Word: alling
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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"I'm not too impressed with the MAC at all," says Charles B. Watson '03, who plays intramural volleyball. "I've seen better in high school, and I feel like Harvard can afford to buy better equipment for students that can't go to the Murr [Center]."
Whatever students feel about the University's commitment to student fitness, whether it be a matter of activities or equipment, nearly all stress that maintaining one's health is a personal decision.
Even if they don't all end up participating in varsity or junior varsity athletics, approximately 700 first-years come in for the athlete-mandatory sports physicals every year, according to David S. Rosenthal '59, director of the University Health Services (UHS).
Rosenthal insists that the University is committed to providing all students with the opportunity to stay fit. But undergraduates tend to complain about a gap between rhetoric and resources, particularly the gloomy Malkin Athletic Center (MAC).
"The team can ride on her back," Delaney-Smith said of the All-America candidate. "We have to come out with a defensive teamwork [and] I think we will be playing our zone."