Word: sae
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Scots Poet Bobbie Burns. It turned out, in fact, that Malenkov had a Soviet edition of Burns in Russian right in his pocket. "A man's a man for a' that, for a' that an' a' that . . . The honest man, tho e'er sae puir, is king of men for a' that." Malenkov read in Russian, while an interpreter provided the Scots burr. "A very friendly man," said Lord Citrine later, "with a deep grasp of English cultural life...
...recent climes o' Scotia. The skirl o' the pipes, the fearsom' whoops o' the hairy-legged hi'landers and the proud switchin's o' their kilts bode fair to make this a noble screening o' that mirk rebellion o' 1745. But e'en were there ha' sae much blather as the remains of the movie showed, 'twould be wee wonder that the Scotsmen couldna win the war. A man mocht e'en think they wer'nae beaten at Culloden wi' clouds o' Redcoat shot 'n shell, but hae merely talked themselves to death...
Immediately after the rally, a host of Harvard clubs and fraternities will throw wide their doors to visiting Indians. The Harvard chapter of Sigma Alpha Epsilon has invited all Dartmouth fraternity members to a post game party in the spacious SAE clubhouse at 2 Holyoke Street, in Cambridge. At the came time, Harvard's Porcelain Club will hold the gale open house for visiting Indians at 1324 Massachusetts Avenue, also in Cambridge. Only Dartmouth students and their gates will be welcome...
...only two points made in my previous letter. His discovery that "dropping the discriminatory causes would return Harvard to a position where it could be respected as intellectually just and honest" seemed to me hardly worth making, since I understand that out of seventy undergraduate organizations only the SAE has such a specification, and the SAE is apparently getting rid of theirs. In effect, there aren't any discrimination clauses...