Word: 23ã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...While the committee chose to keep the size of the lane at its current width, the decision to extend the NCAA arc to within three feet of the NBA distance of 23?? 9’’ will likely have a significant impact on how college basketball is played throughout the Ivy League and the country...
...repertory theater for being all-around not good enough. Playwright and actress Nilaja Sun’s solo performance makes “No Child”—directed by Hal Brooks, set-designed by J. Michael Griggs, and running at the American Repertory Theatre through Dec. 23??very enjoyable to watch, although its critique of public education reform lacked focus...
...Behind stellar three-point shooting and an unmatched defensive intensity, first-place Penn handed the Harvard men’s basketball team its fifth straight loss, 83-67, on Friday night at Lavietes Pavilion. The Quakers (19-8, 10-1 Ivy) shot over 50 percent—12 of 23??from behind the arc and forced 21 Crimson turnovers in the victory. Offensive stalwart Mark Zoller led Penn with 21 points, including three three-pointers, and six of Penn’s 22 assists. Senior guard Ibrahim Jaaber added 19 points and two steals...
...verité-infused cinematography for casting light on the complexity of international relations in the burgeoning EU. Schmid’s early work is also some of the most idiosyncratic material in the series, though it is equally critically-acclaimed. His 1988 film “23?? received a Special Mention at the Locarno Film Festival, and picked up several German Film Awards to boot. The film, about a the attempts of a West German computer hacker to connect with the KGB in East Berlin and to decipher a global conspiracy, will screen on Tuesday...
...solid at the one, two, and three spots.” An analysis of the Ivy League’s guard orientation must begin at the three-point arc, which, in the college game, stands just 19’9 away from the basket (as opposed to 23??9 in the NBA). While this has affected the style of collegiate play in general, causing a natural selection away from traditional, lumbering pivotmen towards players better suited to knock down the trifecta, the effect has become even more pronounced in the Ivy League. The nature of the level...