Word: campus
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Dates: during 2010-2019
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...role of final club members also deserves a closer evaluation: The University has put unbelievable pressure on final clubs to function as campus-wide social venues, forcing their presidents to take on enormous personal liability and their members to shoulder the large financial burdens associated with hosting weekly social events. Physically, final clubs were not built to host campus-wide events that could accommodate the same number of students as House dining halls, the old Student Union (now the Barker Center) or even the old Hasty Pudding Theatre (now mainly classrooms). In this sense, the University has placed final clubs...
After this spring, hard alcohol will no longer be served at on-campus House formals, as the Cambridge License Commission will now only issue beer and wine licenses for ticketed events taking place in dining halls...
This decision—which may not alter plans for this spring’s formals—will not affect formals being held off-campus. House events that do not serve hard alcohol or do not charge for admission, such as stein clubs, are also exempt from the change, said Assistant Dean of Harvard College for Student Life David R. Friedrich at yesterday’s meeting of the Committee on Student Life...
Bryan W. Dunmire ’11, co-chair of the Eliot HoCo, said he feared that some Houses may resort to off-campus venues in order to keep serving hard alcohol. While this year Dunmire said House administrators told him liquor will still be at Fête, he said in the future Eliot may choose to stick to beer, wine, and champagne in order to continue hosting the event in the House...
...mention of the recent visit by the Secretary of the Navy, Ray Mabus, at Harvard. As former President of Harvard's Leadership Institute, I have observed your newspaper's willingness to cover some of the high-profile and exceptional individuals that our organization, and others too, have brought to campus. Unfortunately, for someone as notable as the Secretary of the Navy, there was no coverage provided, and I believe that deprives your readers (and the many attendees) of quality news. I hope the Crimson will continue to report on news that matters to Harvard community members...