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Word: tinkered (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...press." When asked after the meeting to define "conservatives and radicals," he admitted that the average conservative is a man just too lazy to act; he is willing to stand pat, and let things slide as they are. A genuine conservative, however, is a man willing to tinker ahead slowly, experimenting as he goes along, trying to get a working principle, but ever advancing. The radical, on the other hand, is one who works as soon as he thinks, or even sooner...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LIBERALS FLAYED BY ROGERS IN TALK AT LIBERAL CLUB | 11/5/1929 | See Source »

Four lecturers come from other American colleges to Harvard, two for the whole year and two for the second half year only. Chauncey Tinker, on sabattical leave from Yale, will lecture during the second half year in the Department of Fine Arts on British Painting of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FOUR AMERICAN PROFESSORS COME TO HARVARD IN 1929-30 | 9/24/1929 | See Source »

Confident of success, Equity has not called upon unionized electricians, operators, cameramen. But these men have devised technical subtleties to express Equity sympathy. They drop heavy tools near apostate Equity actors, tinker with studio machinery, cause intolerable delays...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Equity v. Hollywood | 8/5/1929 | See Source »

...Maury Maverick, all praise for a TIME-worthy report. His bookplate, here reproduced, has been forwarded to Collector FitzPatrick, Director of the Sunday Times, Sydney, Australia.?ED. Tinker's Version Sirs: The controversy on the famous Merkle play in your columns has been of interest to me. While reading Evers' letter last Sunday morning I glanced out my window and saw Joe Tinker chasing a golf ball up the fairway. Joe stopped on my call and I plied him for his version of the affair. Joe says he DID NOT hold McGinity's arms. His story is that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Jun. 3, 1929 | 6/3/1929 | See Source »

Back in the Sober Seventies the typewriter tinker was a faithful reader of The Weekly Tribune founded by Editor Horace Greeley. Years after he left New York state and moved across the Atlantic to settle in Tinglev, Schleswig, the Danish mechanic remembered the great U. S. editor. When he begat a son in Tinglev, he named the man-child?today chief of the German delegation in Paris?Hjalmar Horace Greeley Schacht. The onetime plowboy was. of course, General Electric's Owen D. Young, chief negotiant for the U. S. in Paris, chairman of the Second Dawes Committee...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INTERNATIONAL: Young Plan | 5/13/1929 | See Source »

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