Martin C. Ye
Tears and Rain
It all came down to freshman Hannah Morrill’s matchup with the Big Green’s Georgiana Smyser to determine the winner of the matchup and also potentially clinch a share of the Ivy League title. Morrill won the first set before Smyser challenged the rookie and took the second one, 6-3. Morrill was up early in the third set but ultimately dropped the matchup, 6-3.
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A red robot emerges from the darkness to entertain the crowd in Lowell Lecture Hall during The Harvard Undergraduate Drummers' spring show, THUD Robots.
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Rachel Wagley '11 looks at a fellow performer during The Harvard Undergraduate Drummers' spring show, THUD Robots.
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Admitted students of Harvard’s Class of 2015 and current Harvard students stand in an overcrowded shuttle, a common problem during Visitas, the visiting program for prospective students.
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An admitted student of Harvard’s Class of 2015 asks her undergraduate host a question during Visitas, Harvard College’s preview weekend for admitted students.
Admittedly Confused
An admitted student of Harvard's class of 2015 asks her student host a question during Visitas, Harvard College's preview weekend for admitted students.
TCHAN-NING BED
Shown here in previous play, sophomore Joshua Tchan won both his matches at the No. 6 singles spot this weekend and went 1-1 at No. 2 doubles with teammate Jonathan Pearlman. The pair’s 8-5 victory helped the No. 65 Crimson defeat Yale Friday, but the two lost yesterday against Brown, 8-4.
Captain Aba Serves It Up
Senior captain Aba Omodele-Lucien focuses on serving in his 6-3, 6-2 loss to Andy Gauthier of Cornell.
THE JOSHUA TREE
Sophomore Joshua Tchan had a rocky weekend of tennis, as the Crimson faced league foes Cornell Friday and Columbia Saturday. Tchan fell in the deciding three-set match against the Big Red in Harvard’s first Ivy matchup of the year. He then paired up with junior Jonathan Pearlman for a No. 2 doubles win—clinching the doubles point—but lost again at No. 6 singles the next day.
Waitlist Letters
This year, thousands of students will open their letters to find that they are neither accepted nor rejected — they are waitlisted.
Admissions 2011
The Harvard Admissions Office mails out decision letters to Class of 2015 applicants. A record-low 6.2% of applicants received acceptances this year.