Word: hartness
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...place in it. He might argue that issues like softwood lumber will never go away until all three countries recognize the common challenges they face from an increasingly competitive world. "Canadians are looking for someone to exercise leadership on the border," says Carleton University trade-policy expert Michael Hart, who argues that the stakes are too high for the PM to wait for a comfortable majority at home. Adds Hart: "The future prosperity of Canada depends on the continued health of the North American economy." Even for the shrewdly cautious pols on Harper's team, that ought to carry weight...
...Magazine and Harvard College-distributed Freeze Magazine joined forces and attracted a gaggle of stunning Harvard women, all there to compete to become the next Miss CO-ED model. Not surprisingly, FM identified himself as a Crimson reporter, and a chorus of young ladies politely declined comment. Lindsay N. Hart ’08 and L. Caroleene Hardee ’09, though, were pleased to chat. FM, noticeably flattered, discovered that the two students had heard about the audition from the Kappa Alpha Theta e-mail list. Was the sorority trying to stack the competition? Hard...
...Chicago” follows the story of Roxie Hart (Samantha G. Barnard ’09), a vaudeville wannabe who murders her lover after he walks out on her. Sent to jail, she quickly discovers that she can win both freedom and fame by playing off of the sympathy of the scandal-loving city of Chicago. Meanwhile, fellow jailbird and vaudeville legend Velma Kelly (Anna Haas) jealously tries to win back the spotlight as the year’s most sensational murderess...
...male leads in the show, Benjamin K. Glaser ’09 as Amos Hart, also delivers an impressive performance. Glaser is stunningly convincing as Roxie’s pathetic husband, tottering clumsily and bashfully around on the stage. He has not simply reenacted John C. Reilly’s version of the character from the 2003 Rob Marshall film adaptation of “Chicago”—instead, Glaser puts his own spin on his character, playing Amos with an almost childish eagerness and gullibility...
...during the weekend.The Crimson swam on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday in hopes of winning its second Ivy Title in a row but ended up finishing second with 1445 points to the Tigers’ 1580 points.“[Princeton] had some fantastic swims,” sophomore Lindsay Hart said. “We were just a little bit off and we don’t really know why. We had some illnesses and injuries going into it too, so that was hard.”Each morning the team competed in the preliminary heats to decide who would...