Word: leaping
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...line that separates life and death, and this was the line where they chose to make their stand, their professional codes of conduct be damned. When one is lost in a sandstorm, deafened by artillery and surrounded by primal cries of agony, an ethical lapse can be a moral leap...
...caring for an aging parent as they are to analyze a marketing problem. "One of the things we realized pretty quickly is that, especially if you're an entrepreneur, your personal life affects your business life," says Joanne Dennison, 43, who co-founded the group. "Our favorite saying is 'Leap, and the net will appear.' We are the net for one another." Last year the group added an extra layer of intimacy to its web of support. Each member took a decorative angel inscribed with her name to the December meeting. Then the women passed the angels around...
...Brown, just one shot back of Harvard after Saturday, put in another very consistent round to finish 326-325-651 and take the tournament crown. Hard charging Long Island turned in a tournament-low single-day score of 320 on Sunday to leap the Crimson for second place and finish at 652, one shot back of the Bears and two ahead of Harvard...
Lisa Halaby was a blond, Princeton-educated, all-American girl when she married the late King of Jordan and became QUEEN NOOR. She tells her story in a new memoir, Leap of Faith...
Neil Armstrong meant to say "That's one small step for a man," adapting the phrase from a children's playground game. Instead, because of intense radio static, Mission Control in Houston--and the rest of mankind--heard, "That's one small step for ... man, one giant leap for mankind," which became one of the most famous sentences of the 20th century. If the audio failed, the images were indelible, as a camera mounted on the base of the lunar-landing vehicle beamed back the otherworldly milestone. Ohio-born Armstrong, then 38, had become the first earthling on the moon...