Word: sighting
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This performance by the HRO was geared towards attracting musically attuned pre-frosh, yet there were few in sight. This was a shame, because the concert was one of the strongest student performances of classical music on campus this year...
...freshman Dan Zailskas. ONE AND DONE While Harvard needed nine pitchers to get through the game, one was plenty for the Eagles. BC starter Ted Ratliff spread eight hits over a complete game performance, striking out nine while allowing only one walk. Ratliff has become an all-too familiar sight for the Crimson. When Harvard faced the Eagles last Wednesday, Ratliff entered the game in the fifth inning with his team up 4-3 and the Crimson gaining offensive momentum. He proceeded to strike out ten batters over five innings of shutout work. The senior has now defeated Harvard four...
...recruited by major colleges to compete in the 400-meter event, runs his schedule as smoothly as he used to circle a track.With his list of appointments written on a folded index card in his pocket, he walks the Yard with the apparent intention of speaking to everyone in sight. And more often than not, his targets are receptive. Sundquist’s speech is uniquely disarming: a mélange of strikingly understated, philosophy-tinged awareness, with a streak of beach-style casual that puts the listener at ease. It leads to gems like “bureaucracy?...
...frozen Charles River, in the belly of the Bright Hockey Center, a Harvard coach made a promise. Amidst a crowd of witnesses, men’s hockey skipper Ted Donato ’91 gave me his word. And here I sit, two months later, my graduation date in sight, and Donato is nowhere to be seen...
...signing statements”—official assertions by the president of his power to ignore certain provisions in laws he deemed unconstitutional. The statements are not confidential but Savage was the first to reveal their systematic use. “It was hiding in plain sight,” Savage said, “but no one was talking about it.” In the first article, published on Jan. 4, 2006, Savage wrote, “When President Bush last week signed the bill outlawing the torture of detainees, he quietly reserved the right to bypass...