Word: meters
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Sanchez isn’t alone in her frustration with the Board’s committee, according to Robert Van Meter, executive director of the Allston-Brighton Community Development Corporation...
...butterfly events. It was then Columbia’s turn to put together a string of first-place finishes. Tobin White sparked the streak for the Lions with a win in the 50 free and Justin Reardon followed suit with a 299.10-point performance in the 1-meter dive, easily taking the event. White then rounded out the performance with a second victory in the 100 free. Degnan-Rojeski regained momentum for Harvard with a 1:52.96 winning effort in the 200 backstroke. From there, the Crimson hardly looked back. Rathgeber used a strong final 50 yards to capture...
...Connor rounded out the performance a few events later by winning the 100 fly in 58.42. On the dive side of the meet, Papadakis turned in a dominant performance against a talented Columbia squad. Papadakis executed a nice set of six dives to take the 1-meter competition with 273.45 points, 44 points more than Columbia’s second-place finisher. In the 3-meter dive, 25 points set Papadakis apart from the rest of the field, as she amassed a total of 272.40. Freshman Caitlin High took fourth in the 1-meter dive and fifth...
...ancient at once, her willingness to look backwards setting her apart from her Icelandic contemporary. The poetry of all five songs is astonishing. The text is more complex—at least formally—than even Bob Dylan. Where he weaved stories on an intricate but predictable meter, Newsom spins an ever-evolving sequence of rhyme schemes. In “Emily,” she paints an organic tale of a dying kingdom, and the swoop and pull of the orchestration (arranged by Van Dyke Parks) makes it sound like an apocalyptic dirge from another planet...
...free-spirited flirt who begins the movie in Berlin entertaining the meter-reader and ends in London in the arms of Jack the Ripper, Lulu brings out the worst in all her men - foremost among them a scrofulous pimp who may be her father and a newspaper publisher (Fritz Kortner) and his son (Franz Lederer). She marries the publisher, who becomes enraged on their wedding night and insists she kill herself. The gun goes off, and he's dead. At her trial she's a symphony in black in her widow's weeds, but she's able to flash...