Word: ens
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...more wait to be filled with toys and clothes and kitchenware and books and photos and the other flotsam of family life. The woman deserves a medal. That's exactly the conclusion the French authorities reached earlier this year. In May, Denis traveled from her home in St.-Germain-en-Laye, an affluent Parisian commuter town, to the capital. There, in the Salle des Fêtes of the Elysées Palace, French President Jacques Chirac presented her with the Médaille de la Famille Française - the medal of the French family, founded...
...short stories, The Pact of the Rainbow Snake. But being heard in her homeland proved tougher. "I often realized that nobody could accompany me in my travels, as I often took an alternative path?the perilous one," the author writes in her Actes Sud-commissioned essay, Croire en l'incroyable (Believe the Unbelievable). "It was not necessarily the shortest one, but I felt that it was the closest to the country's reality...
...lead changes. The teams were knotted at 24, but Dartmouth won six of the next seven points to tie the match at one game apiece. The Harvard defense took over in Game Three. Posting three blocks and forcing nine Big Green errors, the Crimson limited Dartmouth to .089 hitting en route to a 30-27 victory. Carrying its momentum into the fourth frame, Harvard was dominant. After taking the lead at 4-3, the Crimson never trailed again, leading by as much as seven. Only on the brink of defeat did Dartmouth respond, fighting off four match points before Mahon...
...excitement to kick off the Ivy League season, the Harvard women’s soccer team somehow managed to look past one of the nation’s top teams. The Crimson (0-6-1) played a sluggish, unfocused first half en route to a 2-0 loss at No. 14 Boston University (BU) and the embarrassment of entering its league schedule without a win. It took only four minutes for the Terriers (6-2-1) to jump out to a 1-0 lead, as senior Paula Moniz sent a cross into the Harvard box and found freshman Emily Pallotta...
...It’s tough being down by that much, but at the same time, it was a great fight.” The Wildcats controlled play to open the match, recording 20 kills on .289 while holding the Crimson attack to a meager .081 hitting percentage en route to a 30-24 victory. Though UNH’s offense was less proficient in game three, its strong defensive pressure forced 11 Harvard attack errors and allowed the Wildcats to take a 2-1 match lead. “We need to work on maintaining control throughout the match...