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Allowing students the simple option of checking off a box on the term bill was just too simple for the council. Instead, our representatives voted to require all students to navigate through a maze of bureaucracies; the Undergraduate Council, the Term Will office, and the Dean of Students' office. In the words of Vice-President Joshua D. Liston '96, this circuitous refund process was designed solely to make it more difficult" for students to reclaim their dollars...

Author: By Evan Pearce and George Wang, S | Title: A Primer on the U.C. | 10/4/1994 | See Source »

Bikes should also be easier to maneuver through Cambridge's maze of one-way, narrow streets...

Author: By Todd F. Braunstein, | Title: Fleeing a Crime Scene? Beware the Bike Police | 7/12/1994 | See Source »

...complex maze of how records are linked together, how publications are linked together," says Sarah Mitchell, head of bibliographic access for MIT's Humanities Library "and librarians can help users understand [them...

Author: By H. NICOLE Lee, | Title: Libraries Kill Catalogues, Take new Role | 6/9/1994 | See Source »

...Children's Museum. 300 Congress Street, Boston. 426-8855. Current exhibits include: the Climbing Sculpture, a twostory suspended puzzle piece climbing maze; Climbing the Wall, a rock climbing exhibit; El Mercade De Barrio, a replica of a Latino neighborhood market in Boston; Teen Tokyo, an exhibition on fashion, food, sports, music, art and school and family life for kids in Japan; Columbus: Through Native American Eyes, a reexamination of the discovery of America from both Columbus and the Native American perspectives...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Around Harvard | 4/7/1994 | See Source »

...public address system, non-ASL-trained staff and often complex written directions and appointment schedules are daunting for most deaf people even if they are just having their tonsils out. For AIDS patients, who may see half a dozen specialists for various complaints, the difficulties constitute a diabolical maze. Nor do many doctors reach out to make things easier. Most AIDS caseworkers with deaf clients can name one who was simply handed a piece of paper saying, "You have AIDS," with no follow- up. Quanquilla Mason, a deaf and blind New Yorker who has since died, remembered going into emergency...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Aids | 4/4/1994 | See Source »

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