Word: bobbed
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...achievements, Estes said, “He’s amazing. I’ve been amazed and astonished as to how he can turn that switch from academics to football. I don’t know how he did it.” Columbia’s coach Bob Shoop agreed. “He’s a workhorse. Show me a Division I-AA player who does more for his team that he does.” Hartigan scored three times, twice in the first half on runs of one and five yards to raise his career...
...world of aging boomers, both companies see vigorous opportunity. Says Allergan vice president Bob Rhatigan: "Our product [will get] more brand exposure." For the $920 million Elizabeth Arden, which two weeks ago cut its 2006 fiscal earnings forecast because of depressed consumer spending in Europe, Prevage could help it break through the cluttered $7 billion antiaging skin-care market--and give its sagging profits a lift...
...TISCH, 79, philanthropic financier and co-owner of the New York Giants who with his brother and longtime business partner Laurence built a group of hotels into the Loews Corp., one of the nation's largest conglomerates; in New York City. As the outgoing half of the fraternal duo, Bob Tisch, who once served as U.S. Postmaster General, is credited with inventing the "power breakfast," originally a meeting of corporate and civic leaders who gathered at his Regency hotel in the 1970s to help solve New York City's economic woes. Later he boosted tourism as chairman for 19 years...
...most famous for another radio show he brought to TV, in 1952. On This Is Your Life, each program surprised a guest with live reminiscences from loved ones and shrewdly capitalized on the new medium's capacity for intimacy, chronicling riveting, often weepy stories of the famous (Buster Keaton, Bob Hope, Marilyn Monroe) and sometimes the less famous (Holocaust survivor Hanna Bloch Kohner). More recently, he developed such shows as Name That Tune and The People's Court, the pop-culture phenomenon that in 1981 made California judge Joseph Wapner a household name...
...hunkered down. I'm in the habit of keeping secrets. I didn't want anything out there that was going to get me subpoenaed." BOB WOODWARD, Washington Post journalist, on why he didn't inform his bosses that an Administration official told him two years ago about CIA operative Valerie Plame, whose leaked identity led to a federal probe, a jailed reporter and an indictment...