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Throughout the earliest months of his amazing rise as a presidential candidate, Barack Obama showcased an uncanny ability to turn an attack against the attacker. His pre-primary wonkiness last summer became his post-partisan problem-solving by mid-autumn. His inexperience ahead of Iowa became his newcomer's agency for change after his victory there. The question of race in South Carolina soon became a chance for the whole country to rise above it. And after a while, Obama's knack for rebounding created a magical aura around his campaign: the more he did it, the more he seemed...
...freshman crews were the highlights of the day for the Crimson. The freshman eight finished second behind Yale and ahead of Princeton, clocking in at 6:00.7, while the second freshman eight won its event with a time...
...Kyle. I never thought I could be a crew. I grew up as a skipper, always making all the decisions. But sailing with him, I feel very involved in the boat. I really feel like we’re a team.”The Crimson is now looking ahead to nationals, both for team racing in addition to the coed dinghy national championship. The dinghy championship will be held in Newport as well from June 2-4. And if there’s anything Harvard has learned this weekend, it’s that nobody can be counted...
...men’s lightweight and heavyweight teams had races, and the heavyweight women had their races, too. There were a lot of people in the boat house, and afterwards they had a commemoration for seniors. It was a nice Radcliffe crew day.” Looking ahead, two weeks from now the crew will travel south to Camden, N.J. for Eastern Sprints. Success at that reace could secure an NCAA bid for the Black and White. That race would be held in Camden on June 5-7. Radcliffe finished fourth in nationals there last season...
...days, reporters in China were so tightly controlled in where they could go and whom they could talk to that they were often forced to scan the pages of the state media for subtle hints of change in official policy. Nowadays, under special rules enacted ahead of the Beijing Olympics, journalists are theoretically free to roam China and interview anyone. Except of course for Tibet and its bordering regions. Since the bloody anti-Chinese protests of March 10-16, reporters have once again been barred from Tibet and had to fall back on scanning the People's Daily and other...