Word: wrongly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...last two games with hot shooting, Housman has cooled off considerably tonight. 0-4 from the floor with two turnovers, the Crimson need Drew to find his scoring touch in the second half to have a shot at this game. - In typical fashion, Harvard finds itself on the wrong end of the rebounding and paint-scoring chart. Princeton has a 15-10 advantage on the class and has scored four more paints in the paint. - Leading scorers: Princeton's Kyle Koncz with seven and Brad Unger with eight to lead all scorers. - Princeton is shooting 52% from the floor. Harvard...
...calls as the rest of the industry’s circulation dives, both hometown readership and stock plunging like the Andrea Doria (which she remembers). Yes, she’s gussied herself up for the kids online, but it’s not the same; video just feels wrong. Her pride is intact, to be sure, with most of her reputation, but we’re dealing with a lady who has seen better days—and she knows...
Some cried sensationalism; others felt that the longstanding claims that the Times staff is a hyperliberal cabal had been vindicated. One disillusioned conservative wrote: “There’s nothing wrong with investigative reporting, especially on presidential candidates, but it doesn’t seem that this investigation produced anything substantive.” Another offered something more incisive: “rush limbagh [sic] is right...
...Wrong. On Tuesday, the first day of early voting, election officials across the state reported a record turnout. In just one day in the state's 15 most populous counties, some 65,000-plus voters went to grocery stores and bank lobbies, rec centers and libraries to vote. Some images are startling: 1,000 Prairie View A&M students, a traditionally African-American college in a rural area west of Houston, marched seven miles to the nearest early voting station. And in a state requiring no party registration to cast a ballot, two out of three early voters...
...were those of the organizational and infrastructure kind, not bombings and beheadings. He recalls many late nights driving home safely along Haifa Street, a central Baghdad artery that later became a safe haven for insurgents and snipers. Back when it was safer, Dr. Hakki had to drive down the wrong side of the street because U.S. Marines were busy using the other side for nighttime soccer matches with neighborhood kids. For goalposts, says Dr. Hakki, they used their helmets and body armor. Nowadays, no soldier would caught on the street without helmet or armor...