Search Details

Word: pens (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...does it remotely resemble Top Girls, her study of the modern career woman's adaptive skills at the Big Business pastime of cat-kills-mouse. The women of Fen seem primordially immune to change, though Churchill would doubtless argue that they have been ensnared in a capitalistic slave pen...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Tragedy in an Aching Stoop | 6/13/1983 | See Source »

...measures how efficiently the body is inhaling and distributing oxygen. A normal saturation is around 95 to 97, but this patient's seldom exceeds 80, and drops as low as the low 40s during apnea episodes McMahon noting the reading every few seconds, will mark it in felt-tip pen as the paper rolls along...

Author: By Marie B. Morris, | Title: Helping Them Sleep in the Lab | 5/18/1983 | See Source »

...type of pen wielded by a forger can be a giveaway. The quaint quill was used exclusively until 1780, when its successor, the steel pen, came into existence. The difference in writing between the two can be seen under a microscope. Fiber-tipped pens were not used extensively in the U.S. until 1964. Any forger using a pen not common in the period his document purports to derive from risks quick discovery. The modern proliferation of pens, particularly ballpoints, complicates the task of current document analysts, but can provide fresh clues. A ballpoint requires the writer to exert more pressure...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hitler's Forged Diaries | 5/16/1983 | See Source »

...Collins Sons deposited $120,000 in a West German bank for the privilege of examining a twelve-page extract from the typewritten documents, which bore a signature that was allegedly Canaris'. When tested by a London laboratory, the signature proved to have been written with a ball point pen, an instrument that came into use in Germany after Canaris was executed on Hitler's orders...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Bull Market in Phony Naziana | 5/16/1983 | See Source »

...making them appear dupes of alien Jewish machinations. In 1921, a reporter for the London Times found the sources from which the Protocols had been lifted. The notion of Jewish leaders plotting secretly came from a novel called Biarritz (1868) by Hermann Goedsche, a German who used the pen name Sir John Retcliffe. Most of the language and ideas in the Protocols, however, were taken directly from a French satire published in 1864, Dialogue aux enfers entre Montesquieu et Machiavel (Dialogue in Hell Between Montesquieu and Machiavelli). The conversation reveals Machiavelli (a thinly disguised stand-in for Napoleon...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Fakes That Have Skewed History | 5/16/1983 | See Source »

Previous | 329 | 330 | 331 | 332 | 333 | 334 | 335 | 336 | 337 | 338 | 339 | 340 | 341 | 342 | 343 | 344 | 345 | 346 | 347 | 348 | 349 | Next