Word: pound
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Other student warned that if Harvard formakes the School now it will be guilty of shirking the moral responsibility it assumed when President Lowell and Dean Rosooe Pound of the Law School co-operated with John A. Cousens, President of Tufts in 1930, to establish the School...
...placed on the retired list. No "appropriate appointment" available, " said the R.A.F. "I am being . . . sacked," Sir Basil corrected. "I have strong views." The most recent Embry views: the R.A.F. is unready for atomic war, dominated by the civil service, shackled to outdated strategy and outmoded jet types by pound-pinchers at Her Majesty's Treasury. Like his good friend General Curtis LeMay, chief of the U.S. Strategic Air Command and another battle-tested brasshat, Embry thinks that the next war will turn on the air forces' capacity to deliver immediate and lethal retaliation...
Anchored by its captain, Bill Meigs the Crimson line is big, strong, and, most important, experienced. There are no sophomores on the first seven, and only one junior, 212-pound guard Ted Metropoulos, the fastest lineman not an end. Between Meigs and Metropoulos is the third of the five big "M's", Jan Meyer, the 210-pound center. The other two big "M's" are tackle John Maher and end Bob Morrison. Orville Tice is the other tackle and Ed Kennedy the other...
...Crimson, on the other hand, uses the fundamental single-wing attack with an overbalanced line. It will consistently pound away at the opponent's line, especially inside of the two tackles. Last year it was this wearing down of the Cornell line which gave the Crimson its winning touchdown...
...first backfield were three regulars, Matt Botsford, Tony Gianelly, Leo Daley, and a newcomer to the group, Marion "Terry" Cheek, a six-foot-one, 195-pound wingback, who usually plays behind both John Simourian and Ron Eikenberry...