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...option costing up to $3,000 plus annual fees. Parents generally see private banking as an insurance policy should their child or a sibling fall ill later in life. Public donation does not guarantee availability to the donor's family should the need later arise. "If you don't save the cells [privately], they can never be fully yours," says Dave Zitlow, a spokesman for San Francisco-based Cord Blood Registry, the world's largest cord-blood private bank...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Creating a Cord-Blood Lifeline | 2/26/2008 | See Source »

...minutes of the second period that the Crimson’s scoring took an unexpected and historic form. With a delayed penalty on Harvard, the Bulldogs pulled goalie Alex Richards for a 6-5 advantage. But in an effort to recover the puck from the right corner after a save from Richter, a sweeping stick from a Yale attacker sent the puck squirting across the empty ice to sneak inside the left post of the empty Bulldog...

Author: By Christos N. Theophanos, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Harvard Cruises in Penalty-Filled Rout | 2/25/2008 | See Source »

...Richter’s wild second period was marked by two bizarre plays. The first came during a Yale 5-on-3, a nearly two-minute sequence during which the Bulldogs unleashed seven shots but never found the back of the net, thanks to an impressive series of saves from the sophomore. After Richter stopped one Yale offering with his face, the buckles on his mask flew apart, forcing him to remove the helmet. The officials, however, allowed play to continue for a few seconds as Yale regained the puck and prepared for another try at the now-significantly underprotected...

Author: By Daniel J. Rubin-wills, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: NOTEBOOK: Goalie Richter Earns Historic Score on Standout Weekend | 2/25/2008 | See Source »

...Chewang Norphel has gone beyond prayer. The 73-year-old civil engineer has come up with a solution that won't exactly save the ancient glaciers, but it could stave off a looming irrigation crisis. Norphel has created artificial glaciers, frozen pools of glacier run-off perched above the farmers' fields, which thaw just in time for the start of growing season in April - two months before water from the distant natural glaciers is expected to arrive. The slanted pools melt into irrigation channels over the next six weeks, watering crops for villages of roughly 500 families...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: 'Ice Man' vs. Global Warming | 2/25/2008 | See Source »

...function is inappropriate. Medical education and health care-delivery consulting represent an important way that Harvard Medical School can share its considerable expertise with the world. The sorts of structural changes in healthcare and medical education that HMI is capable of effecting around the world have the potential to save lives—if that is not consistent with the mission of Harvard Medical School, than it is hard to see what is. Profitability should not be dismissed for its own sake. While HMI may resemble McKinsey & Company more closely than the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, the increasing globalization...

Author: By The Crimson Staff | Title: No Harm Done | 2/24/2008 | See Source »

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