Word: adds
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...Harvard in 1999, the squad was in disarray. Now, eight years later, high schoolers want to join the Crimson to have the chance to be his fencer. Brand boasts a national championship team, and numerous individual champions have emerged from under his tutelage. This year, Brand continued to add to his coaching resume. The fencing team took a number of hits throughout the season. From men’s co-captain Sam Cross leaving to battle leukemia, to Cross’ sister Emily leaving to train for the Olympics, the cards were stacked against Brand. Still, his team finished sixth...
...will look to add Olympic gold to the silver and bronze that she already owns when she plays in the Winter Olympic Games in Vancouver in 2010. She then plans to pursue a coaching career at the college level, a career that may begin sooner than expected...
...marquee contest of the season, Harvard met up with Princeton to decide the champion of the Ivy League. Despite taking a 3-0 lead in the contest, the Crimson could not hold on for the victory, as the Tigers stormed back and stole the title away from Harvard. To add injury to insult, Suchde, the Crimson’s No. 1 player, sustained an ankle injury in his match against Princeton’s Mauricio Sanchez, forcing him to retire. Trying to redeem a once-promising season, Harvard, without an Ivy title, vied for the CSA Team Championship. The Crimson...
...four years later in Blakely v. Washington. This time, the justices decided, also by a 5-4 vote, that Washington State's sentencing rules violated a kidnapper's Sixth Amendment right. Since the judge determined that the kidnapper had acted with "deliberate cruelty," the rules allowed the judge to add 37 months to the 53-month sentence. Even though 53 months was far below the "statutory maximum" of 10 years, the sentence was still unconstitutional, a conclusion that suggested the federal guidelines, which operated in a similar way, were in jeopardy...
...four years later in Blakely v. Washington. This time, the justices decided, also by a 5-4 vote, that Washington state's sentencing rules violated a kidnapper's Sixth Amendment right. Since the judge determined that the kidnapper had acted with "deliberate cruelty," the rules allowed the judge to add 37 months to the 53-month sentence. Even though 53 months was far below the "statutory maximum" of 10 years, the sentence was still unconstitutional, a conclusion that suggested the federal guidelines, which operated in a similar way, were in jeopardy...