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...fall. As the new rules will probably be ready then a great deal of the time will be spent in studying them. Scrimmages will not be held until the last part of the last week and on the last day, there will be a long scrimmage with the usual length halves between the first and second elevens...
...work of the team was very encouraging and showed a marked improvement over last week's. Leland was easily the start of the University team. On one occasion he got the ball in his own territory and alone carried it almost the length of the field for a goal. Chadwick, who scored two goals for the University team, also showed excellent form...
...committee appointed by the Corporation to visit the Boylston Chemical Laboratory has lately issued an important and unusually interesting report on the condition of chemistry at Harvard. This sets forth cogently and at length the imperative need of an entirely new plant, consisting of several buildings, for the use of the Department of Chemistry. An effort is now under way to get money sufficient to warrant undertaking the actual construction of these buildings. The committee for the Corporation consists of Dr. J. Collins Warren, '63, Clifford Richardson '77, Professor Morris Crafts '58, and Professor Morris Loeb...
...minor changes suggested by the Football Rules Committee that is worth serious consideration is the one in regard to a change in the length of the game from thirty-five to thirty minutes and the division of the periods. It is suggested that the game be split into four periods of fifteen minutes each, with five-minute intermissions between the first and second, and between the third and fourth periods. Such a change would give much less occasion for players to become exhausted or "groggy." The two extra five-minute intermissions would give exhausted or injured players a chance...
...this locality but its habits are well understood. As soon as it hatches the worm makes its way into the twigs, where it feeds and grows as it burrows into the larger limbs. These worms vary in size from three-eighths of an inch to over three inches in length, when they are the most destructive. They then bore across and completely girdle large limbs, and frequently even girdle the trunk, finally cutting a cell close to the bark and there turning into pupas. When these develop they push out through the bark and become moths, which in turn...