Word: joy
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Radcliffe scored victories, against B. C. in both the doubles matches, and in the second singles match, where Joy Skon defeated Kerin McTeague...
Most of this year's team will be back next year, and Meg Morgan and Joy Skon are both sophomores. For the first time. Radcliffe developed a second-string team this spring, which itself played several matches...
This Carmen is scarcely voluptuous. Rather, she is a kind of molting puma, long in claw and tooth, snarling at a world that is not to her liking. Wanton she may be, but she gets no joy out of it; her eye is out for the main chance, for social advancement rather than sexual gratification. Her quarrel with the overseer of the cigarette factory ends in no mere slap; she tears the poor creature's bodice and carves a bloody cross on her back. Her seduction of Don José is more challenge than submission, and when he ultimately...
...Joy Skon, Radcliffe's other singles player, was eliminated in the quarter-finals by third seeded Melissa Dempsey of Yale. Malo Paul of Wellesley won the singles title for the second year...
...education as work or as play (in their broadest sense). Work is that which you dislike doing, but perform for the sake of external rewards. At school this takes the form of grades. In society it means money, status, privilege. Play is that which you do out of a joy for the activity itself. Discipline, external motivation and all of the above elicited values become unnecessary, indeed, destructive to education as play. Education conceived wholly as work, and all of the coercive measures which accompany that assumption, clearly make for the malaise of this place. And end to the false...