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...near, some of the gravest transgressions against justice manifested in the national issue of immigration policy. The passage of Arizona’s Senate Bill 1070 represents the worst of our nation’s approaches to problem solving. Its reliance on specious standards of “reasonable suspicion?? that seemed to entail nothing further than “looking” like an illegal immigrant remains unacceptable. More horrifying, perhaps, this bill will negatively affect the nation’s Hispanic and Latin-American communities, who will undoubtedly be the first to suffer from profiling...

Author: By The Crimson Staff | Title: Politics of Transition | 5/27/2010 | See Source »

...remembered” the presence of a priest at Hughson’s, and other witnesses were mustered who agreed. The priest was hanged. When Burton started remembering that “People in Ruffles”–influential men who were held above suspicion??participated too, the trials came to a hasty close...

Author: By David Zhou, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: BOOKENDS: Harvard Scholar Faces the Ghosts of Old New York | 9/23/2005 | See Source »

...question I had been sadly too sure would at some point come finally arrived. It was with an almost wry smile that I replied when I was eventually asked, “Did you get it in writing?” That one telling question confirmed the unfortunate suspicion??later explicitly confirmed—that I had had throughout the latter part of the ordeal: namely, that I had neither rights nor recourse in the matter. When it comes to coursework faculty, apparently, cannot fail...

Author: By Susan E. Mcgregor, | Title: Consumer Education | 9/20/2005 | See Source »

...Physics Department Chair John Huth said that he does not want female professors to join the Faculty “under the cloud of suspicion?? that they have been hired for political, rather than academic, reasons...

Author: By William C. Marra and Sara E. Polsky, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERSS | Title: Summers Meets With Divided Faculty | 2/23/2005 | See Source »

...terrible idea for faculty to take pride in drawing a lot of students, and perhaps even to be punished on occasion if they draw too few and be rewarded—rather than viewed with suspicion??if they draw many. Faculty might even be given incentives to evangelize for their subject, not just to take whoever comes and to blame the admissions office if there are too few takers...

Author: By Harry R. Lewis, | Title: Shopping for an Education | 6/5/2003 | See Source »

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