Word: accessibilities
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...attendant's desk in the reading room has been moved, making it more convenient of access and affording a far better supervision of the room...
...send to his Boston or New York paper the most sensational "story" that he could invent, regardless of the injury it might do to the College. Now, thanks to the CRIMSON, the journalistic scavengers have to work from the outside or not at all; for they are refused access to the general news collected by the paper itself. To make its own utterances more and more authentic and reliable should be the CRIMSON'S constant endeavor. The paper should represent all the varied interests of the students, record University events, and speak for the students' Harvard. One incongruity that...
...material of construction will be concrete reinforced by steel trusses and faced with terra cotta. The auditorium 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...
...Society's store involving changes in the location of several departments. The second story, hitherto occupied by tenants, has been remodelled and made to afford commodious and well-lighted quarters for the two important departments of tailoring and men's furnishings, the latter including hats, shoes, and athletic goods. Access is now afforded to this second floor by the construction of a handsome interior staircase of hardwood leading from the forward part of the main floor. The old main entrance to the upper part of the building has been replaced by a large show window which affords the store some...
...addition to the regular departments, all of which give interesting resumes of their respective fields, and the records of the Governing Boards, the current number exhibits its usefulness as a convenient repository of current reports, speeches and records, which would otherwise be lost or difficult of access. Thus we find in full the report of the special Joint Committee on the Regulation of Athletic Sports, President Eliot's last speech before the Taxation Committee of the Massachusetts Legislature, and an account of the late Mrs. Anna Kneeland Shaw, widow of Col. Robert Gould Shaw