Word: lanes
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...final game of the tournament, dropping a 6-2 contest to Wisconsin...Fusco leads the team in NCAA tournament scoring, with three goals and five assists. Chalmers is second, with three goals and one assist...Harvard Coach Bill Cleary is 2-9-1 in NCAA tournament play...Forward Lane MacDonald has the longest current team scoring streak. He has scored a goal or recorded an assist in five straight games...Fusco and right wing Tim Barakett are tied for the Crimson's longest scoring streak of the year--nine games...Second-line center Allen Bourbeau scored a goal against Yale...
Harvard forward Lane MacDonald first put the Crimson on the scoreboard with 16 minutes left in the first period after taking a pass from right wing Tim Smith 20 feet from the Yale net and flipping a shot past Schwalb...
...drug abuse is not just a by-product of life in the fast lane. Drugs are also used by multitudes of blue-collar workers to relieve the deadening boredom of menial jobs. Says Miriam Ingebritson, clinical director for a St. Louis-based consulting firm that provides drug-therapy services for IBM, the Cincinnati Reds and the City of St. Louis: "Frequently we find that it is not the exhilarating high that people are looking for, but rather to escape from tedium...
...Ysidro border crossing, an inspection station that handles 27,000 vehicles a day. On one recent afternoon, a raggedly dressed vendor carrying a load of serapes could be seen watching the inspectors and tipping off the Mexican driver of a pickup truck to work his way over to lane 7, where a weary Customs officer was waving most cars through without a check. At the same time, another supposed vendor worked the other side, scrutinizing the vehicles for the Customs agents and whispering into a miniature radio when he spotted a nervous-looking driver...
...Journal of the American Medical Association last week, two more reports further underscored the health benefits of exercise, specifically for runners. "It's an old story that running wears out joints," says Dr. Nancy Lane, who directed a Stanford study comparing the joints of 41 long-distance runners with those of 41 nonrunners and occasional runners. The researchers found no difference between the two groups in the prevalence of osteoarthritis, or degenerative joint disease. However, the runners, ages 50 to 72, did have 40% higher bone density than their counterparts in the control group. "Running prevents bone loss," concludes Lane...