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Except, of course, for the celebratory Harvard crews on a cool-down row back to Newell Boathouse...

Author: By Aidan E. Tait, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Redemption on the Charles: M. Lightweight Crew Tops Navy | 4/25/2005 | See Source »

...pretty big statement,” Kummer said. “We just stayed calm within our boat and wanted to row well...

Author: By Aidan E. Tait, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Redemption on the Charles: M. Lightweight Crew Tops Navy | 4/25/2005 | See Source »

...latest round of criticism. Unlike in the innate differences debate, in which one could knock Summers for being provocative to the point of being unproductive, the charges leveled against Summers this time around are mostly groundless. Indeed, before Harvard’s overeager Summers-haters start a media-attracting row over the president’s comments, I’d like to set the record straight: the clear, overarching theme of President Summers’ remarks was one of genuine concern for Native American communities in the United States, especially when you read his entire speech. Even so, perception...

Author: By Stephen W. Stromberg, | Title: Another Month, Another Flap | 4/22/2005 | See Source »

...star among the nation's black politicians, yet Philadelphia Mayor Wilson Goode swallowed hard last week and faced it straight on. In a return appearance before a commission of investigators that he had appointed to look into the police helicopter bombing of a radical, back-to-nature cult's row house last May, the mayor acknowledged some degree of culpability in the events that left eleven dead, 61 houses destroyed by fire and 250 people homeless. "Could [I] have made a better decision?" the mayor asked the commission. "The answer is yes. Did I make a mistake? The answer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Did I Make a Mistake? Yes | 4/18/2005 | See Source »

...another woman in his life has long been more important. After the death of his Jewish father Kim Wehistein, Kasparov took the maiden name of his Armenian mother Clara; she has ruled his career ever since. At the championships she sat motionless each day in the same third-row seat, watching intensely. Though he now wears the crown, Kasparov, raised in the republic of Azerbaijan, 1,200 miles south of Moscow, remains an outsider to Moscow's powerful chess establishment. "My relationship with the federation," he concedes, "couldn't be worse...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Bitterness and Brilliance in Moscow | 4/18/2005 | See Source »

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