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...though they'd wrought...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Soul Clap Its Hands and Sing. . . A YEATS SAMPLER | 6/16/1961 | See Source »

...individual members of '61, however, the major changes were not wrought by the Program but by the curriculum, or the "customary magic of Harvard" cited by President Pusey this year in his Baccalaureate remarks. The continual intellectual immersion changed the outlooks of nearly every student, entrancing about 62 per cent into the vale of academe for further study. For 1961 more than ever before, Harvard College became a way-station on the road toward graduate school, law, medicine, or foreign universities. According to a preliminary study by the Office of Student Placement, 15 per cent plan to enter the military...

Author: By Claude E. Welch jr., | Title: Class of 1961: Disappointment To High Honor in Academics | 6/14/1961 | See Source »

More important than the absence of noted teachers, however, will be the changes wrought by the current Curriculum Revision Committee headed by Professor A. James Casner. Since its creation two years ago the Committee has not publicly proposed any reforms, but there are plenty of rumors about the shape of things to come...

Author: By Blaise G.A. Pasztory, | Title: Law School Revisions | 6/2/1961 | See Source »

...tall, active man as heavy with honors as with years (82) lolled in a wrought-iron chair on the breezeway of an apartment in Naples, Fla. last week and fiddled with a 10½-ft. cane fishing rod. Peering through the thick glasses he has needed since an operation last year for cataracts, he fussed with the black and yellow flies' that he had tied himself. He ruminated for a moment, then said: "I'm glad I won't be there. It would be embarrassing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: The Gold-Headed Cane | 5/5/1961 | See Source »

Frances Blakeslee's Hildy provides the best moments of the frenzied dash around the city which follows. A female cabby who run her man down, Miss Blakeslee extracts every heaping tablespoon of suggestiveness from "I Can Cook Too," and fills her role with splendidly wrought bits. Miss Turnstiles (Mary Ellen Klee) suffers from one of the handicaps of the boy-loses-girl gambit: she's lost for most of the second act. It's a shame, too, as she is a superb a dancer with a pleasant (if small) voice...

Author: By James A. Sharaf, | Title: On the Town | 4/20/1961 | See Source »

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