Word: heard
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Heard with startled approbation from Air Minister Sir Samuel Hoare that time tables and rates are already in existence for the London-Egypt-India air service which will be inaugurated on or about Dec. 27. Sir Samuel repeated (TIME, Oct. 4) that he and Lady Hoare will fly in the first plane regularly operated on the new route. Rates: London to Cairo, $250; to Bagdad, $500; to Bombay, $600. Concluding, Sir Samuel said: "Two airships are being built for empire flights which will accommodate 100 passengers each and have promenade decks, outside cabins and big smoking and dining rooms. They...
...field. The battle was fairly even until late in the final period, when Brine ran 25 yards to his own 15-yard line. On the next play Whiting dropped back to throw a pass, but it was blocked, and Adams recovered it to make his winning run. Heard's try for goal hit the upright...
Balked in line plunges and end runs, the Juniors resorted to the field goal route to break the ice, and Heard tried a difficult drop-kick from the side of the field, 30 yards from the goal. The ball travelled the distance, but went wide of the mark. Again in the second quarter, after a long march during which the Juniors tore off gain after gain, the 1928 quarterback tried a goal from the 15 yard chalk directly in front of the posts, but Ingalls, Sophomore guard who was a tower of strength in the forward barrier throughout the game...
...summary follows: JUNIORS. SOPHOMORES. Allen, l.e. r.e., Fuller, Sexton Mulford, l.t. r.t., Pickard Adams, l.g. l.g., Williams, Kane, Brookfield, Sweezy Tuney, Fox, c. c., Shapiro, Weller Cushing, Tuney, r.g. l.g., Ingalls Hemminger, r.t. l.t., Norris Hammer, r.e. l.e., Weiler Heard, q. b. q.b., Morris, Sawyer Sawyer, l.h.b. r.h.b., Whiting, Lefrak Van Renssalaer, r.h.b. l.h.b., Weymouth, Kalanis Barbee, f.b. f.b., Wise, Brine...
...cafe in San Francisco with another elderly man and unwittingly told the other the new development in Harvard's offense. The only trouble with his disclosure was that a Yale man happened to overhear the conversation and wrote to Walter Camp word for word what he had heard...