Word: rushes
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
With nearly two full seasons of college basketball still ahead of him, Bradley is in no rush to think about playing pro ball-though he admits that the money is "attractive." He first thought of studying for a State Department career, but now has switched to a history major and intends to go on to law school. "I will have to quit playing some day," he says. "I've got to be prepared. That's the problem with professional athletes-they retire at 30 with nothing more than a scrapbook full of clippings. It's hard...
...directed simply at him, but also at his position. The teacher is responsible most for what it is in himself that a student responds to. That responsibility dictates that he must wait until the student has matured and both may see clearly what form their relationship will take. To rush immediately towards consummation is irresponsible...
...naming and renaming was a natural reaction; witness a list of Garfield High Schools and McKinley Junior Highs as long as the Lincoln Tunnel. But in the rush to memorialize Ken nedy, many worthy governments and citizens' groups seemed eager to wipe out one historical name with another. In Beirut, Lebanon, Georges Clemenceau Street became John F. Kennedy Street; in Montigny-les-Metz, 175 miles east of Paris, the Rue Jeanne d'Arc was rechristened Rue J. F. Kennedy. A New Hampshire state legislator proposed changing the name of 5,535-ft. Mount Clay (after Henry) to Mount...
Coupe apparently became frustrated with his teammates' ineptness at three minutes of the final period. During a Crimson rush, he swung his stick at the head of Ike Ikauniks, who had the misfortune of hanging by the crease at the time. Ikauniks went down, but soon skated off the ice under his own power. A couple of stitches were taken in his right ear, and reports indicate that he'll recover quickly...
When Sorbonne students spot an empty lecture hall, they rush in like beggars after a tycoon's cigar butt. Lucky ones perch on worn wooden benches, using their laps for desks; others stand or squat in the aisles. The rooms smell; the lighting is dim. The typical Sorbonne lecture hall holds only half the students enrolled in a course. Sitting in a remote stairwell just within earshot of the podium, one girl recently sighed: "The other day I raised my head and actually saw the professor...