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...Gilman Nichols '52, graduate president of the Fly club, last week declined to comment on what action his club would take in the matter, but he said "the authorities" were aware of the situation in the clubs for 20 years, and hadn't cared about...

Author: By Anne E. Bartlett, | Title: Houses' 'Happy Hours' Violate State Liquor Licensing Laws | 12/3/1975 | See Source »

Radcliffe, then seventeen years old, merited two chapters, one written by Arthur Gilman, "Regent of the College." Even then, Martha Trimble Bennett, (probably a student) admitted, "Life at Radcliffe does not lend itself easily to description." The 'Cliffe seemed to be a dull place-- "there are no picturesque details which can be seized upon," Bennett reported. "A large number of the students live at home," so there was "none of the gay dormitory life which is so distinctive a feature at most women's colleges." An atmosphere of "thought and study invests Radcliffe," Bennett wrote, but "no girl is proud...

Author: By Lewis Clayton, | Title: Maybe Times Used to be Better | 4/29/1974 | See Source »

...Thing Most Needed in Cambridge," an essay by Mrs. Susan A. Gilman, centered on the need for "good homes for our working people-- model tenements... in our city of rapidly increasing population." Besides homes, the city cried out for the completion of the Metropolitan Park System, to provide Cambridge with "one of the most superb driveways in America, bordering the Charles, with the handsome fronts of stately residences facing the river." The common needed "a fine fountain." And even Harvard could help, with an art museum to be placed in the Yard, "along the great green terrace, between the President...

Author: By Lewis Clayton, | Title: Maybe Times Used to be Better | 4/29/1974 | See Source »

...Gilman, the knowledge that he will be running against Dow in November must surely be a significant factor in his calculations. Dow will take a very strong and very righteous pro-impeachment stance, and will no doubt tie Gilman as closely as he can to Nixon. And as the special House elections of the past few weeks indicate, that strategy could very well be successful...

Author: By Don Simon, | Title: Impeachment Politics | 4/17/1974 | See Source »

...Thus Gilman may soon be forced to a "yes" vote on impeachment. As the disclosures continue, as the trials begin, as the evidence mounts, as the cynicism grows, voters in the 26th district will probably follow the path taken by their newspapers and support impeachment. And on that day when cautious, moderate, Republican Ben Gilman decides--for moral, legal, or especially political reasons--to vote for impeachment, Richard Nixon will find himself standing trial in the Senate...

Author: By Don Simon, | Title: Impeachment Politics | 4/17/1974 | See Source »

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