Crossword clues for lovell
lovell
Gazetteer
Housing Units (2000): 1013
Land area (2000): 1.065103 sq. miles (2.758604 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 1.065103 sq. miles (2.758604 sq. km)
FIPS code: 47950
Located within: Wyoming (WY), FIPS 56
Location: 44.836787 N, 108.392180 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 82431
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Lovell
Wikipedia
Lovell is a small lunar crater that lies across the eastern edge of the walled plain Apollo, on the far side of the Moon. It has a somewhat irregular shape, with outward bulges to the north and west. The rim is sharp-edged, with some slight wear along the northwestern bend. The featureless inner walls slope directly down to the uneven interior floor.
Lovell crater is named after the American astronaut Jim Lovell, crew member of the Apollo 8 mission in 1968, which was the first manned mission to the moon, and therefore Lovell was one of the three first humans to see this crater on the far side of the moon. Two nearby craters are named after the other two crew members, Frank Borman ( Borman crater) and William Anders ( Anders crater).
Lovell may refer to:
Lovell is an English surname. Notable people with the surname include:
- Adam Lovell, founder of WriteAPrisoner.com
- Alex Lovell, British television presenter
- Andy Lovell, Australian football player
- Ann Lovell, wife of James Lovell; they were the first European settlers in Golden Bay, New Zealand
- Bernard Lovell, British radio astronomer
- Charles Henry Lovell, Canadian politician
- Daniel Lovell, English journalist, died 1818
- Dyson Lovell, film producer and actor
- Ellen McCulloch-Lovell, college president
- Francis Lovell, 1st Viscount Lovell, supporter of Richard III through the Wars of the Roses
- Frank Lovell, American communist politician
- Frederick S. Lovell, American politician and military officer
- Fulton Lovell, American politician and commissioner in Georgia
- Guillermo Lovell, Argentine boxer
- Harold Lovell, government minister in Antigua and Barbuda
- Henry Lovell, Canadian politician b. 1828 – d. 1907
- Henry Tasman Lovell, Australian psychologist
- James Lovell (delegate), 18th-century American educator and statesman
- Jean Lovell, American female baseball player
- Jenny Lovell, Australian actress
- Jim Lovell, NASA astronaut, commander of Apollo 13
- John Lovell (Los Angeles grocer)
- John C. Lovell, American competitive sailor and Olympic silver medalist
- John Harvey Lovell, 19th century American etymologist
- Joseph Lovell, Surgeon General of the United States Army
- Karl Lovell, Australian rugby player
- Lawrence Lovell, U. K. hockey player
- Marc Lovell, English hockey player
- Margaretta M. Lovell, Berkeley professor
- Mary S. Lovell, British writer
- Mark Lovell, British rally driver
- Matt Lovell, Australian record producer
- Michael Lovell, American engineer, and President of Marquette University
- Moodie Brock Lovell, Canadian politician
- Patricia Lovell, Australian film producer
- Pedro Lovell, Argentine boxer
- Robert Lovell, English poet, died 1796
- Salathiel Lovell, British judge, died 1713
- Santiago Lovell, Argentine boxer
- Sidney Lovell, American architect died 1938
- Simon Lovell, British comedy magician and card magician
- Steve Lovell, English soccer player
- Steve Lovell (Welsh footballer), Welsh soccer player
- Sir Thomas Lovell, English soldier and administrator
- The Lovell family, Lairds of Ballumbie
- Tony Lovell. British military pilot
- Walter Lovell, American military pilot
- Will Lovell, English rugby player
Usage examples of "lovell".
Prosecutor Dwayne Lovell had gotten a bench warrant issued and faxed to Boston and San Francisco, both cities having been Gilchrist's home at one time, then Corde added Gilchrist's name to the Criminal Warrants Outstanding Bulletin and Database for state and major city law enforcement agencies.
When at the start of a new year she wrote to say Adams had been absent for a full eleven months, the reply from Lovell was closer to the raw double entendres of Laurence Sterne's “Tristram Shandy”, a book Abigail had never read: he expressed relief that her husband's “rigid patriotism” (again underscored) had not left her pregnant again.
So an appeal to Adams's self-regard, by extolling his integrity to the point of implying that Franklin and Arthur Lee had none, was quite in the Lovell mode.
James Lovell, chairman of the Committee of Foreign Affairs, for example, wrote to Gates on November 27, We want you at different places but we want you most near Germantown.
Julian would run off to check out the flock of sheep that the Lovells still kept on the downs, and try to play with Albert, the collie, and I’d flop onto the turf and stare up at fluffy clouds like glops of whipped butter, and not think about anything.
But that was not how the matter was seen by some others, including James Lovell, who had supported Gates in opposition to Schuyler.
The following day, Morris and Massachusetts delegate James Lovell, a former instructor at the Boston Latin School and now chairman of the Committee of Foreign Affairs, met Lafayette, Kalb, and their aides in front of Independence Hall.
At school, we had a Moment of Silence every day to pray for Lovell, Haise, and Swigert as they went all the way around the moon with a crippled ship, using the oxygen and power reserves of the lunar module to substitute for what the command module no longer had.
Lovell to Meg's bedside, I saw the vision of a romantic figure reflected in the pier glass of your room.
Before the day was over they'd make their way to Turtleback Lane in the town of Lovell — a place where walk-ins were common, according to John Cullum, and reality was apt to be correspondingly thin — but first they were going to make a trip to Bridgton, and hopefully meet the man who seemed to have created Donald Callahan and the town of 'Salem's Lot.
He thought both he and Roland had a pretty good idea of how to get out of this world, suspected Stephen King himself could direct them to Turtle-back Lane in Lovell, where reality was thin and — according to John Cullum, at least — the walk-ins had been plentiful of late.
He thought both he and Roland had a pretty good idea of how to get out of this world, suspected Stephen King himself could direct them to Turtleback Lane in Lovell, where reality was thin and—according to John Cullum, at least—the walk-ins had been plentiful of late.
Before the day was over they'd make their way to Turtleback Lane in the town of Lovell — a place where walk-ins were common, according to John Cullum, and reality was apt to be correspondingly thin — but first they were going to make a trip to Bridgton, and hopefully meet the man who seemed to have created Donald Callahan and the town of 'Salem's Lot.
He thought both he and Roland had a pretty good idea of how to get out of this world, suspected Stephen King himself could direct them to Turtleback Lane in Lovell, where reality was thin and — according to John Cullum, at least — the walk-ins had been plentiful of late.