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...things together at this point in the season.”With the game essentially out of reach and nothing left to lose, Harvard tried to come out strong in the third quarter. Senior Carle Stenmark notched his 11th goal of the season with 7:03 left on a feed from freshman Travis Burr. The assist was the rookie’s first this spring.But the Tigers had an answer, as sophomore Mark Kovler rattled off two straight in less than a minute to give Princeton its biggest lead at 9-1.The Crimson had a little fight left, and with Flood...

Author: By Madeleine I. Shapiro, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Men's Lacrosse Struggles to Score | 4/15/2007 | See Source »

...without congressional funding, military operations would eventually have to be scaled back. But calamity is not exactly imminent. The nonpartisan Congressional Research Service recently found that the Pentagon could finance the war at least through the end of June by shifting existing funds. Then there's the so-called "Feed and Forage" Act, a Civil War--era law that lets the President incur debt, without congressional approval, for such wartime troop expenses as "clothing, subsistence, fuel, quarters, transportation and medical supplies...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Washington Memo: Feeding the Troops | 4/12/2007 | See Source »

...postveto compromise. The most promising notion--funding the war in three-month tranches, no withdrawal timetables attached--would allow opponents of Bush's policy to "gradually ratchet up the pressure" on Bush, says CAP senior fellow Brian Katulis, while avoiding an all-or-nothing showdown. After all, the Feed and Forage Act can provide only so much political cover. "We have some time," says a Democrat involved in the search for a legislative strategy. "But we can't be in the position of defending ourselves with a law that dates back...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Washington Memo: Feeding the Troops | 4/12/2007 | See Source »

...shackling ring in the floor. Prisoners at Gwanda are paraded every morning before the station's officers and, one by one, interrogated and slapped, humiliated. Some of my fellow prisoners had been arrested for trapping porcupines in the forest, selling gasoline, stealing--petty offenses committed in desperate efforts to feed their families. A piece of graffiti on the wall read, P. MOYO WAS HERE FOR STANDING...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: First Person: Imprisoned in Zimbabwe | 4/12/2007 | See Source »

...head down, he demurred. A man asked to share my table and introduced himself as a manager for the Christian relief organization World Vision. I asked him about this year's harvest. "There's zero," he said. "No crop. Millions of hungry people, and just our maize sacks to feed them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: First Person: Imprisoned in Zimbabwe | 4/12/2007 | See Source »

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