Word: kramer
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...were retained are Frederick DeW. Bolman, Jr. '35, Charles B. Feibleman '36, George Gore '34, Malcolm A. Hoffman '34, Victor H. Kramer '35, Powers McLean '35, Seymour M. Peyser '34, Asa E. Phillips, Jr. '34, Henry V. Poor '36, Thomas H. Quinn '36, Isadore Rosenblatt '34, and A. Gilman Sullivan...
...Malcolm A. Hoffman '34, Howard M. Lawn '34, Isadore Rosenblatt '34, Thomas H. Quinn '36, Symour M. Peyser '34. Malcolm A. Hoffman '34, Howard M. Lawn '34, Issdore Rosenblatt '34, Thomas H. Quinn '36, Asa E. Phillips, Jr. '34, Henry V. Poor '36, Powers McLean '35, and Victor H. Kramer '35. These men will compete for places on the team in another series of trails to be held on Wednesday, March 21, at 4.15 o'clock in the New Lecture Hall. The winner of the competition will receive the Coolidge award...
Those competitors retained after the nominations yesterday are John Cromwell '36, Charles B. Feibleman '36, George Gore '34, Richard P. Harmon '35, Victor H. Kramer '35, Melvin Levy '36, Leonard C. Lewin '36, Asa E. Smith '34, Malcolm I. Ruddock '34, George Sullivan '36, William E. Smith '35, Richard P. Wheeler ocC, Charles W. Youngblut '34, John R. Yungblut '35. The contestants were judged on the is of their total relative effectiveness...
...offer complete forgiveness and to justify entirely some of the peregrinations of "Little Napoleon," but I do want to draw to your attention that, despite, perhaps because of his richness in news value as a "campus figure" he does get things done. I venture to suggest that Kramer has been doing more actual work in more worthwhile organizations on the campus than nearly any other man in Harvard today. It is not the kind of work for which he gets recognition; it is the dirty work, the work which requires time and patience. It is the sort of work most...
Although fully aware of the hilarity this letter will create in the CRIMSON office, and amongst those undergraduates who, judging from superficialities, consider Kramer somewhat of an anomaly at Harvard, none the less I present it. Victor might blow his own horn about the little things, but he would never explain away a criticism which was based on superficialities; that, also, would be petty. And Little Napoleon is certainly not that. (Name withheld by request...