Word: monthã
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Though the Crimson tide prevailed in last month??s Harvard-Yale Blood Drive Challenge, questions over scoring may clot the victory. Yale collected 15 more units of blood than Harvard, but this year’s judges took into account certain factors, such as relative size of the student body, to level the playing field. The result: a Harvard win. Though a point system was agreed upon in advance by both colleges, Yale College Dean Peter Salovey suggested—in typical Eli fashion—that Harvard won on a technicality, the Yale Daily News reported last...
...joined by teammates No. 7 seed Ilan Oren, a junior, and freshman Verdi DiSesa, who was seeded first in the lower Molloy Tournament. Broadbent was given the No. 5 national seed but was unable to go, due to a pulled hamstring in a loss against Trinity at last month??s CSA Team Championships—a tournament in which Harvard ultimately placed third. Oren shut out Brown’s Dan Petrie before falling, 3-1, in the Potter Quarterfinals to Penn’s Gilly Lane, who lost his next match to El Halaby. DiSesa also progressed...
...some evidence of some diminution of concern by our government about what’s happening in Darfur at a time when the needs are as great as they ever have been,” Summers said.The impetus for this year’s divestment campaign was last month??s release of Harvard’s Securities and Exchange Commission filings, which showed the University had increased its holdings in Sinopec, said Chad J. Hazlett, an organizer of the petition and a student at the Kennedy School.“What we’re going with right...
...gets reduced to some vague ‘discontent.’” Most of all, professors—even those who have been vocal in their criticism of Summers, including Classics Department Chair Richard F. Thomas—say that the Faculty should move past last month??s crisis despite stinging rebukes in the press. “To really respond would require going into specific ethical and managerial issues that simply keep the state of upheaval going on,” Thomas said. “And he’s already resigned...
...money that we can access.” But still, many working to assist the City’s homeless agree that service providers, in attempting to reach out to more homeless citizens, struggle for sorely-needed federal and state funds. And some of the individuals counted in last month??s census are on the streets because they refuse assistance already available to them.Briefly pausing as he picked soda cans out of trash cans in Harvard Square, Mike—who refused to give his last name—said the census missed him, since he sleeps under...