Word: havener
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...fear is that Somalia, a country with nearly 9 million Muslims and one that the U.S. has long suspected is a haven for al-Qaeda, may fall further into the hands of Islamic fundamentalists sympathetic to terrorist organizations. A report by the U.N.-chartered watchdog group on Somalia, which was submitted to the U.N Security Council last week, says the ICU has developed extensive ties with groups and states steeped in terrorism...
...quarterback, Josh Johnson, torched the Bulldogs defense for five touchdowns in a 43-17 rout. O’Hagan is a two-way threat cut from a similar cloth, able to stand and deliver like Princeton senior Jeff Terrell did in the Tigers’ comeback win in New Haven last Saturday or make plays with his feet, scrambling to stay alive and find the inevitable holes in the Bulldogs’ young secondary, which allows a league-worst 242.3 yards through the air per game. But the best matchup in this game is the Harvard defensive front against...
...secret that winter has indeed come early in New Haven these last few years—although Yale still holds a 13-game advantage in the all-time series. None of the last five Games has been enjoyable for Yale, but the last two—a humiliating rainy day in Cambridge in 2004 and a triple-overtime, 1968-like collapse last year—have been especially painful...
...League’s 2006 rushing leader faces a defensive line that has yet to allow a single player over 100 yards this season. McLeod is fast, strong, and determined to break a half-decade long Bulldog drought against Harvard and bring the league title back to New Haven for the first time since 1999. But if senior tackle Mike Berg has anything to say about it, the celebration won’t take place this year. He and sophomore tackle Matt Curtis patrol the middle, while sophomore end Brenton Bryant and junior end Brad Bagdis take care...
...Norton says.His first two years—1943 and 1944—The Game was not played due to World War II.Talking to him is like a trip through Harvard football history. The shift from playing games in even years in New Haven to their current location in Cambridge, the greatest players he’s seen, minutiae about Crimson football long forgotten by even the most devoted historians, and opinions about the quality of the league’s various stadiums are all fair game.His knowledge of Harvard football history, while comprehensive, is well complimented...