Word: fifthly
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...teams traveled to Prospect Mountain, Vt., to participate in the Williams College Winter Carnival. Amidst grueling conditions and a tough field, the Crimson finished 10th amongst the participating universities with a total score of 345 points. The Dartmouth Big Green came out on top, winning its fifth straight carnival with a final tally of 898.0. The University of Vermont and Middlebury finished second and third with 843.0 and 806.5 points, respectively. In the alpine events, winds of upto 50 MPH and poor visibility provided tough conditions for the teams. Combined with soft snow, navigating the slopes proved...
...with each clearing a height of 3.65 meters. Junior Molly Boyle was third in the weight throw with a 15.63-meter throw. Freshman Kathryn Orchowski was fourth in the 400-meter dash with a time of 58.94 seconds, with sophomore Aishlinn O’Callaghan just behind her in fifth at 59.09 seconds. Sophomore Jan Ng was fifth in the 800 meters, finishing in 2:15.30. The men were paced by a trio of second-place finishers. Junior Brian Holmquist was second in the 3000 meters with a time of 8:36.77, classmate Alex Lewis tied for second...
...underclasmen. Freshman Katie Faulkner opened the meet for Harvard with a second-place finish in the 500-yard freestyle, while Mooney added a pair of top-six finishes. Cutter chipped in by claiming third in the 100-yard free while Faulkner took sixth. Freshman diver Caitlin High placed fifth in the one-meter dive and fourth in the three-meter competition...
...dual meets during the year, we need to win as a team but the focus is less on depth than on talent,” said Papadakis, who is also a Crimson editor. “If you win an event, you get nine points and the second through fifth places don’t match the first in points. But at Ivies, it’s all about depth—it goes all the way down to the 24th girl.”The records started to stream in for the Crimson in the meet?...
...goalie Justin Tobe opened the third period in Richter’s stead. “It was a team-wide disappointing game,” Donato later said of the switch, “but [Richter] was certainly part of it.” Yale’s fifth and final goal was an empty-netter, the result of an attempted 6-on-4 power play by the Crimson with five minutes remaining. Cahill, who scored the Bulldogs’ first goal of the night, found the open goalmouth for his third point of the night. And though Harvard...