Word: samuelson
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...problem.” It was the first game of the year in which the Crimson never led, but the game was still close throughout. After two Stag goals within the first three and a half minutes gave Fairfield a 2-0 lead, co-captain Jake Samuelson and junior attackman Greg Cohen scored unassisted goals for Harvard just a minute and 45 seconds apart. The 2-2 deadlock held for the rest of the half until the Stags’ Greg Downing scored with just 29 seconds to play in the quarter. It was his second of four goals...
...more games away from Jordan Field than it did all of last spring. And this victory was just what the squad needed after a disappointing 12-7 loss to Massachusetts last Saturday. “It was a good win,” senior captain Jake Samuelson said. “We’re happy we had a game after Saturday to bounce back and get our minds pulling forward.” Harvard got off to a slow start. Falling behind 1-0 on a goal from Holy Cross freshman Oliver Schenkel with 8:31 left...
...pattern, given last weekend’s victory over Stony Brook in New York and the fact that the Minutemen had not fallen at home since March 2004. “It’s a tough place to win on the road,” captain Jake Samuelson said. “I wouldn’t say this game is a sign we’re in huge trouble. I’m not too worried about it.” The Crimson (1-1) took an early lead in the game, scoring its first goal just...
...that kept the tension in the room at a fever pitch. “Anything to pump that adrenaline.” Eventually the tournament whittled its way down to the final three. Falling just one four-token chain short of the championship match, second runner-up Joshua D. Samuelson ‘06, a former Crimson photo executive, described the moment when he realized that his dream was over. “I was red and all of a sudden I noticed all the red chips trapped at the bottom amongst a sea of black chips” said...
...neighborhoods have been turned upside down," says Levy. "It's very politically incorrect to say, but that's not what those homeowners signed up for in suburbia." Despite their grievances, however, many of those same working-class families have become addicted to the cheap labor. As a landscaper, Jeremy Samuelson has seen starting hourly wages for gardeners fall from $14 to $12 in the past decade, but he admits that he and his neighbors view cheap labor as a perk of living in the Hamptons. "People are making less, maybe, but now lots of people have house cleaners come once...