Word: margarets
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...game,” Simmons said. Offensively, Harvard shared the ball. Seven different players added a tally to the scoreboard. Simmons, sophomores Tara Schoen and Natalie Curtis, and junior Perry Barlow all scored two goals in the victory. Senior Casey Orr, freshman Kaitlin Martin, and junior Margaret Yellott each added a single goal to the team total. The game began much differently from what the final result indicated. The Bulldogs secured an early 3-1 lead, but not for long. The Crimson unleashed a 5-0 run, bringing the score to 6-3. The offensive spurt lasted 15 minutes until...
...meetings are in resorts that they have chosen-not what I have chosen. My trips are all for legitimate reason and I was very much involved in advancing the conservative agenda overseas-whether it's working against Christian persecution in China or advancing the conservative cause in England with Margaret Thatcher or pushing freedom and democracy in Moscow or getting persecuted Jews out of the Soviet Union, or fighting Communists and socialists in Central America. When you go to those places, you are with the people that you're meeting with. You're staying in the hotels that you meet...
...team field had Harvard in 11th place once the action was over, but that position was helped by the A division tandem of freshman skipper Megan Watson and senior crew Mallory Greimann. The pair’s sixth-place finish came before junior skipper Robbie McIntosh and freshman Margaret Wang took 12th in the B division...
...Margaret Atwood was ready to take us on a journey to the future. But technology let her down--for the moment. Atwood, Canadian author of the Booker prizewinning The Blind Assassin, came up with the idea for a telerobotic writing device that permits an author to remotely inscribe books. The first public test of the LongPen, which can transmit a pen stroke written on an electronic tablet to a robotic pen-wielding arm, took place last week. Atwood, at a book fair in London, prepared to sign books across the Atlantic: in New York City and Guelph...
...feel so lousy? That's what Margaret Hillesheim, a grandmother of three, wondered when she woke up in her suburban Minneapolis, Minn., home a few weeks ago. She had an ugly cough and a stifling case of sniffles. What Hillesheim, 56, didn't have was an inclination to spend half the morning in a doctor's waiting room. Instead, she went to Cub Foods, her local supermarket. Specifically, she dropped by a tiny clinic nestled beside the store's pharmacy, just across from the cigarette counter. There, behind a frosted-glass partition, a nurse practitioner examined Hillesheim, typing her vital...