Word: freedoms
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...campus, where students learn from each other, free from overbearing administrative governance. Surely, such a culture should continue; strict regulation of student group activities would be counterproductive. Just as lecture halls are the realm of the professors, extracurriculars are the realm of the students; through them, students have the freedom to pursue their own interests, and often do so with more enthusiasm than they might bring to regular coursework. But extracurricular involvement and academic engagement need not be mutually exclusive; if faculty take a greater role in this world, meeting students on their own terms, both students and faculty might...
Harvard students will kick off a new human rights group dedicated to promoting freedom in autocratic North Korea on Wednesday evening, as the campus chapter of Liberty in North Korea (LiNK) holds its first event. LiNK is part of a broader international organization formed in March 2004 at Yale University by comedian Paul Kim and Yale student Adrian Hong. The group has grown to over 70 chapters internationally over the two years. Edward Y. Lee ’08, the founder of the Harvard chapter, wrote in an e-mail that his motivations for organizing the group were the human...
...Harvard and other law schools argue that the military’s ban on openly gay service members violates the schools’ nondiscrimination policies.FAIR’s attorney, E. Joshua Rosenkranz, told the court in December that the Solomon Amendment encroaches upon law schools’ freedom of association by forcing them to cooperate with military recruiters. He also said the statute infringes on schools’ freedom of speech by forcing them to disseminate the military’s recruiting messages. The Solomon Amendment requires schools to give recruiters access that is “at least...
...Jamie R. Smith ’08, who participated in the e-mail exchange, said in a phone interview that she felt the combination of a shocking picture and controversial message made the posters disagreeable to students. However, she felt that groups have the freedom to poster about causes that are important to them...
...case drew public scrutiny because of its larger implications for freedom of speech issues...