Word: driving
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...averaged 17 points in six games played entering Saturday, to just five points on 1-of-4 shooting before halftime.Pattman, however, came out of the Dartmouth locker room determined to take over the game, and as his aggressiveness increased, the Big Green surged. On a series of spectacular drives, breakaways and long-range hits, Pattman scored 15 points in the second half and seven more in overtime, fueling the Dartmouth comeback from a 12-point halftime deficit.“I’m a second-half player,” Pattman said. “My mother always tries...
...girlfriends’ trio number “You Could Drive a Person Crazy,” performed by Alison H. Rich ’09, Kieran H. Shanahan ’07, and Rachel E. Flynn ’09, is also a highlight...
...largest for long. Municipal wi-fi will be coming soon to a city near you, from tiny towns like Adel, Ga., to sprawling locales like Boston and San Francisco. Municipalities are promoting competition to drive down broadband prices and bring high-speed access to rural areas stuck with dial-up. Big telcos such as Verizon and AT&T, having first tried to fend off wi-fi in state legislatures, have also joined the battle to own and operate these systems. More than 300 communities nationwide plan to have wireless ventures in the next year, according to MuniWireless.com a portal...
...Mart has pushed a slew of high-profile environmental initiatives over the past year, including the construction of experimental green stores in Texas and Colorado and the launch of a campaign to sell ultraefficient compact fluorescent bulbs to 100 million homes. The real power of Wal-Mart to drive environmental change, however, rests in its sheer size, by which it can influence the behavior of the more than 60,000 companies, large and small, that stock its stores. The "Wal-Mart price"--the corporation's drive for the lowest possible cost, at all costs--ensured that only the leanest companies...
...this past year, it hasn't been fully reflected in our buying decisions. We're green hypocrites, according to Joel Makower, executive editor of GreenBiz.com "Consumers remain depressingly ignorant about the environmental impact of what they do," he says. "They find no irony in getting into their SUVs to drive a few miles and buy recycled toilet paper." In other words, American consumers haven't really begun to change their habits. To avert the worst that global warming has in store for us, we may have to make decisions even more radical than the ones business leaders are making...