Word: ben
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Looked at from a distance, it was clear the bullet-headed dealmaker Paulson was going to squeeze what he wanted out of Congress. Over the last six months, with the help of Tim Geithner at the New York Federal Reserve Bank and Ben Bernanke at the Federal Reserve, he has driven Bear Stearns into the arms of J. P. Morgan at a fire sale price; he has forced the board of Fannie Mae to enable a government takeover even though it meant devastation for shareholders; he has stared down Richard Fuld at Lehman Brothers, who thought he could bluff Paulson...
...with junior Ben Jenkins lining up behind senior quarterback Chris Pizzotti, Harvard tried to run it up the middle, only to be stopped short. A failed onsides kick returned the ball to Brown’s hands, and a few kneel-downs expired the clock...
...things up and try to establish a solid run game, but the position remained the lone unfinished product in an otherwise rock solid offensive attack.But one week into 2008, there’s a new face on the scene threatening to give the Crimson offense a boost. Enter junior Ben Jenkins.Last weekend against Holy Cross, the Raleigh, N.C. native made his first-ever collegiate start at running back and seemed to settle into the position quickly, rushing nine times for 34 yards. Fans saw flashes of brilliance, as the junior juked and cut back with ease, keeping the defense honest...
...Brown a TOUCHDOWN and make it 13-7. On the ensuing kick return, Berry fumbled and Brown recovered, but on the Bears' first play Daugherty was drilled as he released the ball and his fluttering pass was picked off by Derrick Barker. Then, to complete the comedy of errors, Ben Jenkins took the handoff and powered for 10 yards, only to fumble and have Brown recover (although the Harvard side is protesting that the ground forced the fumble...
...late to speed along the once-stalled negotiations. Then McCain, his Democratic rival Barack Obama and congressional leaders from both parties went to the White House for what some billed as a photo-op, a public showing of bipartisan support for a piece of legislation that Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and the President himself have called absolutely vital to preventing economic collapse. Reporters waited and waited on the rainy White House driveway expecting to hear from the two candidates, only to be informed by Senator Richard Shelby, the top Republican on the Senate Banking Committee...