Word: par
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...well-balanced effort.” None of Harvard’s golfers shot over 79 in any round in a tournament where the average round was an 86. Junior Ali Bode led the Crimson with a second-place individual finish. Her combined score of 147 was three over par and one only shot behind the tournament’s winner, Hayley Millbourn of Amherst. Her second-round 73 was the low score of the day. “It feels great to be out there with the team again,” Bode said. “We were...
...East Carolina state took over the top spot on the leader board for good by firing a second-round 276.Sophomore Greg Shuman carded the lowest round for the team with a three-day score of 217 to finish in four-way tie for 18th place.Shuman fired a one-under-par 71 during his first round on Monday morning. He then turned in a one-over par 73 the remaining rounds on Monday afternoon and Tuesday morning. “I played pretty well but could have played better,” Shuman said. “Overall, I was pleased...
...Standards-Based Reform. He is currently director of a policy master’s program at the GSE, as well as President of the Rennie Center for Education Research & Policy. Reville’s primary objectives as chairman of the BOE include helping underprivileged students to achieve on par with their better-off peers. In an e-mailed statement to the Crimson, Reville wrote, “We hope not only to close learning gaps, but to realize the promise of our society that one’s destiny need not be determined by one’s socio-economic...
...after the 1973 peace treaty and prevented or repelled the 1975 North Vietnamese invasion that unified the country under communist rule. It's possible that if that kind of armistice had been negotiated, the former Saigon (now Ho Chi Minh City) would now be an economic powerhouse on on par with Seoul, instead of a still-poor, low-income but fast-growing economic center. This never-was South Vietnam might even have developed into a multi-party democracy as South Korea eventually...
...that will have to change. At a time when U.S. and NATO forces have come under scathing criticism for civilian casualties--figures compiled by media groups and human-rights organizations indicate that since the beginning of the year, the number of civilians killed by Western forces is on a par with those killed by militants-- putting an Afghan face on the war has become an essential part of regaining the faith of the public. "All this anger about civilian casualties by foreign forces--it's just like Baghdad before everything started going downhill," says a Western official who has spent...