Word: regained
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...With a shot from Dani Iervolino, Northeastern then pulled ahead, 10-8, and maintained the lead for the next five minutes, until a jumper from Berry put the Crimson back in the lead, 19-18. But the Huskies quickly capitalized on a shot from Kim Carr and regained control of the score, 20-19, until a three-pointer from Alemany put the Crimson back in front, 24-22. The Crimson made a season-high 11 three-pointers during the course of the game. “I think that was [Northeastern’s] gameplan, to see if we could...
...Unlike Friday night’s blowout, the Crimson wasn’t going to let the Sioux get away with an easy victory. Harvard scored twice in a row—once in the second period and once in the final period—to regain the lead.Sophomore forward Michael Del Mauro notched a goal at 9:54 in the second after tipping in a pass from freshman forward Daniel Moriarty. Despite playing a cleaner period, UND again committed a penalty in the last seconds of the second frame, allowing the Crimson to start off the third period with...
...rules. In 1976, Cambridge became the first city in the world to pass biosafety regulations, setting the standard for other labs around the world, Lipson said. Lipson acknowledged concerns regarding the biological hazards of the lab, stating that there is a tiny possibility for the genetically altered pathogens to regain the ability to replicate and become infectious again. But he called it “so statistically implausible that the likelihood becomes nearly incalculable.” Lipson said he felt confident that the city’s biotech labs posed no risk to Cambridge residents...
Lost America Regarding America's lost leadership role: America could probably regain a measure of moral authority if only it showed an inclination toward accountability [Nov. 3]. Taking a country to war, motivated by imperialism and profit, with a casus belli of fabricated evidence and lies is a monstrous crime. It is naive to think that Bush would ever stand trial, but Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and others could. This would show the world that America does not, in fact, always act with impunity. However, in reality, we have yet to hear any kind of admission or apology from the Administration...
...looking quite sprightly. But beyond the headline number is a growing unease among economists and job-market watchers that, for the approximately 2.3 million people who may be asked to leave their cubicles and workspaces in the next year, it might be harder this time around for them to regain their piece of corporate America than in past recessions...