Word: irishness
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Everyone’s a little bit Irish on St. Paddy’s Day. Come to think of it—in Boston, everyone actually is Irish. Sport some green and celebrate in the most Irish city in the country...
...yesterday at Tampa, Fla., in a back-and-forth game in which Tampa pulled away with five runs in the seventh and eight innings to take a six-run lead and put the game out of reach for the Crimson. Harvard shut out the Fighting Irish (4-7) 4-0 on Sunday in its last of three games at Jack Russell Stadium in Clearwater, Fla. The squad received stellar performances from two freshmen pitchers, Eric Eadington and Max Perlman, who only allowed a combined five hits on the day. In its second game of a double header Saturday, the Crimson...
...grants. To address this potential problem, the DAPA program requires awardees to submit receipts before doling out grant money. And some parties were checked up on by DAPAs to ensure that funds were used properly, according to DAPA Katherine L. Sancken ’09, who dropped by an Irish pub party this weekend. “We’re not here as enforcers. We just wanted to see that the grant was used properly,” she said. While Sancken said DAPAs’ checking up on parties was “casual?...
...shut out Notre Dame by a score of 4-0. The win came thanks to the performances of freshmen pitchers Eric Eadington and Max Perlman. Eadington started the game, managing 4 2/3 scoreless innings despite walking six batters. Perlman came on in relief in the fifth, blanking the Fighting Irish with 4 1/3 innings of two-hit baseball to get the win. Junior third baseman Steffan Wilson provided the offense for Harvard, driving in three runs, including two on a double down the right-field line in the fifth. Shaky defense cost the Crimson the second game of its Saturday...
...Negotiations resumed while votes were still being counted and will continue through the pilgrimage of Irish politicians to Washington for St Patrick's Day (March 17). Whether the deadline works or not, senior members of both Sinn Fein and the DUP believe a deal in inevitable. The strange thing is that's because the voters have now cast polarised politics in concrete. The 1998 Good Friday Accord was built around moderate parties, but Paisley and Adams have now eclipsed them - in practical terms, there's no one else to work with. That might not be a great foundation...