Word: crucially
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...game and promptly dropped the first four points.Things began to turn around quickly, however, as the Crimson attack was increasingly able to find and exploit holes in the NYU defense.The Harvard offense was led by Weitzen and sophomore middle hitter Brady Weissbourd, who each registered four kills in the crucial game, and orchestrated by Fitz, who registered a solid .473 assist percentage throughout the match.The Crimson’s combined efforts resulted in a 30-22 fourth game victory and forced a deciding fifth game.When asked what led to his team’s success in the penultimate frame, Harvard...
...acute sense of the needs of individual researchers. Hyman has stepped into this role with ease, and given the wealth of experience he has accumulated over the last half-decade, his loss would be devastating for Harvard’s expansion. With his leadership ability, seniority, and expertise on crucial academic issues, it is no surprise that Hyman’s name was on the short list for Harvard’s presidency. If history proves to be any indication, Hyman will likely be sought by other top universities for top-level jobs. But despite his relative anonymity, Hyman?...
Neuroscientists have long been convinced that the first few years of life are a crucial period for brain development--a time when connections between neurons are being forged at a prodigious rate as a baby learns to make sense of the external world. Interfere with that process, and you can cause permanent, irrevocable damage. If a child is born blind, for example, it's pretty much over by age 6. You can fix the eyes, and they might be able to perceive light and dark. Without the right visual circuitry in place, though, there's no way to form images...
...take a look at the laundry list of possible changes in California alone, the loser is clear: personal freedom. For two centuries, humans have essentially had free reign to pollute the atmosphere as they wish without consequence. But these days are no longer. Nearly every crucial human activity today—agriculture, transportation, heating, construction—ultimately adds more carbon dioxide to the atmosphere than it removes, and our lifestyles will have to change drastically if we want our planet to survive. We’re about to lose more than just the freedom to choose light bulbs...
...address his disregard for logic. Lacaria argues that because there was no radical feminism in the 19th century South, there could not have been problems of gender. This argument only needs to be written explicitly to expose its incoherence. More importantly, however, gender was a crucial part of how people, especially Southern male politicians, understood the political climate of antebellum America...