Word: armstrong
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Motherhood Dooce www.dooce.com Hilarious personal blog by one Heather B. Armstrong of Salt Lake City, Utah, a whip-smart, sassy (and sometimes vulgar) stay-at-home mom. Even the exploding poop stories are good. Also: DotMoms links to dozens of blogs written by parents about parenting. Not all of them are "momoirs;" some of the bloggers are dads...
...Armstrong Professor of Engineering and Applied Sciences Venkatesh “Venky” Narayanamurti announced on Tuesday that he will step down as dean of the Division of Engineering and Applied Sciences (DEAS) and dean of the physical sciences in June 2006, surprising some fellow faculty members...
Walk on the moon, and people want a piece of you. It can get to a guy. For Apollo 11 commander NEIL ARMSTRONG, the fiber that finished him was hair. An Ohio barber sold clippings of Armstrong's hair for $3,000 to a middleman, who got them to a Connecticut collector of curls from Abraham Lincoln, Charles Dickens, Marilyn Monroe and others. When news got back to Armstrong, he had his lawyer shoot a letter to the barber demanding the return of his hair or a $3,000 donation to charity. But the barber had already spent the cash...
...Total b________," replies Bernstein. It's true the first draft of the book didn't have Deep Throat in it, he says, but it didn't have Woodward and Bernstein either, and that doesn't make them inventions. Scott Armstrong, a former Senate Watergate committee investigator and onetime Woodward collaborator on The Brethren: Inside the Supreme Court, thinks Deep Throat's role was somewhat distorted by the high drama of shadowy garage encounters with Woodward that were featured in the book's movie version, in which the journalist is played by Robert Redford. Says Armstrong: "Bob gave Redford some...
...Armstrong Professor of Engineering and Applied Sciences Venkatesh “Venky” Narayanamurti announced on Tuesday that he will step down as dean of the Division of Engineering and Applied Sciences (DEAS) and dean of the physical sciences in June 2006, surprising some fellow faculty members...