Word: fop
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Dingman specifically said the coordination of the First-Year Orientation programs—such as the Outdoor Program (FOP), Arts Program (FAP), and Urban Program (FUP)—would benefit from having a single coordinator...
...brought him notoriety around Harvard, too. The Leverettite is well known around campus for having more than 300 Facebook.com groups devoted to him (with such gems as “Nate Dern Loves Primal Scream, Eight of His Toes Do Not” and “Nate Dern: Fop Leader or Reckless Cavalier?”). According to an e-mail from roommate and Crimson photography chair Joseph L. Abel ’07, Dern is unafraid to bare all, once streaking through all 13 Harvard dining halls after a dare in just a hair under an hour. Dern?...
Jessica L. Ross ’03 will blaze the trail for future generations of freshmen as the new director of the First-Year Outdoor Program (FOP), the Freshmen Dean’s Office (FDO) announced Tuesday. Ross has served as FOP’s interim director since last September, when former FOP director Brent J. Bell left for a professorship at the University of New Hampshire. Ross has had a long history with the program, which runs six-day pre-orientation camping trips in New England for incoming freshmen each September. After participating in FOP as a freshman...
When given the opportunity to reflect on my personal life in the pages of The Crimson, I’ve always written about things I appreciate.First, I wrote about the benefits of the First-Year Outdoor Program (FOP), and how it eases the transition to college life. Then, my close relationship with my mother inspired me to write a piece about incessant phone calls and the necessity of communication. After junior parents weekend, I envisioned what my roommates would be like as adults coming back to our 30th reunion. Then, this year, I wrote about my favorite place at Harvard?...
...such a position is expected to be rigorous; it needs to be if the program is to succeed. But upperclassmen have proven themselves receptive to instruction in order to make themselves better mentors to first years in Harvard’s other programs—the Freshmen Outdoor Program (FOP), for instance. That the College is set to put a substantial amount of money behind the initiative, potentially even providing stipends to the upperclassmen who volunteer, only makes the case more compelling. For far too long, prefects have been an incomplete resource for freshmen. They have either been unable...