Word: wolfs
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...STEWART WOLF, M.D. New York Hospital New York City
...Hulbert '51, Somerville; Berkeley D. Johnson, Jr. '53, Scarsdale, N. Y.; James P. Johnson '51, Clarks Summit, Pa.; Laurence B. Leonard, Jr. '52, Swampscott; Richmind P. Miller, Jr. '49, Philadelphia; Howitt Pantaleoni '52, New York City; Charles W. Ufford, Jr. '53 Haverford, Pa.; Chalres Weiss '51, Philadelphia; Albert E. Wolf '51, Jenkintown, Pa.; and Joseph P. Flemming '53, Pelham, N. Y., Undergraduate Manager. Also a Major G in minor colors to seniors Donald C. Harshman, James P. Johnson, Charles Welas, and Captain Albert E. Wolf, who have been soccer letter-winners for three years...
...varsity soccer lettermen yesterday elected goalie Richard Christopher Craven '52 of Winthrop House and New York City as captain of next year's team. He replaces graduating captain Albert E. Wolf...
Such mysteries as the lugubrious drums, bells, and fish horns that echo in tombs during initiations, the awsome initials OTIRUNBCDIFT on the Skull and Bones catalog, and the Wolf's Head water bill-highest in New Haven--these are likely to attract the most callous student. Yet most students do not heel their way up the extra-curricular ladder for the sale goal of "going Bones," or at least they say they don't. The six tombs are more important as the extreme result of the Yale credo of success, and as an exaggerated example of it. For the spooks...
...apart from personal worth or intellectual achievement," says a housemaster. "Success for the sake of success is blowing up an artificial coin. Harvard is a good step above Yale and Princeton in university maturity." President A. Whitney Griswold, who once turned down a Skull and Bones bid to become Wolf's Head, agrees. "We could learn much from Harvard's independence," he says. "But the administration is like a cork floating in a whirlpool. It can't change this tradition...