John Gallagher is man enough to admit to crying. He cried when he left Hartford last month, along with nine members of the basketball team he was leaving behind.
But that was quickly tempered by the knowledge that he would be returning to his Philadelphia roots, not to mention taking a small step up the college basketball ladder.
After hitting double-digits in scoring in last week's loss to Towson, the men's lacrosse team appears to have put its offensive woes behind it.
The only problem: It's about to face the nation's fourth-best defensive team.
Penn (5-7, 3-3 Ivy) will look to end its disappointing season on a high note when it hosts No.
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The men's lightweight rowing season is one filled with familiar races and familiar faces: the Navy Day Regatta, the Head of the Charles, the Princeton Chase, the Callow Cup - all year-in, year-out events.
But this season brings a less familiar foe to the water: the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
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Track | Ivy Heptagonals | Hitting the track in New Haven
With Cornell's stranglehold on Heps loosened, Penn hopes to capitalize
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The men's lightweight rowing season is one filled with familiar races and familiar faces: the Navy Day Regatta, the Head of the Charles, the Princeton Chase, the Callow Cup - all year-in, year-out events.
But this season brings a less familiar foe to the water: the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
With Cornell's stranglehold on Heps loosened, Penn hopes to capitalize
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An inspirational cheerleader on M. Lax's sideline
12-year-old Pat Kelly, afflicted with Down Syndrome, supports his brother's team
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On the sidelines of every men's lacrosse game are the familiar faces - head coach Brian Voelker, his assistant coaches and, of course, the players. But for Penn, there's one more person who makes his presence felt as strongly as anyone else: 12-year-old Pat Kelly.
(1 12-year-old Pat Kelly, afflicted with Down Syndrome, supports his brother's team
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Off the court, senior Julia Koulbitskaya and sophomore Kate Kosminskaya are quiet, reserved and calm.
But on it, they're fierce and aggressive, according to coach Mike Dowd.
Yesterday, the NCAA officially announced what Dowd and the Quakers already knew: The two women from Moscow are heading to Tulsa, Okla.
2008 Woodie Awards

