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Dates: during 1880-1889
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Usage:

...entirely covered in and the men are engaged in putting in the windows. The studding for the partitions are in place and the arrangement of the upper floor can now be plainly seen. A long hall with lockers around the four sides will occupy most of the floor, the space on each side of the stairway being used for bathrooms. The lower floor will be devoted to the storing of boats. Two large doors open from this floor out onto a large platform from which the floats are reached. Over this platform is a long balcony on which the hall...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The New Boat House. | 12/17/1889 | See Source »

...Committee on the Regulation of Athletic Sports, which has been established by the faculty, is given, and its duties detailed. Some space is also devoted to the new buildings being erected for athletic purposes-the Carey building on Holmes field, and the new boat house, gift of Mr. G. W. Weld; the exercise grounds, Holmes field, Jarvis field, and the new Norton field, are also described...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Changes in the Catalogue. | 12/6/1889 | See Source »

...Monthly continues Mr. Carpenter's translation of Ibsen's "The Lady of the Sea." The third, fourth and fifth acts occupy almost the entire space of the magazine, and leave room for only a communication and a poem, besides the editorial department and The Month. It may well be doubted whether the editors are justified imdevoting so many pages to a work not original nor written by an undergraduate, even though it is of so great intrinsic merit as Mr. Carpenter's translation. This article is a great honor to its contributor and to Harvard, but it should not have...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Monthly. | 12/4/1889 | See Source »

...size of last year. The hill on the west side of the old field has been taken away and the clay carted to the south side, where it has been used to fill up an old hollow. The hollow corner at the northeast has also been filled in, and space sufficient for three or four new football fields has thus been gained. It will be no longer possible for men from other colleges to watch the Princeton team at practice, for the parts of the grounds where there was formerly no fence have been surrounded by a stone wall...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: New Athletic Grounds at Princeton. | 12/2/1889 | See Source »

...allow proper ventilation between lectures, and even if there were enough to accomodate all the classes conveniently, this would be a great disadvantage; but when it is added that no one of the rooms is large enough to allow a class of twenty to be comfortable for the space of an hour, it is apparent that greater accommodations are imperatively needed. During the year the executive committee have taken some steps towards preparing a simple plan for the enlargement of Fay House in the rear, by which its present dignified and antique front may be preserved...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Harvard Annex. | 11/14/1889 | See Source »

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