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Word: pointer (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...this fall, a hip pointer has limited Harmon to less than two full contests. He sat out the Colgate game altogether after injuring himself in the opener with Princeton, and exited from last week's 17-7 loss to B.U. when the hip began troubling him at halftime...

Author: By Gwen Knapp, | Title: Cornell Counting on Harmon | 10/9/1982 | See Source »

RHODE ISLAND 58, BROWN 55--The Yankee Conference is really too much. This game will be won in triple overtime. URI quarterback Dave Grimsich will hit a last-second three-pointer from 15 yards out to ice it for the Rams. The Yankee Conference is really too much...

Author: By Michael Bass, | Title: A Big Day For D.A. | 9/25/1982 | See Source »

Before Witkowski went on his rampage, Harvard quarterback Ron Cuccia had an edge in both the stats and crowd appeal departments. Cuccia tossed 12 passes for eight completions and 106 yards but had to leave the game in the second quarter after he suffered a hip pointer. He was hit while dropping back to pass. The hit forced the Crimson QB to fumble but he recovered the ball and ran up the middle for seven yards...

Author: By Gwen Knapp, | Title: Gridders Trample Lions in Season Opener, 27-16 | 9/20/1982 | See Source »

...officer frequently appeared before U.S. officials and reporters and traced the Soviet missile bases on huge blowups of aerial photographs taken over Cuba. So it was perhaps fitting that the same man-John T. Hughes, now 54 and a deputy director of the Defense Intelligence Agency-picked up his pointer again to conduct last week's briefing on Nicaragua's military buildup. Hughes' performance was professionally impressive, yet questions remained about the reliability of the evidence he was called upon to interpret...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Judging Spies and Eyes | 3/22/1982 | See Source »

...Nicaraguan tanks, the spy bureau smugly assured reporters that the Sandinistas are arming themselves and receiving substantial aid from Moscow and Havana. John T. Hughes, the very same Government intelligence expert who first translated specks on the Cuban terrain as Soviet missiles in 1962, returned to the stage, pointer in hand. The eyeball-to-eyeball allusions were plentiful, though somehow outdated Russian T-55s parked near Managua seem less of a direct threat to U.S. interests than did medium-range missiles off the coast of Florida...

Author: By Paul M. Barrett, | Title: Theater of the Absurd | 3/15/1982 | See Source »

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