Word: circuiting
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...premises. The Cow Bar (housed in a former barn) and other establishments have become a subject of great local curiosity. "People just can't believe that we're using this animal's den to serve martinis." But that kind of juxtaposition is precisely the charm of Zhongdian's cocktail circuit. With steep, cobbled lanes, wooden houses, courtyards, and prayer flags fluttering in the wind, Dukezong was little more than a ramshackle residential area of 15,000 inhabitants two years ago. Now, it's being buffed and polished for the outside world, with B-52 cocktails served alongside...
After the Third Circuit Court of Appeals declared the Solomon Amendment unconstitutional, Harvard Law School (HLS), parading itself as the paragon of nondiscrimination, ceremoniously banned the military from campus. It should be noted, however, that HLSs application of its hallowed nondiscrimination policy is quite uneven...
After the Third Circuit Court of Appeals declared the Solomon Amendment unconstitutional, Harvard Law School (HLS), parading itself as the paragon of nondiscrimination, ceremoniously banned the military from campus. It should be noted, however, that HLS’s application of its hallowed nondiscrimination policy is quite uneven...
Last Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court announced that it will review the Solomon Amendment, which was recently declared unconstitutional by a U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The Solomon Amendment, which was signed into law by President Clinton in 1994, requires universities receiving federal funding to allow military recruiters on campus, even in spite of potential conflict with universities anti-discriminatory policies. The law has been contested by both sides over the last decade, including a 2003 congressional movement that required schools to give military recruiters equal access to the students, and the 2004 appeal that declared the law unconstitutional...
...pleased, though, that the University, since the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruling, has continued to resist on-campus recruitment, even in light of the courts later decision not to implement its ruling until after the Supreme Court hearing. We applaud the administration for its stance against the bigotry of the military, but wish the principle had developed into greater action. Nonetheless, the litigation by FAIR has already produced significant results, and we hope similar results are achieved by the Supreme Court ruling...