Word: implementable
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...common room so that you can watch SportsCenter on ESPN, or stay up to date on the war with CNN, are nearly over,” says Undergraduate Council representative Wes Kauble ’06. The council has passed a resolution introduced by Kauble urging the administration to implement an innovative and inexpensive “ethernet cable” system. The collective dream of cable access in every Harvard dorm appears close to becoming a reality. The final decision falls to the Committee on House Life, which should implement the Kauble cable plan...
While it would be wrong for an academic department to require students to travel in areas where their health may be at risk, it is not appropriate for Harvard to usurp the role of the government and implement a de facto ban on travel to affected countries. The University should work with the relevant public health officials to insure the safety of students who are traveling to infected areas as well as the safety of the Harvard community...
...DMCA to cut off students found to be infringing after receiving a first warning, and to deny them network access for an entire year. The DMCA’s safe harbor provisions are far more palatable if read closely: To obtain immunity, a service provider must adopt and implement “a policy that provides for the termination in appropriate circumstances of...repeat infringers.” [17 U.S.C...
...Also, the variety of entry points to the system available Sexual Assault Sexual Harassment (SASH) tutors, Senior Tutors, Response Peer Counselors, University Health Services (UHS), and others will have increased training to make their services more effective. We are quite encouraged by the changes UHS has already begun to implement, such as designating certain clinicians who specialize in treating survivors of sexual assault, and feel that these preliminary steps show great promise on their part...
...begin to recognize and cultivate our own ideals. It is because we have some sense of what things should or could be, after all, that we are dissatisfied with what is, and because we have hope that things can be made better, that we work so constantly to implement our own definitions of improvement. I’ve often made my column a place to air these grievances, rhapsodizing on old favorites like the Core, the Living Wage, and what I—as an overzealous, History 1661-taking junior—called the “vanishing life...