Word: standing
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Seats for the grandstand for the Harvard-Cornell boat race, to be rowed on the Charles River Saturday, are on sale at Wright & Ditson's and Herrick's, Boston, and Leavitt & Peirce's, Cambridge, at $2 each. The stand is situated near the finish of the race, on Back street, at the foot of Berkeley street, Boston, where the stand for the Columbia race was built last year. Bulletius of the start of the race will be announced...
Seats, at $2 each, are now on sale at Herrick's and Wright & Ditson's in Boston, and at Leavitt & Peirce's in Cambridge for the grandstand overlooking the finish of the Cornell boat race on May 30. The stand will be erected at the foot of Otter street, directly opposite the stake boat; and the positions of the respective crews will be announced to the spectators throughout the race...
...before this for a final settlement of the phase of the question now uppermost, but it is believed that a general understanding between all parties concerned is necessary to a satisfactory solution. May we not have long to wait! Everyone is anxious to know where affairs are ultimately to stand; but will agree heartily to the proposed conference, if it is to be a means to a speedy, permanent and more satisfactory...
...speech at the CRIMSON dinner Friday night was impressed by but one thing--that in reality the Faculty and undergraduates are not strictly in conflict of views; that their aims are similar and their methods opposed. The time has come when it is no longer of any use to stand off and shout our own views, while the Faculty springs a periodic surprise in the form of a blow at intercollegiate athletics. This unfortunate controversy, that is doing Harvard so much harm throughout the country, must be stopped now! There is but one way in which this can be done...
...Faculty, the third party to the controversy, is far from unanimous in the stand it has taken. And yet, as far apart as the two poles stand the Faculty and undergraduates. When they chance to compare views in person, as at the CRIMSON dinner, both sides are convinced of the possibility of a satisfactory solution. Why, them, cannot a solution be reached? We are more than ready to do our share; we want only to be met halfway, and in the same friendly spirit that is now characteristic of at least the undergraduates' side of the argument...