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...this Harvard Yearbook description may seem to describe Harvard College Libraries’ (HCL) decision to keep Lamont open 24 hours a day on weekdays. But this year-in-review blurb was actually written 50 years ago, celebrating a successful student campaign in 1955-6 to extend the undergraduate library??s weekday closing time from 10 p.m. to the wee hour of midnight throughout the school year...
...cookie-cutter shape of the publication’s officer core. But for the majority of Harvardians without access to these institutions, a new forum has provided an unexpected space to unleash their suppressed desires: Lamont Library. With the advent of the library??s 24-hour schedule, Lamont has become—especially during the doldrums of reading and exam periods—a place of revelry more than a place of study. The signs were apparent from the beginning. As the clock struck midnight on October 18, 1,500 undergraduates congregated in euphoric glee to celebrate Lamont?...
...here’s the deal,” read a post on Craigslist.org yesterday at 11:54 a.m., “of the three obligatory Harvard acts—Primal Scream, pissing on the John Harvard, and sex in Widener Library??I have so far completed two. I think it would really be novel to manage all three while still in my first year here...
...eliminated next year in favor of a free online compilation of readings. According to Mankiw, the Ec 10 staff began considering change after members of the Undergraduate Council told The Crimson that all the articles in the current Ec 10 sourcebook were available for free through the Harvard College Library??s online system. In the interview, Mankiw also noted that Ec 10 has led him to his first foray into blogging. Mankiw said he started his own blog, at gregmankiw.blogspot.com, in order to communicate with students in and outside of Ec 10. Now, he says...
...February, the staff of the Core Office, library liaisons, and graduate students in each department will now work with professors to make better use of electronic resources. In the past, students have paid twice for the copyright to some course materials, once in their termbills to pay for the library??s access to electronic resources, and once when they purchase a course pack, which can carry a hefty price tag. Next semester, materials in the Ec 10 sourcebook will be linked to online, where they are available to students at no additional charge. The sourcebook, which was singled...