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Word: scrambler (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Freeman, who also plays halfback, is a good scrambler. As a halfback, Freeman rushed seven times for 18 yards in four games last season...

Author: By Dan Jacobowitz, | Title: So Many Quarterbacks, So Little Time | 9/13/1991 | See Source »

Freeman, who also plays half-back, is a good scrambler. As a halfback, Freeman rushed seven times for 18 yards in four games last season...

Author: By Dan Jacobowitz, | Title: So Many Quarterbacks, So Little Time | 9/11/1991 | See Source »

...take a trip to Asia after a NATO meeting in Brussels, but he went back to Washington instead. He kept his television set at the Pentagon tuned to the Cable News Network for its frequent on-the-scene reports from Moscow and conducted a number of conversations over a scrambler phone with Carlucci and National Security Adviser Colin Powell, who is an Army lieutenant general. Crowe was hoping that the Soviets would back down on SLCMs -- and worrying about the possibility that the U.S. side would give...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Summit's Good Soldiers | 6/13/1988 | See Source »

Jackson likes to talk in rhyme and think in metaphor; Dukakis is as poetic as a slide rule. Jackson, the college quarterback, is a scrambler, an improviser, a mixer; Dukakis, the college runner, is essentially a loner who learned the Greek monos mou (by myself) as his first words. Jackson sweats, gestures, emotes, preaches when giving a speech. Dukakis uses a terminal monotone and metronomic motions. Where Dukakis is cerebral and calculating, Jackson is visceral and physical. During a joint appearance in New York, as Jackson succeeded Dukakis at the lectern, the Governor shook hands as they passed. That...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Marathon Man | 5/2/1988 | See Source »

...other war, they would have made movies about us too. Dateline: Hell!, Dispatch from Dong Ha, maybe even A Scrambler to the Front . . . But Viet Nam is awkward, everybody knows how awkward, and if people don't even want to hear about it, you know they're not going to pay money to sit there in the dark and have it brought up." So wrote Michael Herr in Dispatches, published in 1977, a year before the first spate of Viet Nam dramas. (The mid-'60s had offered a couple of World War II wheezes disguised as topical films: A Yank...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Platoon: Viet Nam, the way it really was, on film | 1/26/1987 | See Source »

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