Word: ushers
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Adams: Student Council, Treasurer, President; Crimson Key Society; Debate Council; Junior Usher; Union Committee; Harvard Fortnightly, Editor; Judge Club, Vice President; Pre-Law Society, Vice President...
Leverett: Freshman & Varsity Ski Teams; Harvard Ski Club, President; Varsity Club; Leverett House Music Society, President; House Crew; Leverett House Committee, Secretary; Junior Usher; Union Committee...
Adams: The Harvard Crimson, President; P. B. H.; HDC Theater Workshop; Harvard Young Democrats; Social Relations Society; Outing Club; Junior Usher; Franklin D. Roosevelt Scholarship...
...also resting its case on the improvements which the new team will usher in as well as on the complaints against the old. Varsity letter-men are to compose the new cheerleading squad, a procedure which was used before the war. Reinstating the old system at this time, however, makes it appear that the UAC wants to improve the cheerleaders only because the football team has shown new promise. With the new success of the team, the cheerleaders have become the poor relatives who show up at embarrassing times...
When Ambrose Usher first bubbled into print, London critics hooted happily that the model for the talkative detective was obviously brilliant, pudgy Sir Isaiah Berlin, Oxford don, author (The Hedgehog and the Fox), cross-country conversationalist and, during World War II, a first secretary at the British embassy in Washington. Jocelyn Davey was a nom de plume, and there seemed good reason to suspect that Sir Isaiah might be Author Davey, as well as Hero Usher. To save a fellow Reform Club member from disrepute, the real author stepped forward: brilliant, pudgy Chaim ("Rab") Raphael, who was at Oxford with...