Word: reared
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...should be made to appeal primarily to undergraduates, and secondly to outsiders who may wish to be present. It was stated then that many students are kept away by the knowledge that all the best seats will be taken by outsiders, and the real Harvard audience relegated to the rear...
...Fogg Lecture Room, the New Lecture Hall, or Emerson Hall, wherever the event may be, we are confronted with an audience of ladies and gentlemen evidently in no way connected with the University. And these people occupy the best seats while the students are relegated to the rear...
...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 be opened. The skating season will extend from November to April, after which a sectional floor will be laid in preparation...
...into the pit about 20 feet. By means of scenic devices and drops, the galleries and tiled roof of the Elizabethan theatre will be made to appear in circular form. The curtain used will be a "trayers," suspended between pillars at either side of the stage, and the rear of the stage will be formed by an "arras," through which the actors will make their entrances. The stage furnishings will consist of a few Elizabethan chairs and settles. Professors G. P. Baker '87, H. L. Warren and W. A. Neilson will probably supervise the staging of the play...
...start, after being delayed for some time by the unreadiness of the various crews, was made at about 4.15 o'clock. The boats got off fairly well together, the three boats which finished first being almost nose-and-nose, and Mount Auburn Street about half a length in the rear. Randolph pulled the extraordinary number of 39 strokes in the first minute, while Claverly and Matthews rowed about 36 and Mount Auburn Street 35. Rowing such a fast stroke, Randolph rapidly forged ahead and led by half a length at the bridge. Claverly and Matthews, rowing a slower stroke, were...