Word: amherst
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...fresh off a blowout victory on Thursday over Holy Cross, intended to carry that momentum on the road into Saturday’s game against Massachusetts. At the end of both halves, the Crimson fell short against the Minutewomen, losing 12-8 at UMass’ Garber Field in Amherst. Harvard (1-2) dominated the game early with three goals in four minutes. The Crimson, however, would see the lead slip as UMass (1-2) went on a devastating 9-0 run, which extended through the last fifteen minutes of the first half and the first five minutes after...
...different thing altogether playing someone you’re usually working with.” Her win gave Harvard its first Ramsay Cup since Ivy Pochoda ’98 won it in 1998—the last time the individual tournament was held at Amherst. —Staff writer Lisa J. Kennelly can be reached at kennell@fas.harvard.edu...
...goal each from an array of attackmen, including junior Greg Cohen, sophomore Brooks Scholl, and senior Steve Cohen. It was the younger Cohen’s first action since May of 2004, after he missed the entire 2005 season due to an arm injury.Harvard will travel to Amherst on Saturday for the second chapter of its three-game road trip: an afternoon date with Massachusetts. For a team that has already matched its number of road wins from 2005, a campaign in which the Crimson went 1-6, the significance of last weekend’s win was not lost...
...campaign would not stop at one company.“What we really want is a solid divestment principle with governments that have been declared to be complicit in genocide,” he said.The recent push for divestment comes after announcements made last month that Yale, Brown and Amherst will divest from Sudan.“The Yale divestment was a very encouraging sign that divestment has gone mainstream,” said Benjamin B. Collins ’06, one of the petition’s organizers. “But I think that Sinopec made it very...
President Summers, in conjunction with the president of Amherst and a few others, took major steps to rectify this deeply troubling situation. Since 2004, students from poor and working-class families pay little or nothing to attend Harvard; Harvard admissions officers also visit more high schools in poor communities; Harvard began a small summer program for promising low-income students; and students and graduates engage in broader and more systematic outreach. The percentage of low-income students at Harvard is inching up, without any sacrifice in quality of those admitted, and other wealthy colleges and universities are slowly following...