Word: havener
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Harvard picked up another momentous win the following weekend, beating Brown on the road, 64-53, for the first time since 1999. That win sent the Crimson into New Haven still on the fringes of the Ivy race. Harvard was nearly knocked out of Yale’s gym in the early going, but rallied to stay within striking distance. The Crimson had three shots at the game winner in the final seconds, but was unable to avert a 54-53 Bulldogs victory...
...Crimson had reached its breaking point. When its New Haven rivals came to Cambridge, Harvard rebounded. The Crimson fired off an eight-goal streak that sealed a win over Yale, 11-4. The momentum failed to resuscitate the squad, though, as it couldn’t find a similar surge against UMass and Hofstra, losing both games 8-5 and 11-5, respectively. Harvard’s hopes to end the season on a high note went unrealized, as it dropped its final game against Dartmouth...
...have looked at that. We haven't been able to figure out if it makes economic sense. There are a lot of things you can do with technology, but whether it's a business is a separate question. There was a cartoon, I think in the New Yorker magazine, of two young computer geeks, and one was holding a newspaper, and he turned to the other and said, "Look at this new invention. Somebody has downloaded the whole page into a user-friendly format." It's a wonderful cartoon...
...Crimson article, Lowell House was described as being “typed in the past as the house of the scholar.” And even today, Adams House acknowledges on its website that it once was “a concentrated haven for the artistic and idiosyncratic...
Administrators in New Haven adopted a then-cutting-edge IBM computer that generated random residential assignments to its nearly 1,000 freshmen. The Crimson argued that Harvard should emulate Yale’s new housing policy, so that “the stigma of not ‘getting the first choice’ would disappear, along with cliques of dissatisfied people and uneven distribution.” But in Cambridge, Masters resisted such a change...