Word: vermonters
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...performance in the days since her Oval Office announcement, she might have squeaked through a Senate where the President's party holds a five-seat majority. But she fumbled consistently. She seemed to confuse Chief Justices Earl Warren and Warren Burger in a meeting with Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont. She left Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania with the impression that she supported the privacy rights in the 1965 Griswold decision. Then she corrected him. In an unprecedented move, she was basically told to redo her questionnaire for the Senate Judiciary Committee. Senators who met her emerged...
...margins for crops have been slashed razor thin by rising costs, "you have to consider agritainment," says Kay Hollabaugh, president of the North American Farmers Direct Marketing Association. An estimated 62 million people visited farms in 2001, the latest figures available. Annual agritourism revenues range from $20 million in Vermont to $200 million in New York. In Hawaii, revenues rose 30%, to $34 million, from...
...made conditions especially difficult for B-division racing. The Crimson also braved the rain to participate in the Reid Trophy at Boston College, but was only able to place fifth out of six teams competing. By winning just two out of ten races, Harvard bested only the University of Vermont. Next weekend, the Crimson will attempt to capture the Hoyt Trophy at Brown, the Smith Trophy at MIT, and the Nelson Trophy at Connecticut College. —Staff writer Daniel J. Rubin-Wills can be reached at drubin@fas.harvard.edu...
...changes are not always the obvious ones,” he said. “Sometimes it’s just a difference in perspective,” an element that makes the reintegration process harder. Kristin Beattie, a senior at St. Michael’s College in Vermont, who spent a year abroad in Mexico, said her priorities were different when she returned. “I had seen bigger issues around the world,” she said. Jim Citron, a faculty member at Dartmouth College who serves as the dean of international programs for study abroad facilitator...
What a difference two weeks makes. After losing its first contest of the season, a 1-0 grudge match with Vermont, the Harvard men’s soccer team went on a tear. Going unbeaten in its next five games, it had its sights firmly set on a conference title. What have followed are four straight losses, two of which have come to Ivy opponents. Now the Crimson (4-5-1, 0-2 Ivy) is set to face Brown (7-3-1, 2-0) tomorrow, and if the game is anything like last year’s matchup, Harvard...