Word: tonights
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...Harvard women’s hockey team’s 7-0 blowout of Boston College last night, the Eagles’ defensive gameplan was simple: stop junior forward Sarah Vaillancourt from scoring. “Sarah Vaillancourt, they were faceguarding her tonight. There’s not a lot you can do against that,” senior tri-captain Caitlin Cahow said. But by tightening up on Vaillancourt, BC created opportunities for the Crimson’s other scoring threats, and it was Cahow—a defenseman—who answered the call. “Where...
...when we played that three-overtime game it really came down to who wanted it more in the end,” Cahow said of last year’s loss. We felt that we didn’t come through with the effort we should have. Tonight was some vindication for us.” Sticks were hot from the outset for the Crimson and only got hotter as the night progressed, as Harvard scored less than five minutes into play and Cahow added her first career hat trick to help reach the seven-goal total...
...change, the campaign recently chose to refocus its public statements not on Romney's fellow aspirants, but on Barack Obama. "I think Obama's success has focused the race, whether he wins here tonight, whether he wins the nomination or not, and that's to our advantage," says Castellanos. However, their new pitch hinges on basking in the reflected glow of his shiny message of change - "With Barack Obama, the people of Iowa have shown they want change," is now a standard line in Romney's stump speech - while also painting him as a dangerous radical: "The nation wants...
...Hillary Clinton's surprising win tonight may cause Romney to switch, again, to framing his candidacy as an anti-Hillary one. He can even keep his "Europe of old" line: Early on, his strategists contemplated bumper stickers reading "Hillary=France." Says Madden: "We're going to continue to draw contrasts with the Democrat front-runner, whether it's Hillary or Obama...
...literally, afford to keep going even if he loses these early contests. His appeal to Republican voters is largely based on his success as a businessman; his staffers frequently call their spending in early states an "investment." Told that Romney advisers were saying that the race really started tonight, McCain supporter Lindsey Graham - in the midst of a victory toast - laughed and questioned whether Romney can really run on that reputation any more: "It must really be bad to spend $10 million dollars on a race" - as Romney did in Iowa - "and not have it count...