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With the uncertainty surrounding the hiring of Arizona State’s Ray Leone as the new head coach of women’s soccer, a new development has unfolded that will bring a familiar face back to Ohiri Field. Last Monday, Leone announced former Harvard goalkeeper Katie Shields ’06 as assistant coach of the soccer team effective as of this weekend. Prior to taking the assistant coaching job, Shields served as the goalkeeper coach at UC Irvine and more recently as an assistant for Leone with the Sun Devils, who went 8-8-3 last year...

Author: By Dixon McPhillips, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Crimson Legend Returns From Left Coast | 4/3/2007 | See Source »

Nobody came on to the movie camera - wrapped it in a bear hug and wrestled it to submission - like Betty Hutton. They called this 40s singer-actress "the Blitzkrieg blond" for an energy that would make Rachael Ray seem logy by comparison. Film critic James Agee, and other scribes at TIME, described her variously as "rubber-jointed," "brass-lunged," "super-dynamic," "bouncing, bawling," "raucous, rampageous." To Bob Hope she was "a vitamin pill with legs." She seemed to have swallowed a truckload full of them before every performance; she was indomitable, unstoppable, the Fuller Brush flack with a quick smile...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: When Betty Got Frank | 3/31/2007 | See Source »

BEFORE MAGNETIC RESONANCE imaging (MRI) became standard in the 1980s, doctors had two ways of looking inside the human body: the not-always-precise X-ray, which exposed patients to radiation, and surgery. Physicist Paul Lauterbur, a co-winner of the 2003 Nobel Prize, helped pioneer the use of MRI technology-- previously used largely to examine chemical structures of substances--to obtain clear, detailed images of human tissue. Doctors now prescribe more than 60 million MRI exams annually...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones Apr. 9, 2007 | 3/29/2007 | See Source »

...that lowers costs or improves output. Venture capital is increasingly flowing to green start-ups: $474 million in the first three quarters of 2006 in Silicon Valley alone. That's sparking the interest of everyday investors, who see green technology as--dare they wish it?--the next Internet. Says Ray Lane, a partner at the KPCB venture-capital firm: "If you consider the sheer scale of the problem, I think this is an order of magnitude bigger...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: What Now For Our Feverish Planet? | 3/29/2007 | See Source »

...feel a lot better about psychiatry were there definitive tests for its catalog of disorders. For now, its practitioners make judgments on the basis of checklists and observation - solid methodology as far as it goes, but not the same as, say, a blood test for anaemia or an x-ray of a broken femur. In the search for a test offering this kind of diagnostic certainty in mental illness, two Australian researchers believe they've made a leap. Gin Malhi and Jim Lagopoulos, from the department of psychological medicine at Sydney's Royal North Shore Hospital, report detecting what appear...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Light in the Dark | 3/29/2007 | See Source »

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