Word: brights
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...November 11, 2005—almost exactly a year ago. In both games, the Crimson held a late lead. On Friday, senior Kevin Du potted a power-play goal, putting Harvard ahead 3-2 with less than 10 minutes remaining in the game. Similarly, at the Bright Hockey Center last season, Du set up Charlie Johnson ’06 for the go-ahead score midway through the final period. Neither of the leads lasted. This weekend, Krantz surprised rookie netminder Kyle Richter with a long-range shot from the blue line to tie the score at two goals apiece...
When they reported for preseason training in August, neither new women’s soccer coach Erica Walsh nor her incoming class of eleven freshmen knew what to expect from the upcoming season. But with a tough 2006 season in the past, the future looks bright for the women’s soccer program. Last Wednesday, the Ivy League announced its selection of Lauren Mann, the Crimson’s freshman goalkeeper, as its Rookie of the Year. Mann joined fellow freshman Lizzy Nichols and junior Megan Merritt on the league second team, while senior Laura Odorczyk was named...
...floodgates opened. The No. 8 Crimson (5-1-0, 5-1-0 ECAC) poured in four goals in six minutes—including three in 55 seconds—to ice the Big Red (1-6-1, 1-3-0 ECAC) in a 5-2 victory in the Bright Hockey Center. “Katie Johnston scored the third goal and I didn’t see the next two because they happened so quickly,” Harvard coach Katey Stone said. The Crimson was without high-scoring forwards senior Julie Chu and sophomore Sarah Vaillancourt, along with junior...
With the prestigious Four Nations Cup drawing top players to Ontario this weekend, the No. 8 Harvard women’s hockey team found itself in a familiar position on Friday night at Bright Hockey Center—taking the ice without leading scorers Julie Chu and Sarah Vaillancourt and defensive anchor Caitlin Cahow, all three of whom took last season off to compete in the Olympic Games. However, the Crimson (5-1-0, 5-1-0 ECAC) refused to let the loss of their three stars translate to a loss in the standings, as the team skated...
...this way, his vaudevillean scenes of suburbia are the ultimate self-portraits, their bright exteriors hinting at shadowy, unknowable lives that the viewer can only guess at. In Arkley's case it was a long-term heroin addiction, which finally claimed his life. But his surviving work asks us to leave our final judgment open, which is what distinguishes him from that more cynical chronicler of the everyday, John Brack. Instead, we are left with a glimmer of mirth, irony perhaps, but not least of all affection for what takes place behind the masquerade of suburban life...