Word: chloe
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...team had not scored six goals in a game in over five years. Yesterday, in its game against Saint Louis at Jordan Field, the Crimson (6-5, 2-1 Ivy) not only tallied six goals, it also kept the Billikens (4-8, 0-1 Atlantic 10) scoreless. Sophomore midfielder Chloe Keating, sophomore forward Leigh McCoy, and senior forward Tami Jafar notched two goals apiece while co-captain Kylie Stone and freshman goaltender Ana Roda combined for a shutout in a dominant 6-0 win. “We’re really coming together nicely,” head coach...
...veteran player.” Five minutes into the second half, the Crimson regained the lead. On another penalty corner, McGillivray gathered the ball at the top of the circle. This time, the freshman passed to senior back Francine Polet who fired a shot on net. Sophomore midfielder Chloe Keating was standing in front of the net and managed to tip the ball past Duffy and into the cage. Midway through the half, Harvard capitalized on a mistake, extending its lead after it turned the ball over in the Northeastern circle. McVeigh had pushed the ball ahead and looked...
...into the first half, had yet another chance to score. This time, Stone made a save with her right toe on a shot by Brown midfielder Michaela Seigo. “[Kylie] had a great game. She’s been playing great lately,” sophomore midfielder Chloe Keating said. “There were a couple of early collapses where she really saved everyone.” Harvard’s offense picked up from there. McVeigh managed to test Bears goaltender Caroline Washburn on a deflection off of a free hit by senior back Francine Polet...
...where the Crimson (1-1) gave up an early lead and ultimately lost, 3-2, to New Hampshire (3-1) at Memorial Stadium. “They’re probably very similar to the way a lot of the Ivy teams play,” sophomore midfielder Chloe Keating said of the weekend’s opponents. “They’re a little more physical, which is good for us before we get to Ivy play.” NEW HAMPSHIRE 3, HARVARD 2 On Sunday, despite two goals from senior forward Tami Jafar, Harvard fell...
Restraint is a quality seldom lauded except in its absence. Several of the protagonists in Chloe Hooper's compelling second book clearly lack it. The author, by contrast, has it in spades. Hooper's account of the real-life events surrounding the death in custody of an Aboriginal man nearly four years ago is the more powerful for her not making explicit all of her conclusions about the case. Without these in the way, the reader's own feelings have room to grow. Anger and sadness coalesce into something like despair: in 21st century Australia, how could this story have...