Word: 2010ã
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...Amaker hopes that a change in lineup can spark this change in attitude.He began this process of roster revamping early. It was evident to anyone watching. From the first day of practice, there was one thing lacking for the Crimson: a sophomore. The entire class of 2010??all recruits of former head coach Frank Sullivan—was gone, either cut or left off the team prior to the beginning of this season.Amaker declined to comment on these roster changes.But one needs only to look at the team a year ago to see how far it has come...
...least for the moment, there just might be that perfect storm of trends that could compel students—at least in the Classes of 2009 and 2010??to seek out the options that Faust urged upon us before the Street imploded. And there’s some evidence that we are: Officials from Teach for America, the national teacher-placing service that has made significant inroads on elite campuses, report that the number of students turning in applications by the first deadline skyrocketed. Peace Corps administrators report an uptick in applicants, as do graduate schools...
...shouldn’t expect to have the speed and capacity that an industrial business would have.”Selsby acknowledges the recent impracticability of “plugging in,” citing an unexpected drift towards wireless-only usage, with 91 percent of the class of 2010??compared to 70 percent of the class of 2007—using Harvard wireless. “Wireless wasn’t intended to replace wired when it was made, so as such it wasn’t funded to be a complete replacement of everybody?...
...Journal of Blacks in Higher Education has ranked Harvard first in terms of black student yield for the third year in a row. Harvard’s black student yield for the Class of 2010??70.9 percent—is still 9.1 percent lower than its overall yield rate of 80 percent. The University slipped from second to fifth place in the ranking in terms of black student enrollment as a percent of the entire class. Black students comprised 9.3 percent of both the Class of 2009 and 2010, The Crimson reported. The University of North Carolina...
Eighteen-year-old Democrat Alexander J. Gallichon—an Extension School student working toward a degree in 2010??is hoping to become the youngest state representative in New Hampshire’s history in next Tuesday’s election.Gallichon, who graduated from Nashua High School South in Nashua, N.H., last May, started a consulting business, and, fittingly, began taking government classes at Harvard this fall.If elected, he says he would remain enrolled in the Extension School while representing wards 5, 8, and 9, roughly the southern portion of Nashua.Gallichon says he decided to run for public...