Word: championsionly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
But that wasn't nearly enough to hold off the eventual national champions, who cruised by the Crimson, 26-4, on Friday night. Harvard held San Diego close in the first quarter and trailed by only a 6-2 margin at the first intermission.
"I personally have feelings of apathy over Roby's return," Smith added. "I'm more concerned about the psyche of the team, which has to improve for us to be champions."
"Two years ago,...environmental issues were regarded as threats of ideological conflict, where champions of Nature battled champions of Progress," says Wilson. "Liberals... blocked dams to save oddly named small fish, while conservatives destroyed the environment for short-term profits."
Enter Jack F. Kemp, Bush's ebullient secretary of housing and urban development and probably the most formidable Republican alive. An also-ran in the 1988 Presidential election, Kemp champions what Republicans need most--and Democrats fear most--in the emerging post-Cold War era: a compassionate, yet conservative solution...
Even more active measures have their clerical champions. The late British Methodist clergyman Leslie Weatherhead rejected the idea that death should be left to God. "We do not leave birth to God," he observed. "We space births. We prevent births. We arrange births. Man should learn to become the lord...