Word: tracks
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...Neeraj “Richie” Banerji ’06. THE ISSUESVoith, whose new leadership position on CLC has given him a much-needed boost in political clout, is now a much more attractive candidate than he was as a mere vice-chair.But whether he can accrue a track record impressive enough to compete with the SAC clan remains to be seen. Traditionally, SAC members make more attractive candidates because they can tout specific reforms such as 24-hour libraries and universal key access, while CLC leaders are much more vulnerable because their failures—events like...
...needs to be a visible and concerted effort by the University to really do something about this,” he said. “That’s one action in the last three out of four years…that’s not a very good track record.”The rally will feature three speakers—Frankfurter Professor of Law Alan M. Dershowitz, Vietnam veteran Nathaniel G. Butler ’68, and former U.S. Marine Anuradha K. Bhagwati.Butler, who also chairs the Harvard Lesbian and Gay Caucus’s military taskforce, said...
...lesser advertising, it might be worth considering the possibility that there are more sinister forces in play.Apple, it turns out, has other products and services, among them the well-regarded and quite successful iTunes Music Store—a haven where music-lovers can, for just a dollar per track, download major label songs which they can burn to CDs or load onto their iPod. Those tracks, it further transpires, have an interesting feature: they can only be loaded onto an iPod—not a Sony “Network Walkman...
...still make a serious charge at the Ivy title. Dawson is still the best back in the league and probably the country, and O’Hagan is still one of the most talented and exciting quarterbacks in the league. But for the Crimson to get back on track, the team—as a group—must find that attitude that it lost on the field against Lehigh. —Staff writer David H. Stearns can be reached at stearns@fas.harvard.edu...
...walk with Tawoos and his friend Altaf up a steep goat track toward Kamal Kote. They are carrying a sack of flour, 20 packets of biscuits, three loaves of bread, three eggplants, one cabbage, some tea, a bag of sugar, a box of candles and a few loose cigarettes. They are the relief effort. "I buried 27 people yesterday," says Tawoos. He is pale with lack of sleep and bitterness, and has to take frequent rests. He tells us there are 317 dead in Kamal Kote, a village of perhaps 1,000. His head is spinning with...