Ozark ['әuzɑ:k]
[美]密苏里(Missouri) 州奥扎克族印第安人(以 弓术出名)
密苏里州的别名
[pl. ]密苏里州西南、阿肯色(Arkansas)州西北和俄克拉何马(Oklahoma)州东北部的高地
- Missouri's proposed "Natural Streams Act" would protect Ozark waterways.
- At the time, dozens of police officers were manning road blocks and searching the surrounding Ozark hills for Brown, who was wanted for wounding a Rolla police officer with a rifle two days earlier.
- Piedmont Airlines would have some of the same attractions for TWA as Ozark Airlines which TWA acquired as a short-hop regional airline that can feed passengers for its longer-haul flights.
- Ozark Mountain Enterprises makes hand-forged iron products. Oatmeal Studios designs greeting cards and other novelty items.
- Brown had frustrated police for weeks by hiding out in the Ozark Mountains after the killing, inspiring songs and stories in nearby towns.
- An arson fire destroyed the home of a vocal supporter of a play about AIDS shortly before its debut in this conservative Ozark town.
- The Ozark Fire Department and a hazardous materials team from Fort Chaffee entered the ruins of the fire-gutted plant Monday afternoon wearing air masks, Hayden said.
- A low of 22 degrees in Ozark, Ark., beat by 8 degrees the record set back in 1917.
- The trial was moved to Ozark because of extensive pretrial publicity.
- Most of the income _ $16.8 million _ came from 28,279 acres in the Ouachita and the Ozark national forests in Arkansas.
- Elizabeth Lambert of Ozark, Ala., said she saw the fuel truck coming, felt a crunch as the bus left the road and "the next thing I knew I was thrown out of the bus, I guess through the front window."
- The town of Lake Ozark, Mo., finished the job in just three days.
- Trans World, reflecting its purchase of Ozark Air Lines this year, reported net income of $52.8 million, against a year-earlier loss of $87 million due to a flight attendants' strike and a slump in international sales because of terrorism threats.
- Early in his reign, he acquired Ozark Air Lines, ridding TWA of its chief rival at its St. Louis hub and giving it a virtual monopoly there.
- The lower 1986 figure reflects a reduction in the number of flights completed during a flight attendant strike and doesn't include revenue from the recently acquired Ozark Airlines.
- The November 1986 figures include traffic from Ozark Air Lines, which TWA acquired in September.
- TWA also said that it began offering first-class service on Ozark flights that previously had offered only coach service.