Word: cleanness
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Clarkson played strong defense the rest of the way, and netminder Dustin Traylen stopped 10 shots in the third to make the score hold up. Game 3 was a clean affair, at least in comparison to its two predecessors, but it was a game Clarkson dominated from...
...Saturday’s 1-0 win, a game where the clean-skating Saints were whistled for 23 minutes in penalties, Justin Spencer potted the game’s only goal two minutes into the second period. And last night, the Raiders’ Mike Campaner came through with a big goal to break a 1-1 tie midway through the second. With Silverthorn strong in net, that tally proved to be the game—and series—winner
...years, Harvard students looking for some casual exercise have gazed longingly across the river. Surpressing visions of clean, spacious and uncrowded weightrooms and row upon row of beautiful, unused treadmills—located in exercise facilities meant specifically for athletes—these students climb the stairs of the Malkin Athletic Center (MAC) with a tinge of frustration. Waiting in line for treadmills isn’t too soothing either. And with each new, monolithic athletic building that appeared in Allston, the vast disparity between Harvard’s exercise facilities for athletes and those meant for everyone else...
Walt Disney Pictures has apparently created an entire department solely devoted to the production of assembly-line stories wherein sports serve as analogies for actual conflicts that demand clean resolution. Having tackled football and baseball with a fair degree of success in Remember the Titans and The Rookie, Disney moves down its list to hockey, in particular the U.S. Olympic hockey team’s triumphant victory over the world champion Soviet team in the 1980 Games. But Miracle makes a valiant attempt to transcend the trappings of its saccharine genre, and largely succeeds with the prescient casting of Kurt...
...when it was flush with money—the program’s funding problems may seem unbelievable. It all stems from Congress’s decision in 1995 to turn its back on the principle that polluters should pay to clean up the messes they make. Until 1995, Superfund got most of its money from polluters. In most cases, the company that contaminated a site would pay to clean it up. In cases where no existing company was responsible for a contaminated site—so-called orphan sites—Superfund relied on a trust fund which companies...