In what must seem like a revolutionary concept to the Harvard community, we agree with Dean Lewis.
"Freshman" is an accepted term for those who are in their first year at a school. "First-year" is an ugly hyphenated creation that binds speakers or writers into confusing structures. For instance, would a "first-year Undergraduate Council president" be a freshman or just someone who is in his or her first year of the presidency?
And many Harvard females get along fine with commonly-used terms that happen to end with the suffix "-man." For instance, no Harvard or Radcliffe women's athletic team uses gender-neutral terms, i.e., nobody says "person of defense" instead of "defenseman." The word "freshman" no longer has any sexist connotations.
Dean Lewis has seen the problems with the council's proposal and has made a wise choice. What's in a name?
Read more in Opinion
Harvard Treats Tenants UnfairlyRecommended Articles
-
DARTBOARDLucky Leverettites are stepping out on the town next week. On May 6, lucky spring formalgoers will enter the magical
-
For the MomentS trolling through downtown New York is a perilous occupation. At the moment you locate yourself, a crowd of pedestrians
-
Afro-American StudiesTo the Editor of The Crimson: Dean Rosovsky continues to educate the African American community of its deteriorating status at
-
COMPARATIVE MYTHOLOGY.MAX MULLER calls mythology An "Infantine Disease," Just as the croup or hooping-cough Our own dear squallers seize. He thinks
-
Melville; or, the Ambiguous SELECTED POEMS OF HERMAN MELVILLERandom Houses, 458 pp. $8.95. THERE ARE MANY kinds of hyphenated poets-poet-novelists, poet-painters, poet-playwrights, poet-academics, poet-priests. Random House has decided
-
SIFTING THE SANDS OF TIMEReading the lives of great men oft reminds us that it is frequently the historian who makes history, who sets