Word: membership
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...exclusion. As penniless and homeless as the sororities and women’s final clubs are reported to be, they thrive on their exclusivity in selecting female members. Male final clubs thrive on the exclusivity of both sexes: women based on their appearance, and men based on their non-membership in the clubs. Non-Harvardians believe that Harvard is an institution of elitism and exclusivity, and the Crimson editorial did little to prove them wrong...
...sort we expected. Hotspot’s associate led us to a nondescript glass door marked with the RISE logo. Once on the other side, a remarkably congenial bouncer examined our guide’s card and allowed us to enter. You see, RISE is a “membership-only” club, whose packages range from $50 to $750 a year; depending on the price level. Members can bring between one and four guests. However, the lower membership levels require a cover of $10/person. Candidates must be “sponsored” by existing members. Given...
With no shortage of ad-hoc advocacy on the Harvard campus, concerned students have organized a new group to give students real-world experience in defending human rights. The Harvard College Student Advocates for Human Rights group is not yet recognized by the university but already boasts a membership of fifty undergraduates who wanted to respond to frustrations over an absence of “meaningful” human rights work at Harvard, according to co-founders Tamar Ayrikyan ’07 and Caitlan L. McLoon ’07. Modeled after the Harvard Law School (HLS) Student Advocates...
...wasn’t neat, [and] didn’t look like a real magazine. It was in its nascent stages of development,” said Michael P. Anderson ’08, the social chair of BMF. The publication also did not circulate on campus beyond the membership of BMF. “Most of black history has been an oral history. We want to document our history in a literate form for everyone to read and enjoy,” Anderson said, reflecting on his aspirations for Remix magazine. The main financial force behind the magazine?...
...dumb” is that the network itself—the routers, switches, and cables that cross the world—should be agnostic to the sort of data it is carrying. All information, whether a piece of an Internet telephone call, a Viagra ad, or the membership of “Students For California Relocation of Harvard University,” gets the same right of passage.The name for this paradigm is “end-to-end”—the idea, in some sense, that the intelligence of a network ought to be pushed...