Word: doves
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...Republican, Mike DeWine, had put up a spot that called into question Democrat Sherrod Brown's record on national security, using a smudged, smoking, slightly distorted image of the World Trade Center terrorist attack. The thrust of the ad was accurate: Brown is a mortal dove who repeatedly voted against increases in the intelligence budget. And the attack had been expected. "Our candidates were really worried about how to counter the Republicans on national security," says J.B. Poersch, executive Director of the DSCC. "It's what worked against...
...Harvard, Brown’s Kevin Davies beat the Crimson defense and caught junior goalie Adam Hahn out of position. He took a second to collect the ball before trying to bury it in the empty net in front of him, but during that short time, Nyamekye recovered and dove in front of him for the goal-saving block.“He’s a spectacular player,” Kerr said. “It showed his range, his speed, and his desire to make a play.”Harvard will continue its five-game road...
...half, Brown shook her defender and took the shot from about fifteen feet, forcing Big Red sophomore goalkeeper Shannon Prescott to dive for the save. Harvard had one more opportunity to take the lead as the half came to a close, when the Crimson earned a penalty corner. Prescott dove again to save Polet’s shot. Polet and Brown crashed for the rebound, but Prescott managed to corral the ball. Play opened up in the second half as both teams managed to find more offense. Cornell came dangerously close to scoring several times, but each time, Knoche rose...
...Weber who persuaded the photographer Alfred Stieglitz to mount a Picasso show in 1911 at Stieglitz's pioneering 291 Gallery in New York City. That exhibition, Picasso's first in the U.S., included at least some of his newest Cubist images. For budding American modernists like Arthur Dove and Marsden Hartley, it was a first glimpse of work that would transform their own. Later the inexhaustible Stuart Davis came across Picasso's work and likewise reunderstood himself. In the 1920s Davis saw the broad, sharp-edged, irregularly shaped planes of color in some of Picasso's later Cubist work...
...Rarely do journalists fail to play up Abe's blue-blood heritage and the fears he stirs up among liberals. TIME's story was no exception. Will Abe act like a hawk or a dove toward Japan's neighbors? The media like to stereotype politicians, especially those with mystique. But let's remember U.S. President Richard Nixon. He began his career as a crusading anticommunist but turned out to be the statesman who reached out to the Soviet Union and Red China. My concern is not whether Abe will patch things up with Japan's neighbors but how he will...