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Page 20 text:
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Page 19 text:
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wa, 'V' ., 1 . t . -urty-.xfs-.. rf. V f ii'-'iffll'f .f,ft.-QL . 'Iii Q g 'ff2nki':1't 4ff'iI 'J. - ' i 'Q ,ff horseshoe. The stands being dismantled were, of course, added during the Cold Coast Age, to seat the crowds that Harvard teams drew theng pre- viously, elevens played on an open-ended iield. The dearth of spectators in recent years led the Athletic Association and the Corporation to feel that upkeep was not worth the income. In fact, in the last two decades, only the Yale game has seen more onlookers than could be, seated in the original U. 1951-'52 saw other changes in the physical scene. 'gApley Hall will be closed, said the Ad- ministration. Smaller classes permit all but a very few sophomores to move into the Housesg the rest will presumably live in Claverly Hall. The Square was again under the direction of a Cambridge bobby. now posted in his concrete me-n's-room opposite a liquor store. ln spite ol' this modernization and all the redesigning done in the Square in the last three years. one driver knocked the Harvard Trustis standing clock to the ground. The timepiece, which had the bankls name instead of numbers on its face, had been a vital cog in the series of actions comprising the 4'Meet me in-front-of-the-Coopv routine. Sadly, no re- placement has appeared, although the Trust Co. promised one soon. New nest for the Squai-e's finest. 1-ud '4 t'mvHktfwAvea,wf . Local dilettantes pour out of u Fogg . . lecture liver a victim to such activities, the Yard was at least twice subjected to Lampoon candidates' outlandish attempts to amuse Lampoon editors. Once, upon a sunny morning. a painter, an ape and a noisy hawker almost stirred a reaction from the apathetic crowd going to ten ol-locks? in Sever. Later in the year. another group of jester-tainted boys locked every gate to the Yard. Luckily for the freshmen. an heroic Crimson photographer arrived to saw apart one of the massive iron chains that held the gates shut. Crinison-Lampoou altercations reached a peak when a windstorm en- couraged the iPoon lbis to leave his perch above the Bow St. building. When a Crimed got the bird. lpoonsters retaliated by seizing Editorial Chairman David Ratner. Photo Chairman Mar- lowe Sigal was kidnapped by a grisly band of whiteapolo-capped thugs and deposited on Route l28. but one 'Poonster questioned on the subject claimed that his publication had nothing to do with that abduction. A slightly more serious bit of action from the Crz'nz.son was suggested by rumors that the stall' was preparing a book. Apparently culminating its excellent work on academic freedom, the news- paper board. with Philip Cronin and Roger Hahn directing. sought out case after case of infringe- ment of such freedom in colleges throughout the country. From these instances camc the picture ol
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Page 21 text:
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