Writer
Elizabeth H. Wiltshire
Latest Content
Marching to a Fast Drummer
For someone with a clear sense of direction. Guy Molyneux '81-4 has championed a series of fairly disparate campus movements.
No Improvement
I T IS NOT OFTEN that Harvard undergraduates do anything as a group, but we hope this week they will
The Calendar Reform Waltz
The idea of pre-Christmas exams would probably sound pretty good to most undergraduates in Lamont doing pre-Christmas work in the
Despite Depression, War, Harvard '30 Beat the Odds
Certainly the class of 1930 shows as many successes as any other to come out of Harvard: numerous lawyers and
State Rejects MATEP Plan, Blocking Diesel Installations
State officials last week rejected a plan to install diesel engines at the Medical Area Total Energy Plant (MATEP), saying
Abdicating Responsibility
P ORNOGRAPHY is more than "bad speech," as Alan M. Dershowitz, professor of Law and Stork's and Hagen's attorney, said
CUE Student Plan Requests Fewer Reading Period Classes
Student members of the Committee on Undergraduate Education (CUE) yesterday proposed a moratorium on holding hourlies and presenting new material
MATEP Heats Up
Mission Hill residents have spent the last month showering state offices with petitions and documents asking for further public discussion
CHUL Committee Will Vote Today On Lottery Mistake
The Committee on Houses and Undergraduate Life (CHUL) yesterday sent to subcommittee the problem of inadequate male-female ratios among freshmen
Draper Lab Retains MIT Connection
This is the second in a two-part series. Although the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) formally disassociated itself from Draper
Now You See It, Now You Don't
The axe fell on the Radcliffe Forum this week when the Board of Trustees voted to cut the entire staff
Foreign Study
He added that the staff could continue the committee's programs under the auspices of another agency, such as the Center
Endurance Marks Draper Lab Protests
This is the first in a two-part series. About a dozen people gathered inside the entrance to Draper Laboratory in
MATEP
When President Carter signed the windfall profits tax bill into law this week, Harvard's recent hopes for federal government help
Bacchanalia at 33 Dunster Street
About 200 students yesterday afternoon packed a section of 33 Dunster Street for a happy hour that the Student Assembly