Word: adding
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...relationship with University Hall is obviously complicated and not merely defined by antagonism or exclusion, but the list of recent slaps to students by administrators is a long one. Even Sundquist’s position—probably the most important sign that substantive change could come to the Ad Board in a century—was not a simple given; Sundquist and the Undergraduate Council fought for months to have a student seated alongside the three faculty members that interim Dean of the College David R. Pilbeam appointed this winter...
...students from our warring nature. Nor is it surprising that Harvard Law School Professor Harvey A. Silverglate titled his recent book on how colleges govern “The Shadow University: The Betrayal of Liberty on America’s Campuses,” or that he called the Ad Board “outrageous” at a recent dinner with students, and said, “I foam at the mouth when I think about it.” My hope is that Hammonds will be cognizant of University Hall’s skewed perception of students...
...hope that its underlying theme—the education of responsible citizens—is not forgotten by University Hall (or professors). The best example of this new curriculum would be Harvard’s involvement of its students in its own government, from the level of the Ad Board down to public forums about gym hours. I hope Dean Hammonds will do everything necessary to create that culture in University Hall...
...pulling a rabbit out of a hat," as White House press secretary Dana Perino put it on Monday. It is actually an adapted version of Treasury Secretary Paulson's year-long effort to recast and consolidate American financial regulation to keep it competitive with foreign markets. It codifies the ad hoc powers of market stabilization the Federal Reserve has used to calm the waters since the collapse of Bear Stearns in March. It establishes an authority with control over financial institutions' behavior but leaves open just how much power it would have to enforce standards. It would split...
...ad for Mugabe's Zanu-PF party in the run-up to the 1990 parliamentary elections featured the sounds of a car accident followed by a voiceover that intoned: "This is one way to die. Another is to vote [then opposition party] Z.U.M." In 2005, Mugabe ordered the security services to level whole districts in towns across the country, depriving 700,000 people of their homes or livelihoods out of fear that urban support for a new party, the Movement for Democratic Change (M.D.C.), would foment rebellion...