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...same attachment to unknowing athletes. Four hours a week of yelling about how amazing the Harvard football and basketball players are, and the required intensity of concentration on game occurrences, can easily lead to that same best-friend mentality. More dangerous, cheering also results in a large amount of name and face-recognition that is often not returned.Being the only current Harvard student combining Crimson sportswriting with Crimson cheerleading has bestowed upon me a mental directory of Harvard’s athletes, the likes of which could only be achieved by someone spending hours every day utilizing each...
...this Saturday for the final game of its regular season, taking with it hopes for an Ivy League championship. The matchup, which may be the most pressure-filled contest of the year, will determine whether Harvard or the Quakers end the season with an Ivy League title to their name...
...Liberal" is the kiss of death. In the land of the free, we have silenced half the political voice of this country. They've got us afraid to even use the world liberal. We call ourselves "progressive" now. We've allowed them to take our name away...
...time. We refer, of course, to their proposal to increase the time awarded students for travel between classes—assuming, of course, that someone bothers to create more courses that actually count toward General Education. “Harvard time”—the colloquial name given our unofficial seven-minute lateness-amnesty window—is a venerable institution here. We question, then, why would anyone deign change it? Are students truly so sluggish that seven minutes is an insufficient ambulatory period? We are rarely late to our classes. Perhaps it’s because...
...wanted to have a type of tourism that really raised people's understanding," says founder Alfonso Martinez, who dresses in a ski mask and goes by the name Poncho. "So we decided to turn the painful experience all of us here have gone through into a kind of game that teaches something to our fellow Mexicans." Poncho and other ski-masked comrades play polleros, or chicken herders - the human smugglers who guide wannabe migrants over the deserts and rivers into the U.S. Having made the real journey dozens of times to work as a gardener in Nevada, Poncho is well...