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ITHACA, N.Y.—For a brief period in the third quarter, it appeared that Harvard might be in for a fourth straight game decided by a touchdown or less. Cornell’s Peter Zell nailed a 38-yard field goal on the Big Red??s opening drive of the second half to pull to within four points of the Crimson at 19-15, a deficit that had been 19-0 with just 3:11 to play in the second quarter.Momentum would not stay with Cornell long, however, as Harvard responded with a 51-yard touchdown...
...senior Corey Mazza, the memory of the last time the Crimson traveled to Ithaca, N.Y., to play Cornell is still fresh. The game—an eventual 27-13 pounding at the hands of the Big Red??came on a cold and rainy day that, mixed with Cornell’s signature astroturf, ended with a road-loss worse than any since...
...remains perhaps the only band I know of that somehow willingly tricked parents into letting their children listen to songs encouraging cocaine and crystal meth use. What could they do? “Two lines of coke I cut with Drano/And her nose starts to bleed/A most beautiful ruby red?? is a great lyric. So real college be damned. I am ecstatic that the CEB finally embraced Yardfest’s permanent junior high theme. For once, I don’t want something else. —Kimberly E. Gittleson HATE YOU, THIRD EYE BLIND! I haven?...
...ball to pick up some insurance for its starter. In the sixth, captain Brendan Byrne moved up to second on a sacrifice bunt after getting hit by a pitch. Rogers singled and stole second, and, while Casey struck out, Byrne came home on a wild pitch from the Big Red??s Matt Hill. The Crimson scored its fourth run when the Cornell center fielder lost Kramer’s pop fly in the sun and Rogers trotted home.—Staff writer Loren Amor can be reached at lamor@fas.harvard.edu.—Staff writer Emily W. Cunningham...
...teacher’s test questions (“5. A math teacher is frightened 95% of the time. How many hours a day is he frightened? What is he so afraid of?”), a Crayola color-namer’s recent colors (“Sad Red??Really Sad Blue…Divorce Sienna…Divorce Brown”), and a host of other scenes that form a whir of brief, existential episodes.By playing with our notions of youth, Rich pulls off in short bursts what Roald Dahl did so well in his novels...