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...yards was a surprise, especially with top seed Lisa Hamming of Princeton breathing down her neck.About 30 seconds later, the team was in tears. Tears of joy, naturally, as Pangilinan touched the wall first with a time of 2:14.69. “Those are big shoes to fill for next year,” Morawski finished. It was a gutsy win on a day with quicker times than normal, a phenomenon that will likely keep Pangilinan out of the NCAA Championships. “The time she had to win the Ivies this year was faster than the time...
...competition. But, even across the country, he still kept his role as a TF in mind—he sent his students a picture of Marco Polo with a yellow cut-out of a ‘Q’ taken in his hotel bathroom to encourage them to fill out their course evaluations, run by the Committee of Undergraduate Education known as the CUE. After more than a week of mounting hopes as he watched the number of his competitors dwindle, Grosslight was named an alternate. Grosslight said that he is glad that he went through the process...
...play.” The wins came despite the fact that senior Jordan Weitzen was out of commission due to a concussion. Weitzen was struck in the head by a ball in practice coming from an awkward angle. Freshman Dan Medina and junior Jeff Nathan both stepped up to fill in for the missing Weitzen. “The silver lining in one of your starters going down is that you get to see that your bench players can come in and do a great job filling in for him,” senior Brian Rapp said. Nathan nailed seven...
Though not as romantic as a candlelit dinner for two, the Magnetic Fields’ concert at the Somerville Theater last Thursday was clearly a Valentine’s Day celebration of sorts, consisting of two impressive sets played to an audience filled with couples. Stephin Merritt, the band’s singer and songwriter, used the occasion to add another layer of irony to his lyrics. Though he was mostly quiet between songs in the first set, Merritt seemed to become more comfortable with stage banter in the second half of the show. “Valentine?...
...grown! I remember when you were this big. You didn’t take up any room at all; I used to be able to e-mail you to myself with no problems, but now with all your stuff—notes, appendices, illustrations!—you fill up an entire jump drive. Don’t make that face you always make! I’m not complaining—I’m just saying. I miss the days when I could fold you up and put you in my pocket...