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...your study spots. Just make sure that you serve them in library-appropriate disguises. Widener Russian 2 oz. vodka 1 oz. coffee liqueur 3 oz. cream or milk Serve in a Peet’s coffee cup and pretend that it’s hot. Sip slowly. Lamontal Breakdown 2 oz. vodka 1 can sugar-free Red Bull Serve in another empty Red Bull can and nobody will know the difference. Cabot Explosion 1 oz. rum 1 oz. coconut rum 5 oz. pineapple juice Serve in a Greenhouse Café smoothie cup and sip from a straw. Hella Hilles...

Author: By Julia M. Spiro, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Putting the "Bar" Back Libary | 1/17/2008 | See Source »

...more of an unlucky play.” TWO-MINUTE MINORS With the tie on Friday night, Harvard snapped a five-game losing streak...Sophomore defenseman Chad Morin and junior forward Jimmy Fraser each scored their first goal of the season this weekend...The Crimson suffered a mental breakdown against the Bobcats in the second period and took a penalty for too many men on the ice. The next night, Richter took a rare goalie penalty for high-sticking. —Staff writer Robert T. Hamlin can be reached at rhamlin@fas.harvard.edu...

Author: By Robert T. Hamlin, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Road Miscues Doom Men's Hockey | 1/7/2008 | See Source »

...centralized, hegemonic voice itself. This risk comes very much to the forefront when we consider which groups in particular Asian America presumably represents. Different Asian ethnicities are unequally represented on campus, with a disproportionate number of Chinese, for example, rather than Cambodians or Laotians, relative to the national demographic breakdown. In fact, just a quick look at Harvard’s East Asian Studies concentration reveals that only four Asian cultures are covered—China, Korea, Japan and Vietnam. No subcontinent, Southeast Asia, or Oceania.In fact, Harvard’s East Asian Studies program is a case study...

Author: By N. KATHY Lin | Title: No to Asian American Studies | 1/3/2008 | See Source »

...experts to hold grudges. But "grudge" may be the wrong word - and it's not exactly a scientific term. More tenable than the notion of animals bearing grudges is the theory that they suffer stress. A 2005 paper in the journal Nature examined what some scientists called an "elephant breakdown" in Africa, and argued that elephants that had randomly attacked rhinoceroses were behaving pathologically. They were, the scientists suggested, suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder - terminology usually reserved for humans - responding to years of hardship, inflicted by people. Their population and social order had been decimated by poaching, culls...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Did This Tiger Hold a Grudge? | 12/28/2007 | See Source »

...previous books, the investigation leads Inspector Chen to a brutal legacy from the past, for even the most vicious of Qiu's criminals are victims of China's bloody history. So, incidentally, are many of the people close to the author. "My mother had a nervous breakdown at the beginning of the Cultural Revolution and she never really recovered," Qiu says. "But I also have friends who suffered even worse things. I'm not saying they're dead or anything. But they're really ruined. Their life, dreams, career - gone...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Criminal Mind | 12/19/2007 | See Source »

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