Word: soccering
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...When the World Cup comes to the U.S. in 1994, this is the vaunted matchup that won't take place; both teams got eliminated in trials. Americans will still be treated to a summer clinic in the world's most popular sport -- without the criminal antics of Britain's soccer hooligans...
...Alessi Bottle Opener The Italian company Alessi has produced a witty kitchen bibelot from nearly every item of houseware. Now it has got around to the lowly bottle opener. Perhaps inspired by a mental picture of millions of infantilized men sucking on beer bottles as they watch football (or soccer) on TV, Morozzi used the baby rattle as a model, producing a jumbo-size plastic opener that is both playful and elegant. It comes in black and white and -- yes -- blue and pink...
...known for a lot of things: number one school in the world, the Yard, protests outside of undergraduate libraries. But certain athletes of the fall season are making the Crimson known for something else—record-breakers. Three current Harvard stars—women’s soccer goalkeeper and co-captain Katie Shields, All-American junior running back Clifton Dawson, and sophomore cross-country phenom Lindsey Scherf—have all made names for themselves by assaulting the Harvard records. SHIELD IN GOAL Shields has been a force in net for the Crimson this fall season. The cornerstone...
...month brought new hope for the Harvard men’s soccer team, which had gone winless in October. On the day after Halloween, however, the team got a trick instead of a treat. Holy Cross scored in the 64th minute to break a 1-1 dealock and hung on for a 2-1 win over the Crimson (4-8-2, 0-4-1 Ivy League) at Ohiri Field yesterday afternoon. For Harvard, the defeat extended its non-winning streak to eight games, including seven losses during that stretch. It was also the first loss the Crimson seniors have suffered...
...injuries have mounted and the season has unfurled for the Harvard men’s soccer team, youth has become the name of the game. Yesterday, despite the absence of its most noticable rookie—John Stamatis—Harvard (4-8-2, 0-4-1 Ivy) played one its youngest line-ups yet. Stamatis sat out of the 2-1 loss to Holy Cross (8-7-0, 2-4-0 Patriot) because of a red card he was given in a loss to Dartmouth this past weekend. Three games ago, freshman Michael Giammanco returned from...