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Members of the Undergraduate Council’s Student Affairs Committee are now considering how strongly the council should push the University to reverse this apparent misuse of campus space and build a small student center at 90 Mount Auburn. But we urge the members of the council to carefully consider the feasibility of such a proposal before devoting significant time or energy...
...campus without a student center—primarily for lack of land to build one—the vacant lot at 90 Mount Auburn Street screams “student space.” The hole in the ground across the street from Felipe’s Mexican Taqueria and sandwiched between final clubs is no ordinary location: It is the only vacant land in the immediate vicinity of both Harvard Yard and the River Houses. But instead of new student space, Harvard Real Estate Services is building an office complex on the site for the administration of the Harvard...
...Curricular Review. We can not understate the importance of either issue—one affects the everyday life of current students, and one will shape the college experience of future Harvardians. If initial conversations with Harvard administrators reveal a willingness to discuss a change in the future of 90 Mount Auburn, then the council should proceed cautiously. But if the council finds its proposal unlikely to succeed, as we think it will, it should drop the issue and devote itself fully to other pressing matters...
...expected to be no more welcoming of an occupation than the Iraqis are. Tehran will be encouraged by the extent to which Iraq has stretched U.S. combat capability. Particularly to the extent that it remains tied down in Iraq, it's hard to imagine Washington finding the resources to mount a full-blown invasion and occupation of Iran, and fewer allies than it has in Iraq...
...PLUMES OF STEAM SHOT OUT OF ITS horseshoe-shaped crater last week, Mount St. Helens seemed on the verge of a spectacular eruption. And this time the whole world was watching--hundreds through binoculars at safe vantage points, millions more through hourly reports on cable TV. But no one was watching more closely than the scientists monitoring the instruments scattered across the mountain's ash-coated flanks and half-mile-wide lava dome. This early warning network was installed after the 1980 eruption that blew off the top 1,300 ft. of the mountain, destroying tens of thousands of acres...