Word: foul
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...emergency was an "important step forward" but that Pakistan was still a long way from true democracy. Officials in Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party warned that the upcoming elections are unlikely to be free and fair and said that government machinery is already "being exploited for foul play...
...Kathy Delaney-Smith said. In its game on Wednesday against Providence, the Crimson made only 63.6 percent of its free throws, including a 2-for-8 effort in the first half, but that problem was certainly rectified in yesterday’s game. Harvard made 78.9 percent of its foul shots, going 8-for-9 in the first half and 7-for-10 in the second half. Hallion, the game’s high scorer with 13 points, shot 5-for-7 from the stripe. The Crimson hit its most clutch free throws—one from Hallion...
...Those are demons we’re struggling against right now. That’s where we need to improve.”FORWARD THINKINGStarting forward Katie Rollins went into the locker room at halftime with a frustrating statistics line: zero points, two rebounds, and, most importantly, two fouls. She picked up her third foul within the first 30 seconds of the second frame and, subsequently, took a seat on Harvard’s bench that she wouldn’t leave for over 12 minutes of game time.Against Providence’s athletic front line, the Crimson missed Rollins?...
...with 21 points, going 8-for-8 from the charity stripe and sinking half of the three-pointers he dared. Junior guard Andrew Pusar found the bottom of the net with regularity, missing only one field goal and going 2-of-2 both from beyond the arc and the foul line, racking up a total of 18 points for the visiting team. Sophomore forward Pat Magnarelli notched 11 points in the losing effort.“[Housman and Pusar] were certainly the main reason we had an opportunity to keep it within striking distance,” Amaker said...
...Just days after graduating from Brandeis University last May, Raena Davis became one of those hardy souls, packing a few belongings and driving from her childhood home in Miami to the temporary epicenter of presidential politics, Des Moines, Iowa. "I live in a pretty foul apartment," Davis, 22, says with a cheerful laugh. "I have no furniture except a mattress on the floor and an Ikea nightstand. I live out of my suitcases. I also have a coffee maker and cereal." She endures her Spartan digs, the hot weather, cold weather, countless stump speeches and 15-hour workdays...