Word: kills
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...swept, but anything beyond first base could cost her her life, if not her immortal soul. So he climbs into her window at night and holds her as she falls asleep, and protects her from the various other fiends who for reasons not worth explaining are looking to kill her. It's possible, as many commentators have suggested, that the chivalrous Edward is a teenage girl's dream date: not just sophisticated and powerful but tender and soulful, he's the 100-Year-Old Virgin, able to wait a century till he finds his soulmate, his conscience a constant chaperone...
...gotta kill somebody everyday or you don’t get any supper,” Sheriff Hartman intones in the first act of BlackCAST’s “The Front Page,” beginning a night full of power plays and deception. Though the play was written in the 1920s, BlackCAST set its production in a Chicago newsroom from the 1950s, a time in which women and blacks were starting to infiltrate a predominantly white male workforce. “The Front Page,” which was present last weekend in the Aggasiz Theatre, relies...
...From the net on out, we did an excellent job. We really played as a committed hockey club all weekend.” Freshman Matt Hoyle posted his first career shutout against the Saints, who average 3.14 goals a game. The rookie notched 29 saves overall and helped kill seven St. Lawrence power plays. “Our defense was really huge for us all weekend, and obviously when you give up 4-on-3s, 5-on-3s, as many power plays as we did, the old adage that your goaltender is your best penalty killer was certainly the case...
...into the third. Harvard had committed two penalties and faced a 5-on-3 situation for 1:30. It was imperative for the defense to be perfect, as the Crimson’s one-goal lead left no room for error. “That was a huge [penalty] kill,” said Harvard coach Ted Donato ’91. “Jim Fraser, Alex Biega, Chad Morin, and Matt Hoyle I think really dug down deep. They were blocking shots. That’s always a very nerve-racking two minutes when the other team pretty...
...final weekend of the 2008 campaign saw a resounding victory in one night juxtaposed with a characteristically hard-fought loss the next day. Harvard (10-16, 5-9 Ivy) crushed Columbia (6-18, 0-14) on Friday in a 3-0 shutout that featured double-digit kills from three different players. Continuing its New York road trip the next day, the Crimson again thrived off of a number of offensive performances, but ultimately fell to Cornell (10-15, 9-5) in the fifth frame. In the final weekend for seniors Laura Mays, Anna Rachlin, and Kathryn McKinley, McKinley helped lead...