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...wish the students I see walking through Cambridge were more conscious,” she wrote. “I stopped a young woman wearing a backpack just last week because she had on headphones and was not tuned in at all to the street. She was an easy target for someone looking to assault.” She said that, while Harvard now offers a strong response program for rapes, this was not always case. “Harvard has had a long history of dealing with rapes internally, through Administrative Boards, and not encouraging victims to report...

Author: By Sharlene Brown, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Cambridge Sees Fewest Rapes | 10/26/2005 | See Source »

Unfortunately for the future of the EPC’s proposals, professors in many science concentrations are already up in arms about the recommendation to reduce requirements. As science concentrations seem to be the main target for these recommendations (along with honors tracks), this doesn’t bode well. Clearly, the success of the EPC’s proposal to cap requirements—the only one of its recommendations we support—will hinge on the successful implementation of an exemption procedure. For future drafts, the EPC should flesh out this procedure with an eye towards placating...

Author: By The Crimson Staff | Title: Concentrate Harder | 10/26/2005 | See Source »

...company’s first target, however, is Harvard, where they have begun a full-court press. Whitman and Remele hope to recover the line’s production costs solely with Harvard sales, says Adam P. Schneider ’07, an employee who is also a Crimson editor. Remele and Whitman would not specify how high their production costs were, and Whitman would only say that they raised funds from “private investors,” but surely they were high. Manufacturing of the clothing was contracted out to the New York factory which produces clothing...

Author: By Véronique E. Hyland, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Manufacturing Desire | 10/26/2005 | See Source »

...embrace something they find wrong but because the law is wrong. It's ostensibly a Federalist argument that is in fact homophobic-and was racist-in intent. And it offends me to the core that lawmakers would deny equal rights to one minority group using a statute created to target others, a statute that could have barred, even invalidated, my existence and might have prevented me from marrying my (white) boyfriend from Massachusetts in Massachusetts. Remember that it took until 1967 for the U.S. Supreme Court to declare unconstitutional the anti-miscegenation laws that remained on the books...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Viewpoint: Civil Rights and Gay Rights | 10/25/2005 | See Source »

...from Greenspan's often indecipherable econospeak, which came to be known as "Greenspam." Bernanke, a family man who has served on his school's board, is also known to be slightly more tolerant of inflation in pursuit of policies that promote growth. He has argued for adopting an inflation target rate, and making it public, to help demystify the Fed. It's not clear what inflation target Bernanke favors. But it's probably something close to 2% in core prices-about the rate seen the past 12 months...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bernanke Nomination Sparks Wall Street Rally | 10/24/2005 | See Source »

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