Word: otherã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...outright, dropping a 64-58 loss at Yale en route to a three-way share of the Ivy crown with Dartmouth and Cornell. The league could not use a tiebreaker to name its representative to the NCAA tourney—the three teams each split two games with each other??so Plan B, a two-game, three-team playoff begins tomorrow night in New York. The Crimson will face the Big Green tomorrow night at 7 p.m. at Columbia’s Levien Gym, with the winner taking on Cornell—who received a randomly-picked bye?...
...reach and hammering home a fair share of aces.Though the Crimson’s loss had been sealed, Kumar’s match at No. 1 continued in fine—often dramatic—form. Kumar and his opponent, Matko Maravic, looked to be at each other??s throats—even from across the court—after a series of disputed calls early in the first set. A heatedly contested call cost Kumar the first set tiebreaker, but energized him to turn the heat up on Maravic, which he did with his soft touch...
...president of the Buddhist group, said she enjoyed the second, more student-led discussion on Sunday because “the environment was very open and accepting.” “I really felt that all of us were trying to understand the other??s religion,” Tillakaratne said. “We got a chance to not only talk about something very complicated and profound, but also talk about our own personal lives, especially as college students.” Tillakaratne, a History concentrator who is currently training to become a Buddhist minister...
...It’s common to hear stories of young Harvard couples such as Gawlik and Lanre-Amos eating breakfast, lunch, and dinner in the same dining hall. These couples take the same classes. They move into each other??s dorm rooms. It even may seem, to the casual observer, as though committed relationships are flourishing at our stereotyped emotional-freeze of a college. But what’s left for everyone else? Answer: A Harvard love scene that seems practically non-existent...
...with a projected future score of 170 once they’re back in each other??s arms/in the same state. Even beyond the most obvious indicator that these two are in it for the long haul—their names start with the same letter!—it looks like the soon-to-be Mr. and Mrs. Vittori-Hetrick finally have an answer to the how-do-you-knows of those around them: they both have positive blood types and they already know that the documentary of their lives will be filmed...