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...assists (27), and free throws made and attempted (101-of-139). This season has helped ensure that the fifth-year senior departs Cambridge as one of the leading big men in Harvard history. Cusworth holds the all-time school record for blocked shots with 143, and his scoring output over the weekend gave him 1,042 points for his career, good for 21st on the Crimson list. Now, however, that career is over. After the game, Cusworth sat for the last time in front of his locker, its contents packed into a gym bag open at his feet, and faced...
...Yale’s final 16 points of the game came from the stripe. The bright spot for Harvard was the play of Cusworth, who scored a career-high 28 points in his second-to-last game as a member of the Crimson. Cusworth’s scoring output pushed him past the 1,000-point mark for his career, making him only the 23rd player in Harvard history to reach that figure. With four NBA scouts in attendance to watch his play, the seven-footer also hauled down a game-high 10 rebounds, recording his third straight double-double...
...future and Labor's historical devotion to fairness: "If the 19th century was driven by an industrial revolution, and the 20th century by a technological revolution, what is needed for the 21st century is an education revolution." Rudd pointed to a slide in workers' productivity. A decade ago, Australians' output was at 85% of U.S. levels; by 2005 it had dropped to 79%. Rudd argued that the country lacked the skills to prosper in an economic era when the main action would switch to Asia and would be dominated by knowledge enterprises. Labor, he said, would invest more in education...
...time. Neuroscientists have long known that consciousness depends on certain frequencies of oscillation in the electroencephalograph (EEG). These brain waves consist of loops of activation between the cortex (the wrinkled surface of the brain) and the thalamus (the cluster of hubs at the center that serve as input-output relay stations). Large, slow, regular waves signal a coma, anesthesia or a dreamless sleep; smaller, faster, spikier ones correspond to being awake and alert. These waves are not like the useless hum from a noisy appliance but may allow consciousness to do its job in the brain. They may bind...
...Netherlands in 2000. Once moribund countries such as Argentina and Russia are doing much of the heavy lifting today. According to the World Bank, developing nations collectively grew about 7% last year--more than twice as fast as high-income countries. They now account for 49% of world economic output, up from...