Word: dunsteritis
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Charles C. Yin ’09, who was placed in Dunster, said he initially had qualms about his house...
...which House she would hate to get placed in, she said, “there’s one, but I’d rather not say in case I do get in.”Asked the same question, Devin D. Smith ’09 said that Dunster would be his worst-case scenario.“I’ve heard terrible things,” he said. If after a year of House life, students are unhappy with their lot, transferring to another House is an option.During the first round of the transfer process this year...
...people who share our interests, ideologies or backgrounds—the decision should be left in our hands. Because until we can choose where and with whom we want to live, a House will never be a home.Ashton R. Lattimore ’08 is an English concentrator in Dunster House. Her column appears on alternate Wednesdays...
...present a problem for co-ed arrangements. In Leverett Towers, for example, all eight or so residents on a “half-floor” would need to consent to the co-ed rooming agreement, according to Georgi. And Cambridge Historical Commission guidelines restrict the extent to which Dunster House, built in 1930, could conduct internal renovations to accommodate co-ed arrangements, according to Co-Master Ann Porter. “We agree on the principle, but there’s a lot to work out,” Associate Dean for Residential Life Suzy M. Nelson said, according...
Whether you’ve been plopped down by the Square, sent northwest to the frontier that is the Quad or exiled to the far east that is Mather and Dunster, today, you’ve been blessed with a home. You may not be in the House of your dreams—the House that hot upperclassman you’ve been spying on lives in, or the House that’s closest to your favorite coffee shop—but a House is better than no House. You are no longer the houseless freshman you were yesterday...