Word: tournamente
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...first head-coaching opportunity came at Seton Hall University in 1998. The Pirates made the postseason all four seasons under Amaker, advancing to the NCAA Sweet 16 in 2000. Amaker moved to the University of Michigan in 2002, where his Wolverines squad won the National Invitational Tournament (NIT) in 2004. He failed, however, to take Michigan to the NCAA Tournament in his six seasons in Ann Arbor, leading to his firing in March. Amaker currently holds a career coaching record of 177-138. The Harvard men’s basketball team has never won the Ivy League title or advanced...
...practice of drawing from personal bank accounts is hardly unique to Freeze Magazine. The officers of the Mock Trial Team have a long tradition of paying for tournament expenses out of their own pockets and then later reimbursing themselves through fundraisers. “Normally, by spring we’ve already exhausted the funds that we’ve collected from membership dues,” Special Operations Officer Matthew S. Roller ’08 explains. “At that point in time, the easiest way to purchase plane tickets or hotel rooms is for one member...
...majority of the Mock Trial Team’s expenses are spent on airplane tickets and hotel rooms, which are necessary for members to attend tournaments around the country. Since the Undergraduate Council does not fund transportation expenses beyond the cost of a T-token, the Mock Trial Team can only use UC grants for the relatively negligible registration expenses that it incurs at each tournament...
...This development forced the team to pursue increasingly elaborate fundraising initiatives—from an invitational tournament called the Crimson Classic, to a series of training seminars for high school students involved in mock trial teams...
...10th place, junior Jessica Hazlett fell into a tie for 11th at 165 (79-86), while sophomore Ali Bode’s 166 (77-89) put her in 13th place. Though it played a one-round invitational over spring break, this was Harvard’s first 36-hole tournament since the fall, and the Crimson welcomed the extra holes, quickly resuming its success from the fall (one win, two second-place finishes). “Longer tournaments give better teams a chance to come to the top,” Rhoads said. Harvard’s next outing comes...