Word: dakota
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...both of those games, Harvard rallied late, showing flashes of brilliance that it has also displayed in out-of-conference wins over juggernauts such as Boston College, New Hampshire, and North Dakota. But the fact remained that the Crimson let itself be pushed around in the first two periods...
SCHENECTADY, N.Y.—One good thing doesn’t always lead to another. Despite having earned a series split in hostile territory against last year’s NCAA finalist North Dakota over winter break, the No. 13 Harvard men’s hockey team sputtered on offense—especially on the power play—against an unranked Union team on Friday night at the Messa Rink. Although the Crimson fared well on faceoffs, winning 59 percent of them, that success seemed to be the only positive note on a dismal night for the Harvard...
...fact that the Crimson has played 14 ECAC games—six more contests than five of the next six squads on the list—the picture isn’t quite so bright. Though the Crimson has won big against out-of-conference squads—North Dakota, New Hampshire, and Boston College were all top-10 when Harvard felled them—the in-conference play has proven trickier.“In our league, anyone can play with anyone,” Hafner said. “It’s just a matter...
...Anderson spoke for a poor Iroquois confederation of upstate New York. A deputy came from the bedside of Cesar Chavez, who had barely survived a 25-day fast in penance for violent lapses by striking California farmworkers. Tillie Walker and Rose Crow Flies High represented Plains tribes from North Dakota, while Dennis Banks led a delegation of Anishinabes. During introductions, King aide Bernard Lafayette whispered to King what he had gleaned about basic differences among Puerto Ricans as distinct from Mexicans (Chicanos), or the defining cause of the Assiniboine/Lakota leader Hank Adams, who spearheaded a drive for Northwestern salmon-fishing...
...could play with any team in the country.” The Crimson (10-6-1, 7-5-0 ECAC) hadn’t defeated the Fighting Sioux (13-8-1, 6-6-0 WCHA) in Grand Forks since New Year’s Day of 1951. NORTH DAKOTA 3, HARVARD 2 Matt Smaby’s power-play goal put the Fighting Sioux up 1-0 in Friday’s first period, delighting the 10,598 fans in attendance, but Crimson sophomore Mike Taylor knotted the score with a man-advantage tally nearly 12 minutes into the second...