Word: isaiah
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It’s not that Morris is the only good football player to come out of Cambridge. Matt Birk ’98 is a Pro-Bowl center for the Minnesota Vikings. Isaiah Kacyvenski ’00 is currently laid up in his home with a high ankle sprain, but the Seattle Seahawks hope he’ll heal quickly and regain the team’s starting middle linebacker spot. Junior Dante Balestracci, a bruising linebacker from New Bedford, Mass., and senior offensive lineman Jamil Soriano may be better NFL bets in the long...
It’s after the game, and Dale talks a bit about the best players he’s seen during his time in the booth—Mike Giardi ’94, Isaiah Kaczyvenski ’00 and Morris—and eventually goes home, back to his family and his job as a partner in a Boston law firm. He’ll be back in two weeks for Harvard-Yale, and so will the banners and the kids and “That pass complete to Carl Morris, first down Harvard...
...system in the modern era. Not only has he set nearly every Harvard receiving record but NFL scouts have already expressed heavy interest in his stock. If Morris continues to progress, there is a strong possibility that he will be drafted higher than any other Harvard player in history. Isaiah Kacyvenski ’00, now the starting middle linebacker for the Seattle Seahawks, is currently the all-time highest Crimson draft pick (4th round, 119th overall...
Notions of a divinely choreographed end to history are almost as old as Western faith. They appear first in the Jewish Bible's books of Isaiah and Ezekiel. The books were edited in the 5th and 6th centuries B.C., and secular scholars find an intimate connection between their content and the horrors Jews faced at the time. In 586 B.C., after a brutal siege, the kingdom of Babylon conquered Israel and forced its elite into exile. The prophets defiantly proclaimed the opposite: the establishment over all nations of a Jewish kingdom under a divinely anointed Messiah...
...obvious” obligation to pay higher wages, it noted the equally obvious fact that those with the leisure to engage in such philosophical musings must hesitate before demanding justifications from those who do not. The response reminded me of a tactic once described by Isaiah Berlin, of resolving the difficult questions of life by “so treating the questioner that problems which appeared at once so overwhelmingly important and utterly insoluble vanish from the questioner’s consciousness like evil dreams and trouble him no more...