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Edward S. Gruson, assistant to the President for Community Affairs, said yesterday, "The Stadium is not closed specifically to Summerthing. It is simply closed to all activities that would use the field itself. The main consideration is that the turf is in terrible shape since Harvard and the Patriots finished their seasons. It is a matter of necessity that the field be resodded...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 'Summerthing' Series Must Move; Field Conditions Prohibit Concerts | 1/18/1971 | See Source »

...review. Is the distinction between the House and the Association still valid? What are the functions of the graduate secretary and the Faculty Committee of Phillips Brooks House? (Members of the Faculty Committee: President Mary I. Bunting, Dr. Dana Farnsworth, Dr. George W. Goethals, Mr. Edward S. Gruson, Professor Doris Kearns, Professor Edward L. Keenan, Jr., Dr. James H. Laue, Dean Ernest R. May, Rev. Charles P. Price, Miss Maria Seferi, Mrs. Mona Serageldin, Dean Theodore Sizer, Dean George B. Thomas, Dean Charles P. Whitlock.) Do their relationships to the central committee officers and cabinet members of P.B.H.A. need further...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Report of the Subcommittee on Phillips Brooks House Assn. (CSCR) | 1/15/1971 | See Source »

With respect to Edward Gruson's letter re: Harvard vs. The Cambridge Free School, one thing puzzles me-he says, "... we asked the owner to permit the school to remain in the building..."-it seems to me that Harvard might have done something a good deal stronger than ask-why could they not have said, since they were buying the building, "we want this building to stand with the school using it until we can find a mutually satisfactory replacement." To hear Mr. Gruson, one might suppose that Harvard was helpless in the matter...

Author: By John Holt, | Title: The Mail THE ELEPHANT'S FAULT | 1/5/1971 | See Source »

...afraid I do not find Mr. Gruson's statement altogether convincing. For several years now the Davises have worked very hard, for little or no salary, to found and operate the Free School. I do not believe that they would have let it close if there had seemed to them the slightest possibility of keeping it open, any more than I believe that if Harvard had been seriously interested in keeping it open, they could not have found some means of doing...

Author: By John Holt, | Title: The Mail THE ELEPHANT'S FAULT | 1/5/1971 | See Source »

Hicks sent a similar letter on Oct. 13, but Gruson said that it was not answer-ed because of his hospitalization at the time. Gruson added that his assistant, Donald G. Moulton, was not familiar with the Roxbury area, and therefore was unable to answer the letter properly...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Hospital Plans Remain in Dark; Hicks Questions Harvard Role | 12/12/1970 | See Source »

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