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...students living in Putnam House (69 Brattle St.) will cook their own breakfast with food supplied by the college but will eat lunch and dinner in the dormitories of South House. The eleven freshmen in 46 Concord Street will take all three meals in Barnard Hall, and the eleven residents of 103 Walker Street will eat in Cabot Hall...

Author: By Heather J. Dubrow, | Title: '68 Will Live In Off-Campus 'Cliffe Houses | 9/22/1964 | See Source »

Married couples have been appointed resident fellows in 45 Concord and 103 Walker, in contrast to the single graduate student who lives in the upperclass houses. The Administration felt this arrangement preferable for helping freshmen adjust to Radcliffe...

Author: By Heather J. Dubrow, | Title: '68 Will Live In Off-Campus 'Cliffe Houses | 9/22/1964 | See Source »

Diaphragm Power. Elizabeth Flynn came young to radicalism. The daughter of an Irish nationalist from Galway. she was born in Concord, N.H., in 1890, educated in Bronx schools, and became a Socialist at 15 under her mother's maiden name of Gurley. A slim, blue-eyed girl with soft brown hair who wore a flaming red tie around her shirtwaist collar, she demanded among other things that all children be supported by the Government, thus freeing women of dependence...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: End of the Rebel Girl | 9/18/1964 | See Source »

...Historian Henry, himself a longtime president of the Massachusetts Historical Society who in 1954 first opened for public view the Adams family papers, a priceless collection of handwritten books, diaries and letters that offers a unique survey of the nation's first century; of a stroke; in Concord, Mass...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: Sep. 11, 1964 | 9/11/1964 | See Source »

...Transcendentalists never die. Ignoring the Bomb, the Beats, the Beatles, and other forces of change and disintegration, a small group of American poets continues to write mild, mellow verse in the Concord manner of Emerson and Thoreau. Their themes are hill and dale, solitude and sadness; their tone is elegiac; and the best of them is Winfield Townley Scott...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Can All Come Green Again? | 8/21/1964 | See Source »

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