Search Details

Word: hatched (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

Dunster House: Stroke, Peirce; 7, Hale; 6, Welch; 5, Barnes; 4, Bremer; 3, Dickinson; 2, Perkins; bow, Russell; Eliot House: Stroke, Winthrop; 7, Feichter; 6, Walcott; 5, White; 4, Hepburn; 3, Fabyan; 2, Young; bow, Adelsheim; cox., Quinby. Lowell House: Stroke, Wells; 7, Hatch; 6, McElheny; 5, Verman; 4, Morgan; 3, Fetcher; 2, Hoppin; bow, Patterson; cox., Thayer. Winthrop House; Stroke, Wells; 7, Garrigues; 6, Nichols; 5, Carman; 4, Dubois; 3, Walker; 2, Bampton; bow, England; cox., Winn...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FOUR HOUSE CREWS WILL RACE ON CHARLES TODAY | 10/23/1931 | See Source »

...service will open at 10.45 and will be preceded by a quarter of an hour of instrumental and organ music by Jessie Hatch Symonds, violin...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PROFESSOR CABOT TO SPEAK AT BOSTON SUNDAY SERVICE | 10/16/1931 | See Source »

...sloughs and ponds in southern Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, in the Dakotas, Minnesota and Montana, chief North American breeding-places for ducks. Several yards from a marshy place on the prairie, the mother-duck builds her nest, lays in it from ten to 18 eggs. When these hatch, she leads the ducklings immediately down to the water. In ordinary times, duckling mortality is high. Turtles, hawks and even large fish consume many. In drought times mother & brood may find no water at all and so perish of thirst, or else they have to cross great stretches of mud, open...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Animals: Duck Moratorium? | 8/10/1931 | See Source »

...builder of 70 Zeppelins for Germany, and Commander Jerome Clark Hunsaker, U. S. N., retired, and his well-thatched vice president Fred M. Harpham. Front & centre Mrs. Hoover's place would be marked by the end of a red-white-&-blue ribbon leading upward to a small closed hatch in the underside of the dirigible's snout...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Aeronautics: Up Ship! | 8/10/1931 | See Source »

...personnel, were to stand rigidly abreast of their skipper, Lieut.-Commander Charles Emery Rosendahl. An orchestra of 500 high-school pupils was to render "The Star Spangled Banner" and, as the last note whispered through the cavernous dock, Mrs. Hoover would yank the ribbon, opening the little hatch, tumbling out Frank Eisentrout's 48 astonished pigeons. Then it would be Zeno Wicks's moment to give the signal "up ship!" The workmen would slack off the mooring tackle and up would go the Akron about five feet clear of her metal supports, to hover for a few moments...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Aeronautics: Up Ship! | 8/10/1931 | See Source »

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