Word: marylandã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Harvard men’s hockey’s 110th captain hails from Maryland??he’s lived there since he was four—and back home, No. 8 belongs to Cal (Ripken, Jr.), not Carl (Yastrzemski). Babe Ruth wasn’t lost in 1919 (when Boston dealt him to the New York Yankees), but in 1914 (when Baltimore dealt him to Boston). Sundays belong to the Redskins, not the Patriots, and Maryland crabs trump Boston chowder every time...
...first after winning the doubles title at the Cissie Leary Memorial Tournament in September and playing well at the Riviera/ITA All-Americans. The pair managed to live up to their high billing. The championship match was the anticipated contest between the first and second seeds, matching the Crimson against Maryland??s top combo of But and Baker. O’Riain and Anderson had each lost to the tough pair in separate matches last season, and they fell behind early in the final. The new Harvard tandem was able to battle back, however, tying the match...
...released another study on Thursday that reevaluates the Democratic Party’s current approach and stresses the urgent need to appeal to swing voters. Elaine C. Kamarck, a lecturer at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, and William A. Galston, the director of the University of Maryland??s Institute for Philosophy and Public Policy, served in the Clinton White House and helped frame his centrist campaign approach with their 1989 study, “The Politics of Evasion.”In their current study, “The Politics of Polarization...
This past summer UNITY released a six-month study on diversity in the Washington press with the University of Maryland??s Philip Merrill College of Journalism. According to the census, less than ten percent of journalists in the Washington daily newspapers press corps are of color. It revealed a mere portion of a national trend of racial disparities among influential newspapers, one that The Harvard Crimson follows. Of the few hundred active editors that compose The Crimson’s nine boards, fewer than twenty are black or Hispanic. Asian students fare better, holding approximately forty positions...
...captain Courtney Bergman and sophomore Elsa O’Riain navigated their way past Quakers teams in two consecutive rounds with relative ease, then bested Arizona’s entry to reach the final. But the top-seeded Harvard pair couldn’t handle Maryland??s Ramona But—the winner of the weekend’s singles tournament—and her partner Marianne Baker, losing...