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...here,” Rollins added.That’s right, four years, this being the first. And though the young Crimson is out of the Ivy title hunt this season, the next three years look promising for a maturing freshman class. As it stands, the freshmen have already drawn attention to themselves in Ivy League competition, so much so that comparisons to the seniors of an impressive Dartmouth squad are not without merit. Given three more years of playing time together—and a timely three years it is, as Dartmouth, Brown, and Princeton say goodbye to much...

Author: By Vincent R. Oletu, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Rookie Class Aids Harvard | 2/24/2006 | See Source »

...attorney and a founding member of the Muslim Bar Association in Illinois, said that he felt the publisher’s decision to suspend the two editors was an overreaction and a baseless decision by the publisher, Mary Cory. While Afeef said he regretted that the cartoons were ever drawn in the first place, he felt that Gorton’s motives were justified. “It’s important for these types of things to be discussed and to be brought into the public sight,” Afeef said. “There...

Author: By Kathleen Pond, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Cartoon Lands Daily Illinois Editors in Hot Water | 2/21/2006 | See Source »

...Audiences, not least of all. Having drawn nearly 300,000 people to his arena operas at London's Royal Albert Hall, Freeman, 53, has helped revolutionize the art form from within. As founder of the Opera Factory, first in Sydney and later in London as part of the English National Opera, he earned his stripes as an avant-gardist, famous for stripping his singers - literally, as in his 1988 Cos? Fan Tutte set on a beach. (Amelia, Jaewoo and Emma, fear not.) But when The Magic Flute opens in Sydney this week, their talents will be similarly exposed. "I wanted...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Giving Mozart a Makeover | 2/20/2006 | See Source »

...Power Biggs Memorial Celebrity Recital Featuring John Scott Tuesday, Feb. 21, 8:00 PM Adolphus Busch Hall, 27 Kirkland Street. $15/10 students Organs aren’t just for hymns and Halloween. This Tuesday, organ legend John Scott will come to Harvard, drawn by the opportunity to play on the exceptional 1958 Flentrop organ. For those used to the muddy and sometimes overpowering groans of Memorial Church’s giant organ, the bright, clean sound of the Flentrop will be a welcome relief, especially when combined with Scott’s brilliant technique. Organ recitals have become increasingly rare...

Author: By Alexander B. Fabry, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: The E. Power Biggs Memorial Celebrity Recital Featuring John Scott | 2/20/2006 | See Source »

...Harvard Alumni Association (HAA) is holding a Global Series event in India, which “demonstrates Harvard’s deep interest in the region,” according to HAA Deputy Executive Director Charlie Cardillo ’91. Historically, both Oxford and Cambridge University have drawn heavily on students from countries in the old British Commonwealth. Neeraj “Richie” Banerji ’06, an international student from India, said Oxford is better known in his home country than Harvard. Just fifty years ago, almost all Indian students studying abroad would...

Author: By Stephanie S. Garlow, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Oxford Ramps Up Recruiting | 2/15/2006 | See Source »

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