Word: fridayã
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...really bodes well for next year and for the end of this season.” Finelli certainly wasn’t the only star of the weekend—after all, junior guard Lindsay Hallion poured in a career-high 23 points of her own in Friday??s win over Princeton. And Finelli, who earned her first career Ivy League Player of the Week honor for this weekend’s performance, is excited about playing on a team on which anyone can be the hero. “Everyone on this team goes into the game...
...Scott Denenberg, who silenced the Wildcats’ biggest server, 6-3, 6-1. For Nguyen, the dominant performance in both singles and doubles continued a hot streak that stretches back to the beginning of the spring season. He has won six straight matches, but none as decisively as Friday??s match. “I was clear,” Nguyen said. “I was clear on my game plan, game style, and I essentially didn’t hold back.” In doubles, the Crimson’s recent struggles continued...
...said. “What better example than Preethi’s match can you have of giving everything you’ve got?” After four consecutive Ivy League titles, only time will prove if the Crimson can repeat for a fifth time. Mukundan believes that Friday??s matches will prove a building block for future success. “The losses don’t mean much in the long run,” she said. “I feel we got a lot out of the matches yesterday. Everybody had a chance...
...Corriero ’05 for third on Harvard’s career scoring chart. However, she would see a streak of 26 games with at least one point come to an end the following afternoon in Hamilton. Kessler, who made both starts this weekend, had 11 saves in Friday??s win.—Staff writer Rebecca A. Compton can be reached at compton@fas.harvard.edu...
...Correction: Last Friday??s editorial "President Drew Gilpin Faust" mistakenly said that in a 2001 interview Faust said that Harvard’s support for issues of women, gender, and sexuality were "not the strongest." Faust, however, was speaking not of Harvard’s support for these issues but of the strength of the academic field of women, gender, and sexuality studies at Harvard. The Crimson regrets the error...