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...role at the last minute,” Richards says. “Unfortunately, they never got back to us. We had to replace him with someone who was not of color, who was white.”For the presidents of BlackCAST, Johnson and Richards’ request was an insult. “Don’t you dare say to me, ‘You guys need to be more actively involved in coming out to our shows and all of this stuff when you only seek us out when you need a black character. It?...
...million in their ongoing fundraising campaign. Stanford raised $832.4 million in 2007, more than any other university for the second consecutive year, according to The New York Times. Three out of every four Stanford undergraduates currently receive some form of financial aid. A spokesperson for Stanford declined a request for comment. —Staff writer Alexandra Perloff-Giles can be reached at aperloff@fas.harvard.edu...
...than U.S. intelligence reports. (Subsequently, U.S. intelligence officials discovered that the Argentines had been planning the operation in strict secrecy for two months.) With the information came a British request for U.S. intercession to prevent the crisis. Secretary of State Haig immediately called in Argentine Ambassador to Washington Esteban Arpad Takacs and sent messages to Argentina's President Galtieri through the U.S. Ambassador in Buenos Aires, Harry Schlaudemann. When those advances were rejected, President Reagan was asked to intervene...
...this past November. And poker isn’t just for grads: just this past weekend, Brian M. Wan ’08 played in the PokerStars Sunday Million, an online tournament that guarantees a first prize of over $100,000 (don’t rush to that friend request, though—Wan didn’t walk away with the grand prize). But while Law School students may be learning about poker, undergraduates should probably stick to playing for Crimson cash—though Nesson asked Wan to start a Harvard College chapter of GPSTS, the Student Activities...
...Factor #3 could favor Obama: Ohio is an open primary, which means just about any registered voter can walk into a polling place and request a Democratic ballot. A state Democratic party official told TIME he expects expect turnout to reach or exceed two million votes - more than twice the turnout in the 2004 primary. One Ohio labor official, who is unaligned with any campaign, summed up the uncertainties: "Is Ohio going to go like the rest of the country or will it be its typical conservative self...