Word: wristed
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...cost us.” The Crimson managed to force extra time when freshman Jenny Brine knocked in an inadvertent feed from senior Jennifer Raimondi with 2:10 remaining in regulation. Brine gathered the puck just inside of the blue line and forced a high wrist shot on Golden Knights keeper Kira Hurley. Hurley let the offering fall to the left side, where Raimondi swiped and pushed the puck to the far post for Brine to body the pass into the net for her team-leading 17th goal of the season. Junior Jennifer Sifers was also credited with an assist...
...summed up in one word: Snipes. That’s the nickname of junior forward Jennifer Sifers, who scored both of Harvard’s goals on the afternoon. After tying the contest at 1 with 1:24 left in the second period, Sifers ended it with a screaming wrist shot into the top left corner of the net at the 4:22 mark of the second overtime. Sifers took a feed from classmate and linemate Liza Solley and streaked across the blue line before uncorking the game-winner that eluded Golden Knights netminder Kira Hurley. "She's a rock...
THIS ONE HAS LEGS If you leave the Oliso iron ($99) face down and remove your hand, it springs up to rest about an inch off the board to prevent scorching, tipping and awkward wrist twisting. Touch the handle, and the legs retract...
...Jung, who says he tried to kill himself by slitting his wrist after learning of his father's death, explains that his goal in producing Yodok is "to let people know about human-rights abuses in North Korea in an unconventional way." That would be simple enough, were his message not complicated by politics. For several years, the international community has been trying desperately to convince North Korea to abandon its nuclear-weapons program. South Korea's strategy has been to engage the isolated country economically and diplomatically, so Jung's production was never destined to win official favor. Indeed...
...committee leeway to act or not act in almost any case. It requires that a congressman ?shall conduct himself at all times in a manner which shall reflect creditably on the House of Representatives.? In more extreme cases, they investigate colleagues and recommend punishments that range from barely a wrist-slap to expulsion. The panels sometimes seem moved to action as much by a frenzy of press attention to a specific case as by its severity. But any reluctance to act goes deeper than the cronyism that often appears to permeate the process; there is a reluctance in Congress...