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Things have changed a lot since the tense-air-travel days following 9/11. Not only are cockpit doors locked, but many pilots carry guns, and a cadre of armed air marshals, state troopers and agents from 80 federal agencies routinely hop on random flights. The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) thinks it's high time its security measures reflected those changes. So, as the agency confirmed last week, it is re-evaluating its list of prohibited items, a move supported by veteran security experts. Among the things that may get cleared for takeoff by late January: knitting needles and knives with...
...Administration official called "a dog." So White House and Treasury officials will have to rewrite it, stripping out, among other things, a proposal to scale back the politically sacrosanct home-mortgage tax break, before Bush spells out particulars in his State of the Union address in January. With foreign travel and the holidays eating up the end of this year, his advisers concede that Bush has little chance of getting back his mojo before then...
Junior Ryan Maki did not travel with the team this weekend because of “a nagging injury,” according to Donato...
With the Curricular Review encouraging more study abroad options, the University has been preparing to provide emergency medical and evacuation assistance to students, faculty, and staff traveling overseas for University-related activities. In July, Harvard contracted with International SOS, a worldwide provider of medical assistance and services, to insure Harvard-affiliated travelers. The insurance program began in September and will automatically be included in student and faculty study abroad and internship programs. “This is the best kept secret at Harvard,” said Dillon Professor of International Affairs Jorge I. Dominguez, who is the director...
...anything but lousy. The nation’s oldest university had driven some of its own students to suicide—and then pulled off a nearly successful cover-up.St. Martin’s is a publishing house with strong Harvard ties—it prints the student-run travel guide “Let’s Go” as well as The Crimson’s own books on the college admissions process. The publisher played the role of matchmaker and set Wright up with the “secret court” story, first published in Fifteen...