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...departments or extending the Board of Freshman Advisers into the sophomore year, according to members.“We went into it with an open mind about what would be the best way,” said Daniel G. Donoghue, the Marquand professor of English and chair of the group??s Concentration subcommittee.But he said the committee had to work quickly to put a new advising system in place for the coming year.“We don’t have a lot of time. We’ve got to act,” he said...
Brian Viglione, percussionist for The Dresden Dolls, made it a point to prove in a recent workshop that he is anything but a “Coin-Operated Boy,” the title of one of the group??s biggest hits. At the event, held Monday night in Hilles Library, Viglione emphasized the importance of individuality and focusing on the present—both in art and in life. The workshop was sponsored by the Office of the Arts at Harvard (OFA) and the Harvard College Alliance for Rock and Roll (HCARAR), and it drew a crowd...
...While Barilaro and Saldarriaga initially employed cardboard for economic and symbolic reasons, some attendees saw the project as an opportunity for environmental action as well. Resource Efficiency Program Captain Hayley J. Fink ’08 compared Barilaro and Saldarriaga’s efforts to her own group??s goals. “We’ve applied for an ArtsFirst grant to remake things using trash and recyclables, so I thought this would be a great opportunity to see how a professional does it,” Fink said...
...motive is “not to recruit people to become vegetarian,” says member Amary K. Wiggin ’09. It is to “get Harvard to adapt a more humanitarian approach to food,” she says. For now, the group??s main activities include a potluck dinner every Monday at Karma Yoga at 7:30 p.m. But the off-campus dinner location isn’t a protest—the Harvard Vegetarian Society maintains that HUDS is a strong ally to anyone who lives a meatless life. Even...
Much of what students see and hear about sustainability is pushed by REP. The group??s representatives, one from each upperclass house and three from the freshman Yard, initiate projects aimed at widespread reduction in energy consumption. REP leaders are paid around $10 an hour for their efforts. The program hopes REP leaders can convince students to reduce their wasteful tendencies and save the University money that is squandered when rooms are too hot or dishware is stolen...