Word: gameã
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...audience so much that one forgives her myriad infidelities and an ill-advised romance with her son’s tennis instructor (Billy Baldwin).Speaking of which, Billy Baldwin’s revelatory performance in this film nearly acquits him of the travesty that was “Fair Game?? (apologies to Cindy Crawford). Apparently, Billy’s acting is good for something other than a punch line. Jesse Eisenberg’s performance, however, is the glue that binds the movie’s varied elements into an affecting piece of cinema. Walt?...
...Columbia on Saturday.Ashley Wright caught scoring passes of seven and 68 yards, Mike McLeod ran for two touchdowns and Alan Kimball added a 41-yard field goal to give Yale (3-4, 3-1) a 31-3 lead in the second quarter.Columbia (2-5, 0-4) scored on the game??s first possession when Jon Rocholl kicked a 20-yard field goal.McLeod started the offensive barrage on a seven-yard run early in the second quarter. Mroz, who finished with 329 yards on 22-for-33 passing, then hit Wright twice to stretch the lead...
...ensuing kickoff, when sophomore Matt Schindel’s short kick squirted around on the ground, allowing the Crimson to recover on the Big Green’s 32-yard line. The next play saw Dawson take the ball to the endzone, putting to rest any doubt about the game??s outcome. In just over five minutes, the crowd saw three scores—two from Harvard, and both thanks to special teams miscues from Dartmouth.“We haven’t had a series like that this year,” Harvard coach Tim Murphy...
...sweat, not heart, not effort—will be the bottom line. McDavitt, Harvard’s captain, is aware of that unfortunate fact of life. But it doesn’t seem to matter. Throughout her career, from start to finish, she has played every game??no matter what the score—like it’s her last. She did it on Saturday, and she’ll do it for real against Boston University, Dartmouth, and Columbia as she closes out her career. “It’s about putting...
Given that they know that they are playing a precarious popularity game??one that is undeniably based on social, economic, or otherwise arbitrary standards—why do hundreds of students subject themselves to such capricious, often humiliating, selection processes...