Word: ohiri
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...really. This simple point was driven home to me when many houses, including my own Quincy, scheduled events at the same time as the season-opening football game.But I was wholly unprepared for this.When it was announced last week that all alcohol would be banned at student tailgates on Ohiri Field for “The Game,” Harvard’s single greatest sporting event, I was stunned. It’s traditionally Harvard’s lone day in the athletic sun, with Sportscenter coverage, a national broadcast, and enough of a crowd to give last...
Just last week, the College announced that no student will be allowed to bring alcohol onto Ohiri Field this year, following the College’s negotiations with the Boston Police Department (BPD). The announcement created some concern among students...
...plan which is under consideration, according to Jeremy Gibson, associate director of athletics. Varsity athletic facilities could also be shared to a larger extent without impinging on varsity teams’ needs. Gibson pointed out that club and varsity teams already share O’Donnell and Ohiri Fields and the MAC. Some facilities, like the Gordon Track and Field Center, also have unused space where cardio machines from the MAC should be placed.Certainly, the MAC’s closure will be inconvenient this spring. But that is not reason to indefinitely delay renovations. We appreciate and applaud FAS?...
...Harvard-Yale game, albeit with new, improved College rules for underage drinking, the result of College negotiations with the Boston Police Department (BPD). The College has declared that, this year, students and student groups will no longer be allowed to bring any alcohol to the official tailgate at Ohiri Field; the only source of merriment will be spiked hot chocolate and beer served to students 21 and older with ID at three College-sanctioned stalls. If you’re visibly drunk, don’t even bother trying to enter: You’re not welcome...
...tailgate location.) If anything, Harvard students are known for their inexhaustible ingenuity, and we ought to be able to knock heads together to come up with something a little more palatable and a whole lot safer. If the BPD thought they saw a lot of students get carted off Ohiri Field in ambulances in 2004, they’ll be shocked this year when they see the lineup waiting to get in and out of Johnston Gate. And drunk or not-so-drunk, we’ll all be able to enjoy watching the Crimson beat up on the Bulldogs...