Word: spaces
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Dane Hall in August. Lyceum Hall has undergone extensive alterations during the summer, and the entire building is now occupied by the various departments of the Co-operative. The first floor, formerly used for business offices, has been made into a single, well-lighted room, with a large floor space, devoted to the book and stationery departments. The offices of the society, in this rear, are much larger than those in Dane Hall...
...work of alteration in Hollis and Stoughton Halls has been carried on through the summer and is now nearly complete. Every room is furnished with hot water heating apparatus, and with hot and cold running water. On each floor in both entries, occupying the present bed-room space at the ends of the halls, a set of shower baths and lavatories has been installed; while porcelain bath tubs have been placed in the basements. In order to permit of bath room facilities on the first floor as well as the others, the west entry stairways have been modified to correspond...
...time College opens next fall, the work of alteration will have been completed. Every room in both Hollis and Stoughton will have hot water heating apparatus, and will also be provided with hot and cold running water. On each floor in both entries, occupying the present bed-room space at the ends of the halls, there will be a set of showers and lavatories, and porcelain bathtubs are to be placed in the basements...
...current number of the Graduates' Magazine is interesting because it devotes a large part of its space to an account of President Eliot and his work for the University. The President's inaugural address of 1869 which is reprinted in full deserves the atttention of all Harvard men. To quote from the Editor's note--" by comparing his recommendations in it with the actual Harvard of today, the reader can estimate the clearness with which President Eliot foresaw what was needed to create a great university, structurally complete, and in what manner he has been able to carry...
...feet long, by 38 feet broad, three stories high, modelled after the Assembly Room in the Union. This hall will be used for meetings, and a part will be utilized for a dining room. While the restaurant in the old club can with difficulty accommodate fifty people, the space in Harvard Hall will provide for two or three hundred. The fourth and fifth floors will be occupied by bedrooms to accommodate out-of-town members. Two squash courts are to be built on the roof. The architects for the new addition are McKim, Mead & White; the contractors are Norcross Brothers...