Word: extracurriculars
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Heineman-Pieper, one of nine female winners of this year's scholarships and the only woman chosen from Harvard, plays the cello as an extracurricular activity and hopes to become a professor of academic and clinical psychology in the future...
...court became increasingly concerned about government support for religious expression, opponents began speaking up. It was one thing to outlaw state-written prayers, they said, but what about a moment of silence? Perhaps reading the Bible as part of a morning devotional was inappropriate, but what about recognition of extracurricular religious clubs? Justice Potter Stewart, writing in 1963, foreshadowed the debates of the 1980s and '90s when he warned that the court was hardly being neutral in its school-prayer decisions. A ban on noncoercive religious exercises in school placed religion "at an artificial and state-created disadvantage," he said...
Minority organizations, play a unique role among campus extracurricular groups, providing an opportunity for students to make sense of their own identities while celebrating the diversity of the community...
...minority population at Harvard has grown, so has the number of minority students involved in Harvard's oldtime, established extracurricular organizations...
...point was intentionally silly to satire the BGLSA's response to AALARM's postering campaign during last spring's BGLAD week. Tom Watson '91, writing for BGLSA, vilified our effort, claiming that his group's point of view should be believed because "for AALARM their actions represent just another extracurricular activity, but for us our actions represent our lives." Obviously, Watson's reason was a silly one to justify why not to believe us, and I was just satirizing this flawed reasoning in my letter. Grunwald must have been too Wasingerphobic...