Word: roading
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...that the Crimson will not have it easy. Harvard leads the series 35-29, though it has only won one game in the last four meetings. Two of the last three at Leede Arena, however, have gone in the Crimson’s favor. Harvard is undefeated on the road against Ivy League opponents this year, and it hopes to keep that streak going in order to extend its season. “We still have a lot of work ahead of us,” co-captain Niki Finelli said Saturday night. “Dartmouth is a very...
...against Endicott lifted the Crimson above the .500 mark for the season, but the team will now hit the road after playing five straight games at the MAC. Harvard has not won a game away from home all season, and will now face two solid teams in Princeton and league opponent East Stroudsburg...
...Being here, we’re in our comfort zone, so we’re still yet to be tested,” Rosier said. “We’ve yet to win some really big road games, and that determines whether we go to the playoffs...
...Eventually he was given a student visa to study in the U.S. Now Bernard Chambliss Sissel, he is 30 and a married father working as a camera assistant at Panavision Camera. Says Sandi Sissel: "Making something of himself and not trying to grow up so fast was a harder road to take. These kids steal to eat, lie to get by, outwit tourists to get money. It takes years for them to understand that education is the only way. It has not been easy, given his background, but he is doing well...
...unemployment problem has roots stretching back to the first wave of migrants - about 80,000 of them - who followed the Dalai Lama to India in 1959. Many of them were unschooled, unskilled nomads who found only low-wage jobs in road construction. A few thousand were allotted uninhabited jungle land in southern and northeastern India and given training to become farmers. Later, some received subsidies to help market traditional handicrafts. But the vast majority of migrants settled in Dharamsala along with the Dalai Lama. The local economy was unable to absorb them. A mere lucky few found odd jobs...