Yesterday's News

Happenings at Harvard in Mays and Junes past

1919

Massachusetts governor Calvin Coolidge, speaking on Commencement day afternoon, calls education the  nation’s biggest industry and the one that yields the largest dividends, and says citizens must be prepared to pay market price for “marked intellectual ability and teaching power.”  

1934

The Bulletin reports on the  Saturday afternoon visit by Harvard  1904s to the White House. FDR invited his 604 classmates and their wives and children to tea, and 936 acceptances  arrived from 26 states and five foreign countries—prompting a Boston newspaper columnist to suggest the classmates would get more food out of the president than he got votes out of them. 

1949

The Harvard Law School Association council votes 8-5 in favor of  admitting women to the school, but  recommends polling the alumni to determine their views. Harvard Medical School, meanwhile, graduates its first women—12 in a class of 141. 

1954

Harvard establishes a Center for Middle Eastern Studies, similar to its  existing “area programs” on East Asia and the Soviet Union. 

1964

Among the statistics from the class of ’39’s twenty-fifth report: their  favorite institution is marriage; the  average number of drinks consumed per week has doubled, from four to just over eight; 14 percent of their wives work outside the home for pay; and the  median family income is $23,800. 

1969

The Senate Committee on  Government Operations serves subpoenas on the deans of the College and graduate schools, demanding the records of any students receiving federal assistance who were arrested after the occupation of University Hall. 

1974

A survey of Harvard seniors  reveals that 17 percent want a law  career and 15 percent a medical career, with business not far behind. Students “are much more aware of the problems of financial security,” says a career-services adviser. “They seem less socially concerned and more introspective. They have realized that the life-styles they  want require a certain kind  of income.” 

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