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...Crimson. Hallion also added seven assists while Markley had seven rebounds. Getting the win was critical both for Harvard’s confidence and its place in the standings. The Crimson now sits second in the Ivy League. Coming into the game, Harvard was hoping to get back on track after Friday, and the players were much happier with their performance Saturday night. “We had a problem with effort last night and we should never have that problem,” Tay said. “But we cleaned that up tonight.” Their coach...
...ensure the close victory. “She played a phenomenal weekend, even though she was sick,” senior co-captain Vivian Liao said. “Overall, I thought we came out really strong and improved in each game. We’re on the right track for the season.”Next up on the slate for the Crimson is the ECAC Championships on Mar. 1. The team will look to utilize its depth and build on its play over the past weekend to improve on last season’s eighth-place finish...
Harvard’s men’s and women’s track and field teams traveled to New Haven for the HYP tri-meet, where the women almost upset the Tigers, falling by a narrow four points to finish second. The men placed third. With 58 points, the Harvard women tallied seven ECAC qualifying finishes and nine personal bests to overpower the Bulldogs’ meager 39 points, but came up just short of Princeton’s 62. “The meet was really exciting,” junior Becky Christensen said...
...Australia, China, Japan and New Zealand all use cloned cattle and pigs. ViaGEN, a cloning and animal genetics company based in Austin, Tex., produces some 150 cloned cattle annually, which it sells to meat suppliers, primarily for breeding. ViaGEN says it will launch a system to log and track each of its clones, with a unique tracking number - but not its DNA - that will be stored in an independently run database. The company will also make efforts to keep any food products made from its clones out of markets that don't want them. "We're not making it voluntary...
...coincidence that there are no cameras in that courtroom,” Toobin says—he needed all the goodwill he could muster to write this book.“The Nine” goes behind and around the curtain at the Supreme Court to track the rise of the conservative movement, beginning with the creation of the Federalist Society in 1982 and not ending until the close of the judicial term last June. In his book, Toobin makes the point that the Supreme Court is as much at the mercy of politics as any other branch of government...