Word: palfreys
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...think it would be a mistake to make the housing lottery more complicated at this point,” he said. But most other masters supported co-ed rooming as long as clearer guidelines are established. Adams House Co-Master John G. “Sean” Palfrey ’67 summed up these masters’ sentiments when he said that he is “in favor” of co-ed rooming but that “there need to be uniform guidelines.” Palfrey’s logistical concerns stemmed from...
...says. Without quality content and active readers, ambitious experiments like CampusTap will never compare to the vibrant House life of entry-ways and dining halls.“In blogs, people express slightly different personas than in real space,” says Harvard Law School professor John G. Palfrey, executive director of the Berkman Center for Internet & Society.Nevertheless, Palfrey is optimistic about Harvard’s blogging community. “Blogs represent a kind of learning that can be done in public and across communities,” he says. Palfrey believes that sites like CampusTap are using...
...long-term commitment to make Harvard dining more accessible to students. “We’re all tremendously frustrated,” said Nowski. “But we’re now trying to explore much more creative options.”Adams House Master Sean Palfrey suggested that CHL seek the assistance of Harvard Business School students who could use their expertise to find lower-cost ways to extend dining hall hours.Many attendees of the meeting were especially concerned about finding a short-term solution for students for whom extra-curricular commitments cause them to consistently...
...category that encompasses adware, spyware, and other malicious programs. The site will collect individuals’ stories of their battles with the electronic nemesis. “We hope this will be a neighborhood watch of badware,” said Executive Director of the Berkman Center John G. Palfrey, Jr., who is co-directing the project. “Based on what we hear, we’re going to design programs to combat the problem.” Almost sixty million American adults have spyware on their computers, according to a survey by the Pew Internet and American...
...incident in order to protect the student’s anonymity, who, according to Pontbriand, has chosen not to identify himself publicly. A representative from the Department of Homeland Security did not respond to requests for comment yesterday. But Harvard Law School Clinical Professor of Law John G. Palfrey ’94 said that he doubts that a request for the Little Red Book alone could have prompted a visit from government officials. “That seems extremely unlikely to me to have happened absent other circumstances,” Palfrey said. He suggested that the student...