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Pi Eta

"A lot of what they say is tongue-in-cheek," said a woman who had been to parties but asked not to be identified. "Nobody's forced to do anything they don't want to do and both men and women are contact with what's going on. There is stuff written on the walls and ceilings so you know what's going on."

Action

Committee on College Life members said they would bring up the recent incidents at their meeting this Thursday and consider how it affected the club's probation states.

The probation was not "of the kind where you said one more step and you'll be closed because at the same time the committee raised the question of jurisdiction," Epps said.

Since the fall's incident, the committee has been conducting a review of the College's ties to the final clubs and other private groups.

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"They were asked to behave more responsibly, and I don't think the printing of this newsletter and the implications about what is going on in there is behaving responsbily," said committee member Erica S. Eisenberg '86. "The Pi Eta asked to be reopened became it did the community a service and provided an important social function, and the letter calls all of that into doubt," she added.

Committee member Jake Stevens '86 said he was not sure if closing it down was the appropriate action, but added, "I think the administration should express its displeasure more strongly than it has."

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