Writer
George T. Hill
Latest Content
Off-Campus Undergraduates Find Community Through Dudley House
Nobody actually lives in Dudley House, but about 70 undergraduates have some right to call it home. About 33 students
Flashback to 1971-'72
June 29, 1971 Radcliffe approves a deal that more closely links it with Harvard. The two will share fundraising and
A Takeover for African Liberation
When two dozen student protesters seized Massachusetts Hall at dawn on April 20, 1972 and began a 153-hour seige, it
Despite 26th Amendment, Students Face Ballot-Box Barriers
The passage of the 26th Amendment to the Constitution in 1971 gave 18-year-olds the right to vote everywhere in America
Lamont Changes Loaning Policies
Starting next week, Lamont Library will lend books for four weeks at a time and will accept e-mail renewals, librarians
Radcliffe Awards Highest Honor Fay, Levi Prizes
The highest honor a Radcliffe woman can receive went to a biochemistry concentrator with a 14.5 cumulative GPA and a
Theses Earn Hoopes Prizes For 49 Seniors
War-torn Niger, electron-positron colliders and astral planes helped some of Harvard's most talented thesis writers win Thomas Temple Hoopes Prizes
Hilles Library Elevator Mishap Traps Student
An unidentified male student spent roughly two hours trapped in an elevator at Hilles Library on Saturday evening, according to
Dukakis Tells Pre-Frosh to Enter politics
With the Cold War over, now is the time for young people to enter politics, 1988 Democratic Presidential Nominee Michael
'Frosh Flood Yard
Sporting red folders, playing the name game at socials and researching party life, roughly 940 pre-frosh will sample Harvard's fruits