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...Leone said. “It was a really good performance—much better mentally.” The Crimson smoothed out many of its preseason wrinkles but couldn’t overcome a goal by the Lions’ Tiffany Harrison in the 52nd minute. The defense held strong and junior goalkeeper Lauren Mann made four saves. Both Leone and captain Nicole Rhodes noted the strong play of the Harvard keepers, Mann and junior Laura Dale, over the weekend. “I think we played well defensively,” Leone said. “There were...
...from senior forward Tami Jafar, Harvard fell to New Hampshire. After the Crimson took a 1-0 lead into halftime, the Wildcats responded and rolled off three straight goals. Harvard did its best to come back, cutting the lead to one with 15 minutes to play, but New Hampshire held on for the win. Jafar, who scored two goals for the third time in her career, put the Crimson on top early in the first half. Keating found Jafar at the top of the circle where the senior fired a shot past Wildcats goalkeeper Jenna Lehman. The assist marked Keating?...
...season opener held particular significance for the Crimson, as it was the first meeting between Harvard and former Head Coach John Kerr. Kerr left Cambridge for Durham last December after nine seasons with the Crimson...
...Although McCain was one of the last holdouts in his campaign for continuing the signature "Straight Talk" sessions, he now embraces a tightly supervised separation from the media pack. He has not held a press conference since early August, and reporters traveling with him can go days without seeing the candidate up close, and weeks without an opportunity to exchange a word with him. In a recent pre-convention interview with TIME, McCain dismissed many of the questions - including ones that seemed benign to the reporters posing them - as gotcha attacks, and refused to answer others. He was similarly brusque...
...Linke (The Left), a party made up of former east German communists and disaffected leftists from the west of the country. According to the latest polls, just 21% of Germans now say they would vote for the party of Willy Brandt and Helmut Schmidt if an election were held tomorrow (compared to 37% for Merkel's CDU and 14% for Die Linke). For the past twelve months, the party's top brass had tried to stem those losses by moving the party's policies to the left...