Word: stoning
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...trio of hard-fought, one-goal games to advance out of the conference tournament quarterfinals. Junior Jennifer Sifers clinched the series win with a double-overtime tally in the rubber match. “I thought it was a great series overall,” Harvard coach Katey Stone said. “We match up really well, particularly this year. You knew it was going to be close.”The Crimson had earned the No. 4 seed and home ice by besting the Golden Knights the prior weekend on a last-second sudden-death strike by senior...
...defeated the then-No.2 Saints, 3-1, at Appleton Arena on March 11. “Even though we lost last time we faced them [on Feb. 24], we hit three posts and carried the play for two periods, and our girls remember that,” Stone said. Entering the first intermission during the postseason matchup, the game was locked at one. While the Crimson had netted the first goal, St. Lawrence was only able to respond and beat Boe on a power play, resulting from a tripping call on the Crimson goalie herself. The rest...
...business side this spring, with the release of her autobiography “Breaking the Ice.” The book represented Ruggiero’s attempt to capitalize financially on her popularity and success in the niche sport and signaled to her longtime mentor, Harvard head coach Katey Stone, that Ruggiero’s ambitions extend beyond the blue lines—a schema continued in her Apprentice bid. “She was one of the best players we’ve ever had and a great kid,” Stone said in an earlier interview...
...First (and only) Sister made the BookExpo scene at a swank cocktail reception at Washington's Hay-Adams Hotel, a stone's throw from the White House. Her memoir on 41's behalf will tell the story of her famous father's life. To that end, she has interviewed all of the living presidents and many world leaders. "Before he was the President, he was her dad," trumpets her publisher...
...that deeper argument for containment that war supporters like me neglected in the debate over Iraq. When U.N. inspectors re-entered the country in late 2002, they did not find Saddam growing inexorably stronger; they found a corrupt, isolated regime with an infrastructure degrading to the Stone Age. Had America not gone to war, containing Saddam would have been a diplomatic challenge for years to come. But if containment was taking its toll on the U.S., it was taking an even greater toll on Saddam...