Word: reds
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...Red offense runs through last season’s Rookie of the Year Adam Gore, an explosive scorer with lethal late-game instincts. Senior Graham Dow is a pass-first point guard (and bio concentrator, go figure) and classmate Andrew Naeve’s like Windex cleaning up the glass...
...Brittney CarforaCarfora dropped 16 on Harvard, going 4-for-6 from three. Her range will take pressure off of Griffith, who gets the best defender every night. CORNELLThe league’s biggest surprise in 2006, Cornell finished fifth in the Ivies after a preseason poll picked the Big Red to place last. Thanks to standout freshman Jeomi Maduka—the league’s Rookie of the Year and team leader in points (14.8), rebounds, (7.8) and steals (1.7)— and guard Lindsay Krasna, Cornell was a threat last year and will be more dangerous...
...Cornell pressured hard in the third period of a tied game. And then the floodgates opened. The No. 8 Crimson (5-1-0, 5-1-0 ECAC) poured in four goals in six minutes—including three in 55 seconds—to ice the Big Red (1-6-1, 1-3-0 ECAC) in a 5-2 victory in the Bright Hockey Center. “Katie Johnston scored the third goal and I didn’t see the next two because they happened so quickly,” Harvard coach Katey Stone said. The Crimson...
...still took No. 1 in 11 of its 15 events, swimming the final sixteenth event, the 400-yard freestyle relay, as an exhibition. Dartmouth was able to take home two wins for the meet, with Cornell picking up the last three. Overall on Sunday, the Crimson beat the Big Red 208-89 and the Big Green by a smaller but still considerable margin of 187.5-109.5. Once again, as they did against Brown, junior Samantha Papadakis and Morgan won their two individual events. Papadakis once again took first in both the 1-meter and 3-meter diving events...
...from Alien when the monster begins sawing its way through your chest. For some Beijing residents, a hacking, lung-ripping cough that leaves the sufferer unwilling to draw a full breath for fear it might set off another bout is as much part of the onset of Fall as red leaves at the Great Wall. Colds and the flu are common all over the world when winter threatens, of course. But this is something special, a by-product of Beijing's putrid air that serves as a painful reminder of how much damage China's invisible menace is wreaking...