Word: goed
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Dates: during 1930-1930
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Then, with a decidedly horror-stricken parlor remark, "Audacious" utters a "Do you know, my dear?" to the effect that Harvard men actually go to their nine o'clocks in full dress after returning from affairs lasting until dawn in the mauve ballrooms of Greater Boston. Tickled with this scandal, the dilettante society reporter proceeds to explain that the list is graded socially and not athletically. To quote: "If a man goes to Harvard and makes a varsity team, he usually makes the good clubs and therefore 'rates' at Harvard. But many who 'rate' at Harvard do not 'rate' socially...
...longer hazardous to go to Boston debuts. No Man's Land has become coeducational, and the grade A Cream of both sexes is clotted. No longer must a first rate girl undergo agonies for fear she is dancing, with a Z boy. They are all classified now, Harvard and the debs. Deep will call unto deep. Audacious, who prefers to travel incognito, has done it again...
Members of the Classes of 1932 and 1933 will have another opportunity to try out for the CRIMSON by reporting at the President's Office of the CRIMSON Building, 14 Plympton Street, at 7 o'clock this evening. Sophomores may go out for the news, business, and photographic departments of the paper, while Juniors have their last chance to compete for the CRIMSON, on the editorial board...
...four Divisions, the Professional Schools. Each & every College faculty member will be also a member of a Division, so that correlation between departments (i. e., a Psychology professor and an Economics professor may work together profitably whereas they rarely did before) may be furthered. To twelve deans will go all budgets: simpler will it be to handle twelve divisional budgets than the former 72 departmental budgets...
What should a lad do between the ages of 18 and 22: go to work? go around the world? go to college? Said Dr. Samuel Smith Drury, rector of St. Paul's School (Concord, N. H.) in his annual report last week: "Let a father ask his boy: 'Do you want to invest four years of your life while I invest $10,000 of family money in this venture?' " Let them not assume that "a boy whose father can afford it should go to college regardless of profiting thereby...