Word: problem
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...after sold only to graduates upon application, and that the west side of the Stadium be reserved for Crimson supporters. The above solution of the seating difficulty at football games is generally held and advocated throughout the undergraduate bode. The section is, will the H.A.A. act to remedy the problem? This is a natural question to ask in view of the many years that the present conditions have existed at the Stadium with no effort initiated by the H.A.A. to apply the obvious remedy proposed by the class...
...come to football games to see Harvard beaten if possible could be placed on the east side, in the bowl, in the wooden stands, or if absolutely necessary on the west side, but roped off from the Harvard A. A. and season ticket sections. This would solve any financial problem connected with the necessity for the sale of a number of low price season tickets to those outside the University, and would prevent the mixing of these outsiders with Harvard men in the stands...
...right to strike is the only legitimate weapon which the unions have: without it under the personal economic system, they are not only helpless they cannot exits. And no matter how much public opinion is in favor of taking away this weapon, doing so can never settle the labor problem. If must be replaced by some other means of making labor and capital equal in strength. Otherwise the unions will be forced to adopt some more terrible measure of defense than the strike...
...Mount Wilson he perfected methods of measuring star distances photometrically, and applied these methods to the problem of the distances and structures of the great star-clusters. His work has given astronomers a new perception of the size of the stellar universe, showing that in volume it is at least a thousand times larger than it was thought to be before the distances to the clusters were measured. Furthermore, Dr. Shapley has discovered that the sun, instead of being at the center of the sidereal universe, as was formerly supposed, is really several hundred quadrillion miles away from...
...which leads to this: if college men are to exercise this undeniable right they must substitute for their present commendable, but not highly profitable, sentiments some definite knowledge concerning the problem of limiting armaments. For which reason, we take this opportunity of calling attention to the series of meetings which the Liberal Club is holding for this purpose. Whatever may be our opinion of the Liberal Club, as judged by its activities in the past, we can scarcely have anything but approval for their disarmament program. Unless Harvard undergraduates, too, regard the Washington Conference as a football game at which...