Word: crimsonã
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...Crimson??s offense started hot, cruising to a 13-0 lead in the first three innings of the earlier game and holding on for the win. But it was Yale that sustained its level of play, riding strong hitting at the end of the first contest to a solid opening in game two. With a seven-run lead of its own four innings into the nightcap, the last-place Bulldogs assured themselves an even...
...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 with a double-play ball and a strikeout after the Bulldogs had pulled within...
More appalling is the Crimson??s Staff sole criticism of Israel because its settlement policies “undercut the peace process” while blatantly omitting the serious lack of commitment from the Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank toward peace. Hamas in Gaza uses terrorism and fires rockets, hiding cowardly among human shields; Hamas is targeting Israeli civilians and putting their own civilians at risk, thereby committing a crime against humanity on two accounts. Hamas has a greater desire to see Israel destroyed rather than to help Palestinians in Gaza. In the West Bank...
...wins extends the Crimson??s lead in the North Division to two games. Harvard’s last four league games of the season will be against second-place Dartmouth, a rematch of last year’s series that determined the North Division. Dartmouth takes on Brown today before facing the Crimson this weekend...
These stories are so deeply ingrained in the institutional memory of the Holden Choirs—a memory that stretches back further than the Crimson??s archives—that whenever a Holden singer discusses anything that the choruses have done, they’ll use the first person plural. As a result, 19-year-old students with laptops in bag and cell phones in pocket develop a verbal tic of referring to high jinks they enjoyed during the late nineteenth century or early 1970s...