Word: barretts
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Although it may be presumptuous of me, a lowly, probably stupid cheerleader, to criticize so intellectual a person as the President of The Harvard Crimson, I feel compelled to comment on Paul M. Barrett's recent flight of fancy entitled "Sis-Boom-Bah." Like Mr. Barrett, I bemoan the loss of many fine Harvard traditions. However, I am less dismayed over that decrease in "final club snobbery" than over the collapse of the old mainstay of journalism--accuracy. Call me old-fashioned and reactionary, but I long for a return to the ancient "VERITAS" standards...
...NOTEBOOK. Sophomore Mirium Keltz felt under the weather at the meet, and chose to run in the "B" rather than the "A" race Her time of 19:51 outclassed the field and would have placed her just behind Gallagher... Sophomore Mary Jeanne Barrett is lost to the harriers for the season. The reason a stress fracture. Senior Wiley McCarthy was elected captain last week. She finished 67th with a time of 19:59. UNH, which was supposed to meet the harriers in a dual meet last Friday but cancelled at the last minute took second at the meet with...
...third quarter, the Harvard defense had limited Pecevich to 65 yards, while sacking him four times. Pickett mercifully lifted his battle-weary QB and brought in back-up Barrett McGath at the start of the final period...
...Immediate freeze" advocates say that is what the referendum stiff calls for. In the final deliberations on the floor Rep. Michael J. Barrett argued that "the spirit of the resolution is vastly more significant than the letter." He said that by approving the referendum, Massachusetts voters would be "telling the President he is going too far." Another freeze-supporter, a member of the Council for Nuclear Weapons Freeze, explained this week, "I talked to the woman who wrote the language for the Wisconsin vote and she said that [a freeze] is what she meant...
...that since the 1970s the number of adults wearing braces has increased 50% to 75%. The A.A.O. claims that of the 4 million Americans currently wearing braces about 800,000 are over 18. (Adults who openly sport braces include Nancy Kissinger, 48, and Miss America of 1975, Shirley Cothran Barrett, 29. Barrett, in fact, appears fully wired in an ad the A.A.O. has been running in magazines to foster a positive image of grownup braces.) Says Spiro Chaconas, chairman of the department of orthodontics at the University of California, Los Angeles, Dental School: "If Eleanor Roosevelt were alive today...