Word: chris
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...thesis or focus on his music. “‘It’s obvious, he said, ‘You gotta do the rock band,’” Kultgen said. For Start, Go!, the Battle turned out to be a surprisingly auspicious beginning. Chris Powers, the singer, song-writer and guitarist for Start, Go! said their first performance together was exhilarating but not perfect. Powers, a senior computer science major at the Extension School, broke a guitar string in the middle of a song. He had a spare, but he didn?...
...side was headed on, finding sophomore Dillon O’Neill, who headed it onto the crossbar. Akpan was the first to pounce on the rebound, and he bravely dove to head the ball home, taking a cleat to the face for his efforts. With the goal, Akpan passed Chris Ohiri ’64 on the Harvard all-time points list.“It’s an honor to break that record,” Akpan said. “It’s a record that was held by the guy who the field is named...
...Captain Chris Clayton and sophomore Alexei Chijoff-Evans finished off the fall season last weekend at the ITA National Indoor Intercollegiate Championships in Charlottesville, Va. The two formed a doubles team, and Clayton also competed in the singles draw after wins in both at the ITA Northeast Regionals Oct. 21. Harvard was one of only eight schools to have entrants in both the men’s singles and men’s doubles competitions, which featured the top 16 players in the nation in each bracket. “You really aren’t going to play anyone...
...another 33 yards were lost because of a bad snap over junior punter Thomas Hull’s head—both losses counted against the rushing total. It probably also didn’t help that the Crimson started a pair of new offensive linemen on Saturday: sophomore Chris LeRoy and junior Ben Sessions got their first starts of the season against the Lions. Harvard gave up five sacks on Saturday, the most it has allowed all season. OFF AND RUNNING Harvard’s defense spent most of the afternoon trying to contain the scrambling of Columbia?...
With a team that boasts the best defense and best total offense in the Ivy League, it’s hard to find anything wrong with Harvard’s football squad. Saturday’s game was no different as senior quarterback Chris Pizzotti led the Crimson offense, going 25-for-40 for 376 yards, and the defense managed three interceptions and forced two fumbles, one of which was returned for a touchdown. But what Saturday’s game also exposed was Harvard’s only question mark: special teams. A snap over the punter?...