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1943 Ninth Freshman Class to Live in Yard

Harvard Union Center for Freshman Activities; Organizations Await '43

Once upon a time Harvard Freshmen lived a precarious, hand-to-mouth life in dormitories and rooming houses all over Cambridge. Today first-year men dwell in the ancient Yard, deeded to the College in 1936; in the Harvard Union they had together, play pool, dance, and study.

It was eight years ago that the Freshmen came into their own. The Yard, traditional preserve of Seniors, was turned over to the Freshmen in 1931 as upperclassmen moved into the palatial House units, completed that year. The word "campus" is not in Harvard's vocabulary.

Acting on the assumption that all Freshmen are barbarians, and that only Harvard Seniors are gentlemen, old timers warned of probable rioting and wholesale property destruction in the tree-shaded quadrangle where Harvard life had centered for three centuries.

Buildings Stand Yet

But after two years even Charles Townsend Copeland '82, Boylston Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory, emeritus, beloved as "Copey" to generations of Harvard men and a fixture in Hollis Hall, had to admit that the Freshmen were as gentlemanly as their predecessors. Other observers noted that all the buildings were still standing.

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More than anything, the Harvard Union symbolizes the Freshman class's newly-found unity. Built in 1901 with funds donated by Major Henry Lee Higginson, who also gave the College its stadium, to promote "the freest and fullest intercourse between students," the chunky brick building on Quincy Street houses many Yardling activities.

Here Freshmen eat and make the time-worn jokes about the stuffed animal heads on the wall and the daily menu. Here they spend hours in the pool-room downstairs. And here in May they dance at the Jubilee, last organized class affair before Senior year and Commencement.

Class Government

Even Freshman class government takes its name from the Union. Each fall a group of 12 Yardlings, called the Union Committee, is chosen to administer class affairs. Up to last year, the Union Committee was replaced in the spring by elected class officers.

Last year, however, Yardlings voted against class elections after several years of agitation against a system of voting for officers when no Freshman could know more than one out of five of his 1000 classmates. Elections were voted down in a referendum by a 432 to 179 margin and the Union Committee stayed in office for the rest of the year.

With the aid of Langdon P. Marvin, Jr. '41, Student Council representative for Freshman affairs and himself an ex-Union Committee President, and of Kendrick N. Marshall '21, secretary of the Union and instructor in Government, the 1943 Union Committee will manage informal class dances, sponor talks, stage course reviews before examinations. It also appoints the committees which stage the Yardlings' two big blowouts; the Smoker, annual class stag party, and the Jubilee.

Extra-Curricular Activities

One of the chief class activities for Yardlings is the publication of the Redbook, pictorial record of the Freshman class. Other Freshman enterprises which center in the Union are the debating and photographic clubs. Most Freshman activities which are not self-supporting are financed by the Student Council.

Beyond the horizon of strictly class activities lies the broad field of College extra-curricular organizations. Annually hundreds of Freshmen turn out for undergraduate publications, managerial competitions, and a host of organizations ranging from the Circolo Italiano to the Mountaineering Club.

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