Word: reds
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Japan organized the world's largest tea party in Nishio, a city famous for its green teas. Precisely 14,718 people simultaneously sipped while sitting barefoot on 1.5 km of red carpet, smashing the previous mark of 7,250. No word on whether they also broke the record for longest port-a-potty line ever...
...said of the loss, adding, “I’m pretty ticked off that we weren’t able to come away with a victory here.”Just a few minutes after the opening faceoff, a delayed penalty on Harvard allowed the Big Red (5-0, 2-0 ECAC) to jump out to an early lead. With goalie Troy Davenport pulled for an extra skater and the Crimson (1-4, 0-4 ECAC) unable to touch the puck and begin serving its sentence, Cornell’s Taylor Davenport was able to net a rebound...
...developing a knack for crushing the spirits of the Harvard men’s hockey team. In many ways, the Crimson’s late collapse in Friday’s 3-2 defeat could be compared to Harvard’s 4-3 loss to the Big Red on November 11, 2005—almost exactly a year ago. In both games, the Crimson held a late lead. On Friday, senior Kevin Du potted a power-play goal, putting Harvard ahead 3-2 with less than 10 minutes remaining in the game. Similarly, at the Bright Hockey Center last...
...from apparent victory, things fell apart for the Harvard men’s hockey team, as No. 11 Cornell took a 3-2 victory at Lynah Rink on Friday night. The Crimson (1-4, 0-4 ECAC) played solid defense for most of the game to hold the Big Red (5-0, 3-0) to just 18 shots on the night. Both teams scored early in the first—Cornell with an extra attacker due to a delayed Harvard penalty, and the Crimson on the power play. Neither team would light the lamp again until the third frame, when...
...Whether a speedier withdrawal is a good thing or bad thing depends on whether you live in the Green Zone or in the Red Zone. In the Baghdad street, almost anybody you speak with wants the U.S. forces out - yesterday. Over and over again, opinion polls have shown that the majority of Iraqis, across the sectarian and ethnic categories, see the U.S. presence as a part of the problem rather than part of the solution. But Iraqi leaders take the more realistic view that the U.S. presence, although irksome, is necessary...