Word: neos
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...communism in a grand web of causality and suspense. Hitler, Himmler, Mengele, Speer, Heisenberg, Honnecker and Gorbachev strut and fret through hot war and cold. The action ricochets back and forth from the '30s to the '90s, from Potsdam to Los Alamos to Auschwitz to post-Wall Berlin, where neo-Nazis are plotting an apocalypse that could put new zip in Einstein's abandoned idea...
...finished her match, the Crimson had already taken a 4-0 lead. Sophomore Johanna Snyder was off the No. 4 court in a matter of minutes, using excellent shot placement to dispatch her opponent in convincing fashion, 9-3, 9-0, 9-0. Sophomores Sandra Mumanachit and Charlene Neo also gained early victories playing in the No. 6 and 8 spots, respectively. Neo dropped only two points in her match and has now outscored her Cornell opposition 54-2 in the past two years. The next round of matches for the Crimson were equally impressive. Freshman June Tiong, Harvard?...
...really well and are headed in the right direction,” Tiong said. The night’s most dominating victories came at the No. 7 and No. 8 spots as freshman Alexandra Zindman won by a score of 9-1, 9-1, 9-5 and sophomore Charlene Neo cruised 9-1, 9-0, 9-2. Sophomore Sandra Mumanachit and freshman Bethan Williams added the other two wins for the final 6-3 margin. Harvard was once again without senior and 2007 All-Ivy League selection Supriya Balsekar, who is sidelined with a hip injury. Tiong and Neo were...
...including two walk-ons—on the nine-woman squad, the team showed confidence and poise on the way to victory. The Crimson began the season beset with injuries, with 2007 All-Ivy senior Supriya Balsekar out with a hip injury for at least two weeks, sophomore Charlene Neo out against Brown with a shin splint, and freshman June Tiong leaving the match against Williams with an ankle injury. With Balsekar out, Tiong played at the No. 1 spot in her first-ever match as a collegiate athlete. She is one of four recruits—along with fellow...
According to Kampgrounds of America, which operates some 450 campgrounds, 400,000 people are full-time RV dwellers. And many of them are enthusiastic proselytizers for their neo-nomadic lifestyle. "This is the ideal American subculture; it's the way everyone would like it to be," says Howard Payne, a real estate lawyer who, along with his wife Linda, traded a five-bedroom house in Louisville, Ky., for a 400-sq.-ft. (37 sq m) motor home in August...