Word: pooling
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Harvard’s peers saw an increase in early applicants after Harvard, Princeton, and the University of Virginia eliminated their early admissions programs. Yale’s early applicant pool swelled 38 percent, and Dartmouth had a record number of early applicants, according to Hernandez College Consulting...
...points in the heptathlon, senior Alex Lewis notched an IC4A qualifying fifth spot.Despite not finishing at the top, the track and field team has a lot to look forward to in the coming spring season. The women improved upon last year to finish in the top half of the pool. And although the men still finished last, they were able to scrape together points from new events, like freshman Dan Chenoweth’s fifth-place 8:34.77 finish in the 3000m run.Next weekend, the women will send qualifying student-athletes to the ECAC Indoor Track and Field Championships...
...since we have such a small team this year we could only send five girls to ECAC’s. Our top priority is the Ivy Championships.”The Harvard women (6-1, 6-1 Ivy League) indeed brought a force to DeNunzio Pool in Princeton, N.J., hoping to avenge a dual-meet loss to the defending champion Tigers (7-0, 6-0).Despite an excellent showing, the Crimson came up a bit short. Princeton proved dominant, amassing 1651.5 points on the way to claiming the team championship. Harvard’s performance cannot be discounted, though...
...scientists with difficulties getting potentially-lucrative research into the marketplace, a new Harvard program will continue providing a much needed boost. After funding six Harvard discoveries last year, school officials announced earlier this month that they will be launching a second round of the Accelerator Fund, a pool of private funding earmarked for University life-sciences researchers struggling to enter the commercial arena. “Most of our technologies in life sciences are very embryonic in nature. They’re very early stage technologies,” said Issac T. Kohlberg, director of Harvard’s Office...
...were forced to arm themselves for war. "We were using swords but they were not effective," says Sylvester, 24, slashing a knife in the air. "In a day we can make between 80 and 100 [arrows]," he adds, refusing to give his last name out of fear. Community members pool money together to buy the necessary tools in secret; the arrows are then distributed within the neighborhood. Local leaders know about the arrow factories, but police forces...