Word: lesbians
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Among the 30 groups who currently hold basement space, the Harvard Foundation for Intercultural and Race Relations, the First-Year Outdoor Program, several peer counseling groups, and the Harvard Bisexual, Gay, Lesbian, Transgender, and Supporters Alliance (BGLTSA) will keep their current basement offices, according to Frano Violich, an architect from the firm that will conduct the renovations of both the Yard basements and the Hilles building...
...another piece aimed at raising awareness for Harvard’s trans-gender population, Julia Lunetta hams, “My mother never thought of the possibility that her son would become a lesbian.” This story, “Coming Out is Hard,” is winningly amusing in its honesty and humor. Similarly, Aidan S. Madigan-Curtis ’07’s interpretation of “The Gun I Carry is Unlicensed” examines the difficulties that transgender travelers have when deciding which box to check—male or female?...
...assortment of Peer Counseling groups related to sexual issues: Room 13 (“I’m really lonely”), Response (“My boyfriend hits me”), and Contact (“If my parents find out that I’m a lesbian, they’ll disown me”). The messages on these doors were desperate cries for help and, still, somebody was instructed to scrub at them until they were no longer visible. The basic problem with Harvard’s student support network is that there are too many groups...
...Yard makes a lot of sense. Prime real estate in the middle of Harvard Yard should either serve a cross-section of the campus population or that meet specific needs of specific groups. Student counselling services, a central resource for the College’s gay and lesbian students, a women’s center, and prayer space all fit this criterion. So does storage for the HRO’s unwieldy string instruments, and enlarged office space for the Harvard Foundation, which administers some 55 ethnic and cultural organizations on this campus. There isn’t really...
...impossible. As a result, the construction of floor-to-ceiling walls for student offices is unfeasible. The solution settled upon by University Hall is partial walls between offices that create private enclosures without jeopardizing the liveability of the space. The lack of solid walls, groups like the Bisexual, Gay, Lesbian, Transgendered and Supporters Alliance (BGLTSA) and The Harvard Salient have complained, could jeopardize the privacy so central to their operations...