Word: upperclassmen
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...loss of Rouleau. “The whole way along I was getting just as many emails from Susannah and Eric as I had been from Justin,” Lescroart said. “I knew that Susannah and Eric were coming back and some of these other upperclassmen had things under control.” Preparation is hardly easy. While most teams look to their coaches to provide an offseason and preseason training regimen, the Harvard team has had to call on outside connections to get prepared. Sophomore Matt Basilico got a little help from high places...
...work. For instance, Eliot is nowhere near as overcrowded at dinner as it was during the first few weeks of the school year. Restrictions have produced results, and as such, the basic one guest per resident policy should not be expanded.However, restrictions are unfair to some students. In particular, upperclassmen randomly assigned to live in the Quad simply do not have the time to go to their designated dining hall for lunch, and in some cases dinner. They should not be forced to buy food in the Square or, even worse, navigate Fly-by.To ease the burden on students who have...
...true that freshmen schedules are restricted by the need to fulfill their language requirements and complete Expos, and the EPC has argued that students need more time to thoroughly explore fields of potential interest. Another undecided semester would provide that, and it would allow ample contact with upperclassmen who can better inform concentration choices. That said, the downsides to changing the concentration deadline far outnumber these advantages. Not only will students be left another semester without a dedicated concentration adviser, they also risk frittering away more of their Harvard experience taking a motley lot of classes without sufficiently considering...
...Harvard upperclassmen often advise incoming freshman that the single most important thing to remember first semester is not to take on too much...
...experience are valuable commodities for the Harvard men’s golf team. With a balanced team of upperclassmen and freshmen, the Crimson finished 11th at the New England Intercollegiate Golf Association Championships held Monday and yesterday in Brewster, Massachusetts. The Harvard squad featured captain D.J. Hynes, senior James Cleary, junior Tom Hegge, and two freshmen, Michael Shore and John Christensen. The Crimson shot a combined 627 over two days of competition to finish 11th out of 45 teams, 35 strokes behind tournament champion, the University of Rhode Island. Hynes stepped up in his role as captain to record...