Word: youthful
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...opposed to turning youth into little guerrilla marketers. It beats thievery and is more honest than many other marketing ploys. It's just that it's a chicken-and-egg proposition: it might take a long time before there are enough Zunes around for this to be more than a once-in-a-blue-moon situation. There are also some issues that will, hopefully, be resolved in time. For instance, if you want to share the song you're listening to, or even any other song while you're listening, your tune will stop playing for the transfer. Also, even...
...guards know it. The perimeter contributed just 39 percent of the Crimson’s offense last year, as Holsey missed almost all year with a series of injuries and Finelli came in several game into the the season.Tay was explosive at times, but her youth showed in hurried attempts to make big plays and games with too many turnovers. Delaney-Smith expects better defense out of Hallion, and Finelli will see more playing time than she did last season. Knox, who played sparingly last year, will also get more minutes, as will Dalton. Delaney-Smith knows, however, that...
...suggest "40 days and 40 nights" -that's the basic six weeks, less two days for her youth-and it has a kind of prophetic ring...
...much for getting better with age. The Ivy League will be fast and furious this year, and youth is leading the charge. Of the top four finishers last year—Dartmouth, Princeton, Brown, and Harvard—all lost key senior leaders and All-Ivy performers. Youth is widespread, with Cornell boasting two standout sophomores and the Crimson bringing back five second-year players with big-time potential. Young teams will make mistakes, and so will voters: it is impossible to predict a sure Ivy Champion. A veteran Dartmouth squad was a unanimous choice last year...
...29—jumped from 20 percent in 2002 to at least 24 percent in 2006, according to preliminary data from the Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement, based at the University of Maryland. That increase was powered by at least 2 million more youth voters.“Young people are at the vanguard of new technology and they are the hottest new voters,” said David C. King, associate director of the Institute of Politics and lecturer at the Kennedy School of Government. “Facebook is going...