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...involved in planning the much-maligned 2006 Harvard-Yale tailgate. As one recent Queen’s grad told The Globe & Mail, “we don’t come back to go to receptions with the dean…Kingston is gorgeous in the summer, but there are no students there...

Author: By Adam Goldenberg | Title: Boo F—ing Hoo | 11/21/2008 | See Source »

...fantasy, Queen’s—an actual state school—pulled the plug on its Harvard-Yale analog until at least 2011. Alumni will instead be wooed back to campus for lower-key reunion events in May, after the undergraduate population has quit campus for the summer...

Author: By Adam Goldenberg | Title: Boo F—ing Hoo | 11/21/2008 | See Source »

...find higher-level jobs, according to HCAA Treasurer Charlotte A. Chuter ’10. The HCAA will hold a laptop collection on Dec. 12 and 13 outside Quincy House and in Annenberg. Negroponte said he hoped Harvard students would get involved by traveling to developing nations during the summer to distribute the laptops. David M. Sengeh ’10 is already organizing a trip to his native country of Sierra Leone to hand out the computers to children there. “Illiteracy in Sierra Leone is 70 percent,” said Sengeh...

Author: By Niha S Jain, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Cheap Laptops, Rich Experience | 11/21/2008 | See Source »

...thing that I regretted at Harvard was that the music people are sort of over here and then over there are the literary, visual people and they don’t interact that much,” says Mendez, who began working on his composition over the summer. “It makes me happy that I’m getting to collaborate outside of the musical world.” Koch and Mendez’s “Rêves/Cauchemars” explores the interaction between the musicians and the dancers. “I find...

Author: By Anna E. Sakellariadis, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: HBC Prepares for 'Departure' | 11/21/2008 | See Source »

...this work," he says. "It's for the outsiders, poor people from the countryside where they can't earn enough to eat meat even." Now the specter of deprivation is emerging again. Plastic bottles, which sold for $1,175 to $1,300 a ton as recently as the summer, are now trading in the $300-to-$450-a-ton range. Zhang claims that as a result of the downturn in scrap prices, the losses sustained by some of his neighbors have ranged from...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In China, Hard Times at the Scrap Heap | 11/20/2008 | See Source »

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