Word: hunts
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...records with all that wind and chill, but the team performed extremely well," coach Pappy Hunt said yesterday. "They proved themselves to be the class of the Ivy League," he continued...
...Hunt echoed this sentiment. "The caliber in eastern cross-country has improved greatly and I expect it will continue, but my girls are tough, they will be right up there...
...Cornell 600 34 6 0.90 Paul Obermeyer, Brown 225 24 2 1.25 Ted Von Gerichten, Brown 355 18 5 1.26 Guy Cipriano, Princeton 556 35 8 1.29 John Ertman, Yale 340 35 6 1.59 Lyman Missimer, Dartmouth 580 38 12 1.86 John McElaney, Columbia 560 41 13 2.09 Brad Hunt, Penn 600 31 14 2.10 Fred Herold, Harvard 560 39 14 2.25 Jim Mooney, Yale...
...natural selection favored those of his genus who could stand up; an erect position enabled them to see over the tall grass to spot and hunt their prey?and to see and escape the carnivores that preyed on them. Thus they were able to survive longer and produce more offspring, who shared their physical characteristics. After many generations of selection, the savanna-dwellers had evolved into upright-standing animals distinctly different from the forest-dwelling relatives they had left behind...
While his Australopithecus cousins foraged or scavenged, Homo habilis began to make tools and to hunt. Both actions accelerated his evolution. Toolmaking, which required reasoning and more complex neurological hookups, gave a survival advantage to the creatures with the biggest brains. That led to an increase in brain size. Hunting, with its emphasis on outwitting animals that were either faster, stronger or fiercer than the hominids that hunted them, also stimulated rapid brain growth. In addition, says Milford Wolpoff of the University of Michigan, it placed a premium on cooperation, strengthening the bond between members of the group and starting...