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...will talk, you have to talk, about the perfect seasons. Fitzpatrick has had two, starting with the 2001 edition when he was just a wide-eyed freshman filling in for ailing Neil Rose ’02-’03, but it’s the legendary 2004 season that was really his. The 10-0 Crimson had the best Harvard football season since the 1901 squad went 12-0, finishing as Ivy champions and the only undefeated team in Division...

Author: By Lisa Kennelly, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: MALE ATHLETE OF THE YEAR: Ryan Fitzpatrick '05, Football | 6/9/2005 | See Source »

...Without Dawson, we would’ve been more like what we were when Neil Rose [’02-’03, Fitzpatrick’s predecessor] was here, and that’s probably a more explosive offense from the standpoint of throwing the ball with Fitzy,” Murphy said. “But we wouldn’t have been as good a field-position team and probably would have had a few more turnovers...

Author: By Timothy J. Mcginn, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: PLAYER PROFILE: Clifton Dawson '07, Football | 6/9/2005 | See Source »

...Springfest has become the president’s little Kiddie Carnival, which is unfortunate,” Lowell House Committee (HoCo) Co-Chair Neil K. Mehta ’06 says. “If you think of [Brown and Dartmouth] everyone has something big that they look forward to. In the meantime, the big spring event is Springfest where everyone is usually disappointed about the lack of a raucous all-out party weekend that people really want and really need...

Author: By Margaret W. Ho, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Putting Fun in the Calendar | 6/9/2005 | See Source »

Summers’ supporters and detractors alike say the president has made a great effort to reach out to undergraduates and interact with them on a personal and academic level—much more so than his presidential predecessor, Neil L. Rudenstine...

Author: By Joshua P. Rogers, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Summers Emerges As Student Icon | 6/9/2005 | See Source »

Gray was said to have been nonplussed by the tenure of Neil L. Rudenstine, whose ten-year reign over Harvard she saw as overly passive and lacking in vision. Speaking at commencement ceremonies at MIT in 1995, Gray took what some saw as a veiled swipe at Rudenstine, arguing in lofty rhetoric for more dynamic leadership in higher education: “It is instructive to see how much of the rhetoric having to do with the decline of higher education derives from the language of a larger nostalgia and from romantic visions of a golden age that never quite...

Author: By Zachary M. Seward, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: The Boys of Summers | 6/9/2005 | See Source »

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