Word: scots
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With just over a minute remaining in the final period, and the Golden Knights, seeded number-one in the East, holding a two-goal lead. Providence coach Lou Lamoriello yanked goalie Scott Fiske for a sixth skater. Just ten seconds later, at 19:04, a Scot Kleinendorst bullet found its way past Clarkson netminder Don Syivestri to narrow the margin...
...transfer of responsibility occurs when a paper stands behind an anonymous source. It thereby vouches for the story more than for stories whose origins are honestly stated. The leaker always has some self-serving motive, good or bad, but gets off scot-free while accomplishing his purpose. Think of how often in the past year "well informed" newspaper stories about policy debates over Iran, Afghanistan or Iraq have implied that National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski and the Pentagon are decisive and tough, while the State Department is waffling and weak-kneed...
...tied the score and brought the 50 or so Crimson rooters who had made the trip to their feet. Then Bucyk from Rick Turnbull for the Huskies at 3:08, Paul Filipe from Chuck Marshall at 4:02, Sandy Beadle from Paul MacDougall and Gerry Cowie at 4:22, Scot McKenney from Fahringer and Glen Giovanucci at 10:42, Fahringer from McKenney and Giovanucci at 13:44 and finally Beadle from Cowie and Filipe at 16:56. Northeastern can't score like this in practice...
...pistols were not firearms, and thus carrying a concealed pistol was not an offense. Such actions have won him a nickname: "Let-'Em-Go Joe." In the Snell case, Durant maintains that "the state was having trouble finding witnesses," and that without plea bargaining Snell might have gone scot free. Not so, insists Dade County Assistant State Attorney Leonard Glick: "I told the judge I had my witnesses." During Snell's sentencing, Glick protested so vehemently that Durant threatened to cite him for contempt of court...
...Bell correctly identified him as a noncommissioned officer who had just been discharged from a Highland regiment in Barbados. Bell, the real-life model for Sherlock Holmes, quickly noted the symptoms of elephantiasis, then prevalent in the West Indies. The man's speech was obviously that of a Scot. He had an air of authority, yet Bell concluded that he was not an officer. The reason: he did not remove his hat-a miscue that Bell knew could only have been committed by a non-com not yet used to civilian ways...