Word: depths
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Bethan Williams was offset by a 3-2 defeat at No. 7 with sophomore Alexandra Zindman falling 8-10, 9-6, 7-9, 10-8, 9-2, to Tara Wadhwa of Yale. Playing three spots above her customary No. 7 flight, Williams’ performance is indicative of the depth and talent of the entire Harvard squad.“We have a very strong team. They proved that they are better than the position they play,” No. 1 freshman Nirasha Guruge said.No. 2 sophomore Alisha Mashruwala chalked another one up for the Crimson with a come...
...nordic and alpine teams that currently maintains a full roster of greater than six members, boasting seven active team members. “The women’s nordic team is the team with numbers,” Schulz said. “We have the depth necessary to deal with both injuries and illness.” Both the men’s nordic and alpine squads currently have four team members due to recent injuries, and McHugh is the lone member of the women’s alpine team that competed at the meet this weekend...
...Cohen said. “Usually we rely on the top of the ladder for wins, but it was towards the middle and end of the ladder that we were stronger.”With victories from the fourth through seventh positions, the Crimson demonstrated enough depth to make a strong showing at the CSA National Team Championships in two weeks. But, after running out of gas against a stellar Tigers squad, Cohen acknowledged that Harvard must prepare for more grueling efforts if it hopes to go far in the tournament.“I think we know what we?...
...Coraline (pronounced core-align), which Selick adapted from a kids' book by graphic novelist Neil Gaiman, begins with a needle thrust in the viewer's eye. Mostly, though, 3D is used to heighten the picture's antirealistic, otherworldly mood. The illusion of depth is boldly stylized; the scene of a front yard or a kitchen will be a series of flat surfaces, like the planes in a pop-up picture book. This is the animated film as art film. Coraline doesn't try to ingratiate; it just looms, like a cemetery gate, daring curious souls to tiptoe in and fend...
...central conversation in the media business these days is how to preserve and provide quality journalism and in-depth reporting at a time when consumers and readers expect to get them for free on the Internet. Information may want to be free, as the Web axiom suggests, but sending correspondents to Baghdad and Kabul and everywhere in between costs money. Information may want to be free, but knowledge and reporting and insight are expensive--and valuable...