Word: easterly
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...Nothing positive comes from Iraq, torn apart by continual slaughter as the civil population flees.' POPE BENEDICT XVI, in his Easter Sunday address at the Vatican, in which the Pontiff included the Iraq war in a list of human tragedies in the world, also making note of other conflict zones such as Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe, Darfur and Afghanistan
...Harvard: No time off for Passover. No time off for Easter. My friends at Yeshiva and Georgetown are laughing at me from home. Dear gyroball: I’m going to throw you so often! Love, Daisuke dear my professor i don’t mind if you give a test this late but can you not call it a midterm? the middle of the term was last exam. thanks. Dear FM: Why haven’t you printed one of my hollers? My crotch is still on fire, and that bitch is still out there. Everytime you talk more...
...that Easter has come and gone, it’s seersucker season. And for some, seersucker represents the worst of Harvard: haughty attitude and old boys’ (read: final) clubs. For others, it’s a sign of spring and of garden parties. For me, it represents neither and that’s probably why I like it. I bought my first and only seersucker blazer in Canada at a thrift shop on summer break after freshman year. It was in mint condition, the right size, and the perfect price ($10). Canada is an odd locale for seersucker...
Taking advantage of a break from the whirlwind weekends that often feature four and five events over a two-day stretch, the Harvard sailing team competed in just two regattas—both on the nearby Charles River—over Easter weekend. The Crimson capitalized on the relaxed schedule, as the No. 8 women earned a hard-fought first-place finish, while the No. 5 co-eds also sailed well, taking third-place overall. It was the first top finish for the women all spring, and it came just as the season begins to wind down for the team...
After splitting each of its first three Ivy League doubleheaders, strong performances by both of its starting pitchers and a resurrected offense led the Harvard baseball team to an Easter Sunday sweep of Cornell.Fighting frigid temperatures and swirling winds, the Crimson (9-11, 5-3 Ivy) defeated the Big Red (11-14, 5-3 Ivy) at O’Donnell Field in the second game of the twinbill, 11-4, after taking the first contest by a score of 4-2.“It was a day of survival,” Harvard coach Joe Walsh said...