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...stepchildren,” Fonda promises. In particular, “Ted’s children asked me to take out the sex.” During editing, Fonda cut 500 pages, “But I left in what I felt I needed to leave in order to render my journey vibrant and palpable,” she says...

Author: By Lindsay A. Maizel, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: The Life and Times of Jane Fonda | 5/3/2006 | See Source »

...crimes of Pharaoh and were it not for the crimes of Moses, we wouldn’t be here today,” said Bernard Steinberg, executive director of Harvard Hillel and acting judge and moderator for the evening. “Therefore let history render the judgment—I leave it up to you.” As he strolled past kosher potato chips and out of Beren Hall, Dershowitz couldn’t help but claim the last word. “We’re going to appeal,” he said, holding...

Author: By Mark Giangreco jr., CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Let My Client Go | 4/19/2006 | See Source »

...glove, would it fit? If it would fit, then we would not acquit,” Harris said. Ultimately, Steinberg said that were it not for Pharaoh’s crimes, none of us would be here today. “We must let history render the judgment,” Steinberg said. After the trial, Dershowitz quipped, “I spent months preparing for this; I took a leave of absence to get ready.” Organizer Philip A. Ernst ’06, Vice President for Education at Hillel and also a Crimson editor, said...

Author: By Pamela T. Freed, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Professors Put Pharaoh on Trial | 4/18/2006 | See Source »

...enrich uranium for fear that this would be used in a covert bomb program. Now, Iran appears to have already achieved that milestone - even though it remains years away from being able to manufacture its own reactor fuel on an industrial scale or create bomb material - which could render that objection moot...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nuclear 'Breakthrough' May Help Iran to Compromise | 4/12/2006 | See Source »

...meet with the search committee “from time to time,” and members of the committee will attend meetings of the advisory groups on a regular basis. But if the search committee intends to seek the input of its advisory groups only occasionally, it will render the present advisory groups as marginally relevant as the informal groups of students and faculty with whom previous presidential search committees occasionally met. The search committee must make it a point to incorporate feedback from advisory groups on a regular basis; open consultation should be the norm, not the exception...

Author: By The Crimson Staff, | Title: In Search Of Input | 4/7/2006 | See Source »

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