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There they all were-the veritable image of geographical distribution-sitting in the Waldorf Cafeteria on Mass Ave, freshman roommates enjoying their first late-night snack in Cambridge. A cool one a.m. in September, 1967. The next night they went out again, this time to the Bick for ham and eggs. They don't do this anymore, of course. This year the Bick and Waldorf disappeared without a trace-and the roommates Harvard so carefully brought together no longer live with each other...

Author: By Frank Rich, | Title: A Senior's Serapbook Pictures at an Exhibition | 6/17/1971 | See Source »

...Longhairs. Ghostwriting on a modest scale has been a campus ploy for many years. But turning the practice into big business has taken men of vision like Ward Warren, 22, a senior at Babson College near Boston. Last fall Warren sank $25,000-earned in the delicatessen and the snack bar he owns-into Termpapers Unlimited. He now says that he is close to breaking even. "The secret of my success," he says earnestly, "is that my employees really believe in what they're doing. Also, there are a lot of brilliant, long-haired people out of work around...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Term-Paper Hustlers | 4/19/1971 | See Source »

Members of the teams will stay in the dorms of opponents, rather than hotels, and they won't have their accustomed snack money. The squads will only fly to Cornell and Penn and bus to Princeton and Columbia...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Athletic Department Trims Costs of Traveling Teams | 3/3/1971 | See Source »

...those who cannot read time; it includes society, travel and sports columns. The tabloid was started by Dane Edwards, 34, owner of a small professional speakers' bureau, to help some neighborhood children. It now operates with a staff of eight (unpaid except for soda pop and snack expenses), a waiting list of 23 and a mandatory retirement age of 16. Edwards and his wife Janie keep their editing and layout help to a minimum. The strength of the paper is derived from Article Four of the Hoot Owl rules: "When writing: If it's wrong, say so. When...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: For, About and By Kids | 1/25/1971 | See Source »

...long, narrow 51 acre strip of land running between the shore and the coastal highway south of Santa Barbara, and started to work on his town. He built a roadside assortment of children's delights: merry-go-rounds, a zoo, a miniature train, donkey rides, toy stores, snack shops-all painted red and white and encrusted with Christmas decorations. Above the largest shop in the village, a 20-foot concrete Santa, his landmark, protruded from the chimney. Auger presided over it all in a red suit and white beard, ho-hoing and passing out free candy to his young...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: American Scene: Santa Claus, California | 12/28/1970 | See Source »

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