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Writer

Faye Levine

Latest Content

Peach, Chocolate, and Lime The Three Famous Flavors of Radcliffe

Every Girl Is Put in Her Place Ask any Cliffie to tell you what type of girl goes to her

Former Harvard Acid-Head Says LSD Doesn't Get You to Heaven

Harvard giveth, Harvard taketh away. In the Sunday edition of the Boston Globe, the world will be astonished to note,

DeBeauvoir: A Review and a Dream

While the critics lash away (and rightly so) at Simone de Beauvoir's new book, Force of Circumstance, let us instead

Sweeping Political Renaissance Transforming Nation's Colleges

In twenty years only a few of the campus political activities of the 1960's will be remembered--the ones which are

Why Do People Overeat? Several Experts Analyze

1. Self-Defender I like to eat. 2. Biologist I am endomorphic. Hence I am extroverted and like to be surrounded

Not Exactly a Pep Rally

As a social event no less than as a political revival meeting, the Tcach-In was a bust. It was more

The House on Tomorrow Street

Ida Picker's play "The House on Tomorrow Street" is a delicate slice of crummy modern life. Miss Picker is really

Harvard Malaise Explained

Have you ever noticed the "malaise" which pervades the Harvard atmosphere? From Fall to Spring, but most especially during January,

A Word About the Class Marshal Election

Now that the shouting, the dirty posters, the exhalations of scandal and, yes, the glory of the Class Marshal election

Crimson Starts 273rd Competition; Mobs Swamp Oldest College's Daily

Once upon a time, when your grandmother was a twinkle in your great-grandmother's eye, shiny-shoed college journalists were busily putting

Conant's "Shaping Educational Policy"

One of the first things James Bryant Conant, does in his latest book, Shaping Educational Policy, is to admit to

Radcliffe Breaks Ground for Study Center; Balloons Rise, Bands Blare, Sophs Shovel

The "hopes and aspirations" for the Radcliffe Library-Study Center were pinned to a dozen red balloons yesterday evening and sent

Big Fish

Nowhere in the world compares to Harvard Square for sheer arrogance density. Tens, hundreds, countless young men walk about Cambridge

Radcliffe Class of '68

If the Radcliffe Class of '68 leaves more high heel marks than loafer tracks in the Cambridge pavement, the cause

The Political Make-Up of Harvard

Goldwater supporters, according to the more than 5000 straw polls the Crimson received last week, are liable to major not

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