Word: iops
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...glorify feudalism” when he spoke at the John F. Kennedy Jr. Forum yesterday about the WTO and accountability. Demonstrators, including representatives from the Student Labor Action Movement (SLAM) and the Harvard Initiative for Peace and Justice (HIPJ), also protested outside the IOP using various percussive instruments, while displaying signs calling for the abolition of the WTO. One Boston-area demonstrator held up a sign that read “WTO loves Malthus,” referring to an 18th and 19th century economist, who said that resources could not keep up with population growth. At five different moments...
Young voters are overwhelmingly opposed to current Bush administration policies, and they are expected to express those views in record numbers on election day, according to a new national poll released by the Institute of Politics (IOP) yesterday in Washington, D.C. The IOP poll, which has a margin of error of +/-3 percent, predicted the highest voter turnout in twenty years for voters between the ages of 18 and 24. Thirty-two percent of the 18 to 24 year olds surveyed said that they will “definitely be voting.” If the IOP?...
...your way to Darwin’s, an IOP lecture, or the A.R.T., it’s easy to overlook. But the art housed in the institute is a powerful—albeit eclectic—chronicle of black culture, offering both snapshots and panoramic views...
...last Thursday’s debate, both sides faced tough questions from the IOP Fellows in an effort to inform their undergraduate peers on the main issues being tackled by candidates. Former Democratic Governor of New Hampshire Jeanne Shaheen kicked off the event, reminding the debaters to “keep it civil.” Members from both sides relied heavily on impassioned political rhetoric to suggest just how much weight is resting on the election’s outcome. Grandiose statements like Krahel’s “America’s best days are ahead...
Merkle, meanwhile, opted for the independent route and nabbed herself a great internship without any help from the Harvard Democrats. “I had always been interested in politics, but more as an observer,” Merkle says. At Harvard, she found her democratic outlet at the IOP during her freshman year, making connections that would eventually give her the opportunity to spend her summers interning for the Patrick campaign. But watching Patrick go from virtual unknown to hometown hero doesn’t have Merkle preparing herself for a career in politics just...