Word: panelized
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...Corporation Committee on Shareholder Responsibility (CCSR) issues an annual report on Harvard’s holdings and decides Harvard’s vote in shareholder proxy meetings. Every year, the Advisory Committee on Shareholder Responsibility (ACSR), a 12-member panel with four student members, issues a report to the CCSR, recommending proxy votes and raising ethical issues. The CCSR often disagrees with the ACSR’s recommendations. But raising an issue via the ACSR, created as an outlet for students to voice opinion on the endowment, is the best way to catch the attention of the people who control...
It’s not Bungalow 8, folks, it’s Quincy Dining hall—the new and improved version, that is. Patrons of this fine Plympton Street establishment will have noticed a further addition to the space since its summer renovation: a two-row, five-panel set of “mood lights,” unveiled this past week, which adorn the formerly blank wall to the left of the food area upon entering...
Want some mood lights of your own, to set the right tone at a party or perhaps to lure that special someone? Be careful – at 350 big ones a panel, the lights may end up costing you a pretty penny. And a final thought: when attempting to woo a member of the opposite sex with your swank new lights, refrain from setting them to a fast color pattern. Nothing like a migraine or a seizure to kill the mood...
...surprising that John F. Kennedy ’40’s career at Harvard involved many a ‘romantic’ encounter—especially at the Spee, but probably plenty of other locations. Al Gore ’69, before the judge’s panel determined him the runner-up in the 2000 election, shared a freshman year dorm—and allegedly a first joint—with roommate Tommy Lee Jones. And of course, there is our current president and president-elect, the dear George W. Bush, Harvard Business School Class...
...being on the other side of it for a change and watching them do all the things we get criticized for: denial, spin and stonewalling." Eventually, Rather had to acknowledge on-air that the documents might be forgeries and apologize for vouching for them. CBS appointed a two-person panel--Richard Thornburgh, Attorney General under the first President Bush, and Louis Boccardi, former president of the Associated Press--to investigate what had gone wrong and report back after the election...