Word: seeding
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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After Brown, the Crimson faced Penn in the semifinal round. The Quakers had been the second seed in the other pool and had also rolled to easy victories in earlier rounds. Harvard, however, brought Penn to its knees, winning...
...best experience of all was the dramatic championship game between the top two teams in the country. In a game that saw five ties and five lead changes, the fourth battle of the season between the No. 1 seed Crimson (33-1-0, 24-1-1 ECAC) and the No. 2 seed Wildcats (23-7-5, 19-4-3) was even more dramatic than the ECAC championship game, which Harvard had pulled out 5-4 in overtime six days earlier...
Harvard advanced to the American Women's College Hockey Alliance National Championship game by defeating No. 4 seed Brown (20-7-4, 19-4-3) in Friday's semifinals in a game that was not as close as the 5-3 score indicated...
...scientists found Seed's sound bites credible, yet his proclamations laid out a soul-shivering truth. Medicine has a strong impetus (if not temptation) to use this technology--for basic research, for new therapies, to provide solutions to infertility or to "replace" a dying loved one. But medicine is also bound by the traditional precept to do no harm, and so it takes on added challenges--such as whether clones will die young because of their older DNA or whether they will suffer the environmental mutations picked up during the life of their adult parent...
...wait for the first human infant to be produced, in secret, by a Richard Seed or his offshore equivalent? Ian Wilmut, the soft-spoken scientist who started this noisy revolution, says no. The father of three (one of them adopted), he speaks passionately of honoring the individuality of the child. Human cloning, he says, should be banned...