Diamondbacks 5, Padres 1: Kellys, Heroes!
nother scoreless outing, and Carson Kelly topped it off with some gratuitous but satisfying fireworks..
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Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images
Over the past couple of years, I feel like I’ve wound up recapping an awful lot of Merrill Kelly starts, and I’ve generally been pleased to watch him perform. I was a bit nervous this time out, however, because he’s been off to a slow start so far in 2021, entering today with an unsightly 7.71 ERA, four short outings under his belt, and very high pitch counts in each of them. Facing off against a tough Padres lineup, I honestly wasn’t sure what we were gonna get. Happily, however, my concerns turned out to be wildly overblown.
Graphic: HANNAH JEOUNG/The Stanford Daily
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As a mechanical engineering major and prospective Italian minor, Michael McDermott ’22 was excited to go to Florence this summer to learn the language and experience the culture. However, when the Bing Overseas Studies Program (BOSP) suspended nearly all learning abroad opportunities late last month, he was left to scramble to make new summer plans.
And he’s not alone. Many have found difficulty finding alternative opportunities for the upcoming months. “You had something sort of set in stone, but then now you have to reverse course and find something else,” McDermott said.
Diamondbacks 0, Nationals 1: We Don’t Need Another Zero
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Photo by Greg Fiume/Getty Images
Ah, offense. I remember it well. To start last night’s contest, the team combined to score 14 runs, while making the first seven outs. This evening? Not so much. Instead, Taylor Widener and Max Scherzer engaged in a classic pitcher’s duel, matching zeroes through the first six innings. It wasn’t quite an
equal match. Mad Max was more dominant, holding the Diamondbacks to only one hit the first two times through the order. Kole Calhoun had a single with one out in the first inning. Their only other base-runners came in the fifth, when Scherzer’s usual pin-point control appeared to desert him, and he walked Carson Kelly and Josh Rojas, both with two outs, before K’ing Widener, his seventh strikeout through five.
Artist Prentiss Haney has a special feeling for “Ohio Shorts.”
In 2009, as a 17-year-old high-school student in Dayton, Haney made an experimental film selected for inclusion in that year’s edition of “Ohio Shorts,” the Wexner Center for the Arts’ long-running festival of short films created by filmmakers of all ages residing in the Buckeye State.
Haney remembers the screening as something of a breakthrough.
“I had never been to a film festival before; I had never had my films shown in a festival,” said Haney, now a 28-year-old resident of Cincinnati, who points to the validation of having his work shown in the company of other Ohio filmmakers.