Word: bones
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...vision was there when the smoke of World War II lifted. As early as 1946, Winston Churchill gave it breath in summoning the Old World to "make a kind of United States of Europe." In 1947, the Marshall Plan began to give it bone and sinew. In 1950, with the Schuman Plan to pool the Continent's coal-and-steel resources, it began to stir. It envisioned nothing less than a prosperous united Europe athwart one Atlantic littoral, allied with the U.S. on the other side-two giants whose joint democratic and humane stand for freedom everywhere would...
...most common skiing accident is fracture of the ankle or lower leg, and strains at the knee. Dr. Manson therefore reiterates the importance of having good equipment: an efficient safety binding will convert a stress capable of breaking a bone into a simple strain, and a stress capable of producing a strain into nothing but a loosened...
When the Crimson offense failed to produce a good shot on goal until midway through the first period, Captain John Daly moved up to left wing to provide power up front. The Huskies' Larry Bone replied to this strategem by stealing the puck at the Crimson blue line and scoring the first goal of the night...
Although the Huskies gave Harvard little trouble last season in absorbing 4-2 and 7-5 defeats, this year's squad has already torn apart Colby 8-4 and pathetic Bowdoin 13-1. Leading its speedy but sometimes sloppy offense are Bill Seabury, Larry Bone, and Bob DeBlois. The formerly weak Northeastern defense has been bolstered by sophomores Don Turcotte and Ron Jeanneault...
...consensus: "The best running back in college ball." The pros count on him for those short yardage situations, say he is strongest banging away "inside where the running is toughest." Better still, he can protect his quarterback on passes. "This kid is a bone-crushing blocker," says one scout. "He'll cut you in half with his shoulder...