Word: tam
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
During the halftime break in Sunday afternoon's Ivy League women's basketball championship game, each coach polled her players and then submitted a team ballot for the All-Ivy tam and the tourney MVP. Dartmouth center Gail Koziara (25.3 points per game and 14.3 rebounds per game on the weekend) walked away with the MVP laurels. Her 26-point. 20-rebound performance in Sunday's final led the Green to its third consecutive Ivy title. Selections to the All-Ivy squad included: Dartmouth's Ann Deacon (21.3 ppg). Yale's Margy Hutchinson (14.7 ppg) and Regina Sullivan...
...life: he has been silenced forever. Will Bill Carter and Hgo Vinh Long join me in deploring and mourning his death? Will they also express concern at the possibility that all those who are still in reeducation camps may face the same grim fate as my father? Hue Tam Ho Tal Assistant Professor in Sino-Vietnamese History
While it is probably only to be expected that in most newspapers a lamentably high percentage of quotations are in fact misquoted. I should have thought that Prof. Hue-Tam Ho Tai, a participant in the April 23 panel and a member of the Harvard faculty (asst. professor of Sino-Vietnamese History) would not have repeated, in her letter published together with that of Dr. Womack on April 30, an April 24 misquotation from the Crimson. Dr. Long never expressed the opinion that the "reeducation camps" in Vietnam are "necessary," as can be attested by a complete recording...
...Vietnam, North and South, faces the prospect of oppression as well as hunger and poverty until the end of the century under a regime which puts its interests far above those of the people, judging by all available official pronouncements. A tragic postscript to a tragic war. Hue-Tam Ho Tai, Assistant Professor In Sino-Vietnamese History
Reporter-Researcher Tam Martinides Gray, who researched this week's story, has worked with Talbott on several diplomatic assignments during the past two years. Their most recent project was an account last month of U.S. efforts to preserve the oil flow from the Persian Gulf, a story that Gray calls a preamble to this week's cover. Gray started at TIME as a picture researcher 20 years ago, and moved from images to words in 1976. Since then she has found, as Talbott has, that looking closely at Middle East politics reveals something more fascinating than the movements...