Word: paid
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...owned buildings, including Peabody Terrace, 18 Banks Street and the Botanical Gardens Apartments. These students can also purchase partial board contracts with Harvard Dining Services. The total cost of room and board to transfer students who select this "annex housing" option is usually a little higher than the fees paid by students who live in the residential houses...
...would be to the removal of their special status. Final club members would be disappointed if you took away their male-bonding luncheons, fine houses, and beer parties with Wellesley women. Women, however, would be very pleased to have access to the final clubs' resources and connections, to be paid equally for equal work, and to be free from sexual harrassment at the hands of men well-trained in sexism. Women at Harvard are a minority; final club members are an elite...
...time Harvard paid attention to the careers of young women scholars and their new fields of research. The University must address why women junior faculty are overburdened with administrative duties. And Harvard must draw in more women senior faculty to provide crucial role models for the student body, add academic expertise form different viewpoints and make it clear that two decades after the start of the Feminist Revolution women have an equal shot at academic achievement...
...some high-level bribery persists, both governments must convince poor farmers that they should get out of the coca business and give up the $1,000 the cartel pays for each 2.5 acres planted in the leaf. The local poseros, or processors, who grind the leaves into paste, are paid even better, which enables them to . acquire four-wheel-drive vehicles and color television sets. "It is an unbalanced and unfair fight," says Juan Carlos Duran, Bolivia's Interior and Justice Minister. "Drug kingpins work in terms of millions of dollars, while we have to do it in terms...
...murder in Mexico of DEA Agent Enrique Camarena Salazar. In Honduras, which does not allow extradition, Matta is living the good life, flamboyantly dispensing money to the poor who line up outside his palatial estate. His assets are said to amount to more than $1 billion; he reportedly paid $2 million in bribes to facilitate his 1986 escape from a Colombian prison. Honduran officials are so concerned by Matta's activities that they have invited the DEA to reopen its office in Tegucigalpa, closed six years...