Word: dealt
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...opposing defenses with his ability to make plays on the run. Coming into the season, many would have said Yale fifth-year senior Alvin Cowan could make a legitimate case that he was right there with Fitzy, but his inability to put Yale over the top this year has dealt a blow to the Bulldogs. He has thrown for more passing yards than Fitzpatrick, but he simply hasn’t been able to run the ball or do the same kinds of things that Fitzpatrick does at the end of games to win. On both sides, the backup situation...
Brown tied Harvard last season for second in the League, and will again have to be dealt with. There will be a distinct offensive void following the graduation of guards Nyema Mitchell and Tanara Goldston, first- and second-team Ivy picks, respectively. Senior 6’5 center Holly Robertson had 11 points and 6.6 boards a game in 22 minutes of action last year, and will have the chance to step up as the No. 1 scoring option. In the backcourt, junior Sarah Hayes is a capable floor general, and was among league leaders in steals, and remarkably, boards...
...picked up the skills she uses to navigate D.C.’s political maze while at Harvard, where she dealt daily with argumentative leaders and often played the peacemaker...
...current ambassador to the U.N. He has support on Capitol Hill (where he served three terms as Senator from Missouri) and has won praise for pushing the Sudanese close to a peace deal after three years of negotiations. Another candidate is CONDOLEEZZA RICE. As National Security Adviser, she has dealt with virtually every foreign leader who matters but draws her influence more from her proximity to the Oval Office than her ability to hammer out disputes between the Administration's long-divided factions...
...that anybody believes the crime franchises are worthless. "Believe me," says ABC prime-time entertainment president Stephen McPherson, "we'd love to have CSI. But you've got to play the cards you're dealt, so to speak, and that's what we did." Not surprisingly, CBS chairman Leslie Moonves agrees that the procedural is not dead. "Good shows work," he says. "Bad shows don't. I don't care what type of shows they are." It's unclear whether many will watch ABC's new hits in reruns or syndication, two reasons procedurals are such moneymakers...