Word: 47th
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...season by completing the 2,000-meter course on the Severn River in 5:54.50, while the winless Quakers came in at 6:03.71 and the Midshipmen finished in 6:07.16. The win gave Harvard its 10th Adams Cup in a row and its 47th overall...
...most races everything was close.”In only the second event of NCAAs, both Clarke and Mills took to the water in the 500-yard freestyle preliminary race. Out of 64 athletes, Clarke placed 46th with a time of 4:47.47, while Mills touched the wall 47th with a time of 4:47.75. With these times, neither Clarke nor Mills advanced to the finals, where Allison Schmitt from Georgia placed first in a time of 4:35.17.For both athletes, these times were considerably slower than their qualifying times from Ivies, where Clarke raced the 500 yards...
...York City Tax Break. At the midtown Manhattan hotels Dream (210 West 55th Street; 212-247-2000), Night (132 West 45th Street; 212-835-9600), Time (224 West 49th Street; 212-246-5252) or Stay (157 West 47th Street; 212-768-3700), pay only the cost of the room tax (6% in New York City) for the fourth night of a four-night stay. Rates begin at $199 a night. Book by March 31 for stays through April 15. (See 10 things to do in New York City...
...posted a 48th-place finish in the women’s 5K classic, clocking in at 17:38.2. Classmate Alyssa Devlin was the first Crimson skier across the finish line in the grueling 15K freestyle race, getting faster with each split and finishing in 51:59.4, good enough for 47th place. Junior Audrey Mangan and Devlin were the other Harvard scorers in the 5K, placing 53rd and 71st respectively. Sprague, placing 52nd, and Mangan, placing 64th, added points to the Crimson’s score in the 15K. Junior Trevor Petach singlehandedly carried the men’s Nordic team...
...Perhaps appropriately, the Normandie ended its days in New York. While being refitted as a troop ship in 1942, it caught fire, capsized and sank in the Hudson River at 47th Street. At war's end it was sold for scrap. But along with other reminders that the two great cities were once joined at the hip of all that was hip, the Normandie lives on in wood, silver and memory. Rivalries end, style endures...