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...Some good pitching beat a great hitting club today, and I have a lot of respect for their lineup,” coach Joe Walsh said. “They have guys that can get on base and guys that can hit the ball out of the park.”Instead, it was the Crimson bringing home the runs—and Yale helping them do it, committing five errors in each game.Harvard and Yale were scheduled to play a second doubleheader yesterday that was postponed due to inclement weather. No make-up date has been scheduled.The Crimson travels...

Author: By Barrett P. Kenny, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Baseball Arms Tame Powerful Yale Bats | 4/15/2007 | See Source »

...Yorkshire farm was where, from the age of 13, British artist Andy Goldsworthy first learned his trade: how to use a shovel, skin a hare, build a dry-stone wall. And it is to the grounds of the 500-acre Yorkshire Sculpture Park, near Wakefield, where he first worked in 1983, that Goldsworthy now makes a fitting return for the largest ever exhibition of his work. Running until Jan. 6, 2008, the show features major new works and a photographic review of many of the ephemeral works in nature for which Goldsworthy has become famous over the last 30 years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Q&A with Andy Goldsworthy | 4/13/2007 | See Source »

...social nature of the landscape is something that has become increasingly important to me. But the ephemeral work is still very, very important. I can't not make it. That's how I get a lot of the ideas for the larger works. Here in the Yorkshire Sculpture Park is an opportunity, with a gallery and the outdoors, to make work that people can see, lay on, touch and engage in without photography as a medium. But a building no matter how beautiful is a dead space compared to the outside, and it takes whereas the ephemeral work gives. Well...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Q&A with Andy Goldsworthy | 4/13/2007 | See Source »

...million; South Africans reckon they host 1 million to 2 million refugees. Shantytowns with names like Little Harare and Zimtown have sprung up outside cities across Africa. The stories their inhabitants tell--of risking crocodiles in the Limpopo River and lions in South Africa's Kruger National Park in their bid to escape--speak of desperation. They also illuminate why any recovery in Zimbabwe will be a long time coming. "It's a brain drain," says Archbishop Pius Ncube, a prominent government critic based in Bulawayo. "All the intelligent people--the doctors, the lawyers, the teachers--have left." Through...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: First Person: Imprisoned in Zimbabwe | 4/12/2007 | See Source »

...piece for killing a Jew. Quentin Tarantino has made a career borrowing tropes from blaxploitation movies. In the critics-favorite sitcom The Sarah Silverman Program, the star sleeps with God, who is African American and who she assumes is "God's black friend." And the current season of South Park opened with an episode about a Michael Richards-esque controversy erupting when a character blurts the word niggers on Wheel of Fortune. (He answers a puzzle - N-GGERS - for which the clue is "People who annoy you"; the correct answer is "naggers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Imus Fallout: Who Can Say What? | 4/12/2007 | See Source »

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