Word: sneakingly
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...finishes from juniors Stacy and Kelly Blondin in the first event, the 1650-yard freestyle.The second event, the 200-yard backstroke, was an extremely close race. Hart led for most of the race until around the 150-yard mark. Yale junior Moira McClosky came back and was able to sneak by Hart for the win, with Hart finishing second.The last event of the meet, the 400-yard freestyle relay, was close as well. Harvard trailed for most of the race with junior Emily Wilson, sophomore Meaghan Colling, and junior Noelle Bassi swimming the first three legs. Senior Erin Mulkey swam...
...women half-pipe snowboarders almost missed their final runs--the most important moment of their athletic lives--because they had crept away to an off-limits slope to sneak in some extra rides. Hannah Teter, 19, and Gretchen Bleiler, 24, returned in time to take home gold and silver, respectively. In the finals of the snowboard cross, a new, Roller-Derby-on-snow Olympic event in which four boarders twist and fly down a mountain to the finish, favorite Seth Wescott, 29, should have panicked, trailing Slovakia's Radoslav Zidek late in the race. (It's the Olympics...
...offense to Nicholas Longworth Anderson, the namesake for the Anderson Memorial Bridge (the most frequently crossed overpass to the Allston athletic facilities), but he’s the reason we’ll do whatever is necessary to sneak our way into Debauchery, but we won’t walk to Lavieties on Friday for one of the most memorable Princeton games in years. You didn’t need a tattoo to watch Harvard lose on a last-second bucket, thank you very much...
After 88 consecutive weeks in the national rankings, the precariously-placed No. 10 Crimson is now in danger of slipping out of the polls with last night’s defeat. Boston College, on the other hand, could sneak into that tenth spot if it captures a weekend series against Providence...
...rivals. Yet as old manufacturing industrial areas are hollowed out - think of northern Italy - there is still no sign of urgency among the European élite about how they might respond to the new world. There was more, of course - at Davos, there always is. Those wanting a sneak preview of a possible 2006 match-up in the U.S. presidential race could catch both Senator John McCain and former Virginia Governor Mark Warner. Those anxious to understand modern design could chat to Rem Koolhaas, while opera buffs sought out Peter Sellars. You have to pick and choose in Davos...