Word: fannings
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...golf fan? PUTTER PERKINS, by Kenneth Brown is one of the most amusing books recently published. Whether you play "gowf" or not, the reading of this volume will entertain...
...contributor in the communication printed below compares the CRIMSON's attitude on the question of the ticket allotment with that of the complacent football fan who yells, "Punk Judgment!" after a play has failed. He feels called upon to resist an implied attack on the Graduate Treasurer and remarks that, "we can safely trust even his snap guesses in preference to other people's well-laid plans." The writer reads into the CRIMSON's recent editorial insinuations of "graft" and concludes by putting a chip on the shoulder of the Athletic Association with a distinct invitation to the CRIMSON...
Going back to our contributor's figure of the critical fan, it is often possible from high up in the stands to see points which are lost in the close-up view from the side-lines. It was in this spirit that the CRIMSON, realizing the difficulties which the Athletic Association has to face, criticized the present method of allotting tickets. There was no suggestion of any of the "graft" which the author of the communication likes to dwell upon, and the reference to "privileged classes" in the editorial was to the seven groups listed under that head...
...courts will be thoroughly ventilated, the upper ones by the windows and outlets at the top of the building. The lower courts are entirely enclosed, and must therefore be ventilated artificially. This will be done by two grated holes in the front part of each court and a fan located in another hole in the wall at the back of the court. The fan is so designed as to exhaust air from the room and allow the warmed air from other parts of the building to flow in. This will eliminate the usual system of having cold air drawn into...
...hundred years old, still retains vigor and vitality. If the second movement is too long, the scherzo and finale more than cempensate for it. Mr. Monteux wisely refrained from taking all of the repeats, for fifty minutes of any symphony is quite sufficient to cause an audience to fan itself on the coldest of winter nights...