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Word: dorm (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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...appeared around the campus charging SDS with using coercion to gain its political ends. SDS is for free speech for itself only, it is charged. SDS physically threatens the administration. SDS breaks rules with impunity while we (undefined) are subject to dismissal for tossing a paper airplane out a dorm window. Aren't you TIRED, TIRED, TIRED of this? Will Mark Rudd be our next Dean? Do something about it. Come to the SDS rally tomorrow and be prepared. At first anonymous, the leaflet reappears in a second edition signed Students for a Free Campus. The jocks have done...

Author: By Simon James, | Title: On the Steps of Low | 5/9/1968 | See Source »

...reform slate, backed by the Graduate Student Organizing Council, an independent organization set up this year to bring about reforms in GSA, had printed up a platform and distributed leaflets. "But the unofficial conservative dorm group won anyway," Gardner said...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Reformist Ticket Defeated in Race For GSA Seats | 5/3/1968 | See Source »

...realities, one conventional and one dreamlike, remains always rigorously disciplined with careful attention paid to continuity and (truly superb) rhythm in its editing. Coonradt instantly establishes the premise, Jane's struggle to maintain a diffuse personality against her singularly insensitive room-mate and the other girls in her dorm, with an opening shot of Jane outside which surprisingly pulls back to reveal the other girls inside. Equally powerful in its economy is Jane's first assertion: the girls run en masse upstairs and Jane follows trailing a flight behind them; we think she is following them but she turns right...

Author: By Tim Hunter, | Title: Two Student Films | 4/16/1968 | See Source »

...repressive. The campus policeman, known by students as "Deputy Dawg," is a powerful symbol. Students accuse him of "hunting for trouble." citing his nightly rout of couples from a popular tunnel that runs under a super-highway. A rigidly enforced curfew requires upperclassmen girls to be in the dorm by ten, and they must sign out whenever they leave the campus. A glance at the sign-out book on an ordinary day exposes trips to the laundromat, to the post-office, or to Woolworth...

Author: By Marion E. Bodian, | Title: White Harvard Students Tutor At A Southern Negro College | 3/22/1968 | See Source »

...sound of rushing water woke Mary Kay Tolbert '69 who notified Mrs. Huenemann, and Lynda C. Friedman '70, dorm president, who set off the general alarm within the dorm...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fire in Barnard Hall Turns on Sprinklers | 3/11/1968 | See Source »

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