Word: formality
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...addition to acting as a formal liaison between women-centered organizations and the central administration, the director is also charged with creating a leadership curriculum geared toward promoting the development of female student leaders...
...business as usual for the No. 2 Harvard women’s squash team yesterday. The Crimson breezed past No. 5 Dartmouth for an 8-1 win in Hanover, N.H. Harvard (2-0, 2-0 Ivy) has not lost to the Big Green (2-1, 0-1) since formal Ivy League competition began in 1982. “It was a good, solid match,” said captain and No. 7 Allison Fast. “After training so hard, it was good to see our competition and see how we all can play.” Fast...
...Mariko soon benefited from the training and visiting professional dancing coaches.The Harvard team provides training for all dancers, those who have no experience and those who have a lot. There are different levels of dancing styles, bronze, silver, gold, and open, and the Harvard team takes you through that formal process, while also serving as a social outlet. Unlike ballet, where you just stand at the bar by yourself, Harvard ballroom forces you to meet and dance with many new people. And because the upper-level dancers teach the newer members a lot of the time, everyone eventually gets experience...
...gatherings will not reinvigorate freshman social life on their own, especially for the less extroverted freshmen. We applaud the FDO’s plans to collaborate with the First-Year Social Committeee (FYSC) to plan more class-wide events. In years past, the FYSC has thrown a mean freshman formal but has done little else in the way of social programming. It has increased its repertoire this year, including the successful Halloween Catwalk, and is currently planning several class-wide parties. But the structure of the FYSC still leaves room for improvement. We envision that the FYSC be free...
...foremost venue for political debate at Harvard,” yet its most regular event is a weekly moderated chat with pizza—no doubt enjoyable, but somewhat missing the point. HPU Chair C.R. Sincock ’07 explained that he fears that more-formal debate, à la the Yale Political Union, would intimidate students and act as a “turn-off.” However, given that it attracts a weekly turnout of about 30 of the same students—mostly freshmen—the HPU’s current format needs...