Word: seventh
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Sophomore Allyson Pritchett finished fourth in the long jump with a leap of 5.27 meters, and Vinduskova made 5.2 meters for seventh. The Crimson finished at the front of the pack in the 60-meter hurdles, as junior Mary Serdakowski and senior Eleanor Thompson finished second and fourth with respective times of 9.18 and 9.3 seconds...
Freshman Julia Rozier finished the 800-meter run in 2:18.76, five seconds off the lead. Senior Vicky Henderson finished seventh in the 400-meter dash finals in 1:00.02, and Freshman Rikka Strong took ninth in the mile in 5:32.23. Freshman Chidimma Kalu led the Crimson in the 60-meter dash, finishing third in the preliminaries in 7.86 seconds before picking up fourth in the finals in 7.83 seconds. Freshman Owanaemi Briggs, who finished 12th in the 60-meter dash preliminaries, picked up an eighth-place finish in the 200-meter dash with a time of 26.61 seconds...
...cast seems remarkable mostly for their unbridled enthusiasm, which was surprisingly effective. Reynolds is really self-consciously charming; his shiny new pair of abdominal muscles only brightens his charm. Jessica Biel is just as pissed off as she was when she played Mary on Seventh Heaven, but now she has an iPod on which she listens to “trip-hop” while killing vampires with a bow and arrow. It is just as holy a role only more aggressive. Professional wrestler Triple-H, in the role of a vampire thug, seems dumb, but conveys no actorly mannerisms...
This marks the seventh year that HRL has publicized the refund policy since 1998, when Daniel H. Choi ’94 found the provision about abortion in the UHS handbook and decided to let others know about...
Undergraduate Council presidential hopefuls Matthew J. Glazer ’06 and Tracy “Ty” Moore II ’06 were campaigning outside the Science Center on a misty, cold Tuesday, the seventh of December. Their supporters bore competing signs—yellow for Moore and orange for Glazer—and a cacophony of shouted slogans filled the air. On the walk back from the Science Center, students were greeted by these same signs pasted on kiosks, stapled to House billboards, stuffed into mailboxes and slipped under room doors...