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Word: tow (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Usage:

...meantime, other members of the hexter club had scouted Mount Auburn Street and found their meeting place in front of the Lampoon building swarming with Yard Cops. A word to the mob if not to the law, and they were of for the river, effigy in tow...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fifth Columnists Almost Disrupt Hex Burning of Hitler in Effigy | 2/20/1941 | See Source »

...mile relay is capably handled by Bob Houghton, Rolla Campbell, Fred Phinney, and Bill Young. Bob McLoughlin; number tow cross-country man, is the outstanding miler, and two Sophomores, Don McCaul and Bob Troescher, are improving rapidly. Johnny Sopka, Tom McElligott, and Bob Kent are all seasoned cross-country veterans, and form the two-mile group...

Author: By Dana Reed, | Title: Jaakko Expects "Real Battle" In Saturday's Meet With Yale | 2/13/1941 | See Source »

Other Springfield enthusiasts who wanted a terrain at their doorstep opened an illuminated two trail run with a tow January 28, south of the General Edwards Bridge on the Island Pond Road. This city also offers skiing at the Franconia Golf Course and skating to music at the Forest Park Chalet...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: NEARBY SLOPES AVAILABLE TO SKIIERS AT PIONEER VALLEY | 2/8/1941 | See Source »

Jumping is extremely popular also at the Holland Kelly Farm in Greenfield where the tow is operated by Strand Mikkelson, a former national champion jumper, whose somersaults delight the jumper, whose somersaults delight the onlookers. Both have performed in major sports centers, as have the native troop of professional skiers, Mikkelson, Shul and Pulaski. These men are now teaching two Greenfield girls who, as high school students, were jumping more than 150 feet...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: NEARBY SLOPES AVAILABLE TO SKIIERS AT PIONEER VALLEY | 2/8/1941 | See Source »

With his frost-nipped ears taped up, Franz von Werra was taken in tow by the German Consulate in New York City. Out on bond, he reported in Manhattan to see what would happen next. Since international law forbade the U. S. to return him to Canada, likelihood was that the Government would order him deported. How a deportation order could be carried out with Britain in control of the seas was a question resourceful Franz von Werra did not worry about. He knew that, to Adolf Hitler's Luftwaffe, he was worth 20 times his $5,000 bond...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WAR & PEACE: Escape | 2/3/1941 | See Source »

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