Word: shields
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...hold up,” he said. “In most civil cases that we’ve followed, there has been some protection that has prevented subpoenas from successfully requiring a news organization to turn over information.” Although Massachusetts does not have a shield law designed specifically to protect reporters, and federal legislation to the same effect, though pending, has not passed Congress, Goodman said common law and court rules typically will support members of the press seeking to keep their records confidential. “There’s basically a balancing of interest...
...actually,” Delaney-Smith says. “We had no one who actually liked the low post [last year]. You can’t pound these kids. Where they’re not finishing yet, they will finish because they’re powerful, they shield better, [and] they like to bump...
...lecture with our wet jeans plastered to our shivering thighs when we have $25.9 billion at our disposal to protect us from inconveniences like the weather. If the United States of America—which doesn’t even have an endowment—can build a shield to protect us from incoming nuclear weapons, the least we could expect from a school such as Harvard is research into the feasibility of stretching a Star Wars-esque force-field of Saran Wrap over the entirety of campus...
...Besides promoting market reforms, the White House also sees the FTAA as a shield against the growing encroachment of China and the European Union into Latin America. Chavez has made no secret of his desire to undercut U.S. hegemony in the region by forging a new Latin American economic and political integration. Oil may be his chosen weapon to achieve that goal: Venezuela, which holds the hemisphere's largest oil reserves and which supplies almost 15% of the U.S. needs, is forming regional energy partnerships that offer cash- and fuel-strapped neighbors cheaper access to Venezuelan...
...things: number one school in the world, the Yard, protests outside of undergraduate libraries. But certain athletes of the fall season are making the Crimson known for something else—record-breakers. Three current Harvard stars—women’s soccer goalkeeper and co-captain Katie Shields, All-American junior running back Clifton Dawson, and sophomore cross-country phenom Lindsey Scherf—have all made names for themselves by assaulting the Harvard records. SHIELD IN GOAL Shields has been a force in net for the Crimson this fall season. The cornerstone of Harvard?...