Word: bowlfuls
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...captain Erik Grimm was invaluable. The more experienced players on the team kept the Crimson from collpasing in down-to-the-wire games, as Harvard came from behind to upset eventual Ivy champion Brown in double overtime and capped its season with a triple-overtime thriller at the Yale Bowl to win the 122nd edition of The Game.CROUCHING CRIMSON Senior Melissa Anderson and classmate Eva Wang led Harvard to another undefeated Ivy season and a berth in the NCAA Tournament in 2006. Wang went 7-0 at No. 1 singles for the Crimson in Ivy play to earn Ivy League...
...exceptional academic work or research. Wobber’s thesis adviser, Richard W. Wrangham, who is Moore professor of biological anthropology, introduced Wobber to research that found that dogs respond better to human signals than chimpanzees do. For instance, if chimpanzees see a human pointing to one of two bowls and are asked to select which bowl is more likely to have food, chimpanzees pick the wrong bowl as often as the correct one, Wrangham said. However, dogs who were involved in the same experiment were more accurate, he added. Wobber became interested in what factor was responsible for differences...
...Game was more than the fifth straight win for either team in series history. Or the first triple-overtime contest in Ivy League football history.No, Harvard’s 30-24 victory over the Bulldogs in front of a bipartisan crowd of 53,213 at the Yale Bowl in New Haven, Conn. was a game that will be remembered for a limitless number of reasons.“It was obviously a great way to end our season, but more importantly, I think it was one of the great games in Harvard history, maybe on par with...
...Retrospect January 30, 1956 After four years of swimming in a national goldfish bowl, it is easy for the casual undergraduate to grow as indifferent to the changes within his Cambridge world as to development without. Perhaps, therefore, our readers will pardon the Crimson editors’ annual urge to review the past year’s developments before they depart from their notepad pinnacle for more academic file cards. Our only conclusion at such close range can be that it has been a good year for historians and for sorcerers, and that it has been a year of expansion...
...Still, there were concerns that the new press box, constructed on a tight budget of $400,000, would not live up to its predecessor’s legacy, holding 90 fewer seats.But sports writers have praised its design. Unlike the press box at the Yale Bowl, for instance, the Harvard press box is directly above the field, which gives it a great view of the action. And the latest incarnation of what The Crimson dubbed a “phoenix of a press box” boasts one major advantage over its wooden predecessor: It was built of concrete...