Word: weldings
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Weld Hall roommate, Theodore N. Metropoulus '57, said last night that Donlan had never mentioned anything about leaving Harvard. "I didn't even know he had left," Metropoulus said. "His clothes were in the room until today...
...kinds of cards, four end up at the University Information Office in Weld Hall. One, the University Geographical File Card, is stashed away in a corner of the office and used only by a few inquisitive students who want to know how many Harvard men come form their home town. The other three, variously labeled University Registration Card, Information Card and University Card, are all used to provide facts for the women who answer University Information calls...
...partisan character, and its summer editors have concentrated their efforts on Summer School news, reviews, and an occasional sports story. When there has been a difference of opinion, both parties have always yielded a bit. Conscious of the School's financial investment, the SUMMER CRIMSON has allowed the Weld Hall administration considerable voice in the paper's management, unlike its winter counterpart which stands aloof from all Faculty interference...
...CRIMSON, placed in a martyr's position by a public regrettably only half-acquainted with the facts of the matter, was beginning to feel very sorry about the whole affair. Meanwhile, Weld Hall found its villainous role extremely uncomfortable and began to needle the paper for all kinds of past errors which had never before even entered the controversy. The summer paper finally agreed to publish without editorials, and as a face-saving gesture changed its name to The Summer News. But the tempest magnified from a little harmless wind left both the CRIMSON and the Summer School smarting from...
...Cross. A onetime director of Düsseldorf's City Hospital, Keusen decided that his country had suffered too much from specialists-tough Realpolitiker, spiritual flagpole-sitters, and thought-spinning intellectuals. What was needed, he felt, was to reunite education and firsthand experience of life and to weld both within the Christian tradition. Keusen, a convert from Roman Catholicism, set out to mold a new type of German youth "who knows something, who is somebody, and who believes in something...