Word: fairing
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...certainly able to be painted as someone who didn't understand what people did with their free time or what their concerns were when they sat around the table. But I don't think that if you looked at his policies you would have found that to be a fair conclusion...
...close election for captain of the 2006 unit, replacing the graduating Erik Grimm ‘05. But from that point, from an exhilarating win and well-deserved celebration to last Saturday’s 31-14 home victory against Holy Cross, few positive things happened for fair Harvard’s football team. A rash of suspensions and dismissals struck the group in the offseason, creating new layers of difficulty for a team that was already breaking in five new coaches. How the squad responds to the suspensions, and how untested replacements perform, will determine how successful the Crimson...
...director of the Melanoma Program at Dana-Farber and a professor in pediatrics at Children’s Hospital Boston, has found that induced tans protect at-risk mice—and, potentially, humans—from skin cancer. For the study, Fisher generated red-haired mice, which, like fair-skinned humans, were unable to tan. After applying a topical cream, which triggered the tanning machinery in the mice skin cells, Fisher was able to give mice a tan without exposing them to harmful UV light. “We learned the normal pathway in easily tanning individuals and identified...
...attached. Colleges must do more to distinguish passionate and academically talented students from those with merely pretty applications.The removal of early admissions options, at Harvard and now at Princeton, is only the first step towards reforming the college admissions process. Getting rid of early action will make decisions more fair, but there is still a long way to go before college admissions are truly meritocratic. Shai D. Bronshtein ’09, a Crimson editorial editor, is a social studies concentrator in Lowell House...
...hour. "That way, we can compete with Disney World and all the other places these kids could work," says Cox. Still he had to battle "old-timer" colleagues who harped that truly motivated kids would work for free. Nonsense, says Cox. "I'm adamant that that is not fair to our less privileged population. Paying them puts everyone on equal territory...