News
News Flash: Memory Shop and Anime Zakka to Open in Harvard Square
News
Harvard Researchers Develop AI-Driven Framework To Study Social Interactions, A Step Forward for Autism Research
News
Harvard Innovation Labs Announces 25 President’s Innovation Challenge Finalists
News
Graduate Student Council To Vote on Meeting Attendance Policy
News
Pop Hits and Politics: At Yardfest, Students Dance to Bedingfield and a Student Band Condemns Trump
Ethiopia-born and Tanzania-schooled Yoseph S. Ayele ’11 woke up to his first New England snowfall yesterday morning.
“I looked out my window and saw cars covered in snow and was like ‘Wow! This happens in real life!’” Ayele said. “It’s just like a movie.”
As the snow fell softly on the streets of Cambridge, covering the Yard in a layer of white, freshmen and upperclassmen alike bundled up in scarves, gloves, and puffy jackets.
“It’s not just a legend—white stuff really does fall from the sky,” said Californian Christina M. Velez ’11.
Eeke L. de Milliano ’11, a Netherlands native and veteran of blizzards, welcomed the first flakes with a snowball fight early yesterday morning.
“We were screaming and running around,” she said, “and some guy opened his window and yelled ‘Shut up! People are trying to sleep in here.’”
Peter J. Huybers, an assistant professor of Earth and Planetary Sciences and self-described fan of the snow, said it is difficult to predict what kind of weather is in store for this winter.
To help out with the cold, the Harvard College Financial Aid Office and the Freshman Dean’s Office awards money to low-income freshmen for coats and other winter accessories through the “coat fund.”
“We know that for students it makes a difference,” said Sally C. Donahue, director of financial aid. “For many students, it’s unexpected and it comes at a time...in your freshman year when you’re probably having midterms, when the winter’s coming on and when it’s getting cold.”
This year, $200 each were awarded to about 300 freshman through the fund, said Donahue.
Student representatives from the north had different reactions to the first flurries.
Co-Prime Minister of the Canadian Club Xiaodi Wu ’09 said his fellow countrymen were unimpressed.
“I’ve seen snow, and this isn’t snow. This is God’s dandruff,” he said.
Kenny W. McKinley ’08, co-president of the Alaska Klub, said he was excited.
“The refreshing drafts of winter have returned to Boston carrying the spirit of Alaska,” McKinley said.
For Elizabeth N. Mrema ’11, a resident of Thayer who came to chilly Boston from Tanzania, the drafts were less than refreshing.
“I was disappointed,” she said, “because it wasn’t fluffy. It was wet and cold.”
Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.
Over 300+ courses at prestigious colleges and universities in the US and UK are at your disposal.
Where you should have gotten your protein since 1998.
Serve as a proctor for Harvard Summer School (HSS) students, either in the Secondary School Program (SSP), General Program (GP), or Pre-College Program.
With an increasingly competitive Law School admissions process, it's important to understand what makes an applicant stand out.
Welcome to your one-stop gifting destination for men and women—it's like your neighborhood holiday shop, but way cooler.
HUSL seeks to create and empower a community of students who are seeking pathways into the Sports Business Industry.