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...Harvard community,” she says. Despite the fact that Schreier never choreographs with a narrative in mind, the bittersweet feelings of a graduating senior are evident in the piece she will be presenting at Arts First. “I’m wishing I could stay here a little longer,” she says. Like a true dancer, Schreier reverts to movement when trying to explain the piece, but says that it’s full of tension, despite the airy nature of the Bach music she chose to set it against...
...yesterday, 5-2 and 4-2. “Going into this weekend we obviously knew that we had clinched [the Ivy North] and I think we just needed to refocus ourselves,” captain Shelly Madick said. “Today we knew that we had to stay up every inning, put pressure on them every inning, and play a solid game against them.” HARVARD 5, DARTMOUTH 2 In the second game of the day it was Dartmouth who crossed the plate first. With Harvard senior Amanda Watkins starting on the mound, the Big Green...
...successful season, picking up a second place finish in the A-division with only eight races to do so.“The weather didn’t really cooperate,” Dolbec said. “You only have a few races so you have to stay consistent.”Discounting the thunderstorms that brewed up in the afternoon, the Crimson had to deal with conditions it usually doesn’t see on the Charles. According to Dolbec, the southerly breeze forced the squad to make some adjustments.“I think we handled...
...with Yale at first. Virginia was harder to gauge as they were a full lane over. We were down almost about a length on each crew after they took a lot of length on the inside of the turn. We tried to handle them as best we could and stay internally focused and row our own race at our own rhythm.”“It’s the race of the day anytime you have ranked teams like those,” Bosworth said. “Obviously, we’ve never faced them before...
...she’s been around for a nearly a half century and she’s still singing about dancing and having a good time. But whoever said 50-year-old women don’t like to sing and dance? She chooses to stay superficial once again, employing distinctly vapid lyrics—the words ‘dance’ and ‘floor’ manage to make it into every song—and reverting back to her “Holiday”-era Minnie Mouse-esque vocal range. But the beats...