Word: easterly
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...Easter Sunday is the time of family dinners, family reunions, family church-going. Hunched over the wheel of his car, or lurching toward Boston in a train, comes the Harvard student from Delaware, or Ohio, or Louisiana. He cannot spend Easter at home, for the rock-bound Harvard calendar beckons her sons to Cambridge for Monday classes...
John M. Gregg '52, who drew up the Council-approved charter, said last night he hoped for official University sanction before Easter recess. Already, according to Gregg, a number of faculty members have offered themselves as sponsors. These include William Y. Elliott, Williams Professor of Government, Oscar Handlin, associate professor of History, McGeorge Bundy and Robert McCloskey, associate professors of Government, and William Moffitt, assistant professor of Physics. Both Eliot and Moffitt attended Oxford, Eliott as a Rhodes Scholar...
Imagine Lady Godiva in the Easter Parade--she wouldn't be without a chapeau to top her ensemble. Your red oilskins may go very well with rain, but you shouldn't be blind to the flattery the right shape can add; the sailor hat, the princesse, the cloche, the cartwheel, the turban, the coolie-surely one of these set off your face. Of course, if your desire softness and subtley, you can luxuriate in flowers, fruits feathers, wires fauna, flora, and rope...
...years on radio, the show has had remarkably few letters complaining of its plays or the political backgrounds of its casts ("We just forward those letters to U.S. Steel and they answer them"). The biggest furor occurred when the Guild presented Tennessee Williams' Summer and Smoke on an Easter Sunday. "It was bad timing." concedes Armina Marshall, "because the girl in the play becomes a prostitute. Ever since then on Easter Sunday we try to do a classic." About a dozen plays have been repeated (e.g., Three Men on a Horse, Little Women, Reflected Glory). The biggest audiences...
...Korea columns carried the authentic flavor of the combat infantryman's lonely world of fear and waiting: "Aside from the patrols and the small attacks, it's a constant vigil . . . Time drags when you sit and wait for something to happen." Reed's account of an Easter sermon, preached at a clearing leveled by a bulldozer the day before: "The chaplain . . . said that men, in these uncertain times, are seeking security . . . He said there is no better security than belief in the story he had just finished telling ... I left the service feeling that, in a time...