Word: harvarditis
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Crimson accepts no such easy solutions, and nominates the following eleven as the best at their position: Paul Choquette (Brown), fullback; Boulris (Harvard), and Doelling (Penn), halfbacks; Gundy (Dartmouth), quarterback; Bob Federspiel (Columbia), and John Seksinsky (Penn), ends; Bob Asack (Columbia), and Gordon Batcheller (Princeton), tackles; Bob Boye (Dartmouth), and John Marchiano (Penn), guards; and Mike Pyle (Yale), center...
Rich Winkler (Yale), fullback; Crouthamel (Dartmouth), and Hugh Scott (Princeton), halfbacks; Charlie Ravenel (Harvard), quarterback; Ed Kosteinik (Princeton), and John Sadusky (Cornell), ends; Tom Budrewicz (Brown), and Eric Nelson (Harvard), tackles; Raleigh Davenport (Yale), and Warren Sundstrom (Cornell), guards; and Ron Champion (Penn), center...
Henry A. Kissinger, associate director of the Harvard Center for International Affairs, will give Sunday the first in a two-part lecture series of the Ford Hall Forum, exploring the relative strengths of the United States and the Soviet Union. His talk will deal with America as a world power...
...Harvard's new Director of Sports Information, Baaron Pittenger, endeared himself forever to Stadium press box inhabitants at half-time in the season's first encounter, when he distributed menus giving the writers a choice of six delicacies for their mid-game snack. Instead of the legendary soggy doughnuts, the sportswriters now had their pick of pizza, ham and cheese, and four other selections. This thoroughness in the relatively unimportant area of refreshments reflects the diligence with which Pittenger has attacked the monstrous problem of press relations and dispensation of information...
...outsider, the Office of Sports Information is pretty much a press service," Pittenger says, but to him his job has a far greater significance. He feels that his work does much to shape the public image of Harvard; "everything we do is part of Harvard, and has to reflect its dignity and excellence...