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...their final game at Harvard, the Crimson pressured hard on offense to secure the lead. Although MIT netted the first goal, Harvard quickly returned with four of its own, putting the Engineers away early. Keeping up the pressure on the other end of the pool, the defense shut down MIT??s momentum time after time, allowing the Crimson a 7-3 victory. Left open by his defender, Garcia pounded in the final goal of the game off a perimeter pass from Voith.“The game was already won, but I thought it was a nice...
Ashley C. “Ash” Dyer, a recent MIT graduate, worked as a student on a public-access wireless network for people near MIT??s campus...
...MIT??s new interactive art exhibit, “Sensorium: Embodied Experience, Technology, and Contemporary Art,” is like the grown-up, version of Boston’s Museum of Science. The six artists displayed play with the senses to create an interactive, intriguing commentary on the way new interactive technologies are changing the way art is experienced. Tactics as diverse as Scratch-N-Sniff inspired walls, a “touch-tunnel” filled with darkness, sounds, and a strobe light, and Bruce Nauman’s attempts...
...gone with the sweaty hands of tomorrow’s unsuspecting tourists. However, Keller C. Rinaudo ’09 is making his mark in a more permanent way—building a rock-climbing wall in a squash court in the basement of Lowell House. After climbing MIT??s bouldering wall last year, Rinaudo approached the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, and Lowell with a plan, got approval, raised $45,000, and started building in July. Karl R.R. Kuryla, a Harvard Business School student and member of the Harvard Mountaineering Club, has been Rinaudo?...
...core business resulted in strong revenue growth and a rebate that returns $1 million to our members,” he said. The Coop pays out rebates to its more than 60,000 members—of whom approximately 18,000 are students from Harvard and MIT??every year. The average rebate this year is around $25, said Murphy. But despite the payout, several students said that the rebate has little effect on where they buy books and does little for their wallets. “It does little to mitigate the cost of ludicrously expensive books...