Word: lt
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...cultured, well-heeled flatfoot. Robert Taylor's retooled Detectives (NBC) now wear button-down collars, glen plaid suits, and shoot professorially from the mouth. "A beatnik," said one Taylor gumshoe last week, "is a vagrant with intellectual pretensions.'' ABC's The New Breed celebrates Lt. Price Adams (Leslie Nielsen) and the new, soft-spoken young cops of the Los Angeles Police Department, college men and nearly all scientists, who speak scornfully of the old-style "fat cops who steal apples." Straightforwardly acted, it is an absorbing story of men rather than dum-de-dum-dum bunnies...
...Star spells it "clew," the Indianapolis News "clue." Most papers capitalize Pope, but the Miami Herald does not. In most papers, rape is rape, but in the Memphis Commercial Appeal it is usually criminal attack. The Minneapolis Star and Tribune permit partial decommissioning of generals ("If it's Lt. Gen. John A. Jones in the first reference, plain Jones will suffice in later references"), but in the New York Times, once a general always a general. And no paper cares to folo the trail blazed by the Chicago Tribune into a virgin land of simplified spelling: altho, thru, sirup...
According to Lt. Benjamin L. Frank, assistant professor of Naval Science, the trip, which will extend from April 3 until April 6, is designed to interest some of the participants in naval aviation and to give the rest an understanding of that branch of the service...
Freshman Crew; Kirkland House Football: 1958, 1959; Kirkland House Crew; 1959, 1960; Presently Lt. Colonel, AFROTC, Executive Officer; Distinguished Military Student Award; Former Assistant-Commander of the AFROTC Drill Team (3 years participation); Former Cadet Capt., Administrative Officer...
...spokesman for Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, Director of the Selective Service System, said that the Corps would "put no strain" on the manpower pool. He said that Hershey had looked into the plan and observed that even 10,000 men would hardly cut into the number drafted each year...