Word: closed
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Dates: during 1950-1950
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...order to be close to whatever hospital facilities might develop in a large and growing city, the Medical School moved to Boston in 1810. It occupied several different buildings over a period of years, generally in the area of Boylston Street, between Arlington Street and Massachusetts Avenue. Although women were not admitted to the School until 1945, the controversy over coeducation in this institution started in the later years of the 19th century, but was squelched by the Corporation...
...Crimson during most of the first half and a great deal of the second looked a little awed by the Crusaders' ability. At one time the varsity threw the ball away three straight times as it brought the ball down-court. The close defense of the winners prevented the Crimson from working the ball inside the foul line...
Jehangir "Muggy" Mugaseth, also a junior, is a stylist similar to Nawn, who learned squash in the shorter, wider English courts and is now adapting himself to the American game. Aliston Flagg, Dave Symmes, and Wister Wood are engaged in a close battle for the ninth and last position on the 'A' team, with Flagg currently on top. Both individually and as a team, the 1950 squashmen show great promise; they have started perfectly and could conceivably wind up with one of the top varsity records of the year...
...like to leave the stage with that big an audience in the house." But the tough little showman, who has been sandwiching his writing in between running his nightclub and theater, finally learned what every good columnist knows: that turning out a column three times a week is close to a full-time job. Concluded Rose: "And now, as the sun sinks in the West and the nurse shoves a thermometer in my face, I reluctantly say farewell to the lovely land of green eyeshades and printer's ink. It's been a real nice clambake...
Certainly none of his fellow editors ever imagined that Roosevelt would come close to the Presidency of the United States, but his record on the paper was a good one, and his associates did name him head of the CRIMSON, the first position of authority FDR ever held. While merely a CRIME candidate, Roosevelt dared to ask President Eliot how he would vote in the 1900 election. Later as president, FDR wrote the CRIMSON editorials, including one blasting the spiritless football team, another describing the Yard dorms as firetraps, and a third suggesting that the new Stadium be turned into...