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...accepts the UC??s proposal to have students serve on an advisory committee alongside faculty, he will depart from the framework of recent dean searches...
...current policy, students’ ability to live in mixed-gender rooming situations is limited to special situations at the discretion of the individual House Masters. Policies vary widely from house to house, and the logic behind each house’s particular policy is equally inconsistent. The UC??s Rooming Choice Act calls for much needed uniformity across houses: a rooming group’s ability to live in a mixed-gender suite should be based on explicit consent from all parties, not particular architectural barriers. Under the proposed system, mixed-gender housing would...
...opposite gender. The Handbook for Students states that the College does not “ordinarily permit” co-ed rooming groups, but that House Masters may grant exceptions if “the configuration of space ensures a large degree of privacy.” The UC??s “Rooming Choice Act” calls these restrictions on co-ed rooming “inconsistent and unfair” because the choice to allow co-ed rooming is left up to House Masters, and students in co-ed rooms are often forced to bear...
...UC??s bill requires workers to obtain a badge from building managers before entering any dormitory. The badge, which “shall be displayed prominently,” will help students to differentiate between dangerous intruders and benign maintenance workers. This legislation wisely addresses the problem of plainclothes contractors who, unlike the uniformed Facilities Maintenance Operations workers and UNICCO janitors, often carry no form of identification. Though seemingly harmless, the gravity of this security risk became clear last October, when a convicted rapist was found roaming the halls of Mather House, posing as a fire-door inspector...
...well over a year, this page has called on the College to harness the power of competition to make articles that are unavailable on E-Resources cheaper to include in coursepacks. Specifically, we hope that a centralized office dealing with coursepack cost-cutting—such as the UC??s proposed Centralized Resource Efficiency Optimization—will shop reading lists around to different printers and find the best deal possible for students, including the flexibility of reading coursepacks online, eliminating printing costs altogether. We certainly do not want to compromise the content of a course...