Word: campusã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...former Dean of the College Harry R. Lewis ’68 wrote in a confidential 1999 report bemoaning the deplorable state of College resources. “Once land is gone, it is gone forever.”The only option left is to scatter resources across campus??a serious shortcoming, according to the UC president. “Decentralization,” Glazer wrote in an e-mail, “does not allow for the cohesiveness of an ideal student center.”But maybe what’s missing isn?...
...Aaron D. Chadbourne ’06, Theodore E. Chestnut ’06, Jack P. McCambridge ’06, Neil K. Mehta ’06, and Kwame Owusu-Kesse ’06.When the marshals—minus two, who spent the holiday weekend off campus??convened at John Harvard’s on Sunday night to congratulate each other and chat over refreshments, their conversation centered on broad goals for the year—many of which depended on hitting the ground running, they said.“We want to start early...
...subcontracted to the University through AlliedBarton Security Services by demanding that Harvard require a card-check neutrality agreement prohibiting anti-union activity from all its subcontractors.Snegroff says that the SEIU local—which is presently undertaking efforts to organize the AlliedBarton security guards on Harvard’s campus??promotes card-check neutrality agreements.“We want that for any site,” she says.But Harvard’s Deputy Director of Labor Relations James LaBua says that the University does not intend to require a card-check neutrality agreement of its subcontractors because...
...Independent, Golis claimed in the blog post, is “notoriously under-read,” and the Perspective, the campus?? liberal monthly, “no longer exists.” Perspective’s editors took issue with this claim, pointing to the six issues they released last year, but Golis maintains that six was not enough. “I wrote back saying that I’m a very active liberal political person on campus, and I hadn’t seen it,” Golis told Doordropped...
...particular, closing all but two of the campus?? dining halls turned out to be quite effective in encouraging attendance. Although some students may have grumbled that they didn’t have food nearby when they had work to do, the two dining halls that remained open should have been more than enough to satisfy their appetites (and, we are dubious of the idea that many students had much work during shopping period). More importantly, by closing the dining halls, students who might not normally go to something like the Harvard State Fair went out and wound...