Word: staying
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...January is high, and limiting available housing could save the College costs through heating, dining, electricity, and water bills. The College has not yet specified whether entire Houses will be closed, forcing students to move into “open” houses, or whether all students allowed to stay on campus would be permitted to live in their own rooms. The administration has stated that Annenberg would be the only dining hall to be open during the month. Making sacrifices to cut costs is, of course, a necessary measure for a January Experience that will presumably debut...
...College could minimize costs during January without resorting to drastic measures. To gauge how many students intend to stay on campus for their January Experience, the administration could conduct a survey early in the year and then decide how many dining halls, libraries, and other facilities to keep open during the interlude. Cutting back on the usage of such facilities would hopefully generate enough savings to allow every student wishing to remain at Harvard to live in his or her room...
...limiting January housing. In an interview with The Crimson, Dean of the College Evelynn M. Hammonds expressed concerns with having idle students on campus when no programming would be available for them. Unfortunately, this attitude reflects a lack of trust in the student body to find productive activities and stay safe, even when class work is not occupying student schedules...
...that there is such a scarcity of concrete information that it is difficult even to understand the administration’s January plans. Many questions remain surrounding the current proposal. For example, will entire Houses be closed? And who specifically will be recognized as having a demonstrated need to stay? Will student groups receive housing if they plan to work on projects during January? We worry that many questions do not have concrete answers, which is troubling given the diminishing time left to make decisions...
...roughly 485 million (including sheep and goats) contributes more to global warming than the vehicles the animals obstruct. With new research suggesting that methane emission by Indian livestock is higher than previously estimated, scientists are furiously working at designing diets to help bovines and other ruminants eat better, stay more energetic and secrete smaller amounts of the offensive gas. (See pictures of India's largest ruminant: the Asian elephant...