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Sophomore Nichole Slykhous and a host of freshman also competed in the Manhattan Club Bad Boy Invitational, also at Van Cortlandt Park, on Saturday.MANHATTAN CLUB BAD BOY INVITATIONALThe Crimson snagged six of the top-15 spots at the Bad Boy Invitational.Rookie Jeanne Mack took the top spot among collegiate athletes??fifth overall—crossing the line in 19:13 in the 5K race. Mack shaved off four seconds from her time at the UAlbany Invitational last month.Slykous was the second Harvard finisher, coming in at seventh overall with a time of 19:43.Freshmen Alison Lee, Kirsten Jorgensen...
...Stone’s top priority is the welfare and success of her players, and a conspicuously missing addition to Harvard’s trophy case does not undermine the group and individual achievements that Stone has led her athletes??an impressive collection of future Olympians, coaches, and even contestants on Donald Trump’s NBC reality show The Apprentice–to over the years...
Undergraduates are the clear minority in the pack of would-be-swingers, and so are girls. Even the dance team member checking people in is surprised by the number of boys––including a few athletes??–who have to wait along the side of the room for partners...
...pretty surreal experience. That’s when it hit me.” BEIJING-BOUND Every four years, the Paralympics follow on the heels of the Olympics. Elite athletes with disabilities ranging from blindness to paralysis compete in the same venues and live in the same Olympic athletes?? village. The competitors in the Paralympics are the “elitest of disabled athletes. They train just as hard if not harder as Olympic athletes,” said Peggy L. Ewald, Kolbe’s high school and Paralympic coach. The U.S. Paralympic swimming team...
...pretty surreal experience. That’s when it hit me.” BEIJING-BOUND Every four years, the Paralympics follow on the heels of the Olympics. Elite athletes with disabilities ranging from blindness to paralysis compete in the same venues and live in the same Olympic athletes?? village. The competitors in the Paralympics are the “elitest of disabled athletes. They train just as hard if not harder as Olympic athletes,” said Peggy L. Ewald, Kolbe’s high school and Paralympic coach. The U.S. Paralympic swimming team...