Word: reporters
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...following men have been appointed watchers at the polls and will report at the designated time: 8-9, C. Loring, H. V. Morgan; 9-10, S. Galatti, L. C. Seaverns; 10-11, R. Amory, R. S. Marshall; 11-12, J. F. Day, C. D. Ryan; 12-1, H. E. Harwood, F. deH. Houston; 1-1.30, T. G. Aspinwall, T. K. Ware; 1.30-2-30, J. R. Chapin, R. C. Hallowell; 2.30-3.30, G. W. Hallowell, J. E. Thayer; 3.30-4.30, C. M. Garrett, D. J. Witmer; 4.30-6, W. P. Fuller, E. H. Ruch...
...general athletics conducted under the general direction, of Mr. W. F. Garcelon L.'95, for Freshmen who are not candidates for any of the College teams. This class is intended for men who have not been active in athletic work. Those desiring to enter should send their names, or report at the Athletic Office any morning this week, to Mr. Garcelon...
Last spring a committee was appointed from the Board of Overseers to examine the Chemical Laboratories. The report returned was that the accommodations for chemical classes were inadequate, unsanitary, uncomfortable, and generally bad. The committee also rejected a plan for the renovation of the Boylston and Dane Hall laboratories, and recommended new buildings...
...must likewise be in the box in the CRIMSON office this evening before 7 o'clock. Seniors should consult the provisional list of voters posted at the Union, Leavitt and Peirce's, Memorial, Randall, Gore, and Sever Halls, Lower Massachusetts, and the CRIMSON office, in order that they may report any errors to the Nominating Committee. Action on these petitions will be taken by the committee. The names of men added to the voting list will be published in tomorrow's CRIMSON...
Yesterday's brief report of the meeting of the Board of Overseers recorded a vote in which that body concurred with the Corporation in approval of the establishment of Freshman dormitories. The subject is of less immediate interest than the approaching changes in the elective system, but Freshman dormitories, when they become realities, will have a greater effect on undergraduate life than any limitation that is likely to be placed on the choice of studies...