Word: campus
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Later votes, collected mostly from Comstock Hall, the commuters, and off-campus houses brought the total number of votes over the necessary 553, according to Marjorie P. Zoet '61, Radcliffe electoral chairman...
...this light-hearted and heavy-handed intrigue goes unchallenged, the study committee will have become another small soapbox for campus partisans. A group which potentially can carry on a serious, disinterested study of an honest international problem will have fallen prey to the petty machinations of undergraduate politicians...
...College is no more." Student groups, clubs and even fraternities are on the decline; campus traditions seem "collegiate" to the new student, "and this is no longer a word of praise." Students are enormously concerned with "knowing themselves." Joe Knowledge wants to be an individual, but "not at the expense of rejection" by the group. He is tolerant, "perhaps too much so, feeling that everyone is entitled to his opinion and even that one opinion is probably as valid as another." He is convinced that what he lives in is not the best of all possible worlds...
...campus politicoes received a reply yesterday from the State Department to their request for a clarification of American foreign policy in the Formosa Straits...
...would seriously limit this role." Only in cases where the U.N. Council is directly and formally concerned should it override this principle. Thus the Executive Board could, and in our opinion should, properly have questioned the Student Council's procedure in withdrawing from N.S.A. without consulting interested groups on campus. But as an organizational entity the U.N. Council should not have taken a stand on N.S.A. itself--whatever the personal feelings of its members. In taking such stands it forfeits the right to call itself a "non-partisan political organization." A. M. Colt, Sheldon A. Vincent, Members of the Executive...