Word: calmness
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...over a certain period of time,” Anderson noted, suggesting that O’Donnell was the choice to start because he can use the pre-game warm-up session to get focused. Joe was the clear second half choice, because he “is so calm and methodical in the way that he plays that he can roll out of bed and jump in the goal and be great. That’s just his demeanor.”Another important aspect of lacrosse involves scouting the opponent’s goalie prior to the matchup...
...with 69, 90, and 93 points, respectively,. Dartmouth and Mass. Maritime Academy rounded out the top six. Although not a qualifying regatta, it provided an important tune-up for Harvard as it readies for Nationals. As it was for those at the NEISA event, getting time away from the calm Charles was an important test for Harvard. “Sailing at MIT was good practice for everyone,” senior Jess Baker said. “The results aren’t necessarily the most important thing—we benefited a lot even though we didn?...
Girls love a guy with confidence. When around them it’s essential to do everything you can to maintain a calm and collected façade, even if inside, your heart is pounding out a drumbeat worthy of a Bruce Springsteen song. Talk about the positive aspects of your life, like how your razor now has five blades, but make sure that you don’t spend too much time talking about your own interests. For example, girls hate it when guys start talking about professional sports because they don’t understand how anyone could...
...government-armed militia. “What the survivors are asking for is that the people of Darfur can go back to their homes with safety and dignity,” Osman continued. He stressed that while the government had stopped aerial bombardments, the situation was far from calm, with thousands dying in “concentration camps” each day. Over 3500 villages in Darfur have been victim to aerial raids followed by the complete destruction of their water and food sources, Fashir said, adding that as of August 2005, over three million people had been affected...
President Eisenhower at his weekly press conference called upon a calm-voiced guest to give the news, and Lewis L. Strauss, chairman of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, made his report sound as matter-of-fact as the minutes of a previous meeting. Yet there was no headline big enough to measure the implications of what Strauss...