Word: dorm
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...show their support for Harvard’s janitors, including William M. Skinner ’09, who said that he attended because of his personal interactions with janitors. “I’m out here because I’ve talked to janitors in my dorm,” Skinner said. “A lot of them come from underprivileged countries, and they are just trying to eke out a living here. I think that since Harvard is so rich and prestigious, it should set an example for treating its workers well.” Harvard?...
Pseudo-artistic framed photos—check. Half-full handle of Gordon’s Vodka—check. Life-sized mummy—check? That’s an item the ladies of Kirkland F-11 can check off their list of dorm room must-haves. Thanks to Jayne F. Wolfson ’08’s eager mom, this first floor suite has become a refuge of Halloween spirit. A “Danger: Haunted House” sign beckons one inside, where hair-raising black crows haunt the ceilings and the coffee table has been taken...
...tiny or unequipped. It was just, well, bland. “We didn’t want [our rooms] to be sterile,” Ching says. And COOP mirrors and Abbey Road definitely wouldn’t fly. They immediately set to work transforming their suite into a dorm-sized shrine to travel, to friendship, and to sex. Ching claims to have “a queer eye” for style; both are deeply interested in aesthetics. He calls their room “warm” and “sexy,” while she describes...
...those who took the time to answer the e-mail. Because of this, the pathetically small sample size, and other experimental inefficiencies, the results are unfortunately inconclusive, if not just indicative of rapid uptake, then of some awareness of Harvard football brought to school with bed risers and lame dorm posters.So when my father’s in town on Saturday for the Princeton game and the conversation inevitably drifts toward the old days, the cold days, the good days, I’ll know my inheritance, while still treasured, might not be unique. Then again, who knows who Eion...
...there really room for both? Did HIA really need to start a new magazine? As it stands, The Analyst distributes to every dorm room and panders to the uninformed with articles like “Employee Stock Options 101.” But if they want to be taken seriously as an academically rigorous publication, they need to stop trying to act like a general interest newsstand glossy. In Harvard’s overgrown media landscape, publications need to carve out their corners, and stay in their lanes...