Word: sixes
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...filling the void left by her fellow center.“[MacLaughlin] is a competitor,” Harvard coach Erik Farrar said. “There’s no quit in the woman.”Next week, the Crimson will visit the west coast for a six-game trip, including a match-up against No. 1 Stanford. Harvard returns home to Blodgett Pool on April 4. The team will have a chance for revenge against Hartwick, followed by a match-up against Brown.“I’m excited to see how we come...
...with a 3-1 lead before a kill from Kuld tied it up at 3-3. The Tigers extended their lead to 13-9, as Harvard trailed close behind. Jones posted a kill and a block to pull Harvard within two. The Tigers took five of the next six points to make it 19-13. Princeton then pulled away to take the set and the match, 30-20. HARVARD 3, EAST STROUDSBURG 0 The Crimson came into East Stroudsburg eager for a road win. Harvard held the Warriors to a .150 attack percentage in the first set to take...
...course at three over par, shooting 72, 74, and 73 on the par-72 course.Day 1 of competition wasn’t very kind to the Harvard golfers, as almost every member of the team shaved strokes from his first round total to his second. Pollak, who finished just six strokes behind the daily leader Patrick Schiel of Southern Illinois University—who shot 71—at 77 on Day 1, improved to par on Day 2, finishing seven strokes behind the daily leader, Schiel’s Southern Illinois teammate Todd Obergoenner, who shot a formiddable...
...continued to fight hard, as back-to-back doubles in the eighth by Meehan and Albright tightened the contest and a Douglas single knotted the score at 7.Things soon fell apart for the visitors, though, as a solid relief effort from freshman Will Keuper (0-1) melted into a six-run frame. Through 3.1 innings of work, the rookie allowed only six hits, but fellow rookie Marcus Way and Stack-Babich allowed five inherited runners to score, saddling Keuper with the loss.UAB 13, HARVARD 0The Saturday morning contest brought the weekend’s most lopsided results in a difficult...
Computer algorithms are advancing to the point where prototype robots like the Army's Multi-Utility Logistics Equipment (MULE) vehicle are able to cross barriers and navigate obstacles without human guidance. The MULE - a 14-ft.-long, six-wheeled robot equipped with a range of navigational sensors slated to deploy with U.S. forces 2015 - will eventually carry Javelin antitank missiles and M240 machine guns. The MULE could well carry supplies and conduct reconnaissance missions for light infantry units in difficult terrain like Afghanistan. It is programmed with onboard computers so that the vehicle can find its own way around corners...