Word: steps
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...cage. With less than two minutes remaining in the game, sophomore Chloe Keating was issued a green card. “There was a little aggressive play,” Caples said. “The umpires were just trying to keep it down. We were trying to step up and be aggressive.” “It’s not uncommon [to see a green card],” Stone added. “A team like BU is really physical.” The Crimson will need to increase its offensive numbers in order...
...alters our assumptions and helps us access the world as it is?” Law School student Nathan P. Hamilton said that though he did not agree with all of Suskind’s points, he appreciated his hopeful message. “This kind of took a step back and made us realize that despite our sometimes great ideological differences as Americans, and to a large extent with people outside America, there are values we all share, and those things are worth defending and promoting...
Social life at Harvard is like Sever 113: you’re going to have to awkwardly step over some people to find your place. Punch season is no different. Being the veterans of three unsuccessful punch campaigns, we’d like to give you some tips. From the coveted first envelope to partying on your club’s lawn with the sleaziest pre-frosh to circling the globe in your club’s private hovercraft, Prestige and Mobility will go the extra mile. For example, be conventional. Wear clothes that look like they cost...
...Green is the New Crimson” in an effort to welcome home eco-wonk-cum-movie-star Al Gore ’69, shown above in classic Uncle Sam pose.But lost amidst the glitz of Harvard’s sustainability efforts was a more meaningful step forward that took place a few hours after Gore’s speech and a few hundred yards to the south: the unveiling of Harvard’s revised master plan for Allston. While the new plans certainly have their issues, the revision reflects a desire to make green space the hallmark...
...Palestinian security force - whose months of training by Jordanian police was supported and funded by the U.S. State Department, with a U.S. security coordinator, General Keith Dayton, acting as adviser to the Palestinians - is to persuade skeptical Israelis that Palestinians can ensure security inside the West Bank, a first step in building trust that would allow Israel to turn over control to the Palestinian Authority as part of any peace agreement. So far, the plan has succeeded: The streets are safer for ordinary Palestinians, and Israelis have more confidence in their Palestinian security counterparts. But it's precisely because this...