Word: fasts
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Objections have been raised because some students who agree to fast then buy food outside Harvard dining halls. In doing so, the students fail to realize the significance of the fast, Carol Thorne, a spokesman for CHUL, said yesterday...
Members of the Food Services sub-committee of the Committee on House and Undergraduate Life (CHUL) have adopted new guidelines governing student fasts in an effort to stop what many CHUL members feel is hypocrisy on the part of those who agree to fast...
Typically, students who agree to a fast donate the price of their meal to a sponsoring organization, which transfers the money to hunger relief programs overseas. Such fasts require CHUL approval...
...question of fasts was brought up by an upcoming Oxfam fast set for November 16. The organizers of the Oxfam movement at Harvard agree that not enough education has been made available to students in the past, hampering the success of previous fasts...
Even the most tweedy alum Crimson old codger that Stephen Herzenberg could create in his article (see Crimson, (Oct. 24) couldn't have failed to notice that the heavyweight eight did work last Sunday. A fast boat should not pose any conceptual difficulties for any loyal Harvard alum, fictional or otherwise. Penultimate limon or not, that mixed eight functioned as one smooth unit of eight athletes rowing their guts out together. Determination, pain, (and possibly sheer stupidity) know no sexual boundaries. Crew may also be more egalitarian than most sports in that efficiency, technical smoothness, and mental toughness can count...