Word: statuses
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...have Dean Gross as our narrator.” He declined to comment further. Several other past and current HRO board members who spoke to The Crimson asked that their names not be used because they did not want to appear as though they were undermining Collins’ status as the group’s leader and public voice. HRO, with a roster of more than 100 members, traces its history back to 1808 when a half-dozen Harvard men supposedly formed a musical organization “dedicated to the consumption of brandy and cigars as well...
...upper-level positions. Hammonds, the highest-ranking African American in the history of Harvard, chaired the Task Force on Women Faculty last year and in her new position is seeking to recruit female and minority candidates for faculty positions across the University.“Multiple reports on the status of women have been done since the 1970s,” Hammonds said. “In the past, no one was held accountable for action.”University President Lawrence H. Summers introduced Hammonds, discussing the diversification of the Harvard student body. Citing a higher number?...
...America might not have caught us completely by surprise—after all, the iPod has, in every incarnation, been better designed than most of its competition, and it has also been the subject of an incredibly successful marketing blitz that has transformed it from mere music player into status symbol. Further, there are some real benefits to owning the same gadgets as all your friends—accessories are cheap, tech support is easy to come by, and the bragging rights are indisputable.But there are costs, too. Sony, for example isn’t happy about all of this...
...raising the relative price of unskilled workers, the passage of a living wage shifts the tradeoffs in a way that means fewer of those workers will be hired,” he explained.According to the Office of Human Resources’ 2005 Annual Report on the Status of Employees, 349 custodial workers were employed at Harvard in March 2001. That number grew to 363 in April 2004, but then dropped back down to 346 in April 2005.Janitors in their first three years at Harvard were paid $11.35 per hour in May 2001, and that wage increased gradually...
...benefits of space exploration while concealing the size of the tab for this grand adventure. But to Beijing, the prize is worth the price: symbolically, a victory in space would be a rousing validation of its increasingly credible claim to be Asia's true economic and technological power, a status Japan has boasted for most of the last century and is loath to cede. The issue now, as China prepares to increase its advantage in manned space flight to 2-0, is whether Japan will soon experience a "Sputnik moment" and feel it has no choice but to redouble...