Word: ko
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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Harvard’s No. 2 doubles team of Preethi Mukundan and Elizabeth Brook started the day off right, winning its match against the Aggies’ Anita Athavale and Emma Shapiro, 8-2. Beier Ko and Lena Litvak at No. 1 doubles soon followed Mukundan and Brook’s example, picking up an 8-6 win over Jenna Kappel and Herzyl Legaspi and clinching the doubles point...
...started out well for Harvard, which won the opening doubles point. At the No. 1 spot, sophomore Beier Ko and freshman Lena Litvak beat Pacific’s Fisher and Jolanta Twarowska, 8-4, and senior Preethi Mukundan and freshman Elizabeth Brook captured the deciding match at No. 2 doubles...
...singles action, the Crimson secured straight-set wins in the No. 2 and No. 3 singles matches from Litvak (7-5, 6-4) and Mukundan (6-2, 6-0), respectively. Twarowska toppled Ko, 6-4, 6-2, in the top spot, and notched wins at the bottom three positions as well. Brook dropped a tight contest at No. 4, 6-2, 2-6, 6-1, and junior Vilsa Curto, also a Crimson editor, was rolled over...
...weekend to the warm and sunny climes of south Florida only to suffer a similar battering at the hands of Miami and Florida International, falling by identical scores of 7-0. The Crimson was without senior Julia Forgie, who remained in Cambridge to finish her thesis, and sophomore Beier Ko, who was absent due to illness. Undermanned, Harvard forfeited both a doubles and a singles match, giving their opponents an advantage before a serve was even struck. With the losses, the Crimson fell to 1-9 on the season. “We had a lot to adapt...
...years. At one time I believed that whoever became Prime Minister would make no difference-until Junichiro Koizumi came to power. He is a man who can make the difference, a man with a clear vision that the majority of Japanese can readily understand. Bring Koizumi back. Steve Ko Tokyo...