Word: fairings
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...this a double standard? Or is it fair and just to allow the conservative viewpoint to be harassed and suppressed while taking active measures to protect SASC--which has been known to and can be expected to take actions which are harmful to the University, its faculty, students, and invited guests. If it is, as the University claims at this time, a form of free expression to build shanties and display signs around them, then the tearing down of this conservative information is an inexcusable violation of the right of free expression. When only side is allowed to express...
...look carefully, you'll see that a fair number of well-known figures who graduated from Harvard also graduated from the Signet--like Norman K. Mailer '43, George A. Plimpton '48, T.S. Eliot '10, and John H. Updike '54, Caspar W. Weinberger '38. Teddy Roosevelt Class of 1880, and Harvard presidents Percival Lowell Class of 1876 and James B. Conant '14 were honorary members...
...spent a fair bit of my undergraduate days having run-ins with the CRR, and I've watched several cadres of students come through Harvard to pick up where we left off. But the issues that were behind our protests have been lost in yours. An infatuation with the "bad old days" seems to have replaced intellectual understanding--and sometimes reason--in more recent attacks...
...dining service says it can only give Oxfam the portion of the food bill that actually goes toward the cost of food. Dining hall employees would still have to be paid even if every student on campus were to donate their dinners to Oxfam. That's fair enough, though I have to wonder about the quality of the food in a full-course dinner when it only costs...
...enforced by U.S. courts, foreign judgments must be shown to be the result of fair proceedings. One thing that means is giving the defendant a meaningful chance to be heard. With Marcos unlikely to return, says Harvard Law Professor Abram Chayes, the Aquino government must take care to "give him as much opportunity as possible to present his case." For instance, says Chayes, it might consider appointing a neutral tribunal of lawyers or judges to take testimony from Marcos in Hawaii. In Manila's favor is the fact that federal courts usually defer to presidential policy in cases touching upon...