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...might put Clinton at a disadvantage among young voters, Ruben said that he thinks Clinton’s emphasis on a cleaner environment and focus on withdrawal from Iraq are particularly appealing to young voters. In this IOP survey, 86 percent of pollees said that the economy has the highest level of importance, and 79 percent said that it was the most personally relevant issue. “This is the first time since before 9/11 that young people have said that the economy is the most important [issue],” said Jonathan S. Gould...
...resources output. The alarming warning signs of the late 1990s led foreign investors to withdraw funds from Zimbabwe further aggravating the economic crisis and unemployment. Today, four in every five Zimbabweans looking for work are unable to find it even the the country’s literacy rate is highest in all of Africa. Until last year Zimbabwe was self-sufficient in canned and processed food. However, this year, according to UN World Food Programme estimates, 4.2 million Zimbabweans—a third of the population—will face serious food shortages. Many Zimbabweans have been forced to survive...
...weekend’s events kicked off with a 214-person dinner at the Charles Hotel on Friday night that included Harvard’s highest administrators and development officers, according to a seating chart obtained by The Crimson...
...environmental initiatives. This year’s winner was a group from Mather House that convinced Berryline to switch to compostable cups to make the business greener. The Green Cup, the ultimate award for sustainability efforts in a House, was given to Cabot, which won because it had the highest number of eco project submissions and the highest rate of sustainability pledges—garnered by using cookies and pizza as incentives. According to Cabot REP representative Thomas R. Benson ’09, winning the Green Cup was a sign of his House’s commitment...
...will challenge the basic fairness of the proceedings. Indeed, this week, Hamdan's lawyers will allege "unlawful command influence" over their client's prospective trial. Col. Davis, Guantanamo's former chief prosecutor, is expected to testify that Gordon Englund, the Deputy Secretary of Defense and the Pentagon's second-highest civilian, told him last year, "We need to think about charging some high-value detainees because there could be strategic value before the [November] election." Davis is also expected to repeat, as he has in court filings, that the Defense department's former top lawyer, general counsel William Haynes, informed...