Word: accepter
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...service, which was advertised in an e-mail sent to various House lists, pairs interested buyers and sellers of UC votes. In order to participate, students who wish to buy or sell send e-mails to a specific gmail account stating the lowest price they are willing to accept if they are a seller and the highest price they are willing to pay if they are a buyer, according to the personal website of Aleksei Boiko ’06, who created the service. After bidding closes at 11:59 p.m. today, the service will match compatible buyers and sellers...
...compelling law schools to include military recruiters in career fairs and other activities, the Solomon Amendment forces the schools to transmit the opposite message, FAIR says.Technically, the Solomon Amendment does not directly require schools to let recruiters on campus—since it only kicks in when schools accept federal funds. But the penalties for schools that violate the Solomon Amendment are enormous, and every wing of the university—not just the law school—would suffer. Harvard, for instance, would lose over $400 million a year in federal funds.Last November, a three-judge panel...
WASHINGTON—The Supreme Court seemed unwilling yesterday to accept a gay rights group’s claim that on-campus military recruitment violates law schools’ free speech rights...
...response to the devastating effects of Hurricane Katrina in the Gulf Coast, Harvard clearly demonstrated its support of the victims through monetary contributions and initiative to accept dozens of students whose schools were forced to cancel the fall semester. As if this gesture by the College was not generous enough, the Undergraduate Council has “officially” supported the proposal that visiting freshman students be allowed to apply to transfer to Harvard permanently if they wish. Visiting students who wish to transfer to Harvard permanently and those who support that proposal should realize that it is unfair...
...Your son needs no waiver or release from Tulane,” Cowen wrote in reply. “He is free to withdraw from Tulane at any time and pursue his education wherever he desires. It will be Harvard’s choice to decide whether to accept him or not.” Nikolich’s son, Adam P. Nikolich, said he does not intend to return to Tulane regardless of Harvard’s decision. “I don’t think [Tulane] is a good place to be right now. It is still...