Word: squashing
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
With two of its top players out with injuries, the Harvard men’s squash team (1-0, 1-0 Ivy) still lost only three games during a 9-0 sweep of Brown (0-1, 0-1) Friday evening in Providence...
...Harvard women’s squash team opened the 2005-06 season with a dominating win over Brown on Friday. The Crimson (1-0, 1-0 Ivy) rolled to a 9-0 victory over the Bears (0-1, 0-1 Ivy) in Providence, R.I. Though the Crimson lost several veterans from up and down the ladder to graduation—including Stephanie Hendricks and co-captains Hilary Thorndike and No. 2 Lindsey Wilkins—Harvard looks to be well equipped to fill the gaps. Freshman Lily Lorentzen, fresh off a run in the Squash U.S. Open tournament last month...
Experienced at rigorous hiking and competitive squash, Yadav easily accelerated from auditions to the finals. Then it was off to Taipei, Taiwan, the city selected for the competition’s final stage because of its relative neutrality...
...with 41 varsity sports, Harvard has more than 1500 student-athletes juggling athletic and academic commitments. According to the National College Health Assessment 2004, 33.7 percent of Harvard undergraduates indicate stress as an impediment to performance, both academic and otherwise. From the varsity men and women’s squash team to the varsity men and women’s crew team, athletes on campus are finding that yoga offers a needed break from the rigor of day-to-day campus life. Among the first to include yoga as part of their program, the Harvard men and women?...
...contemporary American authors like Paul Auster, Shibata says that the three of them have a very “unusual relationship” because of their extensive collaboration. Plus, Shibata has visited Rubin’s Japanese translation class frequently. And Rubin and Murakami have planned to play some squash. The three concur on many facets of translation. “We three are the kind of translators that stay as close to the text as possible,” Shibata says. And they seem to agree that one cannot translate a work that one doesn’t love...