Word: networker
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Some students joke that the term "final club" refers to the notion that it is the final club you will ever have to join in your life. Indeed, a final club provides a vast social web, allegiance to which affords its members a network of connections that not only extends far, but continues long after one's time at Harvard. With final clubs existing as selective, male organizations, it is unsurprising to me that women at Harvard would endeavor to create a similarly beneficial network for female students and alumni...
...article (News, May 10) reviewing the emergence of the Seneca--a new all-female undergraduate social organization--explores an alternative to filling the gap of a female network. Promising to provide and develop such a support for Harvard females, the Seneca reportedly exists to aid the entire female population, and it is pointed out that the name "signifies women's advancement." The Seneca seems to be a noble idea with positive intentions. However, the resolutions from the Seneca Falls Convention called for equal participation of, and an enlarged sphere of opportunities for women, but did not aim to achieve this...
This is the third major breach to the University's network this year. In February an intruder broke into the FAS system through terminals in Sever Hall. A similar incident occurred in October in Eliot House...
Osterberg said the most recent incident involved the installation of a "packet sniffer" on the local network to monitor the traffic, which includes login names and passwords...
...most prominent feature of this network at Harvard was the final clubs, where members would get together for a drink or a meal and chat amiably...