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According to the Harvard Chess Team’s vice president, Edward F. Coleman ’11, many of the players had been playing since they were children. Coleman began when he was five, and has participated in numerous chess competitions since, including the U.S. Open...

Author: By Christopher H. Sun, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Harvard Chess Club Ties Beijing Team | 10/5/2008 | See Source »

...likewise developed close relationships with the artists she works with. McLaughlin, who has visited Bailey in New Mexico, said her “doorbell is always ringing.” Bailey has been working with some artists for so long that she now promotes the work of their children and grandchildren. Bailey said one artist even named her daughter “Irma.” While Bailey may share her name, the art she sells is often totally unique. Bailey said that one of the distinguishing features of Native American art is its lack of duplication. She said that...

Author: By Elise A. Sherman, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Native Art Comes to Campus | 10/5/2008 | See Source »

Esquire’s forward-looking list, published in honor of the magazine’s 75th Anniversary, includes music producers, Nobel Prize winners, children of accused terrorists, and current heads of state. But as Esquire’s editors compiled the list, individuals from one locale stood...

Author: By Jillian K. Kushner, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Profs Make ‘Most Influential’ List | 10/5/2008 | See Source »

...phones and cigarettes on the state’s dime, he is considering a law to pay willing women $1000 to undergo Fallopian tube ligation and effectively promote state-sponsored sterilization of poor women. The law would also include tax incentives for wealthier, more educated couples to have more children. To him, the root of the welfare crisis lies in poor people reproducing faster than those who are presumably more qualified to have children. Poverty is a burden on the state, and diminishing that burden is apparently as simple as sterilizing poor people...

Author: By Rachel M. Singh | Title: The Undeserving Poor | 10/5/2008 | See Source »

...that may be the study's most significant finding, says Dr. Sandra Hassink, director of the Weight Management Clinic at A.I. Dupont Hospital for Children in Wilmington, Del., and leader of the Obesity Leadership Group at the American Academy of Pediatrics. What's more, instituting a technique such as reading to promote weight loss would be fairly easy. Already, the Reach Out and Read Program, a nationwide non-profit literacy effort begun by pediatricians at the Boston Medical Center in 1989, encourages reading by providing books to preschool children each time they visit the doctor's office. Why not piggyback...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Can Reading Help Kids Lose Weight? | 10/4/2008 | See Source »

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