Word: march
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...need to play faster. “We need to do the little things, and that’s what we’re going to be doing in practice over the next few days.Harvard will try to rebound at its next match, a trip to Quinnipiac on Sunday, March 16.“We just have to come out ready to play all 60 minutes,” Martin said. “We can’t have any lapses, mental or physical. “We have to come out and give...
...March 2006, Yale’s art collection fell under scrutiny. The Peruvian government sued Yale for the rights to archaeological materials excavated from the Incan ruin Machu Picchu nearly a century ago by explorer and Yale professor Hiram Bingham. In September 2007, the two sides structured an agreement that stipulated that Yale would cede ownership of the artifacts and return many of them to Peru as early as 2009. Yale would, however, be legally permitted to retain certain pieces for 99 years as part of a research collection...
...more likely letters, or “likelies,” this year to try to attract students who will or already do have offers from other schools. ‘EXPLODING OFFERS’Though the Ivy League maintains a single reply date for regular admissions—March 31 this year—colleges can offer students the next best thing to an official decision with a proverbial wink, under the theory that an applicant who has more time to consider a college will be likelier to attend.Harvard isn’t the only school to follow this...
...CORRECTION APPENDED The March 13 story, "Medical School Expands Smoking Ban," said that Harvard Medical School's new no-smoking policy will extend to include outdoors near entrances and other air intakes. In fact, the current policy already extends to these areas, and the new one will ban all smoking on the Medical School's grounds...
...Spitzer's rather poetic sentence seemed apt on March 12, as he resigned as governor of New York in a brief press conference, the culmination of a 48-hour melodrama sparked by revelations that he had been a client of a prostitution ring. Thus ended a public career that had once seemed promising enough that Spitzer was discussed as a potential 2012 Democratic presidential nominee. Spitzer apologized for his "private failings," but he said nothing to explain why he would have thrown it all away, why he risked so much. He had built a reputation as an ethical crusader...