Word: campus
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Stanford is blessed with a campus nearly a thousand acres in extent--originally the farm of Senator Stanford-- which allows ample room for the university's 3500 odd students to wander happily about. Hay fields must be crossed when one goes from one living hall to another, to The Quad, or to the library...
...late spring of each year the hay crop is harvested, and all the hay piled in neat little stacks. At a given signal the freshman class rushes out and sets are to each and every little stack-- provided, of course, the campus cops lack the necessary strength or vigilance. Then, true to Stanford's symbol, the In- dian, all freshmen cavort merrily around the fires. In the end, the entire class faces an assessment, which is always paid without a murmur. It's just another tradition...
...blame Harvard for banishing Husing from campus broadcasting. In view of the announcer's "apology" the ban should be kept on. Daily Sentinel. Ionia, Michigan...
...Harvard team will speak from the studies of WNAC and the Stanford debaters from their own campus over KFRC. Mr. Bellamy will introduce the speakers from the WABC studies in New York...
...college socialite, Wood's best friends are other Harvard athletes-Mays, Record, Crickard and Charles Cunningham, his roommate, who is the football centre and hockey captain. A conscientious rather than brilliant student, Wood has a schedule that allows him no time for campus "activities." Nonetheless, he is president of the Student Council. Quiet and solemnly modest, he has no fondness for newspaper publicity. Particularly embarrassing to him was last week's sequel to the Harvard-Dartmouth game...