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Word: republicanisms (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Harvard University has no right to put down ROTC as an institution because of a Congressional policy ROTC students have no control over,” she said. “The Harvard Republican Club believes ROTC should be included on campus regardless of federal policies...

Author: By Will L. Fletcher, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Students Push for ROTC Recognition | 4/23/2009 | See Source »

...There are still students involved in ROTC but they must go to MIT,” said Mark A. Isaacson ’11, a vice president of the Harvard Republican Club. “It is not that they now want classes offered but that Harvard officially recognize and help with the cross-registration program...

Author: By Will L. Fletcher, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Students Push for ROTC Recognition | 4/23/2009 | See Source »

...meantime, the Harvard Republican Club is trying to draw attention to Harvard’s current policies with the hope of eventually convincing the University to officially recognize ROTC...

Author: By Will L. Fletcher, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Students Push for ROTC Recognition | 4/23/2009 | See Source »

CORRECTION: The April 23 article originally entitled "Students Push for ROTC Credit" incorrectly stated in the headline, sub-headline, and twice in the article text that the Harvard Republican Club was protesting for Harvard ROTC participants to receive course credit for their ROTC classroom work at MIT. In fact, the Republican Club was pushing for "official recognition" of ROTC, which would entail that Harvard use language more accepting of the program in its annually-published student handbook and that the University subsidize cross-registration fees for Harvard students doing their ROTC work at MIT, but not that academic credit...

Author: By Will L. Fletcher, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Students Push for ROTC Recognition | 4/23/2009 | See Source »

...essay is its intellectual laziness. Had he consulted a wide range of courses at Harvard alone, he would have found the intellectual content he was looking for. To take one among many of the possibilities, he might have considered my course, “The Theory and Practice of Republican Government,” where dozens of the Federalist Papers are read and studied intensively. In “Bureaucratic Politics: Military, Government, Economic and Social Organizations,” a sampling of decision theory, non-parametric statistics and stochastic modeling is combined with a healthy reading of Alfred Chandler?...

Author: By Daniel Carpenter | Title: The Other Side of Academic Politics | 4/23/2009 | See Source »

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