Word: regionalize
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...tournament victories before Rhoads took over. When Rhoads joined the Crimson, he set a goal of not only becoming the best team in the Ivy League, but also the best team in the entire Northeast. This year, Harvard achieved both, finishing the season as the top team in the region and placing 18th in the NCAA Central Regional Championship in the heat of Austin, Tex., after reaching 15th place at one point during the final round. Rhoads is a full-time teacher of the game, not just a college coach, and was recognized for his outstanding work by being named...
...Harvard, this kind of analysis is not considered acceptable. Students are taught that “the devil is in the details” by professors who have spent their lives illuminating the many and varied stories that go towards forming the history of a region. In this, Harvard generally does an excellent job. The biggest challenge for academics is to get a wider hearing without diluting their message. It is also a responsibility that they pass onto their graduating students...
...with “freedom” as its watchword—and sanctioning torture on the sly while resisting all criticism. The ongoing effort in Iraq might be a comedy of errors, were it not for its tragic consequences in death tolls and the destabilizing reverberations throughout the region...
...course, any discussion of world affairs today must focus on one region in particular: the Middle East and the Islamic world growing around it. Among all his missteps, President Bush can be commended for emphasizing (rather late) an equitable, two-state solution in Israel-Palestine, the epicenter of that region’s insecurity. We only hope that the two states in question will continue to make strides towards reconciliation, and to transcend the tremendous destruction of the past half-century...
...said he was going “with an open mind, to listen and to learn.” But when he returned to Washington five days later, Reagan remained as set and predictable in his ways as he was before his departure. The President continues to see the region through a distorting East-West prism; countries are distinguished only by their allegiance to either capitalism or communism. The real problems of Latin America—the social, economic and political inequities that affect different nations in different ways—continue to be ignored. A tenuous case...