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Word: lucking (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...comparing admission rates in the early and late pools.Fair enough. But from a journalist's standpoint, it's better to have the numbers, and the Ivy papers should be after them. The Dartmouth struck out at Harvard, Princeton and Penn, but perhaps the on-campus dailies will have more luck. The admissions debate now rattling higher education will be better informed with the relevant statistics close at hand...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Ivy Infusion: The Dartmouth Moves the Ball Forward | 10/3/2006 | See Source »

...studies embryonic stem cells, which can generate all of the body's cell types, produced clones ten times more efficiently than adult stem cells, which can develop into only a restricted number of cell types. And when scientists had tried to clone fully differentiated cells, they had very little luck...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Can Older Cells Solve Cloning's Problems? | 10/1/2006 | See Source »

...lucky. I found my call to public service and public interest law after I went to Washington for a one-year job in 1963, and stayed. Today’s students do not have to trust their luck. The foundation for their call to public service is right here, in a smorgasbord of activities as accessible as the frozen yogurt in the omnipresent self-serve machine—another Harvard amenity not present a half-century ago. So I say to them: Eat! Enjoy! Learn! Commit! Graduate! Serve...

Author: By James F. Flug | Title: Back to the Future: 50 Years Later a Freshman Returns | 9/29/2006 | See Source »

...came to Harvard not to build a resumé and get a consulting job, but to explore some of the most intriguing academic questions in the world today and—perish the thought—to actually learn something, good luck. But for the rest of you, I have a few cynical words of advice...

Author: By Adam Goldenberg | Title: Freshmen: Don’t Read This Column | 9/29/2006 | See Source »

...fourteenth minute of the game, Providence forward Abby Maguire netted the Friars’ first goal, her fourth of the season. Less than ten minutes later, the Friars were given a penalty corner. Two Friars missed the ball as it traveled out of the circle. With a stroke of luck followed by a stroke of skill, the ball bounced directly in front of Providence midfielder Melissa McGow, who smashed a long backhanded shot past the Crimson goaltender, sophomore Kelly Knoche. It was McGow’s sixth goal. “[The Friars] were very good,” Harvard...

Author: By and Loren Amor, CONTRIBUTING WRITERS | Title: No. 15 Friars Offer No Penance to Reeling Crimson | 9/28/2006 | See Source »

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