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Critics have disparaged Starsailor for lacking originality and not challenging the boundaries of modern rock and roll. While such claims are not unfounded, they do not detract from what the group does very well. If Starsailor’s music is rooted firmly in the past, it cannot be denied that the group has made great strides towards mastering—even refining, perhaps—the forms they emulate...

Author: By Lee HUDSON Teslik, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Pretty, Pale, and Polite | 2/22/2002 | See Source »

Huidekoper stresses that the various financial difficulties facing Harvard’s graduate schools will not detract from the University’s core mission: teaching and education...

Author: By Jenifer L. Steinhardt, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Faculties Deal With Serious Budget Crunch | 2/13/2002 | See Source »

...dispute doesn't detract from the fact that the Europeans have enthusiastically and effectively taken up the war against al Qaeda. They have uprooted its European networks, shared intelligence and offered thousands of troops to the U.S. war effort in Afghanistan. But the controversy over Guantanamo has reminded them of the reasons they regarded the Bush administration with suspicion before September 11. Tempers were not cooled by Defense Secretary Rumsfeld's initial reaction last week to concerns over the fate of the detainees: "I do not feel the slightest concern at their treatment; they are being treated vastly better than...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Why Guantanamo Has Europe Hopping Mad | 1/24/2002 | See Source »

While imprisonment generally tends to tarnish a political figure’s image, Ogletree said Sharpton’s Vieques sentence does not detract from his candidacy...

Author: By Robert M. Annis, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Ogletree Defends West’s Political Involvement | 1/11/2002 | See Source »

None of this, however, should detract from the committee’s significant accomplishments, most notably the recommendation of parity. Outsourcing certain services makes economic sense for a university whose primary business will always be education. But Harvard must take care not to use outsourcing as a means of lowering wages or of dividing and weakening the unions that represent workers. The policy of parity will remove any incentive Harvard might have to undercut union-negotiated wages in this...

Author: By The CRIMSON Staff, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: More Than Parity | 1/7/2002 | See Source »

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