Harvard University - Red Book Yearbook (Cambridge, MA)

 - Class of 1943

Page 14 of 343

 

Harvard University - Red Book Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 14 of 343
Page 14 of 343



Harvard University - Red Book Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 13
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Page 14 text:

Jia mm! Caddy. . . the number of students who planned to major in Government was larger than the number in any other single field. A few days later, students' attention was drawn to Bertrand Russell's clash with Gloria Kay and Justice McGeehan of New York City. Harvard, with the overtones of the Browder incident still ringing in its ears, had suddenly appointed the philoso- pher to a teaching position here. The Boston press yelled in protest against the appointment of a man who entertained such immoral Views on sex, love, and marriage. Mickey Sullivan, red-baiting Cambridge politician, hit the front page by holding up for half an hour a Student Union production of Waiting for Lefty. Ironically enough, Mr. Sullivan did not realize that the other half of the Student Union's program was Archibald MacLeish's anti-fascist Fall of the City. In the early spring, a Freshman amateur hour took place, and a few days later, a peace rally, one thousand strong, at which Norman Thomas was the chief speaker was held in Memorial Hall. Copey gave his annual reading just before his birthday. The same issue of the Crimson that carried the Yard walks are widened for Navy formations Symbolic of Harvard's alertness in wartime, the air-raid siren on top of Widener sends its warning alarm in all directions i14l'

Page 13 text:

statements, replete with such terms as: let us avoid indis- creet words and to an impartial observer .... Winter came, and a disappointing Yale game passed. As a dull month crept by, the thorny problem of faculty tenure was hnally settled in a rather unsatisfactory compromise. Irwin Shaw's Bury the Dead, put on by the Student Union, was the dramatic success of the semester. Then, at last, Christmas Holidays arrived to relieve the monotony of cold morning classesg and the Freshmen, tweed coats draped over their shoulders and new pipes in their mouths, went home to show what they had learned. After the student body had returned to college and when mid-years with their all-night cram sessions were over, the heaviest snow in twenty years fell, blocking the streets of Cambridge and forcing unhappy science majors to wade through hip-deep drifts to reach their laboratories. Mean- while, a few enterprising students of '43 started the Yfzrnlling a newspaper for Freshmen. The months now were going by at a faster pace. In March, Freshman finally had to choose their fields of concen- trationg and when the statistics appeared, it was found that ffl K T1 152 -1 Tv qJS?2J X -C7 ,192 Future officers do physical as well as mental exercise at Harvard. Here ensigns do their daily calisthenics in front of Weld Hall. 4151



Page 15 text:

ge avi-1. Iii 5 MUS- Members of Harvard's guerilla unit gather behind the Business School to learn how to use hand grenades and to practice commando tactics. report of this also carried the following editorial: Our fleet still has a marked superiority over Nippon's. So long as we maintain that edge, and so long as we hang on to our iron clad defense line in the Pacific, we are safe from the Land of the Rising Sun .... May was active. The largest riot in five years followed the kidnapping by an M. I. T. fraternity of Rochester, radio comedian, from the Smoker. A few days later, as Freshmen began to file their applications for the various Houses, reports in the newspapers indicated that France was cracking. Of more immediate concern, however, was the new Willkie-for President Club that had been started by the inhabitants of an obscure room in Gray's Hall. Events moved quickly, now. As preparations for thejubilee were well under way, the whole issue of College versus Tutoring Schools was brought to a head. From the Dean's office came a decree absolutely for- bidding any student to enter or make use of these schools. An old tradition of Harvard Square was at an end. Towards the end of May, a Freshman climbed a tree and threatened to remain there until a Radcliffe girl consented to give him a date. The day that France was divided in two by the German armies, the Crimson, now virulent and vitu- perative, printed an editorial .... lf America is truly an- xious to remain free of the war at the cost of a German victory -and this is the grim possibility we must face,-then the first essential is to get rid of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Cordell Hull, and the present administration as quickly as possible. Final examinations came in a hotjune. And the class, disbanding to go home, found itself no longer Freshmen. It did not know it, but the historical forces that had been at work throughout the past three decades, culminating in the fierce conflict in Europe, were sweeping towards their shores and towards their own lives. The last Crimson of the academic year 1939-1940 came out. On that day, France capitulated. Y Throughout the year 1940-1941, college life continued much as it had before. Early in November, during the heat of Presidential elections, Wendell Willkie with entourage passed through Cambridge, and in Harvard Square spoke a few moments to a crowd of students who jammed street and sidewalk to hear him. The winter passed, and spring brought with it a three-day battle between the Lazmpoon and the Crimron. Then, when the Lazmpoon had Hnally released the Crimronk kidnapped president and as broken windows were being mended, students turned their attention to a more important matter. At Annapolis, Harvard's star negro lacrosse player had been forced to remain out of the Navy game. This display of prejudice and lack of courtesy on the part of Annapolis's administration brought in its wake cries of protestafrom the liberals of the student body. Petitions were circulated, editorials and letters were written, meetings were held . . . until, finally, Mr. Bingham was forced to declare that henceforth Harvard would play no college unless 'l15lL fe 1 fn

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