Word: slamming
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...shot flew past the Bobcat goalie, who would again see Buesser’s talent in the last two minutes of the game. After an attempted wraparound shot from behind the Quinnipiac net, junior forward Randi Griffin left the puck open on the goal line. Buesser swooped in to slam the puck into the Bobcats’ net, scoring the game-winning goal for Harvard. This isn’t the first time Buesser has turned the game around in the clutch. As a freshman, Buesser helped the squad secure the ECAC regular-season title, scoring the game-winning goal...
...stop supporting HEI. “All they care about is money.” HEI is almost completely funded by investments from university endowments, including Harvard, Yale, and Princeton, according to John F. Bowman ’11, one of the leaders of the campaign against HEI within SLAM. SLAM is planning to send a delegation to the Harvard Management Company to try to influence Harvard to reconsider its investment in HEI. “As Harvard students it’s our responsibility to find out what’s going on and let the Harvard Management Company...
...different than the American version? I noticed one comic where Batman was fighting a man who could change into a praying mantis, a drill bit, a pterodactyl...They took it back to the '40s, where there wasn't any deep psychological exploration, just a slam-bang fun thing. There's this one villain called Lord Death Man, and his ability is basically to die. But much more importantly, he comes back to life and starts to haunt Batman's dreams. All kinds of wonderful weird things happen that don't get explained...
...inspired his Mad Max movies: the post-apocalyptic landscape, the valuing of speed over life, the fender-level shots of cars careering toward Armageddon. It also spawned a rip-off video game, called Death Race, supposedly the first of its kind to be banned. Death Race 2000 didn,t slam into any legal walls, but it has a lunatic daring that was a hallmark of 70s movies, and that is all but absent from the films...
...plan seems to be working. In the 2004 Athens Games, a Chinese women's pair brought home a surprise gold. Two years later, at the Australian Open, Yan and Zheng claimed the country's first Grand Slam title. Then came Wimbledon, when the diminutive Zheng made it to the semi-finals as a wildcard before succumbing to the younger Williams sister. Zheng, a native of Sichuan province, which was rocked by the May earthquake, donated her Wimbledon prize money to the reconstruction effort...