Word: super
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...Crimson’s only singles win of the day. The singles win was Mukundan’s first since moving up to No. 2 singles in Ko’s absence.Meanwhile, Litvak dropped a lengthy three-set struggle with Janet Kim in a super tiebreak, 10-4.—Staff writer Tyler D. Sipprelle can be reached at sipprell@fas.harvard.edu...
...players all winning their matchups.Ermakov and Hayes delivered the first singles victories of the afternoon, winning in straight sets at No. 5 and 6, respectively.Valkin clinched the match with a 6-4, 6-2 defeat of Rory Green before Nguyen added Harvard’s fifth point, winning the super tiebreak at No. 3, 2-6, 6-4, 1-0(8).Clayton and Kumar dropped matches at the top two singles positions, losing in straight sets after the Crimson’s victory had been secured.—Staff writer Karan Lodha can be reached at klodha@fas.harvard.edu...
...impossibly fast-paced spring semester I can always count on finding a baseball game to lose myself in for a few hours.On a broader scale, sports are a unifying force that can provide common ground for people from completely disparate backgrounds. An NFL team making the Super Bowl can often do more to bring together that team’s city than any rousing speech by a politician.Are there more mentally stimulating or globally important subjects that I could immerse myself in? Sure. But I am uniquely motivated by sports and sportswriting in particular, and I’d rather...
Radio in its most conventional form is dying. It’s due in part to more strict FCC rules regarding what can and can’t be said on American airwaves, an agenda that hit its stride in the aftermath of Janet Jackson’s Super Bowl “slip” three years ago. It’s the reason why Howard Stern now resides rather peacefully on Sirius Satellite radio, free from the firestorm that followed him during his days on syndicated broadcast radio...
...just about the time tax prep technology should have been cementing its hold on the mass market, substantial changes - including new rules about dividends and capital gains - kept people moving in the other direction. The Alternative Minimum Tax, a net originally created to catch the super-wealthy trying to shirk taxes, now ensnares some 4 million people a year, many of them solidly middle class. "A lot of those people throw their hands up in the air and say, I don't like doing my taxes once, I'm not going to do them twice," says Tom Ochsenschlager, vice president...