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...fourth spot. Koulbitskaya got Penn on the board with her 6-3, 6-2 win over O’Riain in the second position. Missing from the Harvard lineup this weekend was junior Preethi Mukundan, who was sick and did not travel. The Crimson will travel to New Haven to face Yale on April 21 and will play its final home match of the season against Brown on April 23. “We’ve been taking it one match at a time all season and will keep doing it,” Graham said...
...going into this race will be key, just as it was at the end of the race on Saturday. Next week will provide a prime opportunity for the Black and White to swing momentum back in its favor, and motivation for the race will not be lacking. Radcliffe will travel to Yale looking to end its slide by defeating its greatest Ivy rival. The Black and White will need to improve fast to make this happen, as the Bulldogs defeated the Big Green by four seconds two weeks ago in the first varsity eight. Radcliffe seems poised to do just...
...different for the Harvard. “I don’t know what the situation was last year,” Shore said, “but I don’t think we’ll finish eighth.” After the Ivy championships, Harvard will travel to Newport, R.I. for the URI Invitational. —Staff writer Brad Hinshelwood can be reached at bhinshel@fas.harvard.edu...
Hoping to heal the human body, Harvard pre-meds are learning that applying to medical school can cost an arm and a leg. A typical Harvard undergraduate applying to medical school can rack up more than $6,000 in costs for applications, the MCAT, test prep, and travel costs for interviews, according to students and advisers. While some resources are available for undergraduates from low-income backgrounds, including loans from the Harvard Financial Aid Office, many applicants do not qualify for application fee waivers and medical schools do not offer financial aid for students not yet enrolled. These expenses...
...with me telling her that she had some nice shoelaces. I also vaguely remember her mentioning that she enjoyed traveling.So the next day I began my quest to find her with three extremely helpful pieces of information: a) she’s a Harvard student, b) she likes to travel, and c) she’s female. Ordinarily, with so little to go on, my efforts would have been nothing more than an exercise in futility. But I had an ace up my sleeve, Facebook.com. Lets face it: the best part of Facebook is that you can both keep track...