Word: backed
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Dates: during 2010-2019
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Harvard’s fortunes appeared to turn in the top of the fifth, when sophomore Marcus Way belted the first pitch he saw over the right-field fence to put the Crimson on the board. Following a scoreless inning from Keuper, Harvard plated two more runs on back-to-back one-out singles with runners in scoring position from juniors Sam Franklin and Sean O’Hara, closing the gap to 8-3. Albright followed with a double play, though, and the Crimson would not score again due to effective pitching from Bulldog hurler Christopher...
Unfortunately for Perlman, the Bulldogs began to hit those strikes in the third. Following a pair of singles, Squires bounced back from his baserunning blunder with a two-run triple and scored on a single by junior Andy Megee. Yale then posted another four runs in the fourth inning, closing the gap to six. When slugger Trygg Larsson-Danforth followed a Megee single with a two-run bomb to open the fifth, Walsh called for junior Eric Eadington to preserve the Crimson’s suddenly precarious four-run lead. But Eadington yielded four consecutive singles, finally stopping the onslaught...
Never been to Lamont? (There’s a café there?) Not really sure where the Greenhouse is located? Still have $130 left on your BoardPlus before it expires on May 22? No worries, we’ve got your back (even though you just might live in a hole) on just how to spend your newfound wad of cash in this burning BoardPlus series...
...first on a wild pitch by Zumbro. After a single and a flyout that put runners on second and third, another single and a groundout brought in two runs for Yale. Two more wild pitches and a throwing error brought in two more Bulldog runs, forcing Brown to come back in to end the Bulldogs’ threat and preserve the win for the Harvard...
...solution. Without commensurate scale-up of community-based treatment programs—the “social” dimension of treatment—or reform of inefficient drug delivery mechanisms in developing countries, TB treatment will remain inaccessible, ineffective, and ultimately futile. To finally turn the clock back on the spread of TB and its even more dangerous resistant strains, we need a concerted effort spanning industry, state, the public sector, and citizenry...