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...opening weekend.“[The Tigers] were effective in implementing their defensive plan,” Crimson coach Erik Farrar said.Harvard was outscored 3-1 in the first period and could not pull even, despite its efforts in the next three quarters. Zdrojewski and sophomore Patricia Smith each scored two for the Crimson, while Kennifer and freshman Laurel McCarthy rounded out Harvard’s scoring with a goal each. HARVARD 11, BUCKNELL 9 On Saturday, the Crimson defeated host Bucknell, bouncing back from a 14-13 loss to the Bison last Saturday at the Princeton Invitational...
...swimming and diving team lost its first Eastern College Athletic Conference Championship in three years this past weekend, coming in second place to Navy at the Crimson’s home Blodgett Pool. Harvard, who remained in second for all three days of the contest, finished with a score of 512.5 to the first-place Midshipmen’s 703.5. Although Navy appeared to have decisively sunk the Crimson’s battleship during this meet, ECACs are a bit of a diamond in the rough—this three-day event is much more than meets...
...post an impressive team score, notching 41 points against the Big Red’s dominant 176.5. Princeton notched 121.5, followed by Columbia with 82, Yale with 55, and Brown with 52. Dartmouth trailed with 18 points...
...going to need to be a lot better to win hockey games at this time of the year and going forward.”Both teams battled through a physical first period, but neither side managed to get on the board.The Crimson’s best chance to score came on a shift late in the frame. Junior Doug Rogers ripped a cross to blueliner Alex Biega, who was posted at the right circle, but Quinnipiac goalie Bud Fisher glided to his left just in time to stop Biega’s wrist-shot, keeping the game scoreless...
...Rather than a stenographer, Pooley would prefer to see the media adopt the position of an "honest referee - keeping score, throwing flags when a team plays fast and loose with the facts, explaining to the audience what's happening on the field and why." In an issue as complex as climate change, the country badly needs smart, fair umpires, and the media can play that role. But the wave of cutbacks and closings that have hit the American media could make that all but impossible. Referees need to know the game cold, and climate change demands...