Word: consensus
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...bill would require illegal aliens to go home. Not immediately--they could continue on their jobs for as long as five years--but then they would have to go back to their homelands and, if they want to return to the U.S., file an application. "There's growing national consensus that in a post-9/11 world, we simply have to know who's coming into our country and why they're here," says Senator John Cornyn, who is sponsoring the bill with Jon Kyl of Arizona...
...yesterday’s meeting of the full Faculty, professors broadly supported replacing the Core Curriculum with a system of distributional requirements, though they did not a reach a consensus on what those requirements should look like.The General Education Committee formally presented its report to professors at the meeting, with Bass Professor of Government Michael J. Sandel introducing the committee’s recommendation that students should be required to take three courses in each of three distribution areas—the Arts and Humanities, Science and Technology, and the Study of Societies.In the report, the committee also proposed...
...order to promote the new name and raise awareness of Boloco, the restaurant chain will have a series of free burrito days at its Boston locations. The Mount Auburn Street location will offer free burritos on Wednesday, Nov. 30, from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.The consensus among most students was that they will continue to call the restaurant The Wrap.“I don’t care what the sign says—it will always be The Wrap to me,” Wang said.—Carmen E. James and Simon W. Vozick-Levinson contributed...
This strong finish came after a dominating first five minutes for the Saints. The more experienced team from North Country showed why it had been a consensus No. 1 team in the country by thoroughly outplaying Harvard—getting to pucks faster, not letting the puck out of its offensive zone, and throwing shot after shot on Crimson senior goalie...
...That casting suggestion by NBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams, responding to a playful question from TIME's Managing Editor Jim Kelly, reflected the dominant motif of Monday's Person of the Year luncheon at TIME's midtown headquarters. The consensus among the panelists assembled to nominate candidates for this year's award was that 2005 was dominated by news events authored by nature, rather than by humans, making it difficult to find individual newsmakers to fit the preferred terms of the award...