1. She turned to find her companions had already begun the final march to the castle. 2. They were to suffer still further as their captors immediately stripped them of everything, even their boots, and forced them to march to the Turkish camp. 3. For more than two years, he was chairman of the Czechoslovak parliament, overseeing the slow and often painful march to democracy. 4. An early evening march to the federal prison on the edge of Terre Haute included enormous puppets painted to look like Jesus and Uncle Sam. 5. An offside infraction wiped out an apparent sack on third-and-three during a march to a field goal. 6. And he seemed to recognize the possibility that McCain would continue to impede what many had once considered an inevitable march to the nomination. 7. And yet the Baltic States are now on the march to membership. 8. Another demonstration planned for Inauguration Day will be a march to the Supreme Court building led by the Rev. Al Sharpton, an African-American protest leader from New York. 9. As conference play begins and the season starts to speed up its march to March, teams have had about six weeks and nearly a dozen games to adjust. 10. As part of their protests, demonstrators plan to surround the White House with a human chain and then march to IMF and World Bank headquarters. |