Adams
Housing Day Videos Get Personal
The housing day videos released thus far have been fairly tame in the sense that they haven't singled out their rival Houses for ridicule. Currier and Pforzheimer, however, are stepping up their campaigns with new videos that not only claim they are the best, but that other Houses are the worst.
Flyby Investigates HUHDS' 'Snail Surprise'
It's dinner time, and you're looking for a healthy meal. You decide to hit up the salad bar and prepare a bowl of edamame. You sit down to eat and notice one of the beans is brown, not green. Upon closer inspection, you realize that what you first thought was a bean is, in fact, a snail.
Snail in Adams House Dining Hall
Who knew that HUHDS put escargot on the menu? Oh right, they didn't.
Friends Honor Ilya Chalik
Friends and family filled the pews of Memorial Church yesterday night during a service to honor the memory of Adams House resident Ilya Chalik ’11.
College Mourns Death of Student
Ilya Chalik ’11—an avid traveler and a Tai Chi expert—died yesterday in his Adams dorm room, according to Adams House administrators.
'We've All Been There, Girl'
It’s Sunday brunch. You press your golden brown verritaffle, grab some coffee, and plop down next to your blockmates. The inevitable topic at hand, of course, is on the romantic successes and failures of the previous night.
Adams House Resident Ilya Chalik '11 Dies
Ilya Chalik ’11, a History and Science concentrator in Adams House, died today, Dean of Harvard College Evelynn M. Hammonds wrote in an e-mail to the College community.
These Happy Golden Adams Years
Last year, during the renovation of the room where Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Class of 1904, lived in Adams House, a small red pamphlet from 1944 called "The Gold Coaster" resurfaced.
Caution! Snow!
Bow Street in front of Adam’s Randolph Hall is taped off due to the danger of falling ice. Students walk around this hazard risking their shoes to the slush-filled streets.
A Slammin' End of Exams
In the midst of final exams and culminating projects last week, George Zisiadis ’11 saw a problem—finishing an exam or a final paper was surprisingly anticlimactic.