Word: marshard
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Harvard's lost Generation upper classmen not in the Houses will get a fling at social life on Saturday night when the Union opens its doors to all members for a post-game dance featuring the music of Harry Marshard and a Dartmouth Green motif...
...hotel dancing facilities of the metropolis, impartially and alphabetically, we unavoidably begin with the Copley-Plaza's greenish Oval Room. Life in the Oval Room may be compared to an existence in an attractive but expensive goldfish bowl. Decorated in the stately manner, the Oval Room offers good Marshard music for a large dance floor and what is usually the best revue in town. While the food is fair, the prices, particularly the $1.50 cover and $2.00 minimum on weekends, do not rest lightly on undergraduate stomachs. Most noticeable of all is the impression inevitably generated by the atmosphere that...
Turning next to the Camellia Room of the Lafayette, we find Friday and Saturday evening dancing on a good sized floor well-stocked with university aged people. A small Marshard unit is the reward for the $2.00 minimum, and as the room grows increasingly darker, the music, through sheer coincidence, becomes increasingly slower. With good dancing, adequate food and liquor, and a quite informal atmosphere, the Camellia Room is a good choice when parietal rules terminate in-room entertaining...
Chairman of the Committee Bill Evans announced that Harry Marshard and his 12 piece band had been engaged for the occasion...
Chief event on the other side of the river is the Harvard-Yale Ball at the Copley-Plaza, complete with three orchestras, Dwight Fiske, and stars from two hit shows. Gene Krupa, Jack Marshard, and Del Rio's rhumba band will play alternately...