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Colonel Stoopnagle and Budd, those inventive geniuses of the radio and stage, put their heads together last night and solved Harvard's major problems in about 8 minutes flat in a CRIMSON interview at the Metropolitan theater...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Colonel Stoopnagle and Budd Solve Cambridge Parking Problems---Interest Harvard Professor | 10/19/1933 | See Source »

...following interview with Arthur N. Holcombe '06, is the sixth in the Crimson's regular series of interviews and articles by members of the Faculty upon important trends and crises in current national and world affairs...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Germany's Withdrawal From Geneva Does Not Mean War--No Gain for France; Germany Weak | 10/18/1933 | See Source »

...which each item had been selected not for artistic or literary merit but on the criterion of "an especial appeal for men." The first issue contained an article on marlin fishing by Ernest Hemingway; an article on Burlesque, called "I Am Dying, Little Egypt," by Gilbert Seldes; an interview with Nicholas Murray Butler by Artist Samuel Johnson-Woolf. Charles Hanson Towne had a piece about his favorite subject, "The Lost Art of Ordering" (meals); Ring Lardner Jr. wrote solemnly about undergraduate guzzling at Princeton. There were stories by John Dos Passos, William McFee, Manuel Komroff, Morley Callaghan, Erskine Caldwell, Dashiell...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Esquire | 10/16/1933 | See Source »

...Language requirements should lead toward mastery of some one foreign tongue, not to a bare reading knowledge of one coupled with a smattering of another," Henry W. Holmes '03, Dean of the Harvard School of Education, stated in a CRIMSON interview yesterday. "I believe," he said, "that the student should acquire a permanent command of at least one language as a tool of learning and a source of continued education and satisfaction. Colleges ought not to hide behind the abstractions of an admission system in terms of points, a system which encourages carrying Latin for four years and then dropping...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Dean Holmes Decries Inadequacy of Language Requirements---Advocates Real Mastery of One | 10/14/1933 | See Source »

...Democracy is waning, and will probably soon be replaced by an aristocracy of the intellect," said Kirsopp Lake, professor of History, in an interview with the CRIMSON yesterday afternoon. "The next trend in the United States, as contrasted to the present 'tyranny of brains' in Europe may well be that the unemployed proletariat will, through an exploitation of the leisure time which is being forced upon them, become the intellectual, and, therefore, the political leaders of the country...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Kirsopp Lake Predicts Aristocracy of Intellect in New Proletarian Government Based upon Leisure | 10/11/1933 | See Source »

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