Word: amanda
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Following its initial release in Sweden last year, the film claimed three Guldbagge Awards (awarded by the Swedish Film Institute), including Best Actress and Best Film, and three other nominations in the European Film Awards and Amanda Awards in Norway...
That Cornell did, as it took advantage of a failed rush to put the Crimson down by a goal two and a half minutes into the game. Once the Big Red got the puck, sophomore Catherine White was find open ice on Harvard’s end and teammate Amanda Young hit her with the puck for an easy goal against Crimson freshman Laura Bellamy. Four minutes later, a different Cornell skater, Karlee Overguard, found the back of the net on an unassisted tally to put the Crimson down by two early in the game...
...majority of the night, the Big Red’s Amanda Mazzotta seemed impenetrable, allowing Cornell to head to the Twin Cities off a four-goal victory despite registering only 18 shots, half of the Crimson?...
ECAC Player of the Year Catherine White opened scoring just 2:34 into the contest, taking a pass from Amanda Young and beating freshman goaltender Laura Bellamy...
Living in humid, jazzy 1930s St. Louis, the Wingfield family spends much of their time wishing they were elsewhere. Amanda (Caroline R. Giuliani ’11) constantly relives her past as a Southern Belle besotted by male attention. She wants the same youth for her 23 year-old daughter, Laura. But Laura (the wide-eyed Rachel A. Stark ’11—a Crimson news editor), who is slightly disabled and cripplingly shy, instead devotes her days to her collection of glass animals. In and out clamors Tom (David J. Smolinsky ’11), Laura?...