Word: net
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...defending Ivy League champions, has held teams to 6.2 goals per game, while the Crimson leads the league in total scoring. Spearheaded by junior leading scorer Kaitlin Martin—who scored two goals and notched an assist—six different Crimson players found the back of the net. Senior Caroline Simmons, junior Sarah Bancroft, and freshman Jess Halpern each contributed two goals, while captain Natalie Curtis added the first tally on the day. The Crimson stayed neck-and-neck with the Quakers in the first, pulling ahead 5-4 on a Halpern score with...
...largest 10 percent of American farms. Previous recipients of much-needed farm aid have included media mogul Ted Turner and Kenneth Lay of Enron fame. David Rockefeller—one of those Rockefellers—received $554,000 in subsidies from 1995 to 2005, despite his estimated net worth of $2.6 billion. Farmer’s need subsidies almost as much as hedge fund managers do. In an era of gaping budget deficits, it seems quite clear that the billions of dollars dumped into lining the pockets of America’s already affluent farmers could be better spent elsewhere...
...lack of a better word) that only becomes obvious with the knowledge of the final score. Maybe it was a missed opportunity, the outcome of a one-on-one battle, or as random as a puck bouncing to the stick of the player, who happened to be attacking the net at just the right angle. Those moments only become part of a team’s storyline when the skates are hung up for the year and the minds of sports fans start drifting towards baseball. After the Crimson skated off the ice in Albany, as Princeton started celebrating...
...HoCo events, the argument goes, and we’ll all flock to all sorts of unsavory off-campus locales—from final clubs to private houses to the Dudley Co-op—to get trashed, far from the safety net provided by House tutors and the Harvard University Police Department...
...three more goals in the half, including tallies from freshman Jess Halpern and sophomore Sara Flood. The last goal came in the final two minutes of play from Schoen. Even being down by 13, the Crimson’s determination to put the ball in the back of the net was not deterred. But this determination was not enough to overcome BU’s aggressive game plan. One aspect that contributed to Harvard’s loss was lack of offensive opportunity. In past games Harvard’s offense has been a powerhouse, scoring in the double digits...