Word: hurtfulness
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Stacey R. Borden ’06 was not letting her new suede Coach bag hit the wet ground outside Leverett’s aptly-named “Fall Fest”. Not over her hurt body. “She tripped and threw her body underneath the bag so that it didn’t [sic] get ruined,” said her roommate Gavitt A. Woodard ’06. “She had that bruise on her knee for weeks.” But Borden doesn’t just throw herself into the enterprise...
Members of the Harvard Mountaineering Club (HMC) assisted an injured climber on Mt. Washington, New Hampshire last Saturday. The group, who traveled to New Hampshire to teach new members about winter camping and hiking, was on its first winter trip of the season when the climber was hurt in the vicinity of Huntington Ravine near the HMC-operated cabin. The climber lost his footing due to a gust of wind and fell about 125 meters down the snow slope, according to Justin Preisendorfer, a snow ranger at the White Mountain National Forest. The climber suffered fractures...
After dropping its first contest in its opening six games heading into a showdown with Boston University (BU) at Case Gymnasium tonight, the Harvard men’s basketball team could have used a helping hand.Now, it turns out, the Crimson (5-1) will have to deal with a hurt one.Junior center Brian Cusworth has a small fracture of the third metacarpal on his left hand. Cusworth suffered the injury during the first half of Harvard’s 87-79 loss to Central Connecticut State on Saturday.“It was a hustle play,” Cusworth...
...trios at foil in the country. Co-captains Anne Austin and Chloe Stinetorf as well as sophomore Emily Cross—the current reigning junior champion—led the way, finishing unbeaten in the competition. “Emily Cross went undefeated against Penn State even though she hurt herself in the world cup last week, which she won,” Stinetorf said. “It was a really amazing performance because she was literally in so much pain she was crying.” With the start of Ivy League play on the horizon, Stinetorf said...
...Harvard women’s squash team didn’t need the home-court advantage to beat Cornell Saturday, but it didn’t hurt. With a rowdy crowd on hand for its first home match of the season, the No. 2 Crimson (3-0, 3-0 Ivy) blanked the No. 10 Big Red (0-3, 0-3) by a 9-0 score at the Barnaby Squash Courts. The 2005 part of Harvard’s schedule is less demanding than the latter half, but these matches are still valuable preparation. “It?...