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...Harvard men’s tennis team split over the weekend with mixed results. The Crimson’s captain, Chris Clayton, played at the Intercollegiate Tennis Association All-American Championship in Tulsa, Okla., while the rest of the team traveled to South Bend, Ind. to play in Notre Dame’s Tom Fallon Invitational. It was a frustrating long weekend for Clayton, who, having beaten the nation’s No. 17 player in mid-September, came in with high expectations for success against his elite competition. “I had one of those days where just...

Author: By Jonathan B. Steinman, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Crimson Divides, Can’t Conquer Over Extended Weekend | 10/13/2008 | See Source »

...season.” And the Crimson will need all the training it can get for the full schedule that lies ahead for the rest of the season. Next weekend, the squad will be split between the Cross Country Pre-Nationals in Terra Haute, Ind. and the 42nd UAlbany Invititational in Albany, N.Y. Harvard did not compete in the Pre-Nationals last year, but Saretsky wants “to start getting back into looking at the national scene.” At last year’s Albany meet, the Crimson dominated the competition, winning all four...

Author: By Dixon McPhillips, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: SPORTS BRIEF: Crimson sends lone runner in preparation for upcoming schedule | 10/13/2008 | See Source »

...Carmel, Ind., is driving in circles. Since 2001, the Indianapolis suburb has built 50 roundabouts, those circular alternatives to street intersections that have become a transit fixture in much of the rest of the world. Because roundabouts force cars to travel through a crossroads in a slower but more free-flowing manner - unlike traffic circles, roundabouts have no stop signals - in seven years, Carmel has seen a 78% drop in accidents involving injuries, not to mention a savings of some 24,000 gal. of gas per year per roundabout because of less car idling. "As our population densities become more...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: You Want a Revolution | 9/4/2008 | See Source »

...first type is reflected in Ed Hecimovich, 41, who had just sat down for a greasy- spoon lunch with his wife and three young children when the Secret Service swarmed Schoop's Diner in Portage, Ind., and Obama swept in for a cheeseburger. Hecimovich, a pipe fitter who twice voted for President Bush, asked the candidate about the economy, his top concern. Obama's answers impressed the independent, but he's still undecided. "I like that Obama stands for change," Hecimovich says. "But he doesn't have the experience...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Obama's Economic Challenge | 8/11/2008 | See Source »

...lure you into the stories of the people onscreen--to (it's not a bad word) entertain. Nowhere is this itch to Hollywoodize reality clearer than in American Teen, director Nanette Burstein's account of one year, 2005--06, in the lives of four high school seniors in Warsaw, Ind. It's the rare documentary that could score at the box office, and not just because Paramount Vantage, its distributor, is pushing it hard. You're likely to have an absorbing, unsettling time at American Teen, for it seduces even as it sparks suspicions about the motives of Burstein...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Year with American Teens | 7/24/2008 | See Source »

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