Word: dunsteritis
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...protest beginning near Dunster House had wound its way through the upperclassman houses and the group of students, chanting and yelling, arrived in the Yard. Hodel recalls watching his classmates flock to join the demonstration...
Though most undergraduates at the time were not following the progress of the PHC, they could feel the housing pinch that spurred it. The seven existing houses—Adams, Dunster, Eliot, Kirkland, Leverett, Lowell and Winthrop—were built for a normal capacity of 1,846 undergraduates, according to the October 1957 issue of Harvard Today. By 1957, that number had ballooned to 2,955. With the funds from the PHC, an eighth house was to be built by 1959. In March of 1957, The Crimson reported that the block bounded by Mill, Mt. Auburn, Plympton and DeWolfe...
...Lumumba Seegars ’09 is a Social Studies concentrator in Dunster House. His column appears regularly...
LOWELL, River West—The courtyards of Lowell are silent today after heavy fighting this afternoon, when a group of Winthropians became caught between two Dunster artillery emplacements at 1 p.m. By 5 p.m., every Winthropian was dead or dying, and the brigadier general commanding the Dunster forces ordered his men to kill the survivors. The Winthrop army raised a white flag at 2:30 p.m., but the time when the twelve Houses took prisoners is nothing more than a memory now, more than a week into the wildly well-attended war that engulfed the Harvard campus without warning...
...Ashton R. Lattimore ’08, a Crimson associate editorial chair, is an English and American literature and language concentrator in Dunster House...