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From the Archives
February
2003
On one
warm spring afternoon,
I almost had my comeuppance as a grader. I was sunbathing in the
nude on the roof of the gym, alternating dozing and grading some
50 blue books in a pile beside me. A sudden gust of wind blew the
top dozen blue books over the parapet. I dashed over in dismay,
realizing that if the papers landed on a sidewalk, where passing
students could pick them up, my grading career was finished. Fortunately,
the blue books landed in some shrubbery, where, after a hasty rush
for clothes in the locker room, I could rescue them.
"Letters"
June 1983
Sex
and the Yale Student, a 64-page illustrated pamphlet,
was published by a small group of students who were among the approximately
1,000 undergraduates to take Dr. Philip Sarrel's non-credit course
on human sexuality last spring. Many readers may be surprised to
learn that college students have any questions at all about sex,
considering how it gluts the nation today. The student authors take
a matter-of-fact approach to their delicate subject that might shock
people who disapprove of pre-marital intercourse, birth control,
abortion, or even of frankly talking about traditional sex taboos.
"At
the University"
October 1970
Before
the Cornell game, excited
students emptied into Cross Campus for the season's first rally.
After the team had been introduced and the pep talks offered, the
situation got out of hand. For hours, Elm Street flared with blue
sparks from the trolley wires as students broke the contacts between
trolley and power line. Rolls of toilet paper arched from windows
and thudded on the sidewalk, or on someone's head. People stormed
the Hotel Taft, which was defended by glowering policemen. On Elm
Street, a police car tried to push people out of the roadway like
a snowplow. A few billy clubs were swung, and statistics show that
Yale casualties outnumbered police injuries -- though no one can
guess what nervous disorders were suffered.
"The
Undergraduate Month"
November 1947
Max Schwartz,
the instructor in swimming,
has had some amusing experiences in his work with the freshmen since
swimming has been made compulsory. Last fall, a young Filipino student
came down to the swimming tank not quite certain that he could swim,
but willing to show what he could do. At the word, he plunged in
with brave assurance, but instead of going ahead, he went to the
bottom and stayed there until Schwartz, who was fully dressed, jumped
in and pulled him out in a waterlogged condition. The young Filipino
was not discouraged, but after being dried out, at once returned
to the attack, and is now one of the best swimmers in his class.
"Yale
University Notes"
April 1904 
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