Word: freeã
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...companies resuscitated lagging profits and motivated a much larger group of (normally indifferent) consumers to buy brands that promised adequate labor conditions. This story shows that consumers want to inject some moral vigor into their largely materialist lives—and that businesses respond. From “hormone-free?? to “dolphin safe” to “biodegradable,” products brandish such quasi-moral labels with a righteousness seldom found outside of religious circles...
Presumably a potential employer would run a basic background search that would turn up Middlesex District Court records from the Quincy House student’s case. The student’s name is also online—and available for free??in the logs posted on the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) website. So even if the Feb. 24 arrest does “hugely compromise” the student’s future, we’re not sure whether that comes as a result of The Crimson’s decision. But we believe that...
...students register their disapproval of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” by demonstrating against the recruiters seizes upon the single element of Roberts’ opinion that offers cause for hope: its assertion that HLS will “remain free??to express whatever views they may have on the military’s congressionally mandated employment policy, all the while retaining eligibility for federal funds.” Members of the Harvard community ought to galvanize behind Dean Kagan’s call for protest. But students...
...protagonist is a defense attorney who worries less about guilt and innocence than about exploiting technicalities and getting paid. Mickey Haller makes his living threading the loopholes of a tattered justice system, setting marijuana growers and fraud artists free??as long as the perpetrators can cough up the thousand-dollar fees...
...mile from the minister’s lush residence, thousands of ‘free?? Zimbabweans experience another form of violence. Still living in plastic tents after having been forcibly evicted from their homes by a nation-wide “Clean Up” campaign last year, they silence their criticisms of government for fear of further reprisals. One of the police officers who guards the camp might privately sympathize with the displaced, but has five children of his own and earns three million Zimbabwean dollars per month, about $30 US. School fees and rent consume...