Word: clubbing
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...pitcher's club, the Harvard baseball team sure found a weird way to split a pair of doubleheaders...
...According to Co-Captain Alyssa B. Murphy '00, these steps included a workout requirement over the summer, the hiring of a coach and a series of negotiations with Harvard officials in charge of insurance and club sports...
...Instead, a financially strapped Harvard-Radcliffe Dramatic Club (HRDC) relies on its alumni. Last year, the club sent out a newsletter, asking for support in exchange for free tickets to Loeb Mainstage productions. But according to Michael P. Davidson '00, HRDC president, this endeavor has not yielded much thus far. The organization has received enough alumni donations to cover the costs of the newsletter but not much more...
...Harvard-educated lawyer, Graham, 37, gained notoriety seven years ago by working as a busboy at a white country club and exposing the prejudices of its members in New York magazine. Here, instead of reporting on the foibles of the black upper crust, Graham sucks up to it, providing little more than a breathless list of neighborhoods, vacation spots and social clubs dominated by folks who can pass the "brown paper bag" test, meaning that their complexion is lighter than a grocery bag. His criteria for including an institution in the elite class are that he either belongs...
After trekking much of the West, Muir settled in Martinez, 35 miles northeast of San Francisco, co-founded the Sierra Club in 1892 and served as its president until his death at 76 in 1914. In Martinez, visitors can roam the grounds of the John Muir National Historic Site; hike Mount Wanda, named after one of Muir's daughters; and snack on ripe fruit from the orchard that helped bankroll his conservation activities. In Muir's 17-room mansion, young children will enjoy seeing the toys that belonged to Muir's daughters; older kids will gravitate to the "scribble...