Word: slow
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...more impressive because of how forcefully William and Mary came out of the gates. “They just came out with a ton of energy, they were very loud, very intense,” Nguyen said. “We came out a little tired, a little slow,” he added.The Tribe won the doubles by sweeping all three matches, with the only challenge being Kumar and Ermakov’s 9-8 loss at No. 1.William and Mary seemed to have the momentum to steamroll Harvard, winning four of the first six singles sets...
...challenge Bears’ David Robertson, he had more than ample time to fire a wrist shot into the top right corner of the net over the shoulder of sophomore goalie Kyle Richter, who ended the night with 16 saves.“I thought we started off pretty slow tonight, and then we started to take it to them after a while,” co-captain Mike Taylor said. “But some untimely penalties, just missed defensive coverage, kind of hurt us tonight.”Senior forward Alex Meintel’s second period goal...
...forward Liz Tindal adding one for good measure. “Teams can’t play [Tay] and [Hallion] and our inside people, so we have to punish them,” coach Kathy Delaney-Smith said. “For the first time, maybe all year, we slowed down on offense and executed and read the defense.” When playing Princeton in the past few seasons, the first defensive priority has always been the same: slow down Cowher, who is the league’s leading scorer in 2008. The Crimson’s strategy, like...
...pace of treacle on a winter day - a pace that allows for eyes to adjust to the rising step and for a firm grip on both red rubber handrails. Here in "Grannies' Harajuku" (based on the name of a district famous for its nubile trendsetters and fashion pranksters), slow is the operative word. Heads in the crowd are gray and silver, not black, pink or red. Glasses are for seeing, not for being seen. The shoes are comfortable and the underwear is long. Busloads of grannies and gramps swarm the main street, called Jizo-dori, even on the windiest winter...
...Tomorrow's Democrats Today Will it happen? There are plenty of reasons to doubt. Obama's Iowa effort was long on money and loaded with time. Conditions were perfect for the slow, hard work of grassroots organizing. Now it's the opposite. On Feb. 5, half the remaining states will vote, including those with megapopulations such as California, Arizona, Georgia and New York State. What's more, the rules are less favorable to student organizers. Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada all had some of the most liberal voting laws in the country. Same-day registration meant that first-time voters...