Word: colorados
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...Harvard women’s soccer team opened up its season yesterday with a tough 5-4 overtime loss against the Tigers from Colorado College. A crowd of close to 500 showed up to cheer on the Crimson on a perfect day for soccer at Ohiri field. Colorado College (2-1-1) was coming off a a 120-minute scoreless marathon against New Hampshire on Friday...
...left side of the net only 3:16 into the match. Junior striker Joey Yenne, last year’s leading scorer and an All-Ivy selection, turned on a defender and unselfishly cut the ball back to Costello, who managed to get a solid left-footed shot past Colorado goalkeeper Megan Loseke...
Harvard dominated for the next 20 minutes with crisp passing through the midfield and some savvy through balls past the flat Colorado College defense. Although they continued to barrage the Tiger goal with shots, the Crimson failed to capitalize on numerous scoring opportunities. Midway through the first half the momentum switched drastically when the Tigers inserted sophomore striker Jessica Reyes. Reyes provided the Tigers with the spark they needed as her creative play up front drew the focus of the Crimson defenders. With Reyes threatening the Crimson backline, the Tigers were able to develop cohesion between the midfielders and forwards...
...Beneath the less-than-shocking survey results, however, there is real news here: thanks to an effort launched by the AMA and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, some colleges are radically rethinking their approach to alcohol control. The University of Colorado at Boulder (ranked fifth on Princeton Review?s list of top party schools) has banned beer sales in its football stadium. Florida State University (ranked fourth) has banned alcohol advertising on campus and notifies parents when their children break campus alcohol policy. The University of Wisconsin (ranked ninth) actually sits in on its town?s liquor licensing decisions, ensuring...
...history or the victims of a bum rap? Many of the young people who responded to our story felt they had been unfairly dissed. "How can parents blame us for being spoiled, when pop culture and advertising--created by adults--have targeted us as a market?" asked a Colorado teen. "You slapped negative labels on our entire generation," complained a Californian. "None of my friends got a Mercedes for their 16th birthday. What we do have are the problems that the President is leaving for the future." A Wisconsin high-schooler was more upbeat: "Rest easy, folks...