Word: corrects
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...professor of retailing at Harvard Business School, said that “when FAS had a meeting and a vote of no confidence, there was no process by which the rest of the University could express itself. And I think that’s the thing you want to correct.”“It should be possible for the University as a whole to express an opinion rather than be limited to the FAS,” Lal said.But it might not be possible in the near term. As the University prepares to enter a period...
...deliberately misled - no, I don't. I believed the intelligence, and I think the people who made the assessments believed it. It remains a matter of astonishment to many of them, and this applies particularly to people in the British and American intelligence services, that their assessments were not correct...
...enters. Given the current decentralized state of resources, it is easy for students to “fall through the cracks” or give up because it is “just too much hassle” if a proctor or tutor does not guide them to the correct group—and that’s assuming the student goes to a proctor or tutor in the first place.Only centralization and raising student awareness can prevent students from suffering this fate. It is not enough that the OSAPR is open to phone calls 24 hours...
...their defense to shut down Harvard.With the Crimson struggling to deal with its opponent’s serves, Harvard’s passing game broke down and allowed the Highlanders to take game one with a 30-24 victory.“I didn’t run the correct offense, and they were just camping on our outside hitters,” Fitz said. “We’ve just got to be able to handle the serve. If we can do that, then we can push the tempo up the middle.”Though...
...elected officials caught in ethics cases, said Justice may be ?saber rattling? since the ethics panels cover congressional rules and not criminal offenses, which are Justice's province alone. But if Justice is really just trying to warn Congress to crack down on sleazy conduct, ?I think they're correct.... Not only the Department of Justice, but I think the public is telling Congress: if you're going to have some rules make sure people obey them...