Word: sided
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...summer of ’99. Leveling at a decent top 50 ranking in the pros (after being No. 1 on the college circuit), Blake seemed to make the transition swimmingly. That is until 2004, when he broke his neck in practice, contracted a virus which left one side of his face paralyzed, and lost his father to cancer. Other than being forced to shave his snazzy dreds, Blake made it through these obstacles surprisingly unscathed. “James has a particular way of responding to a challenge” Blake’s former coach and current Harvard...
...order,” said Councillor Marjorie Decker. Mayor Kenneth E. Reeves ’72 offered a longer criticism of Kelley’s behavior. “It is my view that in one’s first term in the council, you can err on the side of needing more information because you want to fully understand a thing,” Reeves said. “[But] at some point, you want to put in the human factor and say, do you want to torture the manager enough...
...weren’t able to execute simple plays.” The Crimson’s best special-teams opportunity came halfway through the second period, when Kevin Du corralled a rebound near the left post with BC goalie Cory Schneider out of position and the left side of the net wide open. A one-timer would most likely have found the back of the net, but Du required two touches to control the wobbling puck, giving Schneider time to fill the hole. NET LOSS Harvard’s previous contest against the Eagles, a 4-0 victory...
...establish a forecheck, we weren’t able to get pucks in the net, we weren’t able to get traffic.” Harvard (9-13-1, 6-9-1 ECAC) started the first period strongly, as senior Kevin Du skated up the left side after blocking a BC (15-10-1, 11-8-1 HEA) shot with his body, maneuvering through the Eagles’ defense to pass the puck across to captain Dylan Reese. Slamming in a shot from the right side, Reese landed the Crimson’s only goal of the night...
...divided and essentially stagnant, taken by surprise by the Palestinian uprising, paralyzed by the dilemma of the territories. Public opinion is splintered between hard-liners who want to keep all the land and those willing to take the chance of giving some of it up for peace. On neither side, in Israel, is the matter as theoretical as it might be elsewhere. Apocalypse is a possibility always. People live with it. They listen to the news almost obsessively. Israelis have traveled a distance from the Leon Uris version of themselves, from the romanticized pioneer days when kibbutzniks drained malarial swamps...