Word: think
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...Princeton game. I didn't have a particularly good day throwing the ball. The score was 6-6, and it was 3rd -and-11 or something. And I scrambled and broke a few tackles to pick up the first down and keep the drive going. I think that was pretty big. We had two receivers to the left, one to the right. I was looking to throw a 12-yard out route to T.P. [senior receiver Terence Patterson]. [Princeton] dropped the linebacker underneath him, and I just started rolling his way, hoping he'd find a way to get open...
...been more confident. I came in and was not really sure if I was good enough to be here. Being so far away from home, it just took me a lot longer than I feel it should have to get acclimated to football and being out here. I think [Rich and I] were both pretty much equal when we came in. I was ahead of him on the depth chart when we got here. I was bigger and had a stronger arm. He was so confident and believed in himself so much that he played so much better than...
great program and playing with such great players," she says. "Obviously, college soccer is a huge step up from the high school level, but I think I adjusted well...
...take long to feel at ease," Urbanic says. "I never expected to come to this team and have so much success. If someone had told me five months ago that I would be playing on the No. 7 team in the country, I wouldn't have believed them. I think part of the reason we've done so well is team chemistry...
...year-old Michigan law, the most stringent of its kind, which permits prosecutors, with a judge's permission, to try children as adults. "The theory behind this law," says TIME Detroit bureau chief Nichole Christian, "is that because more and more children nationwide are committing crimes that we generally think of as 'adult crimes,' these kids should be tried as adults." And despite widespread discomfort with attributing adult motivations to children, the laws are popular in many states. Opponents of the measures, ranging from Amnesty International to Abraham's defense lawyer, Geoffrey Fieger, claim they violate the most basic rights...