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Under one proposed framework for new meal plans, students would be able to select from among two equally priced options. One would be the current plan, which allows for unlimited meals in dining halls. The other would restrict the number of meals per week a student could eat in dining halls but would give the student a larger amount of Board Plus dollars to spend at on-campus eateries such as Lamont Cafe, the Greenhouse Cafe, or the impending Queen’s Head Pub. Such a plan has some clear benefits. Students would be able to eat more meals...

Author: By The Crimson Staff | Title: Keep Unlimited Dining Intact | 1/5/2007 | See Source »

...leadership needs to implement a mechanism for arranging student services within the UC’s current two-committee framework. It does not need to bring back the CLC, nor does it need another third arm such as an "Outreach and Services Committee"—an idea which was proposed and rejected last spring. We do not know precisely how the UC ought to handle soliciting and selecting bids from third parties. It could be done by the UC’s Finance Committee (FiCom), or by a FiCom subcommittee, or by the president and vice president themselves...

Author: By The Crimson Staff | Title: Bring the Shuttles Back | 12/18/2006 | See Source »

...first scenario could be entitled Poor, Misunderstood, Rational North Korea: This narrative sees virtually everything the North has done since signing the so-called "Agreed Framework" nuclear deal with the Clinton Administration in 1994 as understandable - even predictable. Pyongyang signed away its plutonium reprocessing plant and in return was supposed to get a bunch of things in return, including diplomatic recognition from the United States, and two light water reactors for electric power generation from a U.S.-Japanese-South Korean?led consortium. But not much was delivered: The first of the reactors was supposed to have been finished...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: What North Korea Wants | 12/18/2006 | See Source »

...been deceived, the North began a secret uranium enrichment program that violated the spirit, if not the letter, of the '94 deal. Confronted with evidence of this in October 2002, Pyongyang angrily announced it was restarting its plutonium-based nuke program, which it had frozen under the Agreed Framework, and expelled inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency. Then, having been been named to President Bush's "Axis of Evil," and having watched the Bush Administration knock off Iraq, Kim Jong-il did the only thing he could do to guarantee no one would mess with him: he went ahead...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: What North Korea Wants | 12/18/2006 | See Source »

...Core courses, Foreign Cultures 12, “Sources of Indian Civilization,” to include a focus on the impact of the Indian diaspora on American life. Supporters of the proposed curriculum are insisting that the report not be judged by any superficial similarities to the existing framework. Rather, they say, the new proposal presents a guiding philosophy far removed from its forebear. “This is emphatically NOT the Core,” Professor of Philosophy Alison Simmons, the co-chair of the Gen Ed task force, wrote in an e-mail last night...

Author: By Anton S. Troianovski, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Similar Structure, Different Mission—Real-World Philosophy Sets Plan Apart | 12/13/2006 | See Source »

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