Word: crossing
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...build off the result. “We needed a big win to really get us going and prove our worth,” Akpan said. “We did that tonight.”Harvard takes to the field tomorrow for a non-league matchup against Holy Cross.—Staff writer Jay M. Cohen can be reached at jaycohen@fas.harvard.edu...
...blocked by Jue, but the ball trickled away from her. Freshman forward Allie Kimmel got two shots off of rebounds, but Jue stopped both before the threat was cleared. Cornell also threatened in the first half. Nine minutes into the game, Big Red forward Abbi Horn sent a cross in front of the net intended for teammate Kelly Kantarian, but Stone dove out to challenge the shot, blocking it and thwarting the threat. Almost 27 minutes into the period, Cornell had an opportunity on another corner. This time, Martinez ripped a shot from the top of the circle that Stone...
...perceived stigma. With Lance egging him on, Ian decides to drive from Chicago to Knoxville in a desperate attempt meet up with an internet acquaintance named “Miss Tasty.” Of course, almost any reason for a carpool of characters to drive spontaneously cross-country will tend toward the unrealistic. Usually, however, the actors’ charisma helps you look past the initial premise until the characters have a chance to develop a certain depth. “Sex Drive” is not so accommodating. During the first half hour it’s difficult...
...from the University of Virginia. In his time at Harvard, Shore has worked on improving the University’s budgeting process, and on implementing planning initiatives such as “the renewal and expansion of Harvard’s campus, the more intensive pursuit of cross-faculty academic collaborations, the consideration of how to optimize the use of endowment funds, and preparations for an eventual campaign,” according to the release...
Translation Tool. Struggling with a phrasebook and your clumsy pronunciation is so old school. You can now cross the language barrier with Lonely Planet's audio phrasebooks for mobile phones. Local linguists have recorded 600 phrases - "Do you have a room?" or "Can you recommend a bar?" - in 10 languages (Mandarin, Vietnamese, Cantonese, Japanese, German, French, Italian, Spanish, Thai and Czech, with more promised soon). You simply play them through your phone's speakers. You can download the app onto iPhones (go to the App Store), BlackBerrys and any cell phone running the Java midp 2.0 platform or Windows Mobile...