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...triple in the opener. “What we’re playing for right now is all the work that we put in at the beginning of the year—all the swings indoors, all the lumps we took in California,” coach Joe Walsh said of a club that struggled mightily in a challenging nonconference schedule last month. “We’re loose now, and we’re putting it together.” “All along we’ve known that we have talent, and we?...
...Warren, who gave up four runs in the first inning of game one on Saturday, the Crimson seemed poised to continue its season-long struggles.“All of the sudden that sinking feeling that seems to settle in all the time hits,” Harvard coach Joe Walsh said. “I didn’t think Max had much.”But a mound visit from Walsh settled Warren down, and the senior hurler did not allow another run in 5.2 innings of work to keep the Crimson in the game...
...diamond as the bottom feeders in the Rolfe Division. Yale sits two-and-a-half games ahead of Brown and Dartmouth leads the division with a 10-2 Ivy record. “Usually there is a lot lying on this [series with Brown],” Harvard coach Joe Walsh said. “It’s a different feeling; usually you’re looking down [at the other clubs]. What’s riding on this is respect and knowing we can beat some good teams in the league.” For the Crimson...
Harvard students got a taste last night for the different flavors of a product especially popular among college students—beer. Charles M. Storey ’82, Michael D. Smith, and Joe Zaccaro, all affiliated with Harpoon Brewery, educated approximately 50 people at the Cambridge Queen’s Head Pub on what it takes to make quality beer. The “Beer School” event featured a tasting of three types of Harpoon beer and one cider, each paired with a different appetizer. Storey spoke on the history and philosophy of Harpoon—which...
...global warming, for instance, he and Senator Joe Lieberman introduced a cap-and-trade system to limit carbon emissions 60% below 1990 levels by 2050. McCain's recent body language indicates he would not be nearly as comprehensive as the Democrats; he probably would not, for example, auction off the right to pollute for major corporate spewers - which could raise significant funds for alternative-energy research. But the old McCain-Lieberman plan had the look of a half-a-loaf compromise that could eventually get through Congress - and take the global-warming issue off the table in the election...