Word: edly
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...don’t have a problem with opt-in co-ed housing, that young men and women might live together in the same dorm room. Co-ed housing is but a minor blip in the unstoppable progressive march to further realms of modernity. And, as a practical matter, it’s already been widely implemented by live-in couples, with the hushed complicity of a University that has largely abrogated its role as a stand-in for absent parents.What bothers me about the issue is not co-ed housing but the inflated rhetoric and sense of entitlement employed...
Both the No. 1 Harvard co-ed sailing team and the No. 7 women’s squad were in action on the same days for the first time all season last weekend. A multitude of events forced the Crimson to mix up its teams—and Harvard came away with some mixed results. TRUXTUN UMSTEAD TROPHY AT NAVY Following the Navy Women’s Intersectional last week, it was the co-eds who traveled to Annapolis, Md., for a regatta that featured a total of 80 races in two days. Harvard took seventh overall...
...potentially serious liability issues to give the story to the media even before the President was informed. The disclosure that Cheney and his friends were hunting from their cars without proper licenses adds a smarmy exclamation point to another display of his arrogance and disregard for the law. Ed Vecchio Huber Heights, Ohio...
...council meeting. The bill calls for the College to develop a “relatively uniform policy” allowing students to live with members of the opposite gender. The Handbook for Students states that the College does not “ordinarily permit” co-ed rooming groups, but that House Masters may grant exceptions if “the configuration of space ensures a large degree of privacy.” The UC’s “Rooming Choice Act” calls these restrictions on co-ed rooming “inconsistent and unfair?...
...This respect for tradition manifests itself in a certain strain of argument that crops up in opposition to almost any dramatic reform. Harvard students support liberal policies, but they don’t want “radical” change. This argument is now being used against co-ed housing, but it came up in the debate over a “living wage,” in the struggle for divestment from PetroChina, and in the current discussion of working conditions for Harvard contractors. In all those discussions, many students called for incremental reform pushed through institutional means...