Word: rights
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Dates: during 2010-2019
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...Yale’s] bats rolled right through. They kept on going the next game,” Albright said. “It took us awhile to get into...
Harvard’s fortunes appeared to turn in the top of the fifth, when sophomore Marcus Way belted the first pitch he saw over the right-field fence to put the Crimson on the board. Following a scoreless inning from Keuper, Harvard plated two more runs on back-to-back one-out singles with runners in scoring position from juniors Sam Franklin and Sean O’Hara, closing the gap to 8-3. Albright followed with a double play, though, and the Crimson would not score again due to effective pitching from Bulldog hurler Christopher...
...game. With the game on the line, Walsh turned to sophomore Brent Suter, who bent but did not break in the bottom of the seventh. Despite yielding a pair of one-out singles, Suter induced a ground ball and forced Gant Elmore to fly out to right field, preserving the win for Harvard...
...interesting hypothetical situation: after spending your high school years cultivating a bitter dislike for your biggest rival, you’re suddenly forced to spend multiple hours a day with him in a narrow, compact space. It could have the potential to be a little awkward, right...
...performance in medias res spans across cultures and genres of entertainment. It is as if the audience, and not the actors, are breaking the fourth wall by throwing bricks at it. What noisy senators do to the State of the Union is comparable to a diaper commercial right after a murder on your favorite TV show: a grating, sobering reminder that you are only watching a performance and not truly experiencing it. Because we only understand laissez faire as it applies to economics, viewers cannot lose themselves in the act. Never mind what the performers want to convey; nothing speaks...