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...Bulldogs had to do was to keep winning. Like almost every other team thrust into the spotlight as the challenger, Yale couldn’t last one contest, dropping the finale of its five-game homestand to last-place Brown, 70-64, Tuesday night...

Author: By Michael R. James, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Around the Ivy League: Penn Hopes To Clinch | 2/24/2005 | See Source »

Skier, who is also a Crimson editor, said after her speech that while these issues were brought to the spotlight recently, she felt that these problems have long existed at Harvard...

Author: By David Zhou, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Students Protest at Faculty Meeting | 2/23/2005 | See Source »

...more serious note (and there are many serious notes in the Vagina Monologues ), domestic violence, female genital mutilation, and rape all had time in the spotlight. In “Memory of Her Face,” Sarah K. Howard ’07, Manisha Munshi ’06, and Alexandra C. Palma ’08 spoke about civilian victims of America’s bombings in Iraq. In particular, they mentioned the cases of a Pakistani woman whose husband threw acid on her face. (According to Ensler, 90 percent of these female civilian victims...

Author: By Emer C.M. Vaughn, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: ARTS TUESDAY: It's a Whole New V Word | 2/22/2005 | See Source »

...meeting—“get out the vote” drives. If this conversation takes place on such political terms, Summers will have won by default—bringing Washington politics to a university that has thus far resisted them. In short, with Harvard in the media spotlight, unusual power has fallen to those who never liked the notion of a university—who have long argued that the professorship is a cushy position that involves no work (as Summers implicitly did in challenging Cornel West a few years...

Author: By J. hale Russell, | Title: There Is No 'CEO' in 'University' | 2/22/2005 | See Source »

...hour of Robbins’ arrival at the Pudding drew nigh, four spotlight beams swung across the industrial walls of neighboring Holyoke Center. Inside, the 117-year-old theater filled with tuxedoed men and women in chic eveningwear. An air of decidedly old-Harvard mirth descended as attendees hobnobbed and perused the program for HPT’s 157th annual musical, Terms of Frontierment. The show, which opened following the Man of the Year ceremony, adhered to the Pudding’s tradition of casting exclusively male actors in all parts...

Author: By Simon W. Vozick-levinson, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Tim Robbins, Man of the Year | 2/18/2005 | See Source »

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