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...history to record 200 career points.The Big Green got even before the first period was over. Junior defenseman Jen Brawn was called for hooking at 16:35, and Dartmouth’s Maggie Kennedy capitalized on the power-play opportunity.The second period brought more of the same back-and-forth play. The squads traded shots, with Harvard dealing the first blow.At 6:04 in the second frame, sophomore Katharine Chute notched her second goal of the season to put the Crimson back ahead. Vaillancourt and tri-captain Kirsten Kester were credited with assists.The recently reshuffled line of Kester, Chute...

Author: By Kate Leist, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: 2008 Ends On High Note for Crimson | 1/4/2009 | See Source »

...modesty of their own gifts. But this is not so; we emerge from their movies frustrated by their failures to grasp and shake our souls. I would like to propose a cinematic moratorium on this subject: a thoughtful silence, rich in remembrance, but lacking in the desire to leap forth a couple of times a year with slack, distant, by-the-numbers products like Good...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Good: A Mild-Mannered Morality Tale | 12/30/2008 | See Source »

...second score, answered two Lakers’ goals with one of his own at 18:51 in the first.The events of the second period action against the Lakers (5-8-6) serve as a reminder of how quickly a hockey game can change from a back-and-forth battle to a blowout. With the team having already rallied twice to get within one goal of the Lakers, Simon Gysbers and Fred Cassiani beat freshman goalie Matt Hoyle in a 91-second span.“In general, our offense starts from our zone and if we can establish a defense...

Author: By Robert T. Hamlin, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Men's Hockey Stumbles on Wisconsin Visit | 12/30/2008 | See Source »

...Gist: The biggest juggernaut in children's-television history sprang forth from mundane origins. At a Manhattan dinner party in 1966, a Carnegie Foundation executive named Lloyd Morrissett mentioned that his young daughter was so enthralled by television that she would park herself in front of the family's set to gaze at early-morning test patterns. That story prompted a public-television producer named Joan Cooney to investigate how television could be used to package education as entertainment: "What if it went down more like ice cream than spinach?" The ensuing creation - in which kids learned everything from empathy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The History of Sesame Street | 12/29/2008 | See Source »

...back-and-forth can feel esoteric, but, in fact, it goes to the heart of solving the problem. "If losing firms are sucking up all the credit, then isn't the [correct] policy response to let banks cancel lines of credit?" asks Octavio Marenzi, CEO of the banking consultancy Celent, who joined the debate in December with his own paper, called "Flawed Assumptions about the Credit Crisis." After going through a reckoning of the aggregate data - including the fact that consumer credit hit a record high in September 2008 - Marenzi put forth a couple of possible explanations, including "that policymakers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Is There Really a Credit Crunch? | 12/24/2008 | See Source »

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