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...lacked a suitable centre in which to concentrate the numerous courses and activities under its direction. The noisy location and diminutive proportions of Holden Chapel manifestly unfit it for being such a centre. It can with a fair degree of comfort accommodate 85 students, while some music courses contain an enrollment of over 120. The assurance of a new adequate Music Building where Harvard musical traditions may be fitly maintained and raised even to a higher level of fame is a source of congratulation to all Harvard men and in particular all music-lovers...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: NEW MUSIC BUILDING. | 1/16/1913 | See Source »

Professor T. W. Richards '86, who will have full charge of the building, will have his offices on the second floor, including his private library which is wide enough in scope to satisfy the needs of students. The second floor will also contain two chemical laboratories, one for crude and the other for very accurate work, a physical laboratory, a balance room, a dark room and an apparatus room. These rooms have been arranged very compactly and easy access may be had from any one to another. On the top floor are located four large and two small chemical laboratories...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GIBBS LABORATORY READY | 12/20/1912 | See Source »

...building committee has had tentative plans drawn up by Messrs. McKim, Mead, and White with provision especially for additional sleeping facilities. The fourth and fifth floors will each contain eighteen bed-rooms with suitable bath-rooms. The additional space on the sixth floor will be used for squash courts, showers, and dressing rooms, provision for which, with the addition of a swimming pool, has also been made in the basement...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: NEW YORK HARVARD CLUB | 11/7/1912 | See Source »

...Views." During the past four or five years, however, and especially since the organization of the Undergraduate Schools Committee, matters have been greatly improved. In addition to the systematic distribution . . . . of all the regular college publications, a new plan is now on foot for editing a handbook which will contain concise information intended primarily for the benefit of Princeton sub-freshmen . . . . but also to arouse interest among men not strongly prejudiced in Princeton's favor. This work is being carried on entirely under the supervision of the Undergraduate Schools Committee...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PUBLICITY THROUGH THE TERRITORIAL AND SCHOOL CLUBS. | 11/5/1912 | See Source »

...about 130 feet on Kirkland street and about 200 feet on Divinity avenue and Frisble place. The main entrance is from Kirkland street, opening into a lower vestibule, with office-rooms on each side. Beyond a small rotunda is the Romanesque Hall, about 70 feet long, which will contain, among other valuable parts of the collection, the collosal Bernward Column. From the farther end of the Romanesque Hall an entrance leads into the Gothic Hall...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GERMANIC MUSEUM EXERCISES | 6/1/1912 | See Source »

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