Word: deanã
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...grants. Sundquist said that about 4 percent of UC funds go to private parties. McLoughlin ended his meeting with the ultimatum that if the UC refused to end private party funds, the administration would begin its own grant-giving system, adding that such a system has existed in the dean??s office in the past. Petersen countered that McLoughlin’s proposal would amount to an “unprecedented, unacceptable” move in defiance of defiance of the UC’s constitution. The Faculty approved it in 1982, when they passed the legislation creating...
...program,” all recent reports by House officials and administrators attest to the fact that the program does not adequately ensure that students under 21 are not being served alcohol. Since the UC has not assumed responsibility in preventing this problem, the proverbial party is over.The Dean??s letter threw the student body into a tizzy, and house and student group e-mail lists exploded, as undergraduates vented their outrage. One student proposed on his house open list that the College “is run by regulatory zealots.” Another griped that...
Marc K. Bhargava ’08, a resident of Eliot House’s Ground Zero party suite, said that the dean??s aim to increase student safety by ending the party grants program will likely backfire. More students will attend final clubs parties instead, he predicted, leading to situations where “excessive drinking is even more likely to prevail...
...been easy. When Tomas returned to campus after a brief hiatus—as a second-semester freshman unable to return to the dorms—she often felt out of the loop. Since she was affiliated with Dudley House, she was off of the Freshman Dean??s Office’s radar...
...despite coming from the side of undergraduate education, Gross also was not the advocate for student life that many hoped he would become. While the Dean??s Fund for Undergraduate Life was used to bankroll many important student initiatives such as the Lamont Café and the Cambridge Queen’s Head, the push for and oversight of many of these projects came from others in the administration. While the primary obstacle doubtlessly was the difficulty of accessing the necessary funds, Gross could have taken a more active role as an advocate for these projects, rather than...