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Word: classicized (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...schedule as announced yesterday is one of the most ambitious undertaken by Crimson crews in recent years. In there races, six opponents will be met by the first University crew, numbering some of the strongest college eights in the country. The annual Yale classic will be rowed as usual over the four mile course on the Thames at New London on June...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CREW SEASON BEGINS WITH MEETING TODAY | 2/11/1925 | See Source »

...first novel relates concurrently the life of father and son. It concludes with son's inheritance which consists of: a) The memory of a father who died in unmitigated disgrace; b) $6,000,000 worth of breweries, steel railways, iron-foundries piled together by Grandfather Moldenhauer, a classic German-American of Columbus, Ohio. The second novel relates the story of the Great War as it was fought concurrently in the hearts of German-American mother and Yale-American son. It concludes a victory that warbles faintly in the breast of the latter...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Father and Son | 2/9/1925 | See Source »

...although not of the best traditional stock, deriving from the long-ago time when Professor Dunbar convinced his colleagues that an economist might be a scholar. With the cock-sureness of youth, the School chose to demonstrate in its own way its preference for such things as the newest classic slogan, the clarion call to "Take Baby...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "BOOST THE BUSINESS SCHOOL" SAYS LAMPY | 1/30/1925 | See Source »

...much like a metrical exercise in other hands, by a variation that gives it something of the fluent melody of terzarima. John Sherry Mangan, an enthusiastic an energetic experimenter, indicates something of the range of his work in two sharply contrasting poems: "Disoriented", sapphics in which a strictly classic treatment of form encloses a romantic elaboration and decoration of feeling; and "the Passing of Shaughnessy" which fuses the fantasy and conceit of pre-classical phrasing in English poetry, a music that has the sureness of old rhythm and the freedom of new, and a nervous presentation of story conspicuously modern...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ADVOCATE PROSE IS POETRY SAYS CODE | 1/22/1925 | See Source »

...Democrats now, like Sisyphus in the classic fable, must roll our great, heavy stone uphill again, and we never will roll it uphill again unless there shall be a reversion on the part of the party to its former sound ideas of the proper relations between the states and the National Government and between governmental activity and private industrial activity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Party Difference | 1/12/1925 | See Source »

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