Word: favority
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...side, but recent encounters have proven that the Crimson will not have it easy. Harvard leads the series 35-29, though it has only won one game in the last four meetings. Two of the last three at Leede Arena, however, have gone in the Crimson’s favor. Harvard is undefeated on the road against Ivy League opponents this year, and it hopes to keep that streak going in order to extend its season. “We still have a lot of work ahead of us,” co-captain Niki Finelli said Saturday night...
...soccer field,” he said. “I hit it pretty hard.”JACKSONVILLE STATE 7, HARVARD 6After the Crimson let the Gamecocks come back from a seven-run deficit in the first game of Saturday’s doubleheader, Harvard almost returned the favor in the nightcap.Down 7-0 in the top of the seventh inning, the Crimson kept the runners moving with a string of singles and walks, including RBI base knocks by sophomore Tyler Albright, senior Taylor Meehan, Stack-Babich and Way.But with the Jacksonville State lead cut down to one, sophomore...
...committee voted 14-14 on the legislation with two abstentions. Andrea R. Flores ’10, UC president, had to break the tie—she voted in favor of the final two clauses...
...such educated people to consult with the companies that develop new medicines and you cut off a valuable source of knowledge. What's more, pharma's largesse also flows to the schools themselves in the form of multimillion-dollar endowments. Whether or not the companies are trying to curry favor, they're also building labs and bankrolling scholarships - something that becomes increasingly important as the deteriorating economy causes philanthropic giving to dry up. No one disagrees that isolating academia from the industry may be ideal, but even many academics concede that the cooperation yields more good than harm. And while...
...Michael P. Jacobson, a former NYC Corrections commissioner and now director of the Vera Institute of Justice, there is a "historical moment" afoot now to abandon what he and others in the field call the failed policy of "mass incarceration" in favor of systematic and adequately funded re-entry efforts. But nowhere, he cautions, is there such a gap between what we should do - what we know to be the right thing to do policywise - and what we actually...