Word: puts
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...judge their comparative ability and on that account it is difficult to forecast the outcome of the game. Since the team played Amherst it has been steadily improving and the practice last night was much more satisfactory than it has been for some time before. The men were put through nearly an hour's work of basket throwing and in a practice game which followed with the second team, they showed much improvement, scoring 26 points to 2, in the first half. The men blocked effectively and at the same time got well into forwarding the ball. The fault...
...taken. When the offer was first made, the Trustees wished to have the fountain erected in the corridor leading to the dining room, where water pipes are already in place; but the donors and architect were not willing to place it in such a disadvantageous position and agreed to put in the pipes necessary to placing the fountain on one side or the other of the main entrance to the living-room. The fountain, which has been approved by the architect of the Union, will be about three feet in height, of grey Tennessee marble in strict keeping with...
...Athletic Association, concerning the election of officers for the four main branches of athletics, was unanimously adopted. Under the old system, each department of athletics elected its own officers. The new plan provides for the final election of nominees at a general university meeting. It will be put into effect at once...
...exercise a particular set of muscles. They are the result of several months experiments at the Gymnasium, and will now be offered as an optional substitute for the old test. In official trials each man is required to complete his total test within thirty minutes, a premium thus being put on speed. To make the trial a criterion of general physical efficiency it is provided that no man shall score more than a certain maximum or less than a certain minimum on any one exercise...
...University Register will be published about February 10 and will be put on sale at the Cambridge bookstores at 50 cents a copy. The general make-up of the volume is much the same as that of last year. It contains complete directories, arranged both alphabetically and by dormitories and streets, as well as a large amount of useful information concerning College organizations and recent athletic contests. The editor of the Register is R. F. Barber...