Word: comps
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Twice a week, Guerard pays some of the debt as he doles out sin in his popular course, "Forms of the Modern Novel." In Comp. Lit. 166, more famous as "one-sexty-sex," Guerard puts to work his precise and detached psychological analyses and seems to have great fun trying to shock his students. "The old-fashioned assumption which led to biographical studies of novelists," he says, "was that if you got the writer's public face and knew what he ate for breakfast, you could understand his books. But this overlooked the whole creative temperament or psyche that appears...
These men selecting English 123, Music 1, or Fine Are 13 have over 100 'Cliffedwellers to choose from. Comp. Lit. 166, Hum. 4, English 10, History 130, and Natural Science 3 are also liberally endowed...
...even as Langguth bemoaned the lack of a new conservatism and calied for the formation of a vital political center, other undergraduate organizations bailed the start of the comp...
...CRIMSON also requested Radcliffe sophomores and juniors to come out for the comp. "We like Radcliffe sophomores and juniors," David L. Halberstam '55, sporting editor, admitted...
...very good and obvious choice," said Albert J. Guerard, associate professor of English, whose Comp Lit. 166 course covers Hemingway's early works. "I am very glad that he got it. The prize should have been given to him a long time...