Word: droving
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...impossible for this year to live up to the last. The 2004-05 season established itself as the greatest in the history of Harvard sports. The Class of 2006, however, did not disappoint. A year after contributing to the Crimson’s 14 Ivy League titles, the seniors drove their teams to new heights and earned multiple awards for their efforts. And the knowledge and skills they imparted laid the foundations for years to come.NEW KID ON THE BLOCK Rookie Drew Housman (below) made headlines for the Crimson, filling in ably at point guard after the graduation of Dave...
...dramatic,” “concrete,” and “major”achievements for the University and his strengths as leader. Not one of the article’s 2,700 words directly mentions the Faculty uproar that drove Summers out.The Gazette’s conspicuous near-ignorance of the furor that engulfed the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) for the past 15 months is not surprising given Summers’ influence on the University’s public relations apparatus.Summers, who became Harvard president after a year-and-a-half as President...
...Crimson reported on its website that FAS Dean William C. Kirby, the historian of China who had led Harvard’s flagship school for just four years, would step down from his post under pressure from Summers. Citing anonymous sources, The Crimson’s report drove Kirby to officially announce his resignation nearly a week before he had planned...
...junior shortstop Lauren Brown said. Brown was given the award for Best Offensive Player. She finished the season with a .302 batting average and started in all of the team’s 44 games this season. In 139 at-bats, she banged out 42 hits, drove in 15 runs, and ended the season with a team-best .518 slugging percentage. She also stole a team-best eight bases in as many attempts. On the mound, the sophomore pitching tandem of Madick and Watkins led the team with ERAs of 2.53 and 2.77, respectively. Watkins got the team?...
...mobile purveyor of frozen delights; in Ocean City, N.J. Such was the ardor for the white trucks that when New York City officials tried to ban the familiar--to some, cloying--jingle, a public outcry forced them to back down. Launched in 1956, when Conway and his brother William drove a truck around Philadelphia giving away green ice cream on St. Patrick's Day, the company now has 600 trucks in 15 states...