Word: one
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...score boards have been put up in the middle of the Stadium, the one on the left to record the track events and the one on the right for the field events. On the track score board the number of the event will correspond to the number of the event in the program. The time of only the first man will be recorded. Today the numbers of only the men qualifying for the semi-finals or finals will be recorded in each heat. On the right of this board, under the word "score," will be posted the standing...
Considerable doubt has been expressed about the advisability of extending athletic privileges to men who have graduated in three years and are enrolled in one of the graduate schools. However, the reasons given in opposition to the extension apply only to men in the Business, Medical and Law Schools, who might not be able to carry on their studies and play on University teams at the same time. Everyone seems in favor of allowing men in the Graduate School and candidates for the M. A. degree to take part in athletics. The CRIMSON believes that the members of every graduate...
...Stadium tomorrow and Saturday afternoons. There is an exceptionally large number of entries this year, the total being 1046, representing 20 colleges and universities. On the first day of the meet, beginning at 2.30 o'clock, the preliminary elimination trials will be held in all events except the one and two-mile runs, leaving the semi-finals and finals for Saturday at 3 o'clock. Admission to all seats tomorrow will be 50 cents. Reserved seats for Saturday at $1.50 and $1 are on public sale at the Athletic Office and at Leavitt & Peirce's in Cambridge, and in Boston...
...participating life member who in any one of the four years, after due notice, fails to pay such sum as together with sums previously paid by him for such membership, shall be equal to $10 for each year he has been a participating life member, shall thereupon, ipso facto, cease to be a member of the Union, and the payments made by him shall be deemed payment for dues for the period during which he was a participating life member...
...been said by members of former graduating classes that the Senior picnic was one of the most enjoyable features of the life of the class. We cannot vouch for the truth of this statement, but it would seem that this occasion, if participated in by the majority of the Seniors, could be made vastly entertaining. It is the one time of a college career that a class ventures en masse to the sea-shore to disport itself to the best of its ability for a whole day. Let not the occasion be made a failure by the absence...