Word: submits
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HNTB Corp., the Boston firm hired by Harvard to do the analysis, hoped to submit its report to Dean of FAS Jeremy R. Knowles by the end of Oct. last year, according to HNTB Corp. architect Richard Friedson...
Soon after, then-Trade and Industry Minister Peter Mandelson chose not to submit the company's $2 billion takeover of the a British utility called Wessex Water to a review by antitrust authorities. This coincidence did not go unnoticed by the nation's broadsheet press: it received the mild scandal treatment in the left-wing Sunday newspaper, the Observer, while the daily Independent wryly called the decision "a test case for companies which have made donations to the Labour Party." In 1999, the party itself held an internal inquiry scrutinizing the payments. But soon the story was mostly forgotten, filed...
...who’s to say that Harvard—or any other institution, for that matter—should in every case submit to market determinations? Summers himself advocated for such flexibility at the 1988 annual meeting of the American Economic Association. Citing Keynes’ theory of “relative wages,” Summers argued that “even in settings where unemployment is high, firms do not cut wages and they sometimes even raise them. This means that when insiders raise wages at some firms, the effect spills over leading other firms to raise...
Incidents of plagiarism vary in seriousness and in circumstance. Students might be confused about the rules of citing and unknowingly incorporate a few phrases from a source without giving the appropriate credit. However, a student might intentionally submit a paper completely plagiarized from a secondary source or another student, hoping to get away with it “just this one time.” It seems that Ambrose hoped that with his expertise, connections and glowing resume, he would be able to get away with it “just this one time.” If any college...
...visit, in May, he waited 20 minutes to be told he needed to submit copies of his court dispositions. Out of a briefcase bursting with official documents, he produced the dispositions with a flourish--he had been to court three times to get them. "I got them," he said, with the satisfaction of a citizen who believes he has finally checkmated the state. Nonplussed, the woman behind the counter asked him for copies. He had only the originals. There was no copier he could use in the building, she reported. "You have to go outside for that...