Word: passes
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...then finish.” With the Crimson down 24-20 midway through the first half, Harvard put the clamps on defensively and outscored the visitors 15-3 over the last parts of the half. Captain forward Brad Unger began the run with a three-pointer off a pass from sophomore guard Jeremy Lin to pull the team within one. Four minutes later, following a free throw by Colgate, junior guard Drew Housman hit a three-pointer, giving his team a lead it wouldn’t give up. On the next possession, Housman and junior guard Andrew Pusar both...
...than five minutes into play and Cahow added her first career hat trick to help reach the seven-goal total. “It’s a first for me in my college career so it’s exciting but mostly I was just amazed by the passes that we’re coming my way tonight,” Cahow said of the hat trick. Freshmen forward Kate Buesser capitalized on a rebound off a shot by classmate Katherine Chute to get the Crimson on the scoreboard at the 4:30 mark in the first period. With...
...contact in a major U.S. oil company told me that Iraq's Shi'a-led oil ministry has been soliciting the company's interest in a couple of Iraqi fields. When the company finally took the bait, the Iraqis coyly suggested that the company might want to first pass through Tehran to get an Iranian green light. It was the only way for the U.S. major to secure an Iraqi property. The company of course declined the invitation, but got the not-so-subtle message that Iran is a major player in Iraq...
...face it, given the opportunity, Iran would take the Gulf and its oil, the only reason we care about that miserable body of water. Sixty per cent of the world's reserves sit underneath its shores, and 17 million barrels of crude oil exports pass daily through the Strait of Hormuz. Should the Iranians ever find themselves in a position to close it, Americans would pay for a gallon of gas - what, $10? It's no wonder that Iran's Revolutionary Guards decided on Hormuz to draw a line in the sand...
...journalists still had parties and friends would pass out in the bushes and lived to tell of it. I enjoyed taking taxis at night. Today taking a public taxi during the day as a western journalist is tantamount to a death wish. Back then there was an overabundance of satellite dishes - these big metal pans - for sale at nearly every shop. Today commerce has slowed to a crawl. The traffic now is a bit more orderly, but the number of horse-drawn carts has increased. Fancy cars are all but absent. And everyone is on edge - get too close...