Word: blurredly
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Scoring was not as difficult for the Lady Friars as they tallied on their first trip to the Harvard end. With a blur of Crimson and white surrounding the goal, the Providence center flicked the ball into the upper left-hand corner giving goalie Juliet Lamont no chance at a save...
...started climbing. Slowly--agonizingly slowly--we rose toward the summit, balanced for an instant--and plummetted. The two people sitting in front of me let go of the car and raised their arms into the air. Somehow they stayed in their seats. The plunge took forever, becoming a sensory blur of red and white railings, roaring wind, clattering wheels, screaming passengers, and green countryside as we hit the bottom. Subtle twists in the track threw me right and left. Unseen rises lifted me from my seat, and the inevitable dips threw me back down. They say the ride lasts...
...father was a mulatto, his mother Puerto Rican, and she remarried into a family in which the color line got crossed so many times that it turned into a sort of soft, beige blur. That condition may be fine for discussion in a sociology seminar, but it is rough in a classroom and punishing on the playground. Jeffreys was Roman Catholic, but the other Catholic kids would not hang out with him because he was black. The neighborhood blacks kept away from him because his skin was too light. He found a couple of Jewish friends but was forbidden...
...change a success? Hardly ever out of the top ten during its first three years, Angels gradually sank to 17th. Something had gone wrong, and nobody could figure out what. With the acerbic Jackson gone, the remaining beauties sometimes seemed to blur, to look remarkably alike. The producers let Hack go but turned once again to New York City for a solution. This time, after having some 100 actresses read for the part, they hired Tanya Roberts, an off-Broadway hopeful whom the publicity handouts described as "streetwise." Said she: "I'm going to bust...
...times. Of 71 professional fights he lost only three, recording 54 knockouts. Yet he once observed: "If you dance, you gotta pay the piper. Believe me, I danced and I paid, and I left him a big fat tip." His dance was a flat-footed shuffle and a blur of powerful arms, and payment was eventual poverty and emotional problems. In the ring, the Brown Bomber was an impassive menace who revealed neither hatred nor benevolence. But from the first time he fought until his death last week of a heart attack at 66, he remained a victim...