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Word: axed (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...crowd of 60.000 Baer's reaction was amazing. With a blow of his right hand, which he swings as if it still held the meat axe with which he used to butcher heifers, he knocked Carnera down...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Clown into Champion | 6/25/1934 | See Source »

...Steel Corp. He retired in 1923 when Bethlehem bought Midvale. Same year he was divorced from his second wife, Mabelle Oilman Corey, onetime actress, whom he married amid much publicity in 1907. Died. Albert E. Sleeper, 71, banker, onetime (1917-20) Governor of Michigan; after long illness; in Bad Axe, Mich...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, May 21, 1934 | 5/21/1934 | See Source »

...swarm of soothsayers laying down the law, but rarely have their tables of stone weathered the drizzle of a single generation. Of the modestly minor interpreters of the modern U. S., Lewis Mumford has one of the most respectful followings. No Jeremiah, no hard-shell Marxian, with no patent axe to grind, he goes at the complex mass of modern civilization with all five senses. Technics and Civilization, scholarly, ambitious, big (495 pp.), does not attempt to be a Bible for any creed, but it may well prove to be a milestone in the circuitous study of the Machine...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Neotechnic | 5/7/1934 | See Source »

...families can move out of depressing hovels into sanitary, sun-lit homes." His remedy for crime: education. "While we are striving to deal with one gangster, a thousand criminals are in the making. We pluck leaves from the tree of crime when we should put an axe to the root...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Beggar Bespoken | 4/16/1934 | See Source »

...Islands have long had a heavy axe to grind with some of the gentlemen from Nevada and Iowa, etc., who take up residence periodically in Washington. The Territory particularly resents it when full-blooded Americans start talking about "those American possessions, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, and Hawaii." The loyal American Islanders have an extreme aversion toward being "possessed," even when the United States is the "possessor," for the same reason that the multi-racial jury in the Fortescue-Massie case was royally irked when Clarence Darrow talked to it "as if we were a group of Middle Western farmers...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WE'RE IN, WE'D LIKE TO SAY | 4/12/1934 | See Source »

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