Word: caitlins
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...fair, this season, coinciding with the Olympics and therefore offering exceptional parity, belies the true power structure of the country’s top teams. The Crimson acutely feels the loss of its three top players—Julie Chu, Sarah Vaillancourt, and Caitlin Cahow—for the year to participate in the Winter Games currently going on in Turin, Italy. Add a trio of world-caliber skaters back to Harvard’s roster and suddenly the landscape doesn’t look quite so level...
...manages to be moving with an unusually high degree of success. As the earnest, caring Father Confessor, Roy A. Kimmey ’09 displayed an extremely powerful musical and dramatic presence; his immediacy brought his character to life. Jessica G. Peritz ’06 as Mother Marie, Caitlin C. Vincent ’07 as Sister Constance and Catherine L. Vaughan ’08 as the Second Prioress perform with similar success...
...When Caitlin K. Cahow ’07 first scored a goal, it felt good. At least for a while.“I went in on a breakaway, I shot, and put it in the net,” she says. “I was celebrating and dancing, and nobody was celebrating with me. And I looked around.” The seven-year-old hockey neophyte had just shot the puck into her own net.Cahow has come a long way since then. Starting Feb. 11, she will be competing with the U.S. women?...
...hockey what Spielberg is to Hollywood—a spokesperson, a leader, and an expert practitioner. Standout Julie Chu is back for her second Olympic tournament and solid blue-liner Jamie Hagerman ’03 also made the cut. The most surprising inclusion, however, was of Maine native Caitlin Cahow, whose rapid rise up through the ranks of the national program will now culminate in representing her country against the world’s best on the biggest stage in sports next month. A forward in her rookie season for the Crimson in 2004, Cahow switched to defense last...
When everyone was tired, cranky, and cracked out (like Achilles?), Caitlin and Kelly delivered beautiful pages (like Ceres?) to shroud our oft-shoddy content (like Sibyl?). Every week, they dressed mutton (arnea) as lamb (amnos). We can’t say thank you enough...