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...have been a “very important effort.” Dimas also discussed a self-imposed target for the EU to reduce emissions by 20 percent and produce 20 percent of energy from renewable sources by 2020. Dimas said he viewed this ambitious legislation as a stepping stone rather than as a final solution, and if other countries follow suit, the EU will up its goal. “That is what science is telling us is necessary in order to avoid the irreversible and catastrophic impacts of global warming,” he said. In a question...
...year, with four different players scoring goals, and survived a late Husky surge to win, 4-3. “It’s a great win for us. We have a really big cross-town rivalry with Northeastern,” said co-captain and goaltender Kylie Stone. “This win puts us at .500 and that’s huge.” Harvard struck first a little over 13 minutes into the game after it earned a penalty corner. Junior midfielder Kristin Bannon took the corner and sent the ball...
...said. But Miranda added that all the representatives will meet next week where they will be informed of their tasks for the year—and for the decades to come. In addition to Love, Lin, Vilkin, and Miranda, the other students elected were Kylie P. Stone ’09 of Adams House, Brieana P. B. Marticorena ’09 of Cabot House, Devin D. Smith ’09 of Currier House, Sheila C. Lee ’09 of Eliot House, Ricky B. Shah ’09 of Lowell House, Derek N. Jones...
...defeated the Bears (2-7, 0-3 Ivy), 2-0, at Warner Roof, thanks to timely offense and stalwart goaltending. “Like with any Ivy matchup, we were excited to go down to Providence to play,” said co-captain and goaltender Kylie Stone. “Every game is a big game within the league.” With only 14 seconds left in the first half, Harvard broke a scoreless tie when sophomore forward Maggie McVeigh scored on a counterattack. Sophomore forward Leigh McCoy increased the cushion to two with a goal late...
...their use in their database of English-language books, newspapers, broadcasts and other media. If, by February 2009, a word reappears in that database with at least six "high quality" citations, it could be spared from the semantic dustbin. "We're looking to see if dropping a little stone in the pond of language actually does generate ripples," says Brookes...