Word: clashed
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...clash with Princeton was sloppy with a capital P, but the Crimson cleaned up in the end, escaping the opening ECAC weekend with an unblemished record. Harvard (3-0-0, 2-0-0 ECAC) downed the Tigers (2-1-1, 1-1-0) by a final count of 3-2 at the Bright Hockey Center on Saturday, overcoming a sluggish start to seize the edge on special teams and ultimately the win. The more effective power play and penalty kill won out in the end, with the Crimson converting 3-of-8 extra-skater chances while holding Princeton...
...David Malouf. A celebrated Australian novelist reimagines his country's pioneer past with a haunting tale of a white man raised by Aborigines. It is the mid-19th century, and the struggling Queensland settlers are homesick for Britain and afraid of the natives. Malouf works the themes of culture clash and racial fears into a seamless narrative that amounts to a national contraepic...
...Tuesday night clash of women’s hockey titans at Yale’s Ingalls Rink, the All-Star team from the ECAC took on the U.S. National Team. Team USA emerged victorious, beating the ECAC All-Stars by a final score of 6-2. Of interest to Harvard fans was the fact that both squads boasted a number of Crimson players past and present. The U.S. National Team had the larger contingent, with senior Julie Chu and junior Caitlin Cahow joining alumnae Angela Ruggiero ’02-’04 and Jamie Hagerman...
...folkloric world of Kashmir will spell disaster. It is his abuse of power 24 years earlier that leaves him lying in a bloody heap on the stairs of India’s apartment building. Max’s relationship with Boonyi is a non-too-subtle allegory of the clash between Eastern and Western values, and although he is clearly a foil to Shalimar, he emerges as a tragic hero. We hate him for his selfish womanizing, but admire him for being “the Resistance hero, the philosopher prince, the billionaire power-broker, the maker of the world...
Five Middle East experts discussed the roots of Arab public opinion toward the U.S.—and the “clash of misperceptions” between America and the Arab world since September 11—at the Kennedy School of Government’s John F. Kennedy, Jr., Forum yesterday. Former American Ambassador to Yemen Barbara Bodine moderated the panel, which included veteran pollster John Zogby, University of Maryland Professor for Peace and Development Shibley Telhami, Pakistani journalist Beena Sarwar, and Jordanian diplomat Jafar Hassan. Zogby opened the discussion by presenting recent polls that gauged attitudes toward...