Word: hatful
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...easier to score three goals when you get three great set-ups by your linemates," Dominc Moore said. "It was my first college hat trick so it was definitely a special moment...
Moore was sure to collect the third puck that eluded Marsters to remember the moment. It was Harvard's first hat trick since Jan. 3, 1999 when defenseman Matt Scorsune '00 notched three in a wild 7-6 win at UVM. And it was the Crimson's first triple against RPI since Jan. 9, 1998, a 6-4 loss at Houston Field House. The captain that year, Jeremiah McCarthy '98, had an extremely rare offensive outburst in a losing effort...
...details of Medicare and Social Security that Gerald Ford's White House chief of staff, a young guy named Dick Cheney, promoted him to deputy director of the Office of Management and Budget. By 1975, Cabinet officers like Donald Rumsfeld, the once-and-future Pentagon chief, were trudging hat in hand into O'Neill's office...
Best of all, the man knew his audience. He didn't rail against our lack of an attention span; he played to it. The minute that big, easily bored, sugar-fueled baby that is the American public started to drift off, he'd grab a straw hat and a banjo and somehow get us back. And so we never turned him off. We sat and watched, grinning and glassy-eyed, waiting expectantly to see what the funny man with the fat red nose would do next...
Clinton was such a cartoon that anyone who entered his orbit immediately became an absurd, two-dimensional character. Ken Starr, once a boring lawyer, magically sprouted a buckle hat and musket. And, like all cartoon villains, Starr became single-mindedly obsessed with catching his wisecracking prey. He did everything short of arranging sticks of dynamite into the shape of a woman, dropping a wig on it and hiding behind a nearby rock. Clinton made Starr funny and watchable. And without Clinton on the scene, Starr, Newt Gingrich, Rush Limbaugh and all the rest revert back to bland, Anglo-Saxon reality...