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...After 14 months in captivity, the hostages were released on Jan. 20, 1981, the day of President Ronald Reagan’s inauguration. Harvard students, in the middle of their exams at the time, scrawled “The hostages are free!” in their blue books in celebration, The Crimson reported.“Nobody was hurt, nobody was killed. There was a great sigh of relief,” Frye says. Both Limbert and Swift accepted positions at Harvard’s Center for International Affairs in the 1981-1982 school year, where they each kept...
...violence against women have not entirely disappeared. In 2003, a string of students were sexually assaulted in Cambridge Common, leading the University to install emergency call phones to improve safety on the walk to the Quad. The Harvard-operated phones, marked by distinctive blue lights, can be used to directly summon police. Earlier requests for such phones had been denied because Harvard did not own the land. It took the series of assaults for Harvard to agree to the callboxes, which were installed in the fall of 2004 at a cost of $12,000 to the University...
...season against Denver, the only time the Crimson put together consecutive wins all year.Other drama came when Harvard got its tournament invite, which was completely unexpected for a team with a .500 record and just a single home win.“It [came] out of the blue,” said senior attackman Steve Cohen before the 11-4 loss to Syracuse. “Nobody even watched the selection show.”And despite the fact that the postseason trip was short-lived, the fact remains that it did do something for the program that hasn?...
...culminating in two goals within the last six minutes of play. Junior Liza Solley scored her second tally of the day just past the 14-minute mark of the final frame to provide the eventual game-winning goal. She received a pass from freshman defender Nora Sluzas at the blue line and after her first shot was blocked, picked up the rebound and swept it around the net to beat Guckian for the score. The third and clinching goal was registered by junior Jennifer Sifers, who also assisted on Solley’s first score. With the swin, Harvard extended...
...Breaking the Ice.” The book represented Ruggiero’s attempt to capitalize financially on her popularity and success in the niche sport and signaled to her longtime mentor, Harvard head coach Katey Stone, that Ruggiero’s ambitions extend beyond the blue lines—a schema continued in her Apprentice bid. “She was one of the best players we’ve ever had and a great kid,” Stone said in an earlier interview. “[But] she’s much more than a hockey player...