Word: reed
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...that was as close as Harvard would get. The Black Bears opened up a convincing lead early in the second half, thanks to some deadly three-point shooting from Maine guard Kevin Reed. Reed, who scored all of his 14 points after the break, set the Black Bears’ record for career three-point field goals by hitting back-to-back treys with just less than 10 minutes to play. Overall, Reed was 4-of-7 from behind the arc, including the shot with 15:52 left that put the Bears ahead by double-digits for good. Maine...
...Ernest Turner, a transfer from UNLV, who led all scorers with a career-high 22 points on 6-of-16 shooting, while point guard Chris Markwood added 11 points and six assists. The Crimson was done in by the quickness and strength of the starting Maine backcourt, as Turner, Reed and Markwood poured in 47 points and harassed Harvard into 18 turnovers, a continuing problem for the Crimson...
...thought this was the first game this year in which we had a real inability to guard people,” Sullivan said. “You look at Turner, Reed and Markwood, and those are three tough covers. I was afraid that their three perimeter guys might have been looking for a chance to break out, and that’s exactly what happened today...
...Hiring: Dem Strategists In "What Happens to the Losing Team?" [Nov. 15], Democratic Leadership Council president Bruce Reed said, "We can't let George Bush define our future." It wasn't Bush who was defining the Democratic Party. I voted as much against Michael Moore, French President Jacques Chirac, the U.N., the élitist media, stuck-up Hollywood and MoveOn.org as for Bush. The single issue for me was the war on terrorism (which in my opinion does include Iraq). Maybe the Democratic Party should start to choose its friends a little better. Robert P. Rosetta Plainsboro, New Jersey...
Following deployment to Iraq, 17% of Army respondents and 19% of Marines reported a "perceived moderate or severe problem," according to a psychiatric study released last July by the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research. The study termed those estimates "conservative," and most cases, says Nash, will not be apparent until the troops are back home. The Marine who served in al-Anbar for seven months says that when he drives past potholes in his hometown, he wonders if they will explode. If the refrigerator door closes, he says, "I ask myself if that was incoming fire. A bomb...