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Word: campus (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...student referendum held this week, the college voted 748 to 331 for a rule requiring campus social organizations to eliminate all discriminatory restrictions by 1964. At that time, clubs not complying with the rule will lose their rushing privileges and representation in the student senate...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Colgate Fraternities Must Eliminate Bias | 5/21/1954 | See Source »

...road that separates the girls from the boys and the rest of the Middlebury campus is not as wide as the Common between Radcliffe and Harvard, but it might just as well be. Academically and socially it is a chasm...

Author: By L. THOMAS Linden, | Title: Middlebury College: Myth of Coeducation | 5/21/1954 | See Source »

Mirroring the ancestral profile, Mrs. Alice Roosevelt Longworth, 60, posed proudly for a picture with a bust of her father, Theodore Roosevelt, after its formal unveiling at the Hall of Fame on the greening campus of New York University...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, may 17, 1954 | 5/17/1954 | See Source »

...present purely social societies was completed. In the decade immediately preceding World War II the fraternities' contributions to the student and to the college were of such an extremely negative nature that from many quarters it was urged that the organizations not be allowed to return to the campus after the War. When the two parallel and independent reports considering the post-war college were submitted early in 1945: "Amherst Tomorrow" by the alumni committee and a report on Long Range Policy by a faculty committee and a report on Long Range Policy by a faculty committee, both also recommended...

Author: By John J. Iselin, | Title: Amherst: Studies First, Parties Second | 5/14/1954 | See Source »

From the standpoint of the many young, active instructors and professors on the Jeff campus this discipline and control over the academic life of the student represents Amherst's greatest single attribute and attraction to them. With such a community tough, radical courses, which would never be selected by the students in a free elective college, can be required of an entire class. As instructors candidly admit, they have a captive audience...

Author: By John J. Iselin, | Title: Amherst: Studies First, Parties Second | 5/14/1954 | See Source »

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