Word: litchfields
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...teams played even, fast-paced hockey for the next ten minutes, until Wildcat Ralph Robinson went off for slashing at 16:35. Near the 18-minute mark, Mark Fusco took a pass from Alan Litchfield at center ice and, uncharacteristically, popped into the UNH zone, slipped between two defenders and beat Pearson low to his right. The power play goal (Harvard is now 13 for 41 with a man-advantage) put Harvard well on its way to its fifth consecutive win over...
Experience should be especially evidenced by the play of the Crimson defense, starting with senior goaltender Wade Lau, the most valuable player in last year's Beanpot win, and continuing out to the blueline, where the top two defensive pairs--Mark Fusco and Ken Code, and Alan Litchfield and Neil Sheehy--return this season...
...other pairing, Litchfield and Sheehy, also gained consistency as the season wore on, as Sheehy adjusted to the position after playing at forward during his freshman year. Litchfield, also a surprise after playing J.V. and nursing a bad knee for much of his sophomore season, turned out to be the most consistent player on the team last year, turning in stalwart defensive efforts every time out. "Alan's just a tower of strength out there," Cleary says...
...defense, the Crimson is in much better shape than last season, with the two pairings returning. Junior Mark Fusco, brother of Scotty, and sophomore Ken Code are the top anchors on the blue line, and senior Alan Litchfield and junior Neil Sheehy compose the second duo. Says Cleary: "We're going in with a little more solid defense this year. We don't have to play freshmen, and on defense, you really have to rely on experience...
...purchase was the brainstorm of Eliot Wadsworth II, 39, owner of White Flower Farm, a $3 million-a-year mail-order nursery in Litchfield, Conn. White Flower has advertised in Horticulture "almost forever," and in The New Yorker nearly as long. The New Yorker assumes 60% ownership, while Wadsworth, a Harvard M.B.A., gains a 40% interest and editorial control. The editorial staff of two, who work among potted plants in a two-story red-brick gingerbread Boston building, will not be pruned. Both of them go on quietly sprouting seasonal articles ("Make Way for Anthuriums") and such regular features...