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...Dorothy C. Shepherd-Barron was captain; her civil-engineer husband accompanied the British Wightman Cup team as coach and chaperon. Mrs. Eileen Bennett Whittingstall, once the best woman tennis player in England, was still the prettiest. Dorothy Round and little Phyllis Mudford, whom no British player beat last year, had never played in the U. S. before. Betty Nuthall, plumper and more jolly than ever, was the team's No. i. They arrived in the U. S. three weeks ago, last week at Forest Hills lost the Wightman Cup to a U. S. team five matches...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Wightman Cup | 8/17/1931 | See Source »

...reception of women guests in students' rooms is apparently being looked upon with increasing liberality by the authorities of Eastern universities. The CRIMSON's survey of the regulations in force at Harvard's contemporaries reveals a tendency to ease up on the usual old requirement that a chaperon be present whenever young ladies enter the dormitories. At Yale, for example, two students need no chaperon to obtain permission to receive a girl in a dormitory room in the afternoon. Such parietal rules contrast strikingly with those at Harvard where a student may not so much as show his rooms...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COME INTO MY PARLOR | 11/8/1930 | See Source »

...occasion like today's football game illustrates the desirability of modifying the present code so that two or three students might informally entertain. In their rooms for luncheon or tea without a chaperon. That there are valid objections to such change is doubtful, since similiar entertainment has been successful in such representative American universities as Yale and Princeton, and in conservative Oxford and Cambridge...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COME INTO MY PARLOR | 11/8/1930 | See Source »

Last week The Dartmouth (undergraduate daily) aroused by past indignities to chaperons, plumping for abolition of chaperons, editorialized: "Many of us are unwilling to ask our mothers, or anyone we respect, to bear the brunt of universal disregard, and even the shade of contempt which cannot but arise from the office of chaperon as it exists at present...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Chaperons | 2/10/1930 | See Source »

...school is known to offer such a course. Director of instruction will be Roland Harvey Spaulding,* Guggenheim professor of aeronautics at New York University and head of the Curtiss Flying Service ground school at that university. Proclaimed Miss Mason: "All pupils at all times will be accompanied by a chaperon...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AERONAUTICS: Flights & Flyers: Jul. 15, 1929 | 7/15/1929 | See Source »

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