Other Regulations

1. Jumping off a bridge into the Charles River is prohibited. Any student who does so is subject to immediate dismissal by the Administrative Board.

2. Any student in possession of stolen goods is subject to disciplinary action.

3. Students may not bring into the University or use or transport any radioactive materials within its property without authorization of the University’s Department of Environmental Health and Safety.

4. Use of the names and insignia of Harvard Summer School and Harvard University or any of its units by any student is permitted only as detailed in the University Policy on the Use of the Harvard Names and Insignia. In particular, reference to “Harvard,” “Harvard Summer School,” or “Harvard University,” or suggestions of affiliation with the Summer School or University in connection with any organization, publication, activity, or third party is allowable only with advance permission of the Dean of Harvard Summer School.

5. A student who commits an offense against law and order during a public disturbance or demonstration or who disregards the instructions of a University officer at such a time is subject to disciplinary action and may be required to withdraw.

6. Students are requested not to engage, on Harvard property, in any games that might annoy others, cause damage, or injure participants or a passerby.

7. No student shall be connected with any advertising medium (including the press, the Internet, or other public forum) or publication that makes use of the name of Harvard or Radcliffe or implies without permission of the University, through its title or otherwise, a connection with the University.

8. No firm, agency, organization, or individual shall solicit in a University residence at any time, for any purpose.

9. Distribution of printed matter in Harvard buildings must be approved by the Office of the Dean of Harvard Summer School.

10. Please see summer.harvard.edu for information regarding the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, and the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997.