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...solved it. Remember? There were no eyewitnesses; the evidence was just a huge pile of rubble. Somehow the FBI managed to identify and capture the killer. It was one of the greatest accomplishments of police work in history, but you totally ignored this in your story. DAVID GORDON Northboro, Mass...
Granted, the Crimson, who hosted the event, finished fourth place at Indoor Heptagonals at the Gordon Track that weekend, well behind meet champion Princeton. But no team stepped up and performed beyond expectation like Harvard did that Sunday...
...Coming into the spring, Harvard had pretty much the same team on paper as one year ago. Freshman Lola Ajilore was the only new face to the varsity line-up. Nevertheless, as the season progressed, Coach Gordon Graham found himself shuffling his players in and out of his roster due to a slew of injuries to top players. Both senior co-captain Sanaz Ghazal and sophomore No. 1 Sanja Bajin spent a portion of the season on the sidelines nursing nagging injuries. Harvard showed a great deal of flexibility and resiliency to end the year on a high note, three...
...plans to run for Florida Governor against Jeb Bush; in Hanoi. Peterson engineered a U.S.- Vietnam trade deal, which is awaiting the Bush Administration's submission to Congress for approval. A former air force pilot and prisoner of war in Hanoi, Peterson is expected to leave July 15. RETIRED. GORDON MOORE, 72, Intel Corp. founder and articulator of "Moore's Law," a prediction that the number of transistors on a silicon chip will double every year; in Santa Clara, California. He will continue serving as chairman and director emeritus but will have no voting power. EXTRADITION UPHELD.Of FRANZ MEIJER...
...drug companies and politicians have something to argue about. Given the painfully slow development of effective cancer treatments over the past three decades, the flood of positive results reported at last week's oncology conference was especially gratifying. "Cancer treatment has always been a satisfying profession," says Dr. Michael Gordon, a cancer specialist at the University of Arizona. "But now it's truly exciting. I've been wondering to myself about where I will be in 20 to 25 years, and I'm thinking that I might just be out of a job. And that will be great...