Word: wings
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...team, while of last year's second-string men E. O. Baker '17, L. Curtis '16 and T. K. Fisher '17 all won their letters. Two of these men, with R. Baldwin '17 and G. Townsend '17, who will probably fill their old positions at left wing and centre respectively, should constitute a fast and sure forward line. H. M. Bliss '17, P. S. Howe '17 and L. M. Lombard '17, who have not yet won their letters, are also possible candidates for the line positions. There will be a meeting of all candidates for the squad about December...
...unusual in both design and architecture. Through a vestibule, distinctly "Modern German" in type of design, one enters into a large hall, to be given to the display of the Romanesque arts. Beyond this is a small chapel, where the distinctly Gothic work will be placed; and in the wing at the left is the Rennaissance Hall, where work of the German Rennaissance can be displayed against an appropriate background. The intersection of the two unequal wings is marked by a massive tower, that dominates the entire group and is the most striking decorative feature of its external design...
...ball down the field for three straight first downs before the regular line held. After several exchanges in the possession of the ball, the teams lined up on the University 45-yard line, and from there H. W. Minot '17, a second team back, ran through the right wing of the regular line for a touchdown. A University score in the corner of the field, followed by a frustrated attempt to kick out for position, finished the scoring and the practice...
...extension of 100 feet in length to the Museum was completed last fall. This is the second addition which has been made since the south wing of the Museum was begun in 1876, when an extension of 40 feet facing on Divinity avenue was built. An addition of 60 feet was made in 1888, and last year the wing was completed by building 100 feet more and connecting the new section with the main building as planned by Louis Agassiz in 1859. The completion of this wing doubles the space for exhibitions in the Peabody Museum, which is the anthropological...
...rebuilt, the Herbarium consists of the Kidder wing, at the rear, built in 1910 through the liberality of N. T. Kedder of Milton, and containing a considerable part of the plant collection; the Library wing, the gift of Dr. G. G. Kennedy of Milton, built in 1911 and including the library and administrative offices; the G. R. White laboratories of systematic botany, forming a wing extending toward the conservatories and containing the Harvard and Radcliffe laboratories; and the central section described above...