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...dormitories in and around the Yard. He is the Harvard administrator extraordinaire, having sat in a University office since 1940, when he was chosen as an assistant dean. "With the exception of three and a half years during the War. I've been in University Hall ever since," von Stade noted last week, looking out an ivied window of Harvard's main administration building...

Author: By Peter Shapiro, | Title: F. Skiddy von Stade | 9/1/1972 | See Source »

...Stade's influence over incoming freshmen is likely to be small, and even then in most cases only indirect. The only times most freshmen see his office is in the beginning of the year when they submit their study cards showing what courses they have enrolled in, and at the end of each semester, when grades are issued...

Author: By Peter Shapiro, | Title: F. Skiddy von Stade | 9/1/1972 | See Source »

DESPITE the limited scope of von Stade's power, a small storm erupted last year when students learned that the freshmen women brought into the newly coeducationalized Yard would fall under his jurisdiction. The objections stemmed from a private letter which von Stade had written to the director of Admissions at Radcliffe. In the letter, which The Crimson obtained and published, von Stade said that he opposed any change from the former 4-to-1 ratio of men to women undergraduates at Harvard. "I said I thought that the world in the foreseeable future was going to be primarily...

Author: By Peter Shapiro, | Title: F. Skiddy von Stade | 9/1/1972 | See Source »

Although he concedes his feelings on the question are "perhaps more emotional than rational," von Stade believes there is a certain biological inevitability behind men having a role of greater leadership in our society. "My argument is speculative," he contends. "But it's also based on a certain amount of experience. I know a number of very able women who've gone to college and graduated very high, and gone on to professional school, but an awful lot of them take themselves out of circulation from between ten and twenty years--through motherhood and family and this kind of thing...

Author: By Peter Shapiro, | Title: F. Skiddy von Stade | 9/1/1972 | See Source »

...Stade sees daycare as an unfeasible alternative. "Everything I hear about daycare is that a child needs a parent during those years in which daycare would be needed," he said. "And I always read 'parent' to mean 'mother...

Author: By Peter Shapiro, | Title: F. Skiddy von Stade | 9/1/1972 | See Source »

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