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« February 2009 |
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| April 2009 »
March 2009 Archives
After an political career that involved writing speeches for JFK, RFK, and LBJ, and a legal career that is highlighted by the exposure of the "Quiz Show Scandal" of the 1950s, Richard Goodwin, class of 1953, is bringing his first play to Boston. Two Men of Florence pits Galileo Galilei and Pope Urban VIII against each other as science and religion battle for supremacy in the 17th century. The play is presented by the Huntington Theatre Company, and it runs through April 5th.

While at Tufts, Goodwin was President of the Student Council, Editor-in-Chief of the Tufts Weekly, and was awarded first prize in the Wendell Phillips Oratory Contest. He received an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters in May, 1995.
Darn you, Tufts Digital Library! When I began looking for Tufts resources about the Great Depression (hoping to make some clever parallels to the current grim economic news), I was expecting articles about bread lines and unemployment. Instead, I found this fascinating 1931 photograph of medical students Shizue Komu and Ethel Hideko Omori.
![[Shizue Komu and Ethel Hideko Omori, medical students in 1931]](http://repository01.lib.tufts.edu:8080/fedora/get/tufts:MS036.001.050.00001.03334/bdef:TuftsImage/getMediumRes)
Further investigation led me to a number of interesting discoveries. I started looking further because our photograph was clearly miscatalogued due to a transcription error. Additionally, the women are labeled on the photograph itself as "Japanese girls", but web searches to confirm the mistaken name led me to evidence that Omori had been a premed student at the University of Hawaii in 1928. And now, thanks to the combined informative power of the Hawaii Medical Library's Archives and the Internet Archive, I learned that the Hawaii-born Omori received her degree from Tufts in 1935 before returning to Hawaii (via Japan) to become an OB/GYN. Along the way, I discovered that we have at least one more lovely photograph of these women, in which they look much happier, but which has not been scanned for our digital collections.
All of which is fascinating, except for four things. I got so distracted by this treasure hunt that I forgot I was supposed to leave the office over an hour ago; now I have a single photograph I'd like to add to the "to be digitized" queue; and tomorrow I will have cataloging that needs repairing. Plus, I just know I am going to go home and spend my evening trying to learn more about Komu.
Archives is fun, isn't it? *g*
With temperatures this week ranging from 22 degrees to the 50s, I think we are justified in asking whether it is spring yet - that is in any way more than technically. My thoughts are akin to those of the snowman pictured here:
Somebody tell nature to make winter go away.
In the hopes of encouraging spring, I thought I'd reflect Tufts' spring time traditions, such as Spring Sing. From 1941-1967 fraternities, sororities, and dormitory groups would prepare a song for a competition sponsored by the senior honor society, Tower Cross. This competition, which was judged by an outside judge, was usually held outside Miner Hall.
And if that doesn't sound like fun, consider Spring Fling. Spring Fling is held every April on the Medford Campus and may include a comedy show, block parties, and a concert on the President's Lawn. The musical line-up often includes nationally recognized acts. Yes, the ladies really do like cool James...
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