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Word: driffields (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Last week at Coltishall airfield in Norfolk, Blackie, a prize tercel (male falcon), his sister Collette and two other lady falcons, Odette and Isolde, were hard at work at new peacetime jobs. Eight other falcons were busy at Driffield in Yorkshire. Each day a thickly gloved trainer took them out on the field and gingerly removed their hoods. Then (in falconer's lingo) "they rang up from the fist, attained their pitch at 1,000 or more feet up, waited on until the game was served to them," and swooped to the kill at speeds up to 300 m.p.h...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Berlin Calling Blackie | 11/1/1948 | See Source »

...TWENTY-ONE CLUES-J. J. Connington-Little, Brown ($2). An English version of the Hall-Mills murder case: preacher and paramour pistoled in the bracken. Sir Clinton Driffield, chief constable, uses dead cats to prove the Crown needs two warrants for murder. Clever, and a satisfying puzzle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Murder in May, Jun. 9, 1941 | 6/9/1941 | See Source »

...Rosie. When Edward Drimeld died his late-won position as Grand Old Man of English Letters was secure. His shrewd second wife wanted an official, respectably-mum-mifying biography, asked the popular novelist Alroy Rear to write it. But Ashenden was one of the few who knew anything about Driffield's early life. When Kear tried to pump him, Ashenden had reason to tell only a little of what he knew. The rest he tells to the reader...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Beer & Skittles* | 10/6/1930 | See Source »

Ashenden was a boy when he first met Drimeld, then a struggling author, and Rosie, his beautiful barmaid wife. When the Driffields "shot the moon" (left town without paying their debts J, Ashenden thought he would never see them again. But years later, while a medical student in London, he met Rosie on the street, went home with her to tea, became an habitue of the Drimeld salon. Rosie was the chief attraction. Kindhearted, affectionate, she became Ashenden's mistress, but he knew he shared her with others. One day she ran off to the U. S. with a married...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Beer & Skittles* | 10/6/1930 | See Source »

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