Word: crosses
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...usually are up front.” GONE RACIN’ The Ivy League race appeared to be even more open after Saturday’s contests. Brown, Princeton, and Penn remain the only undefeated teams in league play, but the Bears lost 41-34 to Holy Cross and Penn looked unimpressive in a 27-7 victory over Georgetown. Princeton fell to Colgate, 27-24. One of those undefeateds will fall next weekend; Brown travels to Princeton on Saturday for a 1 p.m. kick. Harvard, meanwhile, kept itself in the race. There has not been a two-loss Ivy champion...
...fall day at Ohiri Field. The Crimson was looking to match the level of play attained during its 3-1 defeat of Yale on Oct. 4, while Cornell sought a positive result after three straight Ivy losses.Harvard took the lead in the game’s 10th minute. A cross served in from the right side of the goal box deflected off a Big Red defender into the back of the net.The Crimson’s second goal came in the 73rd minute, when Hagner’s header beat Cornell freshman goalkeeper Kelly Murphy.Slightly over a minute later, Harvard...
Yesterday’s correspondence offered the most specific example to date of the increased responsibilities of the divisional deans—the cross-departmental administrators whose role Smith pledged to enhance last year...
...draft, Davis was diagnosed with leukemia before he ever played an NFL down. He died shortly thereafter at the age of 23.In addition to his on-field performance, Davis was an admirable student and an even better person off the field—a sort of cross between Florida’s Tim Tebow (last year’s Heisman winner), and Jackie Robinson. Although his story is well-known among baby boomers, the legend of Davis is largely unknown to younger sports fans. If nothing else, “The Express” should familiarize another generation with Davis?...
...General Petraeus and Senator Joe Lieberman as proof of his bona fides - or attacks on targets (like "liberalism") whose relevance has evaporated during the past eight years. Even when it comes to national security, his alleged area of expertise, McCain has difficulty explaining himself. His waffling about whether to cross the border into Pakistan for targeted strikes against al-Qaeda leaders was both foolish and incomprehensible: if the Pakistanis are our allies, as he insisted, why are they protecting the terrorists? Obama, by contrast, answered with simple declarative sentences: "We will kill bin Laden. We will crush al-Qaeda. That...