Word: monitors
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...than even the number hauled in by Norway, which simply ignores the moratorium. Next year Japan plans to bag 50 humpbacks, the endangered giants famous for their spectacular breaches and eerie subaqueous songs. Stanford University cetologist Stephen Palumbi says their addition to the scientific catch will confound attempts to monitor poaching through the dna testing of meat, a method that has proved remarkably effective in recent years...
...next time you find yourself letting the minutes slip away while you nervously monitor how Cubs starter Carlos Zambrano is faring in his outing on the west coast—for fantasy baseball is of course the most powerful of procrastination tools, the lazy college student’s best friend and his mortal enemy—remind yourself that you are taking part in a rich intellectual, literary tradition that has deep roots in the Harvard community...
...floating around [on the web] sometimes months in advance.”Under FECA, Thomas and Bowser could face up to eleven years each in prison.This increasing aggressiveness on the part of both the music industry and the U.S. government raises questions about the role played by universities in monitoring, discouraging, or disciplining students who download or distribute media files. Though internet law experts think that downloaders may find themselves harried more and more often, Harvard administration officials say the university doesn’t play any active role in discour-aging downloading to begin with. Thus, the future...
Does that mean that a name is necessary? Couldn’t readers adequately monitor arrest patterns if we had just said, for instance, that campus police charged a white male 20-year-old sophomore economics concentrator from Orem, Utah who lives in a fourth-floor Old Quincy dorm? Well, yes—provided that there were no key details that we omitted. Might it be relevant that, as a recent op-ed in The Crimson noted, the Quincy student was involved in the Harvard College Libertarian Forum, a group whose members have advocated the decriminalization of drugs...
...often, individuals are accused on the front page and exonerated on page 13. If the Quincy student is acquitted, we promise to run that news as prominently as we printed the initial charges. In the meantime, we continue to trust that readers will use our reports to monitor campus law-enforcement officials—not to rush to pass judgment on their peers. And we will continue to provide you with thorough accounts of this case’s progress through the courts...