Word: whitmanic
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Eliot Hall responded more enthusiastically to the RGA decision by increasing its parietal hours to 20 per week. Bertram, Cabot, and Comstock voted to accept up to seven and a half hours. Holmes, Moors, and Whitman merely enlarged the Sunday afternoon allowance from three to four...
...Beta Kappa Society of Radcliffe College has announced the election of eight juniors: Kate L. Bernstein, of Moors Hall and Great Neck, N.Y., Biology; Lorella M. Jones, of Whitman Hall and Pittsburgh, Pa., Mathematics; Lydia K. Lake, of Barnard Hall and New Canaan, Conn., Classics; Joan E. Lusk, of Saville House and Oradell, N.J., Chemistry; L. Emilie Schrader, of Coggeshall House and St. Paul, Minn., Social Studies; Gail E. Thain, of Whitman Hall and Evanston, III., History and Literature; Ann D. Watson, of Moors Hall and Mentham, N.J., English; and Emily Zack, of Eliot Hall and New York City, History...
...illusion but Whitman called 'the path...
...poet's own generation cannot issue him a passport to immortality, even when it would like to. Robert Frost was no literary revolutionary, like Walt Whitman or T. S. Eliot. But he is more controlled and artful than Whitman, less narrowly contemporary than the early Eliot, wider-ranging than that fellow precisionist, Emily Dickinson. Some of these had strengths that were not his, as he had strengths that were not theirs. His own generation can only be sure that he belongs in high company...
...should leave here convinced that we're not going to leer and snicker about these rules any longer," said Gail E. Thain '64, president of Whitman Hall. "The circus atmosphere around the rules, plus the snide comments and over-dramatized conflict that accompanied the rules last Spring has made it impossible to enforce the rules...