Word: balled
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...tenths of a second to play, giving the Crimson (10-10, 3-3) a thrilling home victory and its best win of the league season. Harris had perhaps the finest game of his career to date. On a night when the rest of the team uncharacteristically struggled shooting the ball, Harris converted 7-of-11 from the floor and 4-of-5 from the free-throw line. He also flooded the box score by adding three assists, two blocks and three steals. “If you look at his stat line tonight, it’s a Matt Stehle...
...Cusworth’s] loss.” Right from the opening tip, it was apparent that Harvard was in for a long night. In place of Cusworth, 6’8 sophomore forward Evan Harris jumped at center court, and Columbia was able to easily control the ball. On the Lions’ second possession, point guard Brett Loscalzo nailed a three-pointer to start the game’s scoring, a shot that would prove to be a bad sign of things to come for the Crimson. After building a 14-8 lead, Columbia carved out the victory...
...close throughout and it would be Harvard that made the final play. After Big Red guard Louis Dale made one of two free throws with 8.6 seconds left to give his team a 64-63 lead and cap a 6-0 run, Crimson sophomore guard Drew Housman drove the ball up the court. With his main option, captain Jim Goffredo, covered, Housman went right and dished the ball to Harris, who converted the baseline layup. “We were running a double screen for Jimmy,” Housman said. “I saw it was clogged...
...nose, of which in three-quarter view there was hardly any - just a small V placed slightly above the mouth, casting the faintest nick of a shadow. One never saw a nose full view. There was never a full view. They were too hard to draw. Eyes were usually ball-less, two thin slits. Mouths were always thick, quick single lines - never double. Mouths, for some reason, were rarely shown open. Dialogue, theoretically, was spoken from the nose. Heroes' faces were square-jawed; in some cases, all-jawed. Often there was a cleft in the chin...
DIED. Bob Carroll Jr., 88, veteran TV writer who helped define the seminal '50s sitcom I Love Lucy; in Los Angeles. Carroll and partner Madelyn Pugh were the first permanent writers hired for Lucille Ball's 1940s radio show My Favorite Husband--the precursor to the TV hit starring Ball and real-life husband Desi Arnaz. Carroll, who later wrote for The Lucy Show and Life with Lucy, went on to write for every I Love Lucy episode...