Word: counciling
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...League summit last October where attendees discussed the service days at their own schools. Fleming and Rafferty noted that their own alma maters, Wellesley and Bates, already have days of service. They then started to coordinate with representatives from the Phillips Brooks House Association and the Undergraduate Council, garnering a $10,000 seed grant from the Provost’s Office and raising an additional $10,000 from various sponsors. Undergraduate Council Vice President Matthew L. Sundquist ’09, one of the day’s main organizers, said preparing the event strengthened ties between College and graduate...
...strong indication of the depth of the Bush Administration's military commitment to the region. "Iraq needs a new resolution to determine the shape of the relationship between the two countries and how to cooperate with the U.S. forces," Labid Abawi was quoted as saying. "We will ask the Council to include an article that allows Iraq to enter into negotiations with the United States to reach long-term security agreements to meet Iraq's security needs bilaterally...
...World,” and “The United States and the World.” Harris and Dean of the Faculty Michael D. Smith chose the nine faculty members on the 14-member committee from a list of more than 150 names recommended by professors. The Undergraduate Council selected three student representatives, and Harris said he requested that the group contain at least one international student and at least one student benefiting from the Harvard Financial Aid Initiative. The faculty members are Indo-Muslim languages and cultures professor Ali S. Asani ’77, Slavic languages...
Candidates for the Cambridge City Council debated the ins and outs of development last night, exchanging views on affordable housing, a massive construction project in East Cambridge, and the shape the city should take in a potential “master plan” that would guide its growth in coming years...
...Faculty Council, the 18-member governing body of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS), advanced a measure yesterday that would make articles written by Harvard professors in scholarly journals available online at no cost. The proposal would create a system of “open access” whereby the authors could make their work available either on a personal or university Web site for free, according to Weary Professor of German and Comparative Literature Judith L. Ryan, who serves on the council. Professors would have the option to opt out of the new system, Ryan said...