News
Community Safety Department Director To Resign Amid Tension With Cambridge Police Department
News
From Lab to Startup: Harvard’s Office of Technology Development Paves the Way for Research Commercialization
News
People’s Forum on Graduation Readiness Held After Vote to Eliminate MCAS
News
FAS Closes Barker Center Cafe, Citing Financial Strain
News
8 Takeaways From Harvard’s Task Force Reports
Standing on Morningalde Heights (100 blocks south of Baker Field), and always in danger of falling into the nation's biggest city, Columbia College for 200 years has maintained a precarious but successful existence.
Nearly 60 percent of the student body commutes and must therefore forego extra-curricular activities in favor of strap-hanging and traffic jamming.
The remaining 40 percent of the College comes under the influence of the New York skyscraper, since three such monsters on the campus house 500 undergraduates each.
The massiveness of these dormitories creates a special problem for the courting Lion. If Barnard College for Women is just across the street, Columbia parietal rules make it seem a very wide street. For Columbia's answer to the Herculean proctoring problem is simply to place the dorms strictly off limits to members of the opposite sex.
One answer to this uncooperative policy is the fraternity, which flourishes in spite of high rents and the commuter problem.
Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.