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Word: spedding (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...managed a 4-3 win over a stubborn Eliot tennis team in the first of the inter-House court matches scheduled for this season. Play was erratic and rough on both sides due to a strong wind which whipped across the nets. With the wind behind it, the ball sped across the net for easy aces, while many attempts against it resulted in weak lobs...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: News from the Houses | 4/24/1934 | See Source »

...André Citroën was heavy on the Paris Bourse one day last week. In a fortnight the stock had tobogganed from 500 francs per share to 260. Andre Citroen, the bald, dapper little "Ford of France," was in swift financial waters. From one excited broker to another sped reports of a general creditors' meeting at the Bank of France. Finally the Agence Economique et Financiére, the Dow, Jones & Co. of Paris, rumbled authoritatively...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business & Finance: France's Ford | 3/12/1934 | See Source »

...tumultuous session marked by vigorous expressions of opinion from the crowd, by the forcible expulsion of one would-be onlooker, and by bitterness on all sides, the Gill hearing sped through the remaining fifteen of Commissioner Dillon's 36 charges against the Norfolk head's administration, and was brought to a close shortly after 2 P. M. yesterday. Ten days have been granted the defendant for completing the reords, before any decision is reached...

Author: By John U. Monro, | Title: Gill Says Hurley "Hit and Ran" and Proclaims Nawn's Actions "Nothing Less Than Treason" | 3/10/1934 | See Source »

...have sought and entreated criticism of our methods and results. . . . The greater part has sped dying and fallen dead. Of late, professional criticism has degenerated into scurrilous and personal appraisements of, and assaults on, officials. A conspicuous recent instance is by a writer who dared not sign his name. . . . With a little less than libel, a trifle more than backstairs gossip, this writer in whose veins there must flow something more than a trace of rodent blood, exalts some who are weak and throws mud at some who are strong. . . . All this is published by a dying newspaper, recently purchased...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Johnson v. Meyer | 3/5/1934 | See Source »

...Harvard again in 1919 he sped up the academic ladder-associate professor of chemistry in 1925, full professor in 1927, head of his department in 1931. Students found him harddriving, businesslike, admired his vast authority. Meantime he was deep in the chemical researches which in time made European scientists first ask visiting Harvardmen: "What's Conant doing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Chemist at Cambridge | 2/5/1934 | See Source »

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