Word: hurt
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...number of medical schools to which they apply.“From my own background as a student with not a lot of resources myself, if students do not have a lot of money to apply to medical school, they must limit the number of schools and that could hurt them in the end,” says Christopher J. Russell ’00, a fourth-year student at HMS and a pre-med resident tutor in Adams House. DIAGNOSIS: COSTLYA typical Harvard applicant applies to 18 schools through the centralized American Medical College Application Service (AMCAS), according...
...definitely helped our business. If we took it away it would hurt our business....We know that people come in, in part, because of the lid,” he says...
...spending, has finally conceded that it's time to hike rates?which is why many analysts believe the stock-market party may end sooner rather than later. Higher rates flow through the global economy in a myriad of ways by curtailing borrowing and curbing business activity. Higher borrowing costs hurt corporate earnings, which is ultimately reflected by lower stock prices. Andy Xie, chief Asia economist at Morgan Stanley, says the world's equity markets have been surfing on a "tide of liquidity" for the past five years?meaning investors have been awash in cash, thanks to the easy-money policies...
...flasks than the minimum $10 donation. If a wealthier Harvard is objectively a good thing, then so is encouraging seniors who can afford it to donate proportional to their means. But no proponent of Senior Gift can legitimately claim that the withholding of a single $10 donation will materially hurt Harvard. And no detractor can feign great enough financial distress to justify their refusal to plunk down the cash equivalent of a beer and a burrito. Harvard subsidizes everyone’s yearly tuition at least to the tune of $20,000 (more if financial aid is in the picture...
...like they had their cups on backwards. Still, I managed to enjoy myself. How? I’m not so sure. But something in two different sequences during game one reminded me of baseball’s ineffable appeal.* * *The first play was no joking matter. A kid got hurt. Columbia starting second baseman Kyle Roberts injured his knee when, on a ground ball to shortstop with runners on first and second and nobody out in the second inning, Matt Kramer slid hard into the base to break up the possible double play. It worked, too: the fielder made...