Word: inputs
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Furthermore, the prospect for the student input if the constitution fails to get the necessary two-thirds approval and 50 percent voter turnout are grim. The failure of the referendum would kill the prospects for an assertive, recognized student voice for years to come. Students and Faculty who have shaped this plan for more that two years agree that it would be a long time before students had the energy and desire to start searching for a student government again...
...building into luxury housing. In return for moving out, the Craigie tenants are seeking future guarantees about Harvard's commitment to low and moderate-income housing. Apparently Harvard's "policy" of ignoring tenant groups is no more than a strategy that HRE believes is most likely to curb tenant input into decisions involving the University's massive housing stock--one of the largest held by any Cambridge landlord...
...still offer tangible and meaningful benefits to those who choose to contribute to it A number of important and difficult decisions will be made by the Faculty and administration of Harvard in the next few years, without the Council, these decisions will be made without student input How to solve the financial aid crunch, and the House demographic disparities, what to do with the unpopular calendar, what course requirements should be, whether an additional year of foreign language requirement will be added, what tuition will be all those are pending questions for the Faculty and administration Regardless of how students...
Even more importantly, if the constitution should fail--especially if by inadequate turnout--students will have to live with the ineffective and powerless bodies it now has. If students believe the Student Assembly is a fantastic forum for student discussion and input, if students believe CHUL and CUE give students a wonderful opportunity to provide student opinion on important areas of housing, college life and education, if students are happy with only House-wide (and frequently alcohol-free) parties and events and think a campus-wide concert, dance or party is somehow immoral or unwanted, and if students want these...
That the Corporation chooses its own members for life also seems an anachronism, one present at no other Ivy League university and largely responsible for its lack of diversity. At least half of the members of every other Ivy board are selected with the formal input of faculty, alumni, students, or others. And with the exception of a handful of ceremonial lifetime seats, no other board allows members to serve beyond 12 years or seems so fundamentally anti-democratic...