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Emily D. Donahue ’09 and Greg J. Mancuso prove that it’s not always opposites that attract. Mancuso, 24, and Donahue, 22—who got engaged last month after almost a year of dating—are both vegetarians who enjoy exercising, listen to similar music, and say they rarely argue. The couple met through a study held at William James Hall and went on their first date last May. Over dinner at an Indian restaurant, the pair bonded over their shared taste in music. Mancuso, who had spent the past few years playing...
...residence. Breaking with the architectural tradition of the initial seven Houses, Quincy’s concrete, high-rise exterior and novelty imbued its initial inhabitants with the freedom to build an interior House character from the ground up. As one of Quincy’s original 150 sophomores, Robert J. Gordon ’62 recalls the sense of pomp and privilege surrounding the newly-constructed eighth House. “In Quincy, we were proud of our modern, posh surroundings and thought that we were destined to become the conceited house in 1959,” said Gordon...
...site.And by 1964, the MTA announced that it was willing to sell the yards. In 1966 Harvard finally bought the land and made plans to relocate its Graduate School of Public Administration—renamed for President Kennedy—on the site.—Staff writer Sarah J. Howland can be reached at showland@fas.harvard.edu...
Although Jennifer M. DeCoste-Lopez ’09 said that she and her husband Cesar J. Lopez ’09 were looking forward to being married, they were not looking forward to the wedding ceremony. “I’m not the kind of person who grew up saying ‘This is what my wedding is going to be like.’ I was kind of dreading it,” DeCoste-Lopez said one afternoon in the Quincy Grille. “But it turned out to be so much...
When Daniel J. Rinehart ’09 proposed to his fiancé Leslie E. Nightingale ’09 last May, his plan did not unfold exactly the way he intended. On their first date their freshman year, Rinehart, a religion concentrator from Northfield, Minn., took Nightingale, a history and literature concentrator from St. Louis, Mo., to the Bunker Hill Monument. So when he decided to ask Nightingale to marry him, that monument seemed like the logical choice for location. This time around, Rinehart decided to take the bus instead of the subway in order to keep the proposal...