Word: club
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Currier resident had a bit of trouble bringing her thesis to a Cabot tutor on Saturday. It seems one couple decided they were too good for Harvard-supplied beds and moved their fondling to the floor in front of the elevator. Stressed senior took the stairs...Some final club rejects have started their own society (because who wants to be a part of your stupid club anyway?) called the Pearl. The society has already started punching freshmen girls and forcing their members to pay dues. You can tell a girl is a member by the pearl necklace...
...master masons change every year and this group seems to want to emphasize a more open application process.” That said, the emphasis on traditional ties shows through in the Harvard lodge’s connection to another exclusive Harvard social organization, the Hasty Pudding Club. “We draw some members from the Pudding,” says Ryan J. Johnson ’00, current grand master of the Harvard lodge. “It’s not a requirement to get in, but there’s a longstanding tradition with...
...sure people don’t wake up in the morning without remembering what’s going on in Iraq.” The name reading was a relatively quiet counterpart to a rally earlier yesterday afternoon in front of the Science Center. Students from the Harvard Republican Club (HRC) competed to out-chant students from the Harvard Initiative for Peace and Justice (HIPJ). The 10-minute contest ended when HRC stopped yelling slogans. HRC President Jeffrey Kwong ’09 said he wanted to show support for the troops. “We wanted to make sure...
Soon after spring break last year, my blockmates and I were eating in Winthrop, heading to the river for stein club, and buying tickets to the Arbella Ball. These few months between housing day and summer break were the perfect residential limbo: I had all the benefits of hanging and dining in a river house while still enjoying my spacious Grays common room...
...Only a game? Sports fans like to ridicule such phrases."Football is not just a matter of life and death," was how Bill Shankly, legendary coach of the English club Liverpool, once put it. "It's much more important than that." Shankly had a point. Who hasn't mourned their team's loss as if a loved one had died? Who hasn't celebrated a win with an outpouring of jubilation normally reserved for a birth or a marriage? To non-fans, the passion of sports lovers is often unfathomable, because it seems driven by things so trivial...