Word: issueã
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...include Benn Steil, director of international economics at the Council of Foreign Relations, Ellen E. Meade author of Regional Monetary Integration, and Harvard Professor of International Economics Richard N. Cooper. One of the review’s editors, Owen C. Barron ’10, said that the new issue??s overarching goal was to show how the economic crisis extends beyond the borders of the United States. “These articles are just one step forward in reforming the system,” Owen added. The review’s second launch party of the year...
...provide heroin junkies with a strictly controlled dosage of heroin everyday. Shockingly enough, this program has succeeded in controlling the nation’s drug problem beyond the government’s wildest dreams. The Swiss pilot program—recently made permanent by a nationwide referendum on the issue??has saved the nation money, decreased crime rates, and halted the spread of infectious disease...
...Though Richardson did not violate any ethics policy, the students had touched on an important issue??up until then, the Medical School did not have a codified conflict of interest policy for the classroom. As several Medical School professors have recently come under fire for failure to disclose conflicts of interest, first-year students banded together to push for stronger disclosure policies at the school...
...alumni, 02138 tried to focus more on issues of national interest, according to Blum. Previously, one of the magazine’s most popular stories was “The Harvard 100,” a list of Harvard’s most influential alumni. In contrast, the final issue??and the only one ever produced by Manhattan Media—contained an article on the sons of New York Times columnist Frank Rich, one of whom attended Harvard, and another on Harvard connections to the Bush administration’s Iraq War machine...
...combating climate change through his ideas. Though tensions rose during the discussion (one panelist tersely asked another if he “lived in an igloo” after the latter said individual greenhouse gas emissions were irrelevant), those in attendance said the contention was demonstrative of the issue??s salience. “By making this institutional commitment,” said Spring Greeney ’09, former chair of the Environmental Action Committee, “you’re turning Harvard into a living laboratory as well as an institutional example for its peers...