Word: youthful
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Otis T. Wingo, Jr., executive secretary of the National Institution of Public Affairs, will discuss "Youth in Politics: A Gamble or a Career?" tonight at 7.45 o'clock in the Lowell House Common Room. Speaking under the auspices of the Liberal Club, he will outline the Institution's plans for sending college students to Washington for two months study...
...date, and this from a man she hadn't even met! Well, she opined it would be all hotsy-totsy (she hadn't been asked out before, but it was early in the term) and the deal was clinched. Inquiring among her friends, she discovered that the said callow youth was anything but up to the real Amherst standards of virility and chivalry...
Chances for the college man's success in public life will come up for scrutiny when Otis T. Wingo, Jr., 23-year-old executive secretary of the National Institution of Public Affairs, speaks on "Youth in Politics: A Gamble or a Career?" in Lowell House Common Room Thursday night at 7.45 o'clock under the auspices of the Harvard Liberal Club. Plans for the organization's activities during the year will be announced at the meeting...
...Author. Born in a comfortable middle-class family at Ulm, on the Danube, in 1879, Albert Einstein spent his youth in Munich, where his father was part-owner of an electrotechnical plant. When Albert was 15, family reverses took the Einsteins to Milan. There he left school to study art, then to Zurich to learn how to become a breadwinning engineer. In 1902 he got a job in the Bern Patent Office as engineer and technical adviser. Three years later, when he was 26, he published his cosmos-shaking Special Theory of Relativity in the Annals of Physics. His General...
...love affairs and friends. No book to read through at a sitting, it will prove to the plainest reader that, in Poet Van Doren's words, Stuart is "a rare poet for these times . . . both copious and comprehensible." Some samples of his comprehensible copiosities: Where are the friends of youth I miss ? Elmer and Bert, Oscar, and Jim and John; . . . And where are Lizzie, Lute, and Jack and Mack! They, too, have gone and they will not come back...