Word: winner
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...women’s co-captain Julia Pederson said. “If you train hard and properly it can really make your season.”VICTOR LOPEZ BAYOU CLASSICNeither the men’s or women’s teams managed an individual winner against a deep field, but there were plenty of strong performances at Rice’s Victor Lopez Bayou Classic.Sophomore Elissa Reidy led the way on the women’s side, placing second in the long jump with a leap of 5.36 meters. Sophomore Shannon Flahive finished fifth in the event with...
Only a targeted divestment policy can achieve successes like this; a company-by-company approach, which only pursues companies after they have done wrong, simply cannot. Fifty student groups, 1,285 Harvard affiliates, and 33 faculty, instructors, and fellows—including Stanley Hoffman, Martha Minow, and Pulitzer Prize-winner Samantha Power—have called for targeted divestment. We hope that the Corporation Committee on Shareholder Responsibility will adopt a targeted divestment policy as a step toward changing corporate behavior in the Sudan...
...Race on Saturday and Sunday, in which a strong Crimson showing earned the co-ed team a second-place finish. Each team sent six sailors to compete in the two-day event, where the best performers from the first day battled it out on Day 2 to determine the winner.“There were eight teams the first day, and eight teams at another venue, so they took the top teams from each [on the second day],” junior Elyse Dolbec said. “It was like a championship bracket.”It was Harvard?...
BEFORE MAGNETIC RESONANCE imaging (MRI) became standard in the 1980s, doctors had two ways of looking inside the human body: the not-always-precise X-ray, which exposed patients to radiation, and surgery. Physicist Paul Lauterbur, a co-winner of the 2003 Nobel Prize, helped pioneer the use of MRI technology-- previously used largely to examine chemical structures of substances--to obtain clear, detailed images of human tissue. Doctors now prescribe more than 60 million MRI exams annually...
...more as Princeton coach from 2000 to '04 - imagine if the most talented players in the country could augment backdoor passes with individual skills. A trip to the Final Four perhaps? Georgetown's offense has clicked, with Thompson expertly mixing finesse with freedom. For example, before Green's game winner against Vandy, Thompson gave the NBA-bound Big East MVP spare instructions: Quickly look for Patrick Ewing Jr. (yes, son of the former Georgetown center) cutting to the basket. If Ewing isn't open? "Just score," Thompson told Green...