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...season did look promising for Harvard from the beginning. The Crimson opened up with a 2-0 record in March despite Mother Nature's attempts to prevent lacrosse from being played in the Northeast. An 18-9 win over Boston College (B.C.) in Harvard's second game was perhaps the most promising of its first few wins, as both the offense and defense looked like they had NCAA-caliber material...

Author: By Chris W. Mcevoy, | Title: M. Lacrosse Leaves NCAA Hopes Unfulfilled in Frustrating Season | 6/5/1997 | See Source »

...Last year, students in the Northeast borrowed over two billion dollars to pay for higher education...

Author: By Cheryl A. Jacques, | Title: The Student Loan Crisis | 6/3/1997 | See Source »

...ways the most pious and morally obsessed of nations outside the Islamic world. Recent polls suggest that 96% of Americans believe in a personal God and that 78% of them think their consciousness will survive death and go, after judgment, to heaven or hell. Its earliest colonists in the Northeast--Pilgrims, Puritans, Quakers, "Pennsylvania Dutch"--were all seeking to flee European persecution and corruption (as they saw it) and trying to set up various kinds of religious Utopias. The main tool of Catholic Spain's colonization in the Southwest was the Franciscan mission. And yet the paradoxical fact is that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SEEKING THE SPIRIT | 5/21/1997 | See Source »

...Puritans weren't alone in their suspicion of the icon. The next wave of settlers in the Northeast, the Quakers, led by William Penn, despised most arts. Music was a distraction, poetry (beyond the simplest hymns) a snare. So the lack of Quaker painting is hardly a surprise, though some artists--most conspicuously Benjamin West--came from Quaker families and left the faith. The only painter who lived and died a Quaker was the Philadelphia "primitive" Edward Hicks (1780-1849), and he felt moral qualms about...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SEEKING THE SPIRIT | 5/21/1997 | See Source »

...Puritans meanwhile created a severe culture of practicality and moral rigor as they set out to build a virtuous Utopia in the wilds of the Northeast. What they wrought, Hughes says, has proved basic to how Americans view themselves even today. He visits the "Old Ship" meetinghouse in Hingham, Massachusetts, a stripped-down, foursquare building that embodies the seriousness and urgency of Puritan life. Puritans were also fixated on death, and in a simple wooded cemetery Hughes discusses why gravestones were their only acceptable art form...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PROGRAM GUIDE | 5/21/1997 | See Source »

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