Word: recordability
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...daunting opponent, not giving up one point in the final game.“I fought for every point up until the last point at 8-0. I saw my lead but still realized anything can happen.”Hill ended his regular-season with an overall record of 8-2.Not to be outdone, sophomore and fifth seed J. Reed Endresen lost no steam replacing Hill on court number two. The second-year player showed no fatigue after tough weekend matches, dominating the opening game en route to a 9-1 win, but faltered by dropping his next two. Faced...
Making note of the team’s 6-4 road record, Amaker believes that the Crimson’s experience in winning away from Lavietes will be key in both games this weekend. He also believes that Harvard’s dramatic win this past weekend should be inspirational to the team...
...However, excellent scrambling and fast reflexes in the front court earned her a 10-9 victory in the fourth set. The final set was no contest as Mashruwala pulled away 9-5 to take the match 3-2 and raise her career five-game match record to 4-0.Guruge capped the evening off at the No. 1 flight with an impressive five-game performance against the Bulldogs’ Logan Greer. After quickly falling behind 2-0, Guruge turned her match around in the final three sets.“I was just making too many mistakes in the first...
...tries to celebrate the comfortable and mundane in a relationship but comes off as a little monotonous, and the self-congratulation of “He Wasn’t There,” despite the song’s inspired beginning reminiscent of an old Billie Holiday record, feels a little flat. Still, Allen’s bittersweet lyrics echo long after the record has finished playing, and it’s a challenge to forget her infectious melodies. Don’t be fooled by her darling demeanor; in “It?...
...Pains of Being Pure At Heart: it demands ellipses, or at the very least, abbreviation. The Pains, TPOBPAH, perhaps PBPH, or, as their label Slumberland Records prefers, POBPAH. One verb short of a clause, it is arguably the most misguided decision in band-naming since the exclamation point in Panic! At the Disco. Thankfully, Kip, Kurt, Alex, and Peggy—who, in a seeming reversal on their word count policy, prefer to forego their surnames—are much better at making music than they were at christening themselves.On their self-titled debut album, they prove themselves...