Word: sara
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
When two elite soccer teams are so skilled defensively that they neutralize front-line talent, it often takes an unheralded player with the courage to make a play beyond her years to win the game. On Saturday night against previously unbeaten Princeton, freshman midfielder Sara Sedgwick answered that call and made the most important play of the Harvard women’s soccer team’s season...
Harvard freshman Sara Sedgwick, with a firm thrust of her head that propelled a ball deep into an unguarded crack in the Princeton defense, slew the final one, and thereby freed the Crimson players from their season-long curse against ranked opposition...
...into the beginning of the school’s fall break, the game was infinitely better attended than the previous year’s H-P contest in Cambridge. Maybe that was because the fans knew the gravity of the situation—when the Crimson’s Sara Sedgwick ended it in double overtime, the crowd reacted with the stunned, knowing silence that should prevail when a 12-0-0 team loses. Throughout the battle, people had asked, “Why aren’t we winning? We’re ranked in the teens, we?...
...become the pedestal that Bradley enjoyed at Princeton in the sixties. Students here have freed slaves, starred in movies and written novels. Students at other schools are Maurice Clarett and Ken Dorsey. There is no need for Harvard undergrads to “mass around and praise” Sara Sedgwick...
...tough love. With characters who triumph over debilitating obstacles and “a really good human story that Harvard students will be able to relate to,” this may just be the “feel-good” play of the weekend. Sara O’Brien ’04 stars in the challenging role of Helen and Iris McQuillan-Grace plays the role of Annie Sullivan, who is haunted by her brother’s ghost and her own experience with blindness. The play is produced by Jenny Marsh, Joanna Marsh and Shira Simon...