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...through a re-inspection process. Among many other safety measures, HUDS employees working in the kitchen have ready access to two different kinds of heavy-duty vinyl gloves (cotton lined and unlined) that are designed to protect them when working with high temperature machines. The Need for BalanceAs a tax-exempt, non-profit institution, Harvard has a responsibility to manage its financial resources prudently. Our tuition-paying students and their families, our donors and research sponsors, and our host communities expect the University to act responsibly with regard to its finances and commitments.From year to year, the University must balance...

Author: By Mary ann O’brien, | Title: Get the Facts: Harvard and its Service Employees | 6/7/2006 | See Source »

...board with Allston developments.FACULTY DIVISIONSince the Allston Task Force committees, formed in 2003, began meeting to flesh out a vision for Allston, there have been professors who have decried what they say is a closed planning process. In 2003, Summers’ extension of the “Allston tax,” a flat tax of half of one percent on the incomes of the different schools, prompted outcry from members of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, the school most affected by the tax. Summers said at a Faculty meeting in November of that year that...

Author: By Natalie I. Sherman, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Summers Leaves Stamp on Allston | 6/7/2006 | See Source »

...Wednesday morning was a big sigh of relief from Republicans across the country over the results of a special election in a San Diego County congressional district where Republicans usually win without breaking a sweat. After ex-Congressman Randy "Duke" Cunningham earlier this year pleaded guilty to bribery and tax evasion, and was given an eight-year prison sentence, the election to name his replacement was watched by both parties as both a crucial test of how badly Republicans are likely to fare in this fall's midterms - and of whether the Democrats' recent "culture of corruption" line of attack...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Republicans Breathe a Sigh of Relief | 6/7/2006 | See Source »

...seven years and is a longtime foe of the Governator, has an uphill battle ahead of him. Aside from the charisma discrepency, Schwarzenegger's popularity ratings, in free fall for much of the past year, have lately rebounded a bit, thanks in part to $7 billion in unexpected tax revenue. In his favor, Angelides is running in a predominantly Democratic state, has the backing of powerful labor unions and may get some mileage out of the current backlash against GOP President George W. Bush. Still, in a Field poll of 702 likely voters last week looking ahead to the gubernatorial...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Man Who'll Face Arnold | 6/7/2006 | See Source »

...list of initiatives Democrats would pursue were they to seize control: raising the minimum wage, cutting student loan interest rates, reducing government subsidies to oil companies and instituting so-called pay-as-you go budget principles, meaning every increase in spending would be offset by either a tax increase or a cut in some other spending program. And Democrats will put out a plan calling for increased spending on education and other domestic policy changes later this month. "If you look at the polling in the last few years, it points in the same direction," says Will Marshall, head...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: What the Dems Need to Do to Win | 6/6/2006 | See Source »

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