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...stick with the political status quo. But by the end of the night, all bets were off. After the first-place votes had been tallied, mouths hung agape in the Cambridge Senior Center, where the city’s political classes gather every two years for the ballot count. Sitting in eighth place—ahead of two council incumbents—was first-time challenger Matthew S. DeBergalis, a then-26-year-old MIT graduate who had focused his campaign on student issues. DeBergalis missed the final cut by 137 votes, but his unexpected success demonstrated that the power...
Challengers Craig Kelley and Sam Seidel ranked ahead of incumbent David P. Maher in the count of first-place votes, according to members of the Cambridge Election Commission, who announced the tallies around 10 p.m. tonight to the candidates and Cambridge political observers gathered at the city's Senior Center for the biannual vote count...
...will be to ensure that these popular courses are content-, not method-based.To guarantee that its recommendations actually have an effect on the content of students’ general education, the committee should do even more to incentivize broad courses. Originally, the committee had suggested that the yearlong portal courses count for all three semesters of a distributive requirement. It should revive this suggestion, as portal courses look likely to be the broadest, most rigorous options for students. Basing general education on the free market is a bold step that avoids the normativity of imposed general education requirements while also transitioning...
...teams great weaknesses this year is putting all our individual efforts towards a larger effort,” Turley-Molony said. “We have a lot of extremely talented players, but when it comes to clutch time, we can’t always count on everyone to perform as well as they can.”Harvard looked strong early in the fifth frame, taking a 6-5 lead on an attack by McKinley.But Columbia (6-16, 4-7) ran off a string of kills and aces to take the next 10 points and close out the match...
...clash with Princeton was sloppy with a capital P, but the Crimson cleaned up in the end, escaping the opening ECAC weekend with an unblemished record. Harvard (3-0-0, 2-0-0 ECAC) downed the Tigers (2-1-1, 1-1-0) by a final count of 3-2 at the Bright Hockey Center on Saturday, overcoming a sluggish start to seize the edge on special teams and ultimately the win. The more effective power play and penalty kill won out in the end, with the Crimson converting 3-of-8 extra-skater chances while holding Princeton...