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Club Members Frustrated by City Regulations

Cambridge License Commission Institutes New Rules to Cut Down on Late-Night Disturbances

The stricter regulations imposed by the city last Wednesday on a Law School social club have left its members frustrated and unsure of their next move.

But neighbors of the Lincoln's Inn Society are pleased, saying they hope the new rules instituted by the Cambridge License Commission will cut down on late-night noise.

Residents who live near the clubhouse told the commission last Tuesday that noisy guest traffic at the society frequently wakes them up as late as 4:30 a.m.

In response, the commission banned alcohol on the premises for one year, limited social events to 25 people and restricted access to residents only after 1 a.m. on weekdays and 1:30 a.m. on weekends.

Failure to comply will jeopardize the society's lodging license that allows seven club officers to live at the house, located at 44 Follen St, west of the Law School.

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Representatives of the club said they thought the issue has been exaggerated.

"We do feel like we were ambushed," said John F. Paschke, vice chair of the society and a third-year law student. "The character of this place is not as it was portrayed in the hearing."

The society's attorney agreed.

"They've been part of that community for 50 years, and I think they've been handled pretty severely and unfairly by the License Commission," said David A. Wylie, the society's lawyer.

Paschke said the allegations against the society before the commission lacked objectivity. "We'd really like to see an independent investigation," he said.

Wylie and Paschke both said that the club has changed a great deal from what it was like a few years ago.

According to Paschke, the fact that only three neighbors publicly complained indicates that the society is not a menace to the neighborhood.

But Henry J. Lelaurain, one of the three residents that appeared before the commission to complain last Tuesday, said more than three residents are upset, but they are unwilling to come forward publicly.

"If one person is disturbed on a regular basis, that is cause for action," he said.

Neighbors of the society said they are optimistic that the measures will reduce early-morning disturbances for the rest of the year, but they question the permanence of the city's action.

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