Word: buds
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Then Pete did something unbelievable. He cracked a second-serve ace wide to the deuce court to set up a match point. Boston Globe sportswriter and general tennis guru Bud Collins described it as the single greatest swing of a tennis racket he had ever seen. It was one of those moments in sports that brings you out of your seat, no matter where you are or when...
...make sure. The U.N. organization rushed a team to the scene and, reports Dr. David Heymann, head of the WHO's new Division for Emerging and other Communicable Diseases Surveillance and Control (EMC), "in five days the Ebola diagnosis was confirmed, and the outbreak was nipped in the bud." The medical team had done its job by isolating the victims, providing health-care workers with basic sterile gear, like gowns and gloves, and staying on the scene until no new cases were evident...
...Bud Selig and his droogs keep complaining that small market teams are at a competitive disadvantage. Well if you can't take the heat, you know the rest...
Donaldson said Harvard Police Chief Francis D. "Bud" Riley may set up a satellite police station in Mather House much like the substation in the basement of Weld Hall...
...Bud Collins, the renowned tennis writer and commentator, immediately dubbed the 5-ft. 6-in. phenomenon "The Unbearable Lightness of Being" Hingis. Like Milan Kundera's novel, Hingis was conceived in Czechoslovakia. She was named by her tennis-loving parents for the national heroine and acquaintance Martina Navratilova. By the age of two, the little Martina was playing outdoors, and at five she was playing in tournaments. She spent her first eight years in what is now Slovakia, and after her parents' divorce and her mother Melanie's subsequent marriage to a Swiss computer executive, she moved to Trubbach, Switzerland...