Overall and Conference Records (As of Mar. 19)
Baseball: 4-5 (0-3 NEWMAC)
Men’s Basketball: 29-2 (11-1 NEWMAC)
Men’s Lacrosse: 1-1
Women’s Lacrosse: 0-4
Softball: 0-1
Men’s Swimming & Diving: 7-0
Women’s Swimming & Diving: 8-0
Men’s Tennis: 5-3
Women’s Tennis: 8-4
Men’s Volleyball: 19-6
National Rankings
#3 – Men’s Basketball
#4 – Men’s Swimming & Diving
#5 –Women’s Indoor Track & Field
#6 – Women’s Swimming & Diving
#7 – Men’s Volleyball
#10 –Men’s Indoor Track & Field
#14 – Coed Sailing
#23 – Women’s Tennis
#28 –Men’s Tennis
Baseball
3/14 –Engineers Defeat Wentworth, 13-4
Men’s Basketball
3/16 – MIT's Spectacular Run Comes to an End with 71-56 Loss to Wisconsin-Whitewater in National Semifinals
3/15 – Playing for one of their own
3/14 – Hollingsworth, Kates Collect All-Region Accolades
Men’s Lacrosse
3/17 –MIT Defeats UNE in Triple-Overtime Thriller
3/14 –Men’s Lacrosse Falls to UMass Dartmouth in Season Opener
Women’s Lacrosse
3/15 –Nealon Scores Five Goals in Battle with Bridgewater State
Sailing
3/19 –No. 14 Coed Sailing Captures Third Place at Central Series
Softball
3/13 –Softball Drops Season Opener to Simmons, 5-1
Men’s Tennis
3/17 –Men’s Tennis Falls at Bates
Women’s Tennis
3/17 – Bates Upends MIT, 6-3, In Women’s Tennis
Men’s Indoor Track & Field
3/16 – Hannon, Kuntz Receive NCAA Elite 89 Awards at Indoor Track & Field Championship
Women’s Indoor Track & Field
3/16 – Hannon, Kuntz Receive NCAA Elite 89 Awards at Indoor Track & Field Championship
Men’s Volleyball
3/19 – No. 7 MIT Defeats Newbury and Emmanuel
Questions or comments? Please contact Phil Hess (pghess@mit.edu; 617-253-7946).
For more information, link to the official website for MIT athletics –
Web: www.mitathletics.com
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This illustration shows a lead sulfide quantum dot array. Each quantum dot (the colored clusters) is 'passivated' by molecules that bind to its surface. Dots that are made up of unequal amounts of lead and sulfur tend to cause electrons (shown in red) to become highly localized, which can substantially lower the electrical transport of the device.Image: Donghun Kim and Jeffrey C. Grossman
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MIT team finds that the ratio of component atoms is vital to performance.
