Word: hockey
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Eleganza has grown since its creation in 1995, moving from its more humble beginnings in a dining hall to its current venue, the Bright Hockey Center. Last year the show drew an eye-popping 1,500 people, and this year, the show’s organizers hope to draw 2,000. “People that come keep coming back,” says Tessa C. Petrich ’07, one of the executive producers of Eleganza this year...
...star-studded performance lit up the Bright Hockey Center as the 37th annual performance of “An Evening with Champions” hit the ice this weekend. “An Evening with Champions,” an entirely student-organized event, raises money for the fight against childhood cancers. Proceeds go to the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute’s Jimmy Fund. This year’s program featured 1994 Olympic gold medalist Oksana S. Baiul, 1964 and 1968 Olympic gold medalists Ludmilla and Oleg Protopopov, as well as Harvard’s own skaters and rising...
Moments before game time Sunday on Jordan Field, the Harvard women’s field hockey team was forced to strip off and change its socks, whose crimson hue the referee deemed too similar to the red of Cornell. Clad in white socks for the first time in over a decade, the Crimson (1-10, 1-2 Ivy) went on to win in a stirring overtime victory over the Big Red (4-4, 2-3 Ivy) on a goal by co-captain and midfielder Gretchen Fuller. Sophomore goalie Kelly Knoche set the tone for Harvard in the game?...
...focused student with conservative tendencies. Fellow classmate Foley Vaughn ’60 wrote in an e-mail that Sprague was “very Brahmin,...not a man of the people.” McKinney recalled Sprague and his roommates’ consternation over an impromptu hockey match held in McKinney’s Mower Hall suite, where a crushed beer can served as the puck and the fireplace as the goal. “They ascended to the third floor as a group to protest the noise,” McKinney wrote in an e-mail.As an upperclassman, Sprague...
...fought losses to No. 12 Providence College and No. 5 Duke University were justifiable, last night’s defeat on Jordan Field at the hands of cross-town rival Northeastern (6-6) substantially added to the frustration of the now 0-10 Harvard women’s field hockey team. “I think it was a great cross-town game, a great regional game, a great battle,” said Harvard head coach Sue Caples. “But it gets hard to play always battling back.” After an odd pregame musical play...