Word: yardã
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...department’s five tracks, the recruitment of professors from outside Harvard for tenured posts, the addition of contemporary social science readings to the department’s sophomore tutorial, and the relocation of the department’s Hilles Library headquarters to a site closer to the Yard??have not come to fruition...
...University was then making do with seven Houses for its total undergraduate enrollment, which hovered around 4430 in the mid-fifties. For the first time since the founding of the House system in 1928, the College saw the return of seniors to the Yard and freshmen to outside the Yard??s gates, as overflow housing sent upperclassmen to Wigglesworth and first-years to newly-purchased apartments on Prescott St. in the fall of 1956. The space crunch that afflicted the University also forced the Admissions Office to cut the Class of 1960, admitted in the spring...
...number of student activists, decided to serve the College the best by reducing its numbers. With a 36 to 10 tally, the “2x2” bill—so-called because a total of two representatives, split between two committees, will represent each House and yard??narrowly achieved the three-fourths vote that is necessary to change the UC’s constitution. The plan disbands the UC’s Campus Life Committee (CLC), hence reducing the membership of the UC from 51 to 35 persons. Eliminating CLC became necessary after the creation last...
...Loker Commons and possibly a 24-hour café in Lamont Library nearby. While some may argue that freshmen should have the same number of kitchens and common rooms as their upper-class brethren, marginalizing large student groups in the face of an already colossal increase in the Yard??s social space seems counterproductive. Move-in day will be especially exciting this fall as student groups begin to inhabit their new digs in Hilles. For the groups that were slighted, we hope that the subcommittee reevaluates its office-assignment procedure so that next spring the Hilles space will...
...onslaught begins tomorrow, when the Harvard Early Music Society and Currier House will both have afternoon recitals. In particular, the program for the Performance Fair on Saturday, May 6—a three-hour sprawl beginning at 1 p.m. and featuring over a hundred events in and around Harvard Yard??is heavy on classical performances. There are 37 listed classical music performances and dozens of venues; those in attendance will have five or six options every half-hour. For those who miss certain performances, some will be repeated on Sunday, May 7. It is also possible for audiences...