Word: welch
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...teams battled back and forth for the rest of the second period and early stages of the third, before Crimson freshman defenseman Noah Welch fired a shot through a screen that beat Snee five-hole. Sophomore Tim Petit and freshman Tom Cavanagh assisted on the goal...
First Period: S, Ball (Lorentz, Peverley) 17:10. Second Period: S, Marchetti (DiLauro) 13:26. S, Marchetti (Fitzrandolph, Peverley) 16:35. Third Period: H, Fried (unassisted) 1:07. H, Cavanagh (Welch, Barlow) 12:55. H, Capouch (Moore, Packard) 14:24. Shots on goal: H 5-3-16-1 25, S 10-12-9-4 35. Power Play: H 0-4, S 0-5. Penalties: H 7-14, S 6-12. Goalies: H, Crothers (35-32) S, McKenna...
...revelation in late 1998 that members of the International Olympic Committee had accepted cash, gifts and college tuition for their children amounting to more than $1 million in advance of awarding the Winter Games to Salt Lake--following an ugly precedent set by other winning cities. Tom Welch, a former president of the Salt Lake Organizing Committee, and Dave Johnson, a former senior vice president, were indicted on federal charges, including bribery and fraud. The charges were dismissed last year, but the Justice Department last month appealed the dismissal. All along, the Mormon church has tried to keep the scandal...
...sustained national emergency that required a strong Federal Government--the authority of the American political process has been in a long decline. At the same time, the reputation of U.S. business leaders has grown extraordinarily. In the 1980s and '90s, Lee Iaccoca, Sam Walton, Bill Gates, Andy Grove, Jack Welch and their ilk became our new heroes. Businessmen seemed to combine a buccaneer's spirit with a slide-rule mind. "Washington" (the word had to be said with a sneer) was, by comparison with the worlds of our titans, disorganized and inefficient, quite hopeless...
...Enron affair matured into a scandal just as it began to seem that the culture of celebrity was defunct; suddenly, we remembered that Barbra Streisand was not a political philosopher. Neither is Jack Welch or Bill Gates or, certainly, Ken Lay. In the '90s, we treated businessmen as if they were film stars (and we treated film stars like gods). But we lend stars our affections only; we lend businessmen our chance of future prosperity. A lesson from Enron: we would be wise to entrust that responsibility to those with their feet on the ground, not on a pedestal. Even...