Word: lonely
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...hits--including three each for Bauer, Allard and Chicarello and two for Chuck Marshall and Danny Skaff--don't make up for the lone safety in the first game. And a 5-5 record just isn't good enough to repeat in the EIBL...
Beall said he thought that Princeton has had better crows in the past few years "We've expected them to be sharp for a lone time--their freshman crews have been really strong." he said adding. "Our team is anxious to race them again--we are the better crew...
Since then, the guerrillas have changed their tactics, attacking lone U.P.C. officials or small groups of government soldiers. Diplomats believe that the two main groups-the Uganda Freedom Movement, composed mainly of Obote-hating Baganda tribesmen, and the People's Revolutionary Army led by ex-Defense Minister Yoweri Museveni-are biding their time until June. That is when the 10,000 Tanzanian troops who remained in Uganda after they helped to overthrow Amin in 1979 are scheduled to be withdrawn. Their departure will leave a dangerous power vacuum. Speculates a Western diplomat: "Any of three things could happen. Obote...
Well, the Wild Man. Donnie Allard, finally cooled to mortal temperatures, rapping just two singles in four trips yesterday and knocking home a lone run. And Harvard's other big bat. Vinnie Martelli's, managed just an RBI double in four at bats, although Northeastern's centerfielder. Mark Ferullo, robbed him of a probable inside-the-park homer, by snagging that smash on one hop with a dive on the Astroturf outfield...
...Astronaut Deke Slayton, boss of orbital flight-test crews, referring to the sturdy Douglas aircraft that opened new routes for commercial aviation in the mid-1930s. Columbia's maiden space voyage brought to mind the first flight of Orville and Wilbur Wright at Kitty Hawk, Lindbergh's lone-eagle crossing of the Atlantic, even the completion of the first transcontinental railroad in 1869, which would turn a land of remote frontiers into a nation. Princeton's prophet of space colonization, Physicist Gerard O'Neill, saw the flight as a first step toward establishing mining facilities...