Word: maining
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...call for changes in the use of the forward pass has been so persistent since the close of the season that it is almost certain that this will be the main topic of discussion at the meeting. The delegates to the committee, deriving their office from connection with the I. C. A. A., have already reported to their association that modifications of the pass are being considered; there are also several advocates of a change in this play in the old committee. Actual codification of whatever changes may be made will be put in the hands of a sub-committee...
...committees of the Intercollegiate Association of Amateur Athletes of America will be held at the Fifth Avenue Hotel, New York, at 8 o'clock this evening. The merging of the Intercollegiate Cross-Country Association with this association and the arrangements for the intercollegiate games this spring will be the main topics of discussion. The question of an intercollegiate freshman meet will also be discussed. G. Emerson '08 will represent the University...
...feet high. The material of construction will be concrete reinforced by steel trusses and faced with terra cotta. The auditorium will have a permanent seating capacity of 5000, with the seats arranged in the arena pit form, and the ice surface about 6 feet below the level of the main lobby. Access to the ice will be afforded by four large passageways leading from a wide promenade in the rear of the seats. When hockey is being played these entrances will be closed, and a passageway leading directly from the locker rooms to the level of the ice will...
...meet with any success at all in opening up this phase of life which is so full of benefit for both the mature and the growing members of the University, stand out quite uniquely. It is difficult to analyze the causes of this condition of affairs, but in the main we believe that both students and Faculty are to blame with a more or less considerable portion charged to the atmosphere of our highly academic University. This, we confess, is a much overworked and abused explanation, applied indiscriminately to University affairs in general...
...installation of a bas-relief of Dean Shaler in the Living Room. Their desire to preserve the character of the Living Room will appeal to all who are interested in its welfare. But this discouragement, by vote or by expressions of opinion, should not turn us aside from the main issue--that a memorial to Dean Shaler should be erected, and that the most fitting location for it is in the Union...