Word: punished
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Harvard by ambassadors, although the Woodbridge Society’s board members said they did not know how Harvard came to possess the two flags in question. The office traditionally lends flags to Woodbridge this event. “There’s no incentive for us to punish the people who took them,” Woodbridge Society President Rebecca R. Gong ’08 said. “We don’t care about the punishment or who took them or for what reason. We would just like them back.” Better known...
...undergraduate officer of the organization was assigned the task of monitoring drinking, but instead participated in drinking, matching each shot taken by a partygoer.” In both of these cases, reckless drinking was either forced or encouraged, and in such cases the College should not hesitate to punish the negligent parties...
...these extreme and rare cases by proposing to pin the blame for any party thrown on behalf of a student group or on student group property on officers. In many cases, student organizations throw parties or hold casual gatherings at which officers are not present or in charge. To punish officers in these cases makes no sense—it seems like the College is turning to group officers simply because it needs someone to punish. Instead of picking convenient targets, the College should beef up hazing rules, as these more egregious and uncommon violations are the true problem...
...their parents’ attorneys, a small cohort of administrators has, for the past semester, mulled changes to Harvard’s alcohol and drug policy. The Committee on Social Clubs has met secretly, charged with figuring out how to keep kids from nearly killing themselves, and how to punish them when they...
Even if the College were to somehow induce social clubs to officially document the names of their officers, while threatening to punish those same officers for their guests’ drinking, the brusqueness with which the new rules are to be implemented leaves little doubt that the administration’s good intentions will go unfulfilled. Not only were fraternity, sorority, and final club leaders not part of the discussions that produced the report, the College also didn’t include its favorite UC representatives until the very end of the drafting process...