Word: beers
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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There, for 25 francs (7?) admission, stand "the shoeless ones"-the great middle-class portion of the crowd which is popularly supposed to bet its shoes and go home barefoot. When a start is bad or a favorite jostled, the crowd has been known to set fire to the beer stands dotting the infield, pull the pari-mutuel booths up by the roots and send the swells across the track fleeing...
...true that the Dunces admit to membership only Dunster House men, but the converse of the axiom is not true. Let the CRIMSON take warning. There have been disgruntled rumblings from the electorate ever the error. Such phrases as "defamation of character," "libel," and "it wasn't the beer, it was the potato chips" have been heard since. John F. Freeman '51, See. of the Dunces
...difficult game on a lurching deck, but 500 pretty women on a boat were not to be wasted. Students practiced square dances in the daytime and danced them at night, waltzed on the open deck, and learned new steps from the crew. Where there are women and beer, there is also song: the ships' pianos were rarely quiet. Barber shop mixed with the classics...
Last spring there were persistent rumors that Harvard planned to construct the new Medical Research Center on the Dunster Street site when the current lease expired, but last night Jim Cronin, owner of the beer emporium, announced that a 15 year lease had been signed...
Plentiful supplies of beer and Coke will be on hand for all comers. Those who turn out will be introduced to The CRIMSON'S organization and held about the eight to ton week grind that leads to becoming a CRIMSON EDITOR...