Word: passed
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...trouble is, all this just feels like a way to pass the time until the Big Day. The British Academy already tried to make the awards more relevant by moving them from a few weeks after the Academy Awards to a few weeks before, but with the Oscar voting all wrapped up and nothing left for Hollywood to do but wait to see who wins, the BAFTAs still come off as the Almost Oscars. Why not move the BAFTAs to a slot before the Oscar voting deadline? That way there's at least a chance that what happens...
...with 90 seconds remaining, an athletic reverse layup by Tay, followed by eight free throws, helped ice the game. As usual, Tay helped push the pace for Harvard. The biggest cheer of the night came with seven minutes left when she hit Katie Rollins with a behind-the-back pass for an easy layup. The two juniors put in solid contributions in the win. Tay finished with 12 points, eight assists, seven rebounds, and five steals, while Rollins added 11 points and seven boards. In such a high-paced game, the Crimson players and staff were happy with...
...defending against our turnovers.”Yale capped the run in a big way. With the Crimson in possession with less than 30 seconds to play, freshman guard T.J. Carey let the clock dwindle down so that Harvard could get the last shot. Carey attempted an entry pass into the lane with six seconds remaining, but it was intercepted by the Bulldogs’ Travis Pinick.On the fast break, Pinick found Yale senior guard Eric Flato open behind the three-point line, and Flato sunk a trey as the buzzer sounded over the attempted swat of Harvard junior...
...government is now pushing through a constitutional amendment that simply states that "no one can be deprived of their right to higher education." It is expected to easily garner enough votes to pass in a final parliamentary vote Saturday. All eyes will then be on the Constitutional Court, which could decide that the move undermines secularism - an inviolable constitutional principle of modern Turkey...
...year-old Japanologist Donald Keene walks in a state of intense absorption. "If he doesn't recognize you when you pass him on the sidewalk," says one of Keene's students at Columbia University, where he still teaches a seminar on Japanese literature, "it's because his head is so full of everything he's ever read." Few heads anywhere, including Japan, have taken in as much Japanese literature as Keene's. His forthcoming memoir, Chronicles of My Life: An American in the Heart of Japan, tells the unlikely story of how a boy born in Brooklyn in 1922 grew...