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Word: lavine (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Yale came flying out of the gates, displaying a furious pace of play in a match that had considerable Ivy League implications. Just 2:08 into the game, Eli defender Brian Lavin converted a feed from Steve Gibbons into a laser shot that beat Crimson goalkeeper Dan Mejias...

Author: By Jared R. Small, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Kelly Scores Game-Winner for M. Soccer | 10/16/2000 | See Source »

Rather than folding, however, Harvard responded by matching Yale's intensity tackle for tackle. Just minutes after Lavin's goal, Crimson sophomore sweeper Mike Lobach slid in hard to Eli forward Justin Burton, knocking him head over heals and subsequently setting the tone for a brutally physical match...

Author: By Jared R. Small, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Kelly Scores Game-Winner for M. Soccer | 10/16/2000 | See Source »

With the score knotted at 1-1, each team seemed determined to gain the upper hand. Each time Lobach displayed his grit by elevating to gain control of Moss' booming punts, Lavin countered with an equally gutsy willingness to engage in physical contact...

Author: By Jared R. Small, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Kelly Scores Game-Winner for M. Soccer | 10/16/2000 | See Source »

...word "carnage," because it was a hard-hitting and violent game. The three yellow cards and 24 total fouls don't quite convey just how physical the game was. As an example of the brutality, at one point Yale defensive back Brian Lavin grabbed Crimson captain Ryan Kelly in mid-air and body-slammed him into the ground. It was an overt display of aggression that would have made The Rock proud...

Author: By Daniel E. Fernandez, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Tenacious D: On Eli Inferiority and Other Self-Evident Truths | 10/16/2000 | See Source »

Perhaps painfully inconvenient might be a better way of putting it. Experts point out that without intellectual property laws, musicians won't get paid for their work. And stealing someone's intellectual property is no different from stealing his bicycle, right? "People just view intellectual property differently," says Dan Lavin, research director for IV Associates, an entertainment-industry consulting firm. "Morality is what the community consensus decides is morality. And they're a tribe of cannibals out there." A typical consumer is American University freshman Jaymin Patel. "I've had MP3s for about two years now," he says. "I first...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: You've Got Music! | 2/22/1999 | See Source »

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