Search Details

Word: hammer (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...Pound Hammer-throw: First, R. P. MacFadden '26, 129 feet 5 inches, scratch; second, O. S. Schaefer '29, 117 feet 9 inches, handicap 20 feet; third, P. P. Phillips '26, 112 feet 2 inches, scratch...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FALL MEET ENDS TODAY WITH RUNNING EVENTS | 11/17/1925 | See Source »

Gates, left tackle and captain of the Princeton track team, will also graduate next June. Line material has been scarce in New Jersey this year, and Roper was forced to use the big hammer-thrower throughout the Eli encounter...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TIGER'S 1926 FOOTBALL PROSPECTS LOOK BRIGHT | 11/17/1925 | See Source »

...Congreve, and the Johnson circle, while pre-Raphaelites, transcendentalists, romanticists go unread. Indeed the present has little sympathy with many of the ideals and standards of the nineteenth century. Traditions, morals, and conventions have to bear the daily shafts of the lighter humorists, to say nothing of the sledge-hammer blows of H. L. Menken and the rest of the Grub Street fry on the American Mercury. Emerson, Carlyle, and Mill are no longer known at first hand. Writers of little depth have succeeded to popularity, if not to their places. It is quite likely that society has suffered from...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THESE LITERARY TIMES | 11/9/1925 | See Source »

...advancement in electric welding is making possible the use of the process on a large as well as a small scale. Only a few further steps in this advancement are needed before it will be practicable to build rivetless skyscrapers, thereby silencing the nerve-racking noise of the air hammer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Rivets | 10/26/1925 | See Source »

...groan, bulwarks drown, spars shiver, tumults surge, canvas flogs, human limpets cling to wreckage with bleeding nails, battered limbs, frozen hands, grim resolve. It is a fast-sailing tale of clipper days, stoutly and thoroughly rigged from stem to gudgeon, commanded by a cultured swashbuckler from Nova Scotia, a hammer-fisted, hell-bent "bluenose" skipper, with Nietzschean ethics, Vulcanic muscles, the passions of Poseidon, the luck of Lucifer. When his clipper Aphrodite goes down off Patagonia, this skipper's redemption is made cinema-credible by a bleak, briny coast, driving rain, starvation and the steadfastness of a childhood sweetheart...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Eccentrics | 10/19/1925 | See Source »

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