Word: ratio
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...them out,” Stamatis said. “We had the legs at the end of the game. The ploy is to keep pressure and not let them have much breathing room.” Another sign of Harvard’s offensive dominance was the lopsided ratio of corner kicks—which the Crimson led Fairfield 14 to 5. Aside from the one blemish on his record, junior Adam Hahn had an otherwise steady night in goal by turning aside six shots from the Stags. The lone Fairfield goal was scored by Mike Troy...
...Nearly 1.1 million children attend one of the country's 3,625 charter schools, according to the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools. Forty states and the District of Columbia have charter programs, with California leading the pack. But the dollar-per-student ratio varies nationally. In 2002-2003, a national survey found that charter schools received about $5,600 per pupil on average, whereas district public schools received...
...unfortunate situation demonstrates the best of Harvard athletics, not the worst. The players made mistakes, they faced the consequences and hopefully they will learn from their experiences. As Murphy has said repeatedly, 99 percent of the players he’s had here have been of impeccable character. That ratio seems pretty good to me. —Staff writer David H. Stearns can be reached at stearns@fas.harvard.edu...
...that ultimately funded the Bassin and Douglass research be provided with a cogent explanation of what convinced the investigators that Douglass behaved properly? How did the investigators explain Douglass’ written statement to a National Research Council committee saying that his work revealed “an Odds Ratio of 1.2 to 1.4 between fluoride and osteosarcoma that was not significantly different from 1” when his own student, in her PhD dissertation approved by Douglass, had found a “robust” five to seven fold increase in osteosarcoma rates in young boys exposed...
...market, driving down relative wages among high-skilled workers and reducing the disparity in wages between low- and high-skilled workers,” according to a press release. In societies where seven percent of the labor force is comprised of immigrant household workers, foreign labor may increase the ratio of native low-skilled workers by 3.9 percent and increase native welfare by 1.2 percent of income, the authors wrote. In an interview with The Crimson, Watt said he found the results of his research particularly satisfying because of the potential in immigrant worker programs instituted by the governments...