Word: kristen
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...second game of the twinbill, like Game One, was a pitcher’s duel. Freshman Bailey Vertovez started for Harvard and was relieved by sophomore Amanda Watkins after three innings. The pair allowed only one run apiece and proved to be stiff competition for Princeton hurler Kristen Schaus, who entered the weekend with a 1.89 ERA, the third best in the Ivy League. Schaus held the Crimson scoreless until the bottom of the fifth inning. After striking out the lead-off batter, she threw junior Lauren Brown a gem that Brown blasted over the left-field fence. After that...
...Bancroft gave the Crimson a 2-1 lead just 44 seconds later when a pass from sophomore attacker Caroline Simmons found her in front of the net. The Harvard defense held the Big Green scoreless for 21 minutes before Dartmouth matched the Crimson at two on a goal from Kristen Zimmer. Martin broke the tie with 2:15 remaining in the half, slithering past two defenders and adding her second goal of the night. The score gave Harvard a 3-2 lead. “[Kaitlin] had a great game,” Harvard coach Sarah Nelson...
...quick cut to the middle, Bobzin created enough space to fire a shot on the goal. “I saw her with the ball and I thought [that] was it,” sophomore Natalie Curtis said. The ball soared over two UConn defenders and slipped passed goaltender Kristen Haldeman. The bench and crowd erupted; it seemed as if the game was headed to overtime. But the goal would not count. The Crimson had too many people in the offensive zone. The call gave the Huskies possession and left under four seconds on the clock—not enough...
...Rugani ’07, Amy Stebbins ’07, and Cat P. Walleck ’06 injected the familiar material of female suffering and pleasure with new, poignant Harvard-based stories of trans-gender youths. Produced by Rebecca L. Eshbaugh ’07, Kristen D. Lozada ’07, and Erinn M. M. Wattie ’06, the show ran from...
...have to wear tights,” said Lisa E.J. Gordon ’06, producer of the annual Eleganza fashion show. “Last year with the huge snowstorms and cold winter, I didn’t really care what I looked like,” said Kristen D. O’Neill ’07, president of the Harvard Vestis Council, a fine arts and fashion club for undergraduates. “This weather is letting us wear what we want and look nice.” This year, many girls have been steering away from...