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According to a Jan. 16 notice to shareholders, Tenon Ltd., with four sawmills and a capacity of 850,000 cubic meters of timber per year, would sell a large fraction of its forestry assets, and looked to auction cutting rights to international investors...

Author: By Elena Sorokin, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Harvard Invests in Forests | 3/10/2004 | See Source »

CANTON, N.Y.—Because of his speed and unrelenting aggression, senior assistant captain Tyler Kolarik generates more scoring chances than anyone else on the Harvard men’s hockey team. Because of the cruel, heartless Hockey Gods, he has converted only a fraction of them this season...

Author: By Jon PAUL Morosi, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Kolarik Coming Through in Clutch for M. Hockey | 2/23/2004 | See Source »

...front of home crowds of 213 and 321, like the Crimson did against Rider and Maine at Lavietes earlier this season. It probably stings a bit to play in front of a crowd of 892 for an Ivy League showdown with Cornell, when you know that a large fraction of those fans have come the whole way from Ithaca to support their...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: King James Bible: Lavietes Comes Alive for M. Hoops | 2/18/2004 | See Source »

...that consequence is far from arbitrary. A good fraction of the girls who would wear headscarves to school belong to the ranks of young French ethnic Arabs who do not adhere to fundamentalist Islam for cultural reasons; tragically, they feel it has more to offer them than does the French republic. Respected scholar Gilles Kepel describes the engagement of young second- and third-generation French Arabs with the Islamic faith not as the perpetuation of their family’s culture and religion—since many of their parents have given up most Muslim practices—but rather...

Author: By Daniel B. Holoch, | Title: One Nation, Secular and Indivisible | 2/12/2004 | See Source »

...Apple announced their plan for the joint campaign last October, as the iTunes software first became available to Windows users, it seemed a particularly bold and risky venture: Pepsi is placing 100 million of the free songs under its bottle caps, and yet Apple had only sold a small fraction of that number to its devoted Mac user base. At that time, the software’s profitability when it reached a larger and more competitive market was very much uncertain. As of early this year, while it’s still difficult to tell, the numbers are looking good...

Author: By Matthew A. Gline, | Title: Music, Set Free | 2/11/2004 | See Source »

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