Word: bouting
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Junior Steve Kaseta returns at one of the defensive tackles, and he'll be paired alongside Charlie Kaye, who missed last year after a bout with mononucleosis. Two years ago, as a sophomore, Kaye was a starter; his return means that the starting defensive front four all have two years of eligibility remaining, which bodes well for now, extremely well for next season. Bob Bailey and Gary Taubes are in reserve...
...Colts must play Cincinnati, Dallas and St. Louis, all of whom earned playoff berths last year. A lackluster exhibition season worries Thomas, since the Colts must get off to a good start if they are to survive the first five games of the season. The Colts open with a bout with the New England Patriots next week, followed in quick succession by other tough games with Dallas and Miami. But football's canniest handicappers are boldly putting their money on the Colts: Baltimore, which never saw the light of the tube last year until the playoffs, is scheduled...
...where a new management is now in charge, Board Chairman Robert Haack said only that he was "saddened" by the revelations in The Hague. That response seemed remarkably understated, for as the Dutch braced themselves for a televised parliamentary debate this week on the Bernhard report, they faced a bout of national soul searching as convulsive as that produced in the U.S. by the Watergate revelations...
...action over the years. The scenes, of course, are from previous Wayne vehicles. Some are of rather recent vintage, others antique, but they pertain much more directly to the star himself than to the character he is playing. Also, it is common knowledge that Wayne had his own bout with cancer - his testament that "I licked the Big C with the love of God and a lot of guts" is as well known as any line from his movies - and The Shootist trades on this fact. Besides, all the sober, rueful honor laid on here is premature. Let us hope...
Voyage au Bout de la Nuit (translated as Journey to the End of Night) is as un-Proustian as a novel can be. Its scenes are the battlefields of World War I, hospital wards, lunatic asylums. The mysterious author's protagonist-narrator is a most reluctant soldier and postwar wanderer named Bardamu. Murderers, wife beaters and abortionists appear as ordinary characters in Journey. Its language-French jangled into street argot-is a kind of frenzied shorthand of pain, terror and hate...