Word: chaisson
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UConn got on the board first, scoring a powerplay goal 2:11 into the game. After a body-checking penalty on Spurling left the Crimson a skater short, Huskies defenseman Cristin Allen received the puck off a faceoff and lasered a pass to teammate Jennifer Chaisson at the left post. The UConn center knocked a shot off of Harvard co-captain Cori Bassett’s skate into the net to give the Huskies an early 1-0 lead...
...hopes for the future, many of these poets believe that poetry will never become a part of mass culture.“Real and deep engagement with poetry will always be something rare. Difficult art will be difficult no matter what the medium is,” says Dan Chaisson, a graduate of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences and a widely published poet and professor of English at Wellesley College.“I would hate for [poetry] to be some market driven industry like fiction or visual art,” he says...
...week investors pulled a net $6.2 billion out of stock funds Monday and Tuesday, but on Wednesday a net $6.5 billion flowed right back as the market bounced, according to Trim Tabs Financial Services. "There has not been any retail panic as far as we can see," says Scott Chaisson, a branch manager for Fidelity in midtown Manhattan. "There seems to be an awareness that there are going to be ups and downs like this...
There was some controversy at Harvard over the space shuttle, which in mid-April successfully completed its first test flight. Scientists such as Eric J. Chaisson, associate professor of Astronomy, emphasized the shuttle's potential as part of the nation's military planning, but when Columbia glided onto a southern California runway after a perfect 54 1/2-hour mission, most could not help but feel a surge of awe--and relief--at the accomplishment...
...seem surprising that Professor Chaisson was the only Harvard professor to speak out against this latest example of a dangerous US initiative in furthering the arms race. His colleagues in the Astronomy Dept. have either silently acquiesced to the military's plans or have been vocally supportive of them. When one considers that 50 per cent of our nation's scientists are engaged in military-related research it becomes clear that material concerns have long since replaced moral ones. If we are to avert the grim consequences of our present uncontrolled arms race, many more scientists must join Professor Chaisson...