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...reserved for exceptional cases. While this legislation is a valuable step, it does not go far enough in protecting students’ privacy. Even though we recognize that students give up some of their privacy by accepting University e-mail addresses, students should be able to communicate without being subject to any University surveillance. We hope that an eventual move to outsource webmail, by removing users’ data from the direct control of Harvard system administrators, will solve many of these problems, but for the present, stronger institutional safeguards to protect student privacy should be instituted...
...Ellison, assistant dean of Harvard College and secretary of the Administrative Board, declined to comment on whether Wu would be subject to disciplinary action...
...France is also in the forefront of the struggle for cultural diversity, which was the subject of a UNESCO agreement signed in Paris in 2005 by more than 140 countries from all over the world. That is one way in which we can justify the strong, protective measures we have taken for the past 20 years, such as quotas for air-time for French songs on the radio, or advances against box-office receipts for movie producers. Such measures have enabled us to maintain a good share of our own domestic market...
Since Hicks was seized by a group of Northern Alliance fighters at a checkpoint in northern Afghanistan two months after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, he has been the subject of relentless speculation as to whether he was a terrorist true believer or just a thrill-seeking adventurer who went astray. Yesterday, smiling and looking stocky and confident, Hicks was driven away in a two-car convoy while his lawyer spoke on his behalf: "First and foremost I recognize the full depth of gratitude for getting me home. I will not forget or let you down...
...Everybody wants to know if he will write a book. We don't know," he said. "I keep saying he may change his mind, but he's said no." Under an agreement signed with U.S. authorities, David Hicks is prevented from profiting from any book deal and is subject to a 12-month gag order, which expires in March 2008. "The whole story needs to be told properly," says Stephen Kenny, the Australian lawyer who was one of the first to take up Hicks' case. "This can happen, and it has happened to other Australians...