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This time, Yale’s crack team of video-gurus, whoever they might be, have produced a crisp video urging the college??s seniors to donate to the senior gift fund...

Author: By Elias J. Groll, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Yale: Masters of the Over-the-Top Video | 2/20/2010 | See Source »

...order. This new, open process is not entirely new, nor is it entirely open. From 2001 until 2003, the Pudding was forced to conduct a truly open punch, complete with postering in the Yard, due to its brief stint as an official student organization subject to the College??s anti-discrimination policies. Those earlier efforts make the Pudding’s current project look restrictive by comparison. This spring, the club still punched over 100 students the old fashioned way—though each was told that he or she could bring along friends, creating something...

Author: By Daniel E. Herz-roiphe | Title: Open Season | 2/19/2010 | See Source »

...It’s true. He and I spent two weeks trying to find a time simply to get coffee. Every cancellation and re-schedule had been my fault, because of lab, section, rehearsal, or work. This type of social avoidance and excuse making is distressingly common in our college??s culture. As has been pointed out in all those “Harvard-doesn’t-have-sex” articles, every Harvard student is chronically over-scheduled. What they don’t point out is that we are over-scheduled of our own volition...

Author: By Maya E. Shwayder | Title: No Sex and the Ivy | 2/18/2010 | See Source »

Cook, a prominent deaf storyteller-poet, performed at the Agassiz Theatre on February 12 to close out Harvard College??s “Deaf Awareness Week.” Coordinated by the Committee on Deaf Awareness (CODA), the event aimed at “promoting and understanding the deaf community...

Author: By Devon M. Newhouse, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Deaf Performance Entices the Senses | 2/17/2010 | See Source »

With regard to freshman dining restrictions, we support the College??s efforts to cultivate “freshman community” within the larger campus. Still, we believe that freshmen should be allowed to eat outside of Annenberg in those Houses not immediately adjacent to the Yard. While opening Adams or Quincy to freshmen would undeniably encourage many first-year students to abandon the ’Berg, decreasing potential meal-time bonding, they should still be able to eat in some Upperclassmen dining halls in order to participate in student organizations and get a taste of what...

Author: By The Crimson Staff | Title: Guess Who’s Not Coming to Dinner | 2/17/2010 | See Source »

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