Word: counciler
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...real impotence notwithstanding, the council undoubtedly possesses the stature to transform the campus political scene, as we saw last year with both the ROTC controversy and the calls for increased hiring of women and minority faculty...
...opportunity exists for the council to provide a vocal and coherent critique of the administration, through connecting student services issues with matters that affect the world outside the University. An effective council will spread the word that the University's failure to provide student services goes hand-in-hand with its readiness to provide disservices to the world...
Last week's elections provide a ray of hope. Several candidates running as political progressive were elected as representatives. These new council members now bear the burden of working together to convince the whole council to maintain the political role it has taken on in recent years--and to expand that role by building a convincing and progressive student position on what the University's mission really should...
...order to re-establish its credibility among students, the 1989-90 Council is going to have to assert itself. Disappearing down the easy path of fiscal responsibility and self-concerned services will not be enough. What Harvard needs is an Undergraduate Council that will lead us into the 90's by tabling all talk of tabling politics...
...Committee Against Randomization (CAR), founded two weeks ago in opposition to the proposal made by Dean of the College L. Fred Jewett '57, announced that it will sponsor a formal discussion of the randomization plan. CAR also announced that it will try to convince house masters and Undergraduate Council representatives to lend their opposition to Jewett's proposal...