Word: nov
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...country that has ruled for a long time won't abdicate on the basis of a single defeat. It will maintain the kingly mannerisms until it loses again. So it is with the Australians on the eve of the rematch, a five-Test series beginning in Brisbane on Nov. 23. Even for the crustier fans of both countries, an Ashes contest may never have been more tantalizing. Part of its allure is that it will put the preceding one in context. Was the 2005 result an aberration, a consequence of many things falling for England in a way that...
Four individuals were arrested during The Game—two for indecent exposure; two for charges including assault and battery against a police officer, resisting arrest, and disorderly conduct—but none of the four were Harvard affiliates. The Nov. 20 news article "College Pulls Off Tame Tailgate" incorrectly stated that two students were arrested that day. In fact, no Harvard or Yale students were arrested that...
Elise D. Wang ’07 is a joint concentrator in the study of women, gender, and sexuality (WGS) and of religion. The Nov. 20 news article "Crimson Scores Six Rhodes" incorrectly stated that Wang was a joint WGS/government concentrator...
...meeting, CREW devised a list of demands that included an apology and reparations from Harvard, a joint union-management investigation into workplace discrimination, union control over hiring management, and equal access to hiring and promotion opportunities. The participants also laid out plans to hold multiple teach-ins on Nov. 30 and a public demonstration near MCB labs on Divinity Ave. on Dec. 7. They discussed strategies to gain support from campus organizations, such as Student Labor Action Movement and the Latino student groups. One of the meeting’s organizers, Jose G. Olivarez...
...Nov. 11 Wall Street Journal article by Daniel Golden—a 2004 winner of the Pulitzer Prize for his series of articles exposing the huge admissions advantages afforded to privileged white students—exposed what might appear to be another disturbing college admissions trend. Some analyses of standardized test scores show that Asian-American applicants, on average, must attain higher scores to snag admission to some of the nation’s most desirable schools. But these statistics, while initially disturbing, are the result of a just and well intentioned system of affirmative action in college admissions. That...