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Azusa M. Lippit

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Articles

  • Dec 4, 2024 | thecrimson.com | Azusa M. Lippit

    The Class of 2028 entered Harvard Yard at the height of pro-Palestine activism on college campuses, but freshmen were split in their views of activists’ efforts, according to The Crimson’s annual freshman survey. Around 38 percent of freshmen said they viewed pro-Palestine campus activism favorably, 24 percent said they viewed it unfavorably, and 19 percent said they had no opinion. Another 19 percent said they did not have enough information to answer.

  • Nov 26, 2024 | thecrimson.com | Azusa M. Lippit |Grace Yoon

    The Royale nightclub is located in Boston. A final club-hosted Harvard-Yale tailgate at Royale became a fiasco as scores of students were left stranded in the rain. By Frank S. ZhouBy Azusa M. Lippit and Grace E. Yoon, Crimson Staff WritersThe company in charge of ticketing for a mismanaged Harvard-Yale pregame at a Boston nightclub said it would not reimburse most students for their tickets, as the promoter and the venue blamed each other for the botched event.

  • Nov 23, 2024 | thecrimson.com | Azusa M. Lippit |Cam N. Srivastava

    Harvard students were disappointed by the final score during The Game on Saturday. Some students were also disappoined the pregames on Friday night. By Nicholas T. JacobssonBy Azusa M. Lippit and Cam N. Srivastava, Crimson Staff WritersMore than 100 Harvard and Yale students were stranded in the rain for two hours Friday night as they waited outside the Royale nightclub in an attempt to gain entry to a Harvard-Yale pregame party hosted by the A.D. and Fly final clubs.

  • Nov 7, 2024 | thecrimson.com | Azusa M. Lippit

    At 7 a.m. on Wednesday, Sophia R. Mammucari ’28 woke up to a phone call from her mom — and the news that Donald Trump had been officially reelected. “I still had some hope that she was going to win by a small amount. And then I woke up this morning, and that’s not what happened,” Mammucari said.

  • Sep 29, 2024 | thecrimson.com | Azusa M. Lippit

    In a neuroscience lecture at the end of her sophomore fall semester at Harvard, Soleil E. Golden ’24 took out her phone to film a video clip. “What are you recording for?” a student sitting next to her asked. “Oh, I’m vlogging for my TikTok,” Golden replied, after which the student pulled up her profile (which now has more than 500,000 followers). She promptly suggested the two meet for coffee. The student turned out to be the president of the Exister Society — or the “X”, a women’s final club.

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