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...debacle, Faculty of Arts and Sciences officials contemplated restricting storage privileges to students living at least 200 miles away. But rather than shifting an extra burden on students, HSA is providing an alternative solution that benefits all students. The College can help encourage this alternative and inject fairness into the business-run storage system by allocating funds for storage financial aid—helping interested but less-affluent students pay for this vital storage alternative. The money could be apportioned on the basis of both financial status and distance of permanent residence from Cambridge. The College already uses geographic criteria...

Author: By The CRIMSON Staff, | Title: Storage Solutions | 5/12/2003 | See Source »

Still, the report, while calling the visual arts “an integral part of the humanities” and of life, held back in its rhetoric: “We do not propose to inject the art school into the academic life, but rather to give the experience of art its rightful place in liberal education…It is still doubtful if a student at Harvard can find space or time to apply himself seriously to creative work in the visual arts...

Author: By J. hale Russell, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Arts Last? | 5/1/2003 | See Source »

...group of TV networks from Deutsche Telekom, Germany's major cable operator, but had been blocked by regulators in part because he was perceived as arrogant and unbending. Saban played the charmer. To regulators concerned about foreign control of media assets, he promised not to inject his political views into the business. To creditors, he stressed that his experience in foreign-rights sales gave him the know-how to grow Kirch's licensing business...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Morphin Mogul: Israeli-American billionaire Haim Saban has a new TV empire to play with in Germany | 4/21/2003 | See Source »

...unfolds like this: Shortly after U.S. forces invade Iraq, Saddam Hussein realizes that the end is nigh. Faced with imminent defeat and near certain death, Saddam decides to authorize one final, gruesome act of terror. He plucks a loyal operative from his security service and orders germ scientists to inject him. The operative is slipped out of the country and put on a commercial airliner bound for the U.S. Dozens of passengers within spitting distance of the Iraqi agent are unknowingly infected. Just as U.S. troops arrive in Baghdad, thousands of American civilians begin experiencing fever, nausea and backache...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Can They Strike Back? | 2/3/2003 | See Source »

...will pay them back in the intermediate term. Think of the "low-hanging fruit" issues--waste, energy use, pollution. There is a social mandate to fix those problems. But what in the world does a timber company, say, care about biodiversity? There has to be some other way to inject that interest to make a company use its resources to help solve that problem...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Gang Green | 1/13/2003 | See Source »

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