Word: scopes
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...hosted the initial petition targeting PetroChina and the more recent anti-Sinopec effort, called today’s announcement “a welcome step.” In an e-mail, he wrote that “Harvard’s divestment still remains the most limited in scope compared to divestment decisions of other universities...
...undeniable—especially with the peninsular judicial system. As he loves to assert, he has never been convicted of a crime. But a closer look suggests something rotten in the Italian Civil Code. With perfect timing, the Italian Parliament altered the statute of limitations and narrowed the scope of EU convictions to “protect Italian sovereignty.” Surprisingly, those changes also made Berlusconi untouchable. And emulating any credible Messiah, he comes to the rescue when his close disciples are about to fall victim to courts. Just last year, he presented a bill openly known...
...rather lose my job for the sacrifice for others than not have a union,” he said. Repeated requests for comment yesterday afternoon to Rob Taylor, the Allied official overseeing the company’s employees at Harvard, were not returned. Milton G. Scope, a four-year employee who guards the Countway Library of Medicine, said “there’s a great deal of intimidation” at Allied. “We’re in the process of organizing,” he said. “Trust me, they?...
...national security interests” and identified universities as an important source of recruits. The resolution also restated the Solomon Amendment’s requirement that universities accepting federal funds must provide military recruiters access that is “at least equal in quality and scope to that which is provided to any other employer.” When asked about his vote against the resolution, Capuano’s spokeswoman told The Crimson that colleges should not be forced to condone the Pentagon’s policy of prohibiting openly gay and lesbian individuals from serving...
...state law and is decided on a fact- and incident- specific basis. The preservation of constitutional protections is always foremost in the decision to search or not to search.”In all three recent cases, students acknowledged that they allowed officers to enter their rooms, but the scope of this consent could have been limited by the means officers used to obtain this consent.Harvard Law School’s (HLS) Climenko Fellow and Thayer Lecturer on law, Wesley Oliver, says that in Walleck’s case, the officer would have been acting outside his bounds...