Word: forwards
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...report told of the great, although somewhat uneven, recovery which agriculture had made: wheat, the great gainer; corn, hogs, cotton, livestock, holding their own; dairy and poultry products somewhat behind. But it looked forward to a farm income of 12 billion dollars for 1924-25, as compared to 11½ billion dollars the year previous, and 9½ billion dollars in 1921-22. It suggested that cooperative marketing might disappoint those who have very great hopes of it, and expressed the opinion that, in aiding the movement, the Government's assistance would be of most value if confined...
...Beals '25, N. S. Howe '26, R. S. Scott '27, Nathaniel Hamlen '27, and E. H. Bradford '26 were the members of the football squad who put in their first appearance. Beals played regularly last year, alternating at center and right wing; Howe earned his letter as a forward; Scott and Hamlen were first string forwards on the championship 1927 sextet. Bradford is a candidate for goal, and is expected to make a good showing...
Practice yesterday was a repetition of former sessions, special emphasis being placed on the development of a sound passing game. For the first hour, various forward lines went down the ice with the puck against different defense combinations. When scrimmage started, Team X lined up with W. M. Austin '25, Clark Hodder '25, and C. L. Peirson '26 as forwards, and E. C. Clark '27, and W. P. Ellison '27 at defense, with J. L. Newell '26 at goal. J. B. Durant '27 was at center on the sextet which opposed Team X at the start of the scrimmage, with...
...Prince of Wales, were also transmitted. The man principally responsible for the new radiograph is Captain Richard H. Ranger, who devised the means of sending uniform impulses so that static does not annul the transmission. General J. G. Harbord, President of the Radio Corporation, philosophized: "As we study the forward marches of science and their effect of steadily shrinking the world to what will ultimately become a single, big community of fellow humans, we must admit the growing necessity for the development of a universal language. Until this new process is worked out in its tedious way and accepted...
...path of least resistance and move with, and in the same rotational direction as, the surface of the cylinder. When air passes rapidly over any surface, it produces suction over that surface. And this is precisely what happens in the giant revolving cylinders. They are in suction on their forward side and are pulled forward accordingly. The vessel moves with them. This principle was discovered by Heinrich G. Magnus, a German physicist, in 1853. It took more than 70 years to find a genius to apply...