Word: moran
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...were evenly matched. Maryland can point to the astonishingly high number of saves Cornell's junion goaltender Dan MacKesey made--28, another tournament record--and to the fact that star attackman Mike Hynes had broken his foot against Brown and misssed the final. At the end, however, only Richie Moran, Cornell's fiery coach (he was so enraged by an official's call that he played the game under protest) was able to tell a cheering partison crowd: "Cornell is Number...
...late in the second period, the Big Red had reeled off nine straight goals to put the game away, 15-4. At that point, Cornell coach Richie Moran started to substitute freely on attack. The visitors failed to break their own Ivy League record for goals (26), but they had made their point...
...John P. Moran, Princeton University Vice-President for Facilities, declined to release any figures on planned investment or return for the project, explaining the information will remain confidential while Princeton negotiates with prospective tenants...
...there is about Ford. In the hall is a painting of Old Faithful done by Albert Bierstadt about the time that Yellowstone became a national park; Ford once worked there. And there is a magnificent view of a setting sun on snowcapped peaks of the Grand Tetons. Thomas Moran did the oil in 1895. To the right of Ford's desk in the Oval Office is Bronco Buster, a bronze by Frederic Remington of a cowboy straining to stay on the back of his plunging horse. Ford's son Steve is working as a cowboy in Montana...
...Final Problem, Rosenberg argues, Holmes' description of Moriarty's academic achievements are thinly disguised parallels of Nietzsche's attainments. A later Conan Doyle criminal, Col. Sebastian Moran (see The Adventure of the Empty House), is given Nietzsche's physical characteristics (a high forehead, "the brow of a philosopher," and a huge grizzled mustache. With the vitality of a dog grinding a juicy bone, Rosenberg goes on to extract from the 60 Sherlock Holmes stories strong influences from Oscar Wilde, Catullus, Robert Browning, Racine, Poe, Mary Shelley, George Sand and even Jesus Christ...