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...Crimson awoke, going on a 17-2 run spanning the halves to take the lead. Goffredo scored eight points in the stretch on a jumper and a pair of threes, one of which was several feet beyond the line. The captain, who scored 30 points in a game twice last season, became the first player in Harvard basketball history to achieve the feat three times.For the Crimson, the victory served to avenge last year’s team, which lost at Newman Arena in the final minute, a crushing defeat that sent the team on to seven more losses...
...Seawolves at halftime thanks to a late Harvard goal by junior midfielder Zach Widbin, but Stony Brook scored the first three goals after the break to make the margin 10-4 with 6:50 to go in the frame. After an 11-6 score after three, both teams scored twice in the fourth quarter to achieve the final score. Scholl attributed the Seawolves’ surge to the same culprit that has plagued the Crimson all year—shooting. “We felt pretty confident after halftime, but we hit a lot of pots in the second half...
...goal deficit en route to a 5-2 Harvard victory at Bright Hockey Center in the first game of the best-of-three playoff series. “Revenge was definitely a big part of this,” captain Dylan Reese said. “They beat us twice handily, and they’re one of our arch-rivals” The No. 10 Bulldogs entered the contest without top scorers Sean Backman and Mark Arcobello, who were absent from the lineup for undisclosed reasons. However, despite the loss of offensive personnel, Yale had no trouble finding...
...argues that Jackson did know and that jumping the gun was socially acceptable on the remote frontier where he and Rachel lived. As presidential candidates, Jefferson was hammered for his lack of religion and Jackson was hammered for his wife's surplus of husbands--yet both men were elected twice. Partisanship and ideology made a space for singularity. Jefferson's and Jackson's supporters cared more about what their champions stood for than what they thought about theology or the divorce laws...
...provoke” them. The correspondence sparked Retsky’s interest in a racial angle to his theory. “Myths seldom lack any connection with reality,” his new paper reads. “Could it be that [African-Americans] believe in the myth twice as frequently as [European-Americans] because they observe it twice as often?” Retsky’s research is again raising eyebrows. Len Lichtenfeld, deputy chief medical officer of the American Cancer Society, said he was skeptical. “The problem here is, there is little evidence...