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...Paul Ma '92, Resident Tutor in Chemistry and Environmental Science, may be new to Dunster House this year, but his connection to volleyball at Harvard stretches back to his first appearance on the varsity team in his first year as an undergraduate. Having founded and coached a men's and women's AAA volleyball team, Ma felt challenged to take on the intramural circuit upon his return to Harvard. With the help of Dunster resident Heather A. Rypkema '97, a member of the current varsity volleyball squad. Ma set out to make a team. He postered in the dining hall...

Author: By Michelle C. Sullivan, | Title: A Man, A Plan, a Volleyball: Paul Ma | 3/16/1995 | See Source »

...media reported that the two telco engineers were being brought to the Norwood barracks for telephone repairs. Is that what taxpayers are paying the salaries of two state police officers for? High tech chauffeur service, while funds for the poor are cut? Roy Bercaw Cambridge, MA...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Taxpayer Money Is Being Wasted | 3/15/1995 | See Source »

...updated introduction to the 1994 edition, Grinspoon makes it clear that his intent is neither to encourage nor to stigmatize those who partake of the demon flower. This is just the facts, ma'am, a fogie's guide to Xanadu. Grinspoon has collected and synthesized a great deal of information, and he gives ample to time to the anti-weed agenda. The author quotes a few scary tidbits from the FBI: "He [the user] becomes a fiend with savage or 'cave man' tendencies. His sex desires are aroused and some of the most horrible crimes result..." Horrible crimes...

Author: By Daley C. Haggar, | Title: How the Grinch Stole Cannabis | 3/9/1995 | See Source »

Write to Norma Knows, 14 Plympton St., Cambridge MA...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Norma Knows | 3/9/1995 | See Source »

...CRISIS: "You can't be older than your ma," quips Christopher Impey of the University of Arizona's Steward Observatory. Sounds obvious, maybe, but if Freedman and her colleagues are right about their space-telescope observations, it would seem that the universe hasn't caught on to this bit of common sense. The most straightforward interpretation of their data implies that the cosmos is 12 billion years old, max. But experts insist that the oldest stars in the Milky Way have been around for at least 14 billion years. "They could quite easily be several billion years older than that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: UNRAVELING UNIVERSE | 3/6/1995 | See Source »

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