Word: theft
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Amendment W, which clarifies the distinction between the CRR and the Administrative Board, a group of Senior Tutors and other administrators which handles cases of academic failure, theft, vandalism and similar offenses. While in the past, "all students asked to leave the University" were prohibited from returning to Harvard property without the CRR's written consent, now only those students "asked to leave the University by the Committee or its predecessors" are subject to that restriction...
...Board considered all disciplinary cases. Now, the CRR is authorized to handle charges of interference with "freedom of speech and academic freedom, freedom from personal force and violence, and freedom of movement"- in short, with "values which are essential to [the University's] nature as an academic community." "Theft or willful destruction of the property of the University" is included in this category...
...demonstrates its political nature by taking only political cases away from the Ad Board's jurisdiction. So it makes that all clearer in a proposed amendment, which would specify that only students asked to leave the University by the Committee- and not those disciplined by the Ad Board, for theft, property destruction, or anything else- are forbidden to be present "in any part of the Harvard community without the express written permission of the Committee." So the new voting procedure to elect student CRR delegates is an elaborate lottery system that, as Anderson said, "is guaranteed to produce students," thus...
...legislative history while enriching himself through private business dealings. The scandal that broke in 1963 instantly converted his status from that of all-American striver to one of cuff-linked corruptor. Last week, four years after his conviction for income tax evasion, conspiracy to defraud the Government and theft, he began a one-to three-year prison term. Hugh Sidey, TIME'S Washington bureau chief, found Baker remarkably mellow before parting with his freedom. Sidey's report...
Preference Plans. The Government also moved into crime insurance in response to an outcry from householders and merchants in crime-infested cities. The 1970 Housing Act empowers the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development to start selling burglary, robbery and other forms of theft policies next Aug. 1 in states where private insurance is not available at "affordable rates." Chances are that HUD will operate through existing private companies and brokerages by acting as re-insuror to them. Though high commission rates (average: 15%) paid to agents are one cause of soaring premiums, Congress responded to insurance-industry lobbying...