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The North American Tiddlywinks Association T i d d l y w i n k s ! |
© 1980-2010 Rick Tucker & Fred Shapiro. All Rights Reserved. Legal
The Tiddlywinks Bibliography is a compendium of all substantive and obscure citations to the game of tiddlywinks in all available resources: newspapers, magazines, books, government records, images, audio, video, websites, etc. In other words, if the game of tiddlywinks was mentioned either briefly or in detail, it should be in the Tiddlywinks Bibliography.
Introduction · Newspapers · School · Magazines · Books · Letters etc.· Video/Audio · Visual Art · Tiddlywinks Publications · Equipment · Patents · Trademarks · Copyrights · Miscellaneous · Museums & Collections
Accountancy (UK)
| Apr 1988 | "People" section, "Wink Wink". Photo of Mapley | original (CUTwC) |
| 10 Sep 1962 | 30 | "Rainier Beer's Tiddlywinks Tourney Is Smashing Success" (Oxford team playing in San Francisco) | transcript |
| 16 Sep 2009 | "Anheuser-Busch to Advertise in Super Bowl, Sun to Rise in the East" by Brian Steinberg ("When in the last decade or more of Super Bowl advertising has Anheuser not been in the game? The CBS ad-sales team could spend its time playing tiddly-winks and still sell ad time for Bud and Bud Light ads.") |
Albany Review
| (?13 Jul) 1907 | Volume 1 | "The Cricket Fetish" by Alfred Fellows
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All the Year Round—A Weekly Journal Conducted by Charles Dickens
| 18 Mar 1876 | Volume 16 Number 381 |
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American Annals of the Deaf
| Feb 1897 | Volume 42 Number 2 |
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The American Botanist
| May 1917 | Volume 23 Number 2 |
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transcript |
Journal of American Folk-Lore
| Jul-Sep 1893 | Page 209 Volume 6 Number 22 | "Exhibit of games in the Columbian Exposition"/"Case II. Balls, Quoits, Marbles" by Stewart Culin
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photocopy |
| Jan-Mar 1961 | 19, 20, 29, 35, 36, 42, 43 | "Sixty Years of Historic Change in the Game Preferences of American Children" by Brian Sutton-Smith & B. G. Rosenberg (results of surveys in 1898, 1921, and 1959) | transcript |
American Journalism Review
| Oct 1994 | v16 n8 p13(2) | "When the facts get in the way" |
The American Flint (Official Magazine of the American Flint Glass Workers Union of North America)
| Nov 1917 | Volume 9 Number 1 Page 45 | "Toronto, Ont." by A. Mooney
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The American Magazine
| ___ 1938 | Volume 125 Page 166 | ("tiddlywinks game that you play until it's time to go to work. And that's just what it is to me! I don't want to be a singer. I want to be a woman!' |
The American Spectator
| Oct 1993 | v26 n10 p43(6) | "Northern exposure" (Canadian post-Mulroney politics and the rise of Kim Campbell, the first woman PM) |
American Stationer (at Library of Congress)
| 18 Sep 1890 | 691 | "Trade Novelties" column. "A New Game" re E. I. Horsman's "Tiddledy Wink Tennis". Illustrated | Important; photocopy |
| 9 Oct 1890 | 850 | "Trade Items" column. Interview with Horsman | photocopy |
| 30 Oct 1890 | 1017 | "Trade Items" column. Interview with Horsman | photocopy |
| 4 Dec 1890 | 1307 | "Chat by the way" column. Interview with Horsman | photocopy |
| 18 Dec 1890 | 1412 | "Trade Items" column. Interview with Horsman | photocopy |
| 1 Jan 1891 | 21 | "Trade Items" column. Interview with Horsman | photocopy |
| 12 Feb 1891 | 320 | Selchow & Righter ad "Tiddledy Winks", three varieties. Illustrated | photocopy |
| 19 Feb 1891 | 389 | "Trade Items" column. Note re McLoughlin Bros. deluxe "Progressive Tiddledy Winks" | photocopy |
| 400 | Ad for McLoughlin Bros. "Progressive Tiddledy Winks" | photocopy | |
| 411 | Same Selchow & Righter ad as 12 Feb. Illustrated | ||
| 26 Feb 1891 | 469 | Same Selchow & Righter ad as 12 Feb. Illustrated | |
| 473 | "Trade Items" column. "Ring-A-Peg", invented by John J. B. Trainer, manufactured byu Geo. B. Leiter & Co. Illustrated | photocopy | |
| 499 | Same McLoughlin Bros. ad as 19 Feb | ||
| 5 Mar 1891 | 549 | Same Selchow & Righter ad as 12 Feb (abbrev.). Illustrated | |
| 12 Mar 1891 | 563 | Same Selchow & Righter ad as 5 Mar. Illustrated | |
| 27 Aug 1891 | 417 | Selchow & Righter ad for "Snap Dragon", "Pedro", "Juno", and two varieties of "Cricket on the Hearth". Illustrated | photocopy |
| 503 | "New Toys and Games" describing Selchow & Righters "Pedro", "Juno", "Snap Dragon", and "Cricket on the Hearth". Illustrated | photocopy | |
| 22 Oct 1891 | 871 | "Trade Novelties" column. Subhead "Lo Lo The New Parlor Croquet Game", by L. E. Lawrence, introduced by E. I. Horsman. Illustrated | photocopy |
| 898 | "Parker's Games". "Hop Scotch Tiddledy Winks". Illustrated | photocopy | |
| 19 Nov 1891 | 1063 | Patent listing of George Scott's US patent |
Antique Toy World
| Sep 1987 | cover | Photo of The Big Game Hunter (Bruce Whitehill) with games, including Lo Lo by E.I. Horsman and Crickets on the Grass |
The Antique Trader Guide to Antique Prices
| Fall 1982 | 37 | Price listing | |
| Oct 1984 | 54 | Price listing |
Antiques and Collectibles
| Jun 1979 | 17 | Ad by Fred Shapiro (same text as in Hobbies magazine) |
The Antiques Journal
| Dec 1974 | 22 | "The games people played" by Andrea Lovejoy (rehash of Parker Brothers 90 Years of Fun book) | transcript |
| May 1979 | 48 | "Ask Us" section. Query by Rick Tucker and Fred Shapiro | original |
ARTnews
| Jan 1980 | 82, 85, 86-87 | "Unexpected Treasures of England's Stately Homes/Donatello tiddlywinks and Ming in the lavatory". 85: photo ("Donatello bronze, The Madonna and Child, served the Fitzwilliam family as a tiddlywinks bowl") | photocopy |
The Atlantic Monthly
| Apr 1891 | Volume 67 Issue 402 Page 565 | "Comment on New Books" ("The Young Folks' Cyclopædia of Games and Sports, by John D. Champlin, Jr., and Arthur E. Bostwick. (Holt.) Eight hundred double-columned pages, full of descriptive illustrations, and so brought to date that the noble game of Tiddledy Winks has more than a column. We object seriously to one of the rules: 'A player may not intentionally cover any of his opponent's counters.' Why, the snap is taken out of the game when one can cover accidentally only.") |
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| 1902 | Page 383 Volume 90 | "On the Off-Short Lights." (" [...] ''T is long ter set. I wisht I could feel ter play tiddledy-winks,' she said wistfully.") |
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| Nov 1917 | Volume 120 Page 715 | "The Contributor's Club"/"The Floor" ("The only parallel that I can think of is the way in which, during very early childhood, we sometimes played tiddledywinks. When the man-made rules of that staid sport became too wearing for our advanced intellects, we used to get to snapping all at once, promiscuously. Everybody snapped everybody else's wink, at the bull's-eye or the eye of his neighbor, regardless. This indiscriminating sort of think lends a lawless charm most bracing to tiddledywinks, but it cancels conversation.") | Digital copy (NATwA) |
| May 1956 | 74 | "What shall we do with the dullards" by Caspar D. Green. Mention | excerpt |
| Apr 1990 | 41> | "Hollywood, the ad: the techniques and cartoon-like moral vision of television advertising are exerting more and more influence over American moviemaking" | |
| Jun 1994 | v273 n6 p24(3) | "Busy, busy, busy" (Americans' love of joining associations) by Cullen Murphy. ("Larry Kahn, of the North American Tiddlywinks Association, in Silver Spring, Maryland, explains that most of the 100 dues-paying "winkers" in his group are men, and that most have a background in mathematics or computers. In the United States major tiddlywinks tournaments are held four or five times a year. NATwA has a sister organization, known as ETwA, in England; of English winkers Kahn observes, "They're even nerdier than we are." Like participants in many other sports and games, winkers have developed a distinctive jargon. They may say, for instance, "I can't pot my nurdled wink, so I'll piddle you free and you can boondock a red." Tiddlywinks apparently enjoyed something of an efflorescence in the United States in the late 1960s and the 1970s, after which it entered a period of mild decline. Kahn blames this on the nation's having experienced a time of cynical economic opportunism and creeping spiritual discontent, which together eroded the bedrock of silliness upon which the edifice of tiddlywinks is erected. Or so I inferred. Actually, what he said when asked about the cause of the decline was simply, "Reagan." ") | digital copy |
Baseball Weekly
| 18 May 1994 | 34 | "Waxing nostalgic for weathered leather we once wore" by Lisa Winston. ("The last one picked for every team from softball to tiddlywinks.") |
digital copy |
The Black Cat—A Monthly Magazine of Original Short Stories (Boston, Massachusetts)
| Jul 1903 | Volume 8 Number 10 | "An Arctic Scoop" by Walter Tallmade Arndt and Philip Loring Allen
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Bookman
| Sep 1926 | 90 | Quick book review of Sinclair Lewis' Mantrap ("The great realist plays an amusing game of tiddlywinks in the north woods") | transcript |
Boys' Life
| Jul 1975 | 52-53 | "Wink Tennis" by Bob Loeffelbein and John Taylor. Photo and illustration | photocopy |
(BOAC/British Airways)
| ? | About Prince Philip and Olympics (see Missing Wink Nov 1976 pages 5, 9) |
Bucks County (PA) Life
| Oct 1962 | Oxford vs. actors |
Business Week
| 4 Dec 1971 | 26 | Bill Mauldin (Chicago Sun-Times) cartoon of John Connally playing "Texas Tiddlywinks" with dollar and yen | photocopy; original (Drix) |
| 2 Oct 1978 | 22C | [industrial edition] "Where nuclear plants get grinsnot growls" | excerpt |
| 2 Apr 1984 | 30 | "High-Tech Exports: Sparks are About to Fly" |
The Business World
| 15 Oct 1906 | Page 828 Volume 26 Number 10 | "Business Articles in the Magazine"/"FORTUNES IN GAMES". ("'Tiddledy-winks,' a game in which flipping small counters into a cup playes the chief part, has provied a gold mine in its way. This game was first played by some members of a club who were waiting for a card table. One of them started to try to flip a poker chip into his glass with a coin, and, as he failed, a friend thought he could do better. This led to bets being made, and in the end nearly all the members who were present in the club had gathered round the table and were breathless with excitement over this new game. Eventually it was decided to patent the game, and since then the public have paid something like two hundred throusand dollars to the retailers of "tiddledy-winks") | Digital copy (NATwA) |
The Camera
| Aug 1932 | v45 n2 p107 | "TIDDLYWINKS" photo by Bruce Metcalfe from the Fourth Chicago International Photographic Salon | original |
Catalog of Copyright Entries by the Library of Congress
| 1936 | Part 4: Works of Art, Etc. New Series Page 24 |
"Einson-Freeman co., inc. 1282-1311"
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Century
| Mar 1919 | 585 | "The Archer", story by Richard Matthews Hallet ("In the case in question they spun away from the strongbacks like tiddledewinks.") | transcript |
Century Advertising Supplement (to Century magazine) (at Library of Congress)
| Dec 1890 | Ad by E. I. Horsman |
Changing Times The Kiplinger Magazine
| Oct 1949 | 29 | "So You Want to Invent a Game"
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Chatterbox by John Erskine Clarke
| 1919 | Pages 28-29 | "The Home Toy-Shop."/"I.— Games for a Rainy Day."
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Digital copy (NATwA) |
Child Development
| Mar 1963 | 121 | "Development of sex differences in play choices during preadolescence" by Brian Sutton-Smith, B. G. Rosenberg, and E. F. Morgan Jr. | |
| 1964 | 965 | "Measuring Masculinity and Femininity by Children's game choices" by Richard N. Walker |
Children's Work for Children (published by the Women's Foreign Missionary Organizations for the Board of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church)
| Apr 1892 | v17 n4 p69 | "Geographical Tiddledywinks" ("'A half-dozen, little full-blooded Indian girls, were in my room a few evenings since, playing Tiddledywinks, a game sent us from the east.'") | original |
Christianity Today
| 12 Sep 1994 | v38 n10 p14(2) | "Blinded by the 'lite:' dying modernity is "into" spirituality" (editorial) |
Collier's: The National Weekly
| 8 Feb 1919 | 7 | [column 3] "Signor Pug" by Mildred Cram ("earliest figurative usage"Shapiro) ("Theres trouble down there, and Ive been playing tiddledy-winks on Broadway!") | photocopy |
Computer Weekly (UK)
| ? late 1979 | (Winking World 34 page 4) |
Congressional Record (United States Congress)
| 3 Aug 2007 | Volume 153, Issue 127, page H9666 col 2 | "Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. Speaker, we just heard it straight out: You don’t need to see the bill. You will see it whenever we want to give it to you. You don’t need it. All we are doing down here is playing tiddlywinks with national security." |
Contemporary Review
| Aug 1894 | Volume 66 Page 246 | "The Home or the Barrack for the Children of the State" by Henrietta O. Barrett.
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transcript |
The Cosmopolitan
| Jul 1895 | Volume 19 Number 3 | "The Maltese Cat" by Rudyard Kipling
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| Oct 1895 | Volume 19 Number 6 | "The Parker Games" advertisement
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Current Opinion
| Sep 1891 | Volume 8 Number 1 | "Current Literature"/"Brief and Critical Comment"
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Current Opinion
| Jul 1924 | 57 | "The Golden Honeymoon" by Ring Lardner |
Dialog Chronolog [ISSN 0163-3732]
| Jan 1984 | 84:26 | "Record of the Month". NATwA listing from Gale's Encyclopedia of Associations, submitted by Shapiro. | photocopy |
Dimensions
| ~Winter 1983-84 | Listing of NATwAs Continentals tournament |
Disarmament Times (NGO Disarmament Committee, UN)
| 6 Oct 1980 | 4 | "Back to the drawing board on the NPT!", editorial. Figurative | transcript |
Discover
| Apr 1993 | v14 n4 p60(9) | "Loops of space" (a possible theory of quantum gravity) |
The Draughts Players' Weekly Bulletin
| 21 Nov 1896 | Page 35 | "London Notes"
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Dun's Business Month
| Nov 1981 | 84 | "Satisfying Cable's Vast Appetite for Programming" | excerpt |
The Economist (UK)
| 18 Nov 1947 | 626 | "End of Act Two"; ("alerted lexicographers to figurative usage" Shapiro) ("yet when its first icy gust blew in the windows of the Cabinet room [...], it found Ministers playing tiddleywinks.") | photocopy |
| 27 Dec 1980 | 13 | "Marching past Georgia" | excerpt |
| 10 Dec 1988 | 45 | "By the squidging of their thumbs...." (preventing multiple voting in Ghana) ("squidge") | |
| 4 Mar 1989 | v310 n7592 p57(1) | "A gap in the learning market; Britain's only private university has lessons for its state-financed competitors " re University of Buckingham ("little time for partying, student politics, or tiddlywinks societies.") | photocopy |
| 27 Feb 1993 | v326 n7800 p96(1) | Vol. 326. "The royal game" (court tennis) by David Manasian. (‘Do not, however, assume a contest on a physical par with tiddlywinks: real tennis (meaning "royal", rather than "genuine", and also known as court tennis) is the finest racquet sport of all’) | digital copy |
Journal of Educational Sociology (American Sociological Association)
| Oct 1933 | vol 7 no 2 pp 117-1212 | "A Discussion of Criteria or Standards of Educational Value with Special Reference to Woodworking" by Fred Strickler ("They must choose, they must identify themselves with the activity whole-heartedly or they would better be playing "tiddledy-winks" or thinking about ...") |
The English Illustrated Magazine
| May 1908 | Page 155 | "A Scientific Game" by Agnes Hood
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The English Journal
| March 1919 | Volume 8 Number 3 | "Protecting the Theme-Reader" by Homer A. Watt, New York University
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Entertainment Weekly
| 16 Jun 1995 | n279 p58(2) | "Head Over Heels" (sound recording reviews) |
Esquire
| Sep 1949 | v31 n3 whole 190 p76-77 | "Love and Tiddlywinks" by Martin Gardner ("So the first word I called out was 'Tiddlywinks'") | original |
| Feb 1984 | 12 | "American Beat"/"For Members Only" by Bob Greene. Section re Larry Kahn | original |
| Mar 1999 | "The Screen: And the Leni Riefenstahl ward for Rabid Nationalism Goes to... " by Tom Carson ("Spielberg turns him back into Sergeant York, and his feats make the real one's look like tiddlywinks.") |
Ethnology
| Apr 1962 | somewhere in 160-185 | "Child training and game involvement" by J. M. Roberts & Brian Sutton-Smith |
Everybody's (UK)
| Apr 1906 | Volume 14 Number 4 | "The Gathering of the Churches"/"Graft in the Wage System" by Eugene Wood
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[Everybody's Magazine] |
| Mar 1912 | Volume 26 Number 3 | "Otherwhere" by Leon Rutledge Whipple
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| 3 May 1958 | 14-15 | Well and True Tiddled, short story by Russell Gordon. Illustration | original |
| 17 May 1958 | Tiddlywinks query by Peter Downes (see Winks Rampant) |
Fab (pop music fan magazine) (UK?)
| ___ 1965 | About Spencer Davis (see Winking World 8, page 16) |
Famous Jersey Cattle (Serial Historical Magazine)
| Nov 1922 | Volume 1 Number 1 Advertising Section Page 14 | "Tiddledywink's Majesty King 181784, AJCC" and more | |
| Nov 1922 | Editorial Section Pages 259, 266, 274 | "Three Generations of Notable Descent from the Bull, Favorite's Lad" |
Focus
| Aug? 1999 | "NASA should hire tiddlywink players to be astronauts" |
| 10 Dec 2007 | Forbes Life section | "You Don't Know Tiddly" by Dick Teresi |
| 22 Oct 1990 | v122 n10 p121(3) | "Do you push your people too hard?" | |
| Aut-Win 1993 | v128 n13 p14(4) | "The best ways to reach your buyers" (The Tough New Customer) (cover story) |
Game & Puzzle Collectors Quarterly (Association of Game & Puzzle Collectors) (ISSN 1529-4706)
| Summer 2008 | v10 n2 p20 | "TIDDLYWINKS"/"A ROYAL MATCH" by Rick Tucker | original |
Game Researchers Notes (American Game Collectors Association) (ISSN 1050-6608)
| Jun 1988 (#3) | 5032 | "Archives Information Listing" ("Instr - E. I. Horsman Tiddledy Winks (2) ca. 1890 Lee & Rally Dennis"; "Instr E. I. Horsman Tiddledy Wink Tennis 1890 Lee & Rally Dennis"; (handwritten by E. I. Horsman) "also Tidly Winks The New Round Game"; "Instr McLoughlin Bros Tiddledy Winks (3) 1890 Lee & Rally Dennis") | photocopy |
| 5034 | "Instr -- ? Tiddledy Winks -- ? John Overall") | photocopy | |
| 5042 | Reprint of ad for Horsmans Tiddledywink Tennis" ("Tiddledy Winks Tennis © 1890 by E. I. Horsman; From the collection of Lee & Rally Dennis") | photocopy | |
| Dec 1989 (#6) | 5103 | "Games Wanted" ("Chuck Hoey is looking for early Lawn Tennis (pre-1900) & all racket games. In particular Geo. S. Parker [ ] Tiddledy Winks Tennis [ ], E. I. Horsman [ ] Tiddledy Winks Tennis") | original |
| 5104 | "Game Catalog Responses" ("All Fair, Inc. 1928 Blinky Blinx (#411)") | original | |
| Aug 1992 (#12) | p7 | "Robinson Crusoes Farmyard and The Wide, Wide World; How a Card Game led to the publication of a Victorian Best-seller" ("It was a far better game than Tiddle-de-Winks.") | original |
| p17 | "Four Moons Tiddledy Winks" listed for Selchow & Righter for 1865 (sic) | original | |
| Jun 1993 (#14) | p5321 | "Jaymar is Game for 70th Anniversary" by Bruce Whitehill ("Donald Ducks Tiddley Winx" (sp?)) | original |
| p5323 | Ad: "Chuch Hoey is looking for [ ] M.B.s Tiddeldy Wink Tennis" (sic) | original | |
| Jun 1994 (# 17) | 5374, 5377 | "The Leo Hart Company and Playtime House: Rochester Printer and Puzzle Maker" by Anne D. Williams | original |
| Feb 1995 (#19) | 5421 | "Comics and Cartoons Board Games" by Alex G. Malloy/ ("Disney did well getting their games into the marketplace. In the 1930s Whitman produced various Disney games including [ ] Disney Tiddley Winks") | original |
| Jun 1995 (#20) | 5467 | "NEWS"/"AGCA Mid-West Regional Meeting" ( "a display of early games from the Midland County Historical Society, which included [ ] Tiddly Wink games;"") | original |
| Feb 1996 (#22) | 5505 | "The Lilly Library Archives" by Jim van Fleet. Re antique set "Over the Garden Wall" by E. I. Horsman | original |
| 5506 | 2 black & white photos of "Over the Garden Wall" | original | |
| 5513 | "Keeping in Touch" by Robert Finn. Re Tuckers tiddlywinks web site on the Internet | original | |
| 5516 | Black & white reproduction of Tuckers tiddlywinks home page on the Internet | original | |
| 5522 | "An Important Antique Toy & Game Auction". Cites McLoughlin "Combination Tiddley (sic) Winks" | original | |
| Oct 1996 (#24) | front cover | Zimmerling game patent. | original |
| 5552-5561 | "Tiddlywinks: The Classic Victorian Pastime: On Target for the 21st Century" by Rick Tucker. 6 photographs of antique sets. | original | |
| back cover | E. I. Horsmans "Ring-A-Peg" | original |
Game Times (American Game Collectors Association) (ISSN 1050-6594)
| Spring 1985 | 5 | (Vol. 1 #1) "GAMES PEOPLE PLAYEDAND STILL DO!" ("Many more games from the late 1800s and early 1900s are still with us. TIDDLY WINKS, also spelled TIDDLEDY, can be found before the turn of the centure with instructions as to how to "tiddle the wink", the tiddle being the larger disk which was snapped against the wink, or smaller disk.") | original |
| 5 | "GAME TRIVIA" (1. What does it mean to "tiddle your wink"?) | original | |
| 11 | "COMMON GAMES" ("Generic Games [ ] TIDDLEDY WINKS") | original | |
| Late Summer 1985 | 12 | (Vol. 1 #2) "GAME TALLY" ("Chaffee & Selchow [ ] TIDDLEDY WINKS") | photocopy |
| Summer 1987 | 105 | (Vol. III #2, Issue #7) "FEATURED COMPANY: TRANSOGRAM" ("The 1930s also saw Transogram expand into the area of games. From the 1935 BIG BUSINESS to the 1938 GAME OF INDIA and TIDDLEDY WINKS, the company started featuring more colorful graphics and more interactive games.") | original |
| Aug 1992 | 377 | (Vol. VIII, #2, Issue #18) "FISH TO GAMES TO GARDENING" by Anne D. Williams. (Reference to NATwA) | original |
| Apr 1994 | 504 | (Vol. X, #1, Issue # 23) Ad by Rick Tucker "TIDDLEYWINKS: PLAIN & EXOTIC" | original |
| Aug 1994 | 517 | (Vol. X, #2, Issue # 24) "All-Fair Games, Cards, and Puzzles" by Anne D. Williams. Reference to Fairchilds 1958 catalog | original |
| 519 | Reproduction of Alderman-Fairchilds ad in Playthings (1928) with Blinky Blinx Tiddledy Winks | ||
| Dec 1994 | 552 | (Vol. X, #3, Issue # 25) Ad by Rick Tucker "Tiddleywinks from 1888 to date." | original |
| Dec 1995 | 602 | (Vol. XI, #3, Issue # 28) "Subject: Aftermath" with Rick Tuckers email re Bloomington convention. | original |
| 607, 608 | Photos of Rick Tucker "as a tiddlywink" at the Bloomington convention | ||
| 613 | "Online" reference to Tuckers web page | ||
| Apr 1996 | 630 | (Vol. XII, # 1, Issue # 29) "Subject: RE: Monopoly on the cereal box " with Tucker email excerpt re Trix tiddlywinks. | original |
Games
| Feb 1992 | 54 | "TIDDLYWINKS" under "The Game and Puzzle Events Calendar" | original |
Games and Puzzles (UK)
| Nov 1973 (#19) | 7 | "Tiddlywinks" by Alan Dean | |
| May 1974 (#24) | 22 | "Tiddly-winks (American style)" letter by Philip M. Cohen (early version of Verbatim article) |
General Register Office (UK) Civil Registration Index
| Births Registered in July, August, September 1863 | Page 330 | Entry: "Fincher, Joseph Assheton [sub-registrar's district] "Andover" [volume] 2c [page] 174". Andover is in Hampshire, Wiltshire, England |
digital copy (NATwA) |
| July, August, and September 1900 Deaths | Page 107 Column 1 | Entry: "Fincher, Joseph Assheton [age] 36 [district] "Lambeth" [volume] 1.d. [page] 181". Lambeth is in Greater London, London, Surrey, England |
digital copy (NATwA) |
The Journal of Genetic Psychology
| May 1960 (v96) | 168 | "A revised conception of masculine-feminine differences in play activities" by B. G. Rosenberg & Brian Sutton-Smith ("Tiddle di winks") | transcript |
GQ
| Dec 1992 | 186 col. 2 | "Tom Cruise From the Neck Up" by Stephanie Mansfield | original |
Harper's New Monthly Magazine
| Jan 1891 | Page 198 Column 1 Volume 82 Number 498 |
"LONDON MUSIC HALLS" by F. Anstey ("'No, she won't, old Tiddlywinks!' says the boy, rising suddenly from his hiding-place.") | |
| Dec 1891 | Page 3 Column 2 Volume 84 Number 499 | "LITERARY NOTES" ("He had not been fed on caramels, he had never been taught to drum on the piano in country hotels, and he had never player Tiddledy Winks.") | |
| Jan 1893 | Page170 Column 2 Volume 86 Number 512 | "The Old Way to Dixie" by Julian Ralph ("But they evidently were only a bit of accidental drift from wide-awake St. Louis, and not intended for the passengers, because the clerk came out of his office, swept them into a drawer, and invited me to join him in a game of tiddledywinks. He added to the calm pleasures of the game by telling of a Kentucky girl eleven feet high, who stood at one end of a very wide table and shot the disks into the cup from both sides of the table without changing her position. I judged from his remarks that she was simply a tall girl who played well at tiddledywinks.") | Digital copy (NATwA) |
Harper's Bazar
| Mar 1910 | 196 col 4 | "New Games" ("There is a new tiddledy-winks game, with spring-boards [...]") | transcript |
Hobbies
| Apr 1979 | 161 col 3 | Ad "TIDDLYWINKS GAMES!" by Fred Shapiro | photocopy |
Hobbies Weekly (UK)
| 18 Nov 1959 | v129 n3336 p116-117 | "Make this exciting game"/"Tiddleywinks Carpet Golf" by L. A. Gribble. 2 illustrations | original |
The Illustrated American
| 23 May 1891 | Volume 7 Number 66 | "Current Comment"
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| 1 Aug 1891 | Volume 7 Number 76 Page 523 Column 1 | "Correspondence"
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Illustrated World
| Dec 1917 | Volume 28, Issue 4 | "Toys Made from Odds and Ends" by Jane Nesbitt
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The Independent
| 7 Jan 1904 | Page 495 |
"An Excursion in Higher Criticism" by Frank Crane, D.D." ("A RECENT ministerial meeting discussed the question as to the ethical bearings of the game called tiddledy-winks." ... "Note, first, the nature of the issue. The question is not whether the game of tiddledy is harmful to the young, nor the game of winks, but tiddledy-winks, a compound expression, embodying two ideas in one." ... and more) | original |
Jouets et Jeux de France
| 1953 (3rd edition) | 304 | Catalog entry "Puces" with eight listings of manufacturers | photocopy; original (Pascal Pontremoli) |
| 1956 (5th edition) | 266 | Catalog entry "Puces" with twelve listings of manufacturers | photocopy; original (Pascal Pontremoli) |
| 1957 (6th edition) | 270-271 | Catalog entry "Puces" with twelve listings of manufacturers | photocopy; original (Pascal Pontremoli) |
Journal of Jurisprudence and Scottish Law Magazine
| Nov 1890 | Volume 34 Number 407 | "The Month"
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Kindergarten Review
| Apr 1909 | Page 505 | "Happy Farmers" by Camilla Kendall
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Ladies Home Journal
| Jun 1991 | 82> | "Playing together" (family recreation for the summer months) |
Library Journal
| 15 Apr 1978 | 790 | "Books or tiddlywinks", letter by Lillie Struble ("Have we sold our precious heritage in exchange for frivolity and a game of tiddlywinks?") | photocopy |
Liberty Review
| Jan 1903 | Page 22 Volume 13 | "TO THOSE WHOM IT MAY CONCERN"
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photocopy |
Life (earlier magazine)
| 1 Oct 1896 | Page 245 Volume 28 Number 718 | "AT TIDDLY-WINKS-BY-THE-SEA" article with illustration. ("The season at Tiddly-Winks had not been over-successful." and more) |
| 27 Dec 1948 | Volume 25 Number 26 Page 2 |
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| 22 Aug 1960 | Ad or reference to Harvard University tiddleywinks competition [to be confirmed] | ||
| 14 Dec 1962 | 121-22 | "... Hold that Squop!" re Harvard; citation of Carnovskys potting feat. 5 photos | ♦ original |
| 11 Jan 1963 | 22 | Letter "Hold that Squop" from Avrom I. Doft (University of Pennsylvania in 1958) | photocopy |
| Sep 1988 | v11 n11 p82(4) | "Obsessed: says America's Cup sailor Dennis Cooper, 'Competition is life's blood, and I'm a vampire.'" |
Linn's Stamp News
| 18 Dec 1978 | 6 | "Tiddlywinks Topical". Query by Rick Tucker | original |
The Literary World
| 1892 | 458 | Review of John Kendrick Bangs book. ("Although it is nonsense pure and simple, yet we venture to predict that Mr. Bang's new book, Tiddledywink Tales, will be read and lauged over by a large number of grown-up readers" and more) | |
| 17 Dec 1892 | 480 | "HOLIDAY BOOKS" ("L. Prang & Co. issue among their many pleasing Christmas publications [...] two humourous pictures of four owls playing 'Whist' and four cats engaged at "Tidledy-Winks," by Mrs. S. C. Winn [...]" |
Little Journeys to the Homes of Good Men and Great, by Elbert Hubbard
| Jun 1895 | Number 7 | "Shakespeare"
|
M The Magazine for Civilized Man
| May 1989 | cover, | original (Tucker, Lockwood) | |
| 4-6 | "Civilized Fun"/"Child's Play at Oxford". 5 b&w photos. re CUTwC | Important; original (Tucker, Lockwood) |
Mad
| Sep 1970 (#137) | 43-48 | <n> "Makeus Sickby M.D." | |
| Date ___ ____ | "Tiddleywinks Finals" in Wide World of Sports parody. Drawn by Severin |
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction
| Aug 1955 | photocopy |
Management Today
| Jan 1992 | 5 | "Power, pride and prejudice. (women in management)" |
Maxim
| May 2000 | Page 62, Issue 62 | "The Best of British". Mention of Alan Dean's World Singles win. |
Missions: an International Baptist magazine
| Jan 1917 | Volume 8 Number 1 | "Wants for Some One to Fill"
|
MPLS-St. Paul Magazine
| Apr 1995 | v23 n4 p34(22) | "Fifty-two weekend getaways" (in the Upper Midwest region) | |
| Aug 1995 | v23 n8 p52(2) | "Bingo! Five rows, five columns of good clean fun" |
The Monthly Magazine, or, British Register
| Dec 1840 | Volume 4 Number 24 Page 571 | "The Knave and the Deuce"/"A Horrible Story" by Sir Ephialtes Mooncalf, Knight-Mayor
|
Proceedings, National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
| 26 Oct 1999 | 96(22) 12901-12904 | "Vocal imitation in zebra finches is inversely related to model abundance" by Ofer Tchernichovski, Thierry Lints, Partha P. Mitra, and Fernando Nottebohm. (" Song Tutoring Apparatus.
Each bird was kept singly in a soundproof box (50 × 30 × 27 cm3) throughout the experiment. The box contained two keys, 1 inch above each of two perches. Keys were prepared from 2-g lever switches (Cherry Elect E22–85HX; Wallingford, CT). We glued a red, ½-inch round, plastic tiddlywinks piece to the end of the lever and, above this, attached a small piece of cuttlebone. By pecking either of the keys, the bird could induce song playbacks from a 11/4-inch samarium cobalt speaker (Intervox S125RL; Washington, DC) hidden inside a plastic model of an adult zebra finch male." |
National Magazine (US)
| Oct 1902 | Page 127 Volume 17 Number 1 |
"PING PONG"/"The Greatest of In-Door Games" by Henry Essex.
|
National Playing Fields Association Journal (UK)
| 1958 and after | [probable] |
Neuropsychologia
| 7 Feb 2009 | Volume 47 Page 1469 | "Pointing to two imaginary targets at the same time: Bimanual allocentric and
|
New England Monthly
| Oct 1986 | "Caution: Geniuses at Work and Play" re MIT. Mention. Reprinted in Reader's Digest, Oct 1987. |
New Era (The official monthly magazine for youth of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints)
| Mar 1978 | Page 48 | "Oh, Tiddledywinks" by Nancy Hinsdale Wilcox.
|
The New Leader
| 17 Nov 1986 | v69 p6(3) | "Spain's rocky straits" (sovereignty issues over the Straits of Gibraltar) |
New Monthly Magazine and Humorist (UK)
| 1837 | Volume 50 | "High Connexions"
|
New Republic
| 30 Apr 1966 | 11 | "Indonesia for Indonesians". Figurative (Dr. Subandrio "could make what has happened recently in Indonesia look like a game of tiddlywinks") | transcript |
Newsweek
| 23 Jun 1958 | 43 | "Britain"/"One Was Not Prim". Mention of Oxford playing Cambridge. | transcript |
| 3 Mar 1969 | 57 | "Man inside the spacesuit". (Gordon Cooper quote: "They ought to hire tiddlywinks players as astronauts") | transcript |
| 10 Nov 1980 | 60 | "Grim Lessons of the Long Crisis". Figurative ("The White House was playing tiddlywinks with the State Department" re Carters Iran rescue mission) | photocopy |
| 16 Mar 1981 | 101 | "The Fastest Man On the Inside Track" (Eamonn Coghlan quote: "whether it was tiddlywinks or cross-country, I had to win") | photocopy |
| 4 May 1981 | 63 | "Thurow Vs. Gilder: A Debate" (Lester Thurow quote: "we have only one economy to play tiddlywinks with") | photocopy |
| 30 Oct 1989 | 70 | "Not Just Kid Stuff Anymore"/"Corporate sponsorship for childhood games". Mention of NATwA | original |
| 6 Oct 2003 | "Bar Games: Seeing Eye to Eye" by Brian Braiker ("So bored that they took an interest in staring contests.[...] NEWSWEEK lays claim to the burgeoning tiddlywinks movement.") |
New York
| 31 Mar 1986 | 64 | "Design/Game Room" by Marilyn Bethany. Photos of antique set | original |
The New Yorker
| 15 Dec 1962 | 156 | "The Sporting Scene"/"Just a personal thing". Mention in article on Harvard-Yale | transcript |
| 4 Apr 1964 | 146 | "A reporter at large"/"Wake up and live". Figurative ("Sun Citians [...] take little interest in the organized activities, describing them as make-work or tiddlywinks") | transcript |
New York Review of Books
| 25 Jan 1979 | 2, 50 | Query by Fred Shapiro and Rick Tucker | original |
The Nineteenth Century and after
| Mar 1906 | 509 | "Football and Polo in China" by Herbert A. Giles. Quotation in OED
|
photocopy |
North American Review (University of Northern Iowa)
| Jul 1891 | vol 153 no 416 pp 87-91 | "The Relations of Literature to Society" by Amelia E. Barr ("He has no time and no interest to spare for tiddledy-winks and donkey parties, nor even for progressive euchre.") | Google Books |
Notes and Queries (UK)
| 9 Dec 1871 | 486 | [4th S. viii] Query re "kidly wink" | photocopy |
| 6 Jan 1872 | 19 | [4th S. ix] Quote re "kiddle-a-wink" from Beeton's Christmas Annual for 1863, page 39, note | photocopy |
| 6 Jul 1872 | 5 | [4th S. x] Song about Kidley Wink from a newspaper | photocopy |
| 6 Apr 1878 | 264 | [5th S. ix] Slang "tiddlywink" via The Reader, 1864 | transcript |
| 18 Jan 1890 | 48 | [7th S. ix] Query re "kiddlewink"; first use of "tiddledywinks" in a sentence ("Lately a game has been introduced here bearing the name of Tiddledywinks.") | Important very early reference; photocopy |
| 1 Feb 1890 | 96 | [7th S. ix] Reply to query | photocopy |
| 19 Oct 1946 | 158 | "Squalloping" in list of words from the book Lorna Doone | photocopy |
Ohio State Law Journal
| 1992 | 683 | [v 53 n 3] "Exculpatory Agreements for Volunteers in Youth Activities-The Alternative to "Nerf" Tiddlywinks" by Joseph H. King, Jr. |
Official Gazette (of the US Patent and Trademark Office)
(see Patents section)
LOfficiel des Jeux et Jouets
| 13 Apr 1950 | No.13, p24 | "OPINION SOVIETIQUE SUR LES JOUETS 1950" re Pravda article ("«Linventeur, estime la Pravda, na pas encore mis au point un jeu de puces capables de communiquer le choléra. Mais cela viendra.»") | photocopy; original (Pascal Pontremoli) |
The Ornithologist and Oölogist
| Feb 1891 | Volume 16 Number 2 |
|
The Outlook
| 9 Jan 1918 | Page 195 Volume 118 | "By the Way" ("Why not let the children start with bridge and chess, and gradually work them up to the point where they can appreciate lotto, halma, and tiddledywinks?" |
PC Week
| 4 Nov 1986 | 61 | "Letters"/"Don't Toy With Me" | original |
The Pedagogical Seminary (became Journal of Genetic Psychology)
| Oct 1894 | Page 113 Volume 3 |
"Education by Plays and Games" by G. E. Johnson. In list | transcript |
| July 1897 | Page 24 |
"A Study in Moral Education" by J. R. Street
|
|
| Sep 1899 | Pages 321, 355 Volume 6 |
"Amusements of Worcester School Children" by T. R. Croswell | photocopy |
| Dec 1900 | Pages 463, 465, 473 Volume 7 |
"A Study in the Play Life of Some South Carolina Children" by Zach McGhee | photocopy |
| Dec 1909 | Volume 16 Number 4 Pages 550-552 | "The Influence of Kindergarten Methods on the Socialization of the School", by Colin A. Scott. Page 551 ("Condemn us in this room this morning to play tiddledywinks, and it might appeal to some who would shine, but others would certainly be out of it. We would be in a need of a method to make it interesting, but it could never be a completely or a truly social method, since our wills would not be engaged upon the object. What we would have to do would be either to pretend that tiddledywinks was something else—such as religion, philosophy, or education, or to play the game so as to join in, to be agreeeable, or because it would be a trial in overcoming which our virtue would be trained. But in these cases, we would not really be playing tiddledywinks at all. [...])" | Digital version (NATwA) |
Pediatrics
| 15 May 1899 | Volume 7 Number 10 | "The Developmental Influences of Play" by James Herbert McKee, M.D.
|
People Weekly
| 27 Nov 1978 | 138 | "Lookout" section. Photo and article about Dave Lockwood | original |
| 22 Aug 1988 | v30 n8 p34(6) | "Playing to win" (George Bush) | |
| 26 Aug 1991 | v36 n7 p56(5) | "Body and soul" (People's Sexiest Man Alive for 1991 is Patrick Swayze) (cover story) |
The Philistine (published by the Society of the Philistines, East Aurora, New York)
| May 1912 | Volume 34 Number 6 |
|
photocopy; original (Pascal Pernet) |
Pif Gadget (France)
| No. 1528 | 3 | "MONTAGE: LE CLOWN JEU DE PUCE" (Gadget # 290) with three illustrations | photocopy; original (Pascal Pernet) |
Playboy
| Sep 1969 | 195 | "Campus Action Chart" entry for MIT ("MITs two saving graces are the tiddlywinks championship of North America and incredible graffiti") | photocopy |
| Apr 1981 | 269 | "Little Annie Fanny" cartoon. Winks shot into beer mug | original |
| Dec 1986 | 100> | "Blindsight: two kinds of people came to this planetthose who wanted to hide and those who wanted to seek" ("squidge") | |
| Aug 1991 | v38 n8 p70(9) | "Boomtown", short story by Craig Vetter. "This aint tiddlywinks" | digital copy |
Playground
| Nov 1922 | 382 | "Progressive Game Party" | |
| Jan 1924 | 568 | "Bedside Games" | |
| Jan 1929 | 576 | Tiddly Wink Golf | |
| Mar 1931 | 667 | List of games in community centers |
Playthings
| around 1906 | "Pioneers in the Toy Business", source for McClintock. (May not be Playthings) | ||
| 1928 | Ad by Alderman-Fairchild with Blinky Blinx Tiddledy Winks (reproduced in Game Times #24, Vol. X, # 2, page 519) | ||
| Jun 1939 | 50 | "Tidley Hop" (cited in US design patent D367680, 1996) | |
| before 1942 | Photo prediction of adult winks interest. Appears in Freeman, A cavalcade of toys | photocopy |
directories (annual) Listings of tiddlywinks manufacturers
(probably others)
Popular Electronics
| Dec 1956 | v5 n6 p47, 49-51 | "4 Electronic Toy Projects" by E. G. Louis, "Project 2 'Electronic Tiddly-Winks'". 3 photos and 1 wiring diagram | original |
Popular Mechanics
| Apr 1908 | Volume 10 Number 4 Advertising Section |
|
|
| Aug 1958 | 178 | "Sandpaper Target Adds Fun to Tiddlywink Game". Drawing. | photocopy |
(Appletons') Popular Science Monthly
| Jul 1897 | Volume 51 | "The Mob Mind" by Prof. Edward A. Ross
|
|
| Oct 1898 | Page 801 Volume 53 | "Some Psychical Aspects of Muscular Exercise" by Luther Gulick ("tiddledywinks" in list of games played by children aged 7 to 12) | photocopy |
| Jun 1914 | Page 609 Volume 84 | "Is the Montessori Method a Fad?" by Frank Pierrepont Graves. ("will she be relegated to the limbo of the exponents of tiddledy-winks and ping-pong, of Belgian hares and Teddy bears?") | |
| May 1929 | 61 | "Parlor Baseball Played with Tiddledywinks". 1 photo | original |
| May 1935 | Page 10 | "Our Readers Say"/"Batters, too, Are Mystified By Ballistics of Baseball"
|
|
| Mar 1939 | Page 139 | "New Table Game Resembles Tennis" with one illustration
|
Prevention
| Dec 1992 | 40> | "12 days to to tranquility: how to make the countdown to the holidays stress-free and joyful" (includes techniques for self-message) |
Punch (UK)
| Mr. Punch's Almanack, 1898-1899 (28 Jun 1899) | Volume 116 Page "The First of October" | Almanack entry for October 1899. "In the Toys and Games Department. Particular Lady. I—a—want some sort of game for two small boys about eight or nine. Assistant.For juveniles of that age I can strongly recommend the game of 'Ascot.' You wind the little horses along on a reel at the end of a string, and the one which gets in first is the—ah—winner. P. L. (severely). I should be sorry, indeed, to give any boys a game that encourages a taste for the turf. A. Of course it—ah—might have that tendency. Here is a highly amusing game called—ah—'Tiddledywinks.' P. L. (icily). Tiddledy-I beg your pardon? A. (with dignity). Tiddledy-winks, madam. P. L. And pray how do you—a—tiddledywink? A. It is—ah—not one of my recreations, madam, but you will find full instructions supplied with each set, and I understand that they are so simple that the merest child can easily become—ah—proficient. P. L. And go tiddledywinks all over the place? A most undesirable accomplishment in my opinion. A. Pardon me—I think, madam, you are misled be the associations of the title, which may, perhaps—ah—verge on vulgarity, but the game itself is perfectly free from objection, and popular with the most select and refined circles. P. L. (firmly). The name is quite sufficient." |
The Puritan
| Dec 1900 | Volume 9 Number 3 | Suggestions for Small Parties by Mary Louise Graham.
|
Radio Times (UK)
| ~10 Mar 1958 | re Goons |
Rarities
| Jul-Aug 1982 | 37-38, 64-65 | "Board Games" by Robert Hencey. 2 photos. References | original |
Reader's Digest
| Oct 1987 | 215 | "Caution: Geniuses at Work and Play" re MIT. Mention. [From New England Monthly, Oct 1986.] | original |
Report of the Commissioner of Education
| 1897-1898 | "Child Study in the United States"
|
The Review of Reviews (UK)
| Mar 1906 | Volume 33 Number 195 | "Football An Ancient Chinese Game"
|
excerpt |
Road and Track
| Dec 1951 | Figurative ("Front tire flips off rim like a tiddley-wink") | excerpt |
RQ (Northbrook IL)
| Fall 1973 | 57 | "The Exchange/Fun and Games" by Mary Jo Lynch | photocopy |
| Spring 1986 | 303 | "The Exchange" | photocopy |
The Saturday Evening Post
| Sept 1986 | v258 p52(3) | "Etiquette: from soup to nuts; help, at last, for the formal diner who handles a fork as if he's spearing frogs and winds up the meal drinking from the finger bowl" | |
| Oct 1989 | v261 n7 p56(3) | "The wrong stuff" | |
| Sep 1990 | v262 n6 p66-67, 74 | "TIDDLYWINKS, ANYONE?"/"The top tiddler of Richfield Center, Michigan, unfortunately couldn't leave well enough alone" by Maynard Good Stoddard. Re President Bush playing tiddlywinks; illus of kids shooting wink into pot | photocopy |
Saturday Night
| Mar 1994 | v109 n2 p8(2) | "The Dalai Lama of Generation X" (author Douglas Coupland) |
The School Journal
| 1 Feb 1902 | Page 134 Volume 64 | "Letters."/"Heroism and Heroes." by Louis H. Bailey. ("If we should teach our children to consider such acts as that of Lieut. Hobson 'cheap;' if we should teach our children that the soldier is an inferior type of man, and that any kind of rough sport is harmful; if we should teach that any exercise more exciting or dangerous than tiddledy winks is to be avoided, and our teaching was believed in and followed; if such a condition were arrived at, which God forbid, and the 'Wrong but necessary war' was upon us, our flag and our nation would go down to well deserved oblivion. Our ethical superiority and our 'Heroes of Life' would hardly save us.") |
Scribner's Magazine
| Dec 1890 | Volume 8 Number 6 Holiday Number | "Sporting Goods", E. I. Horsman advertisement
|
original |
Signals: A Catalog for Fans & Friends of Public Television
| Summer 1992 | 23: J | "Tiddlygolf ... $29.00" (by Townsend Croquet Ltd.). Photo | original |
Smithsonian Magazine
| Sep 2003 | cover | "A Rousing Walk Across England" | original |
| 105 | Coverage and photo of Charles Relle and Alan Dean's walk across England | original |
Journal of Social Science (American Social Science Association)
| Dec 1898 | Number 36 | "Obligations of the State to Public Education" by Hon. Charles Bulkley Hubbell
|
Historically important; photocopy |
The Spectator (UK)
| ___ 1945 | Volume 174 Page 424 Column 2 | "University Sport"
|
Digital excerpt (NATwA) |
| 18 Oct 1957 | 508 | "Does Prince Philip Cheat at Tiddlywinks" by Strix (only mention is in the headline) | Historically important; photocopy |
| 28 Feb 1958 | 261 | "Quail at Querryton"/"Non Sequitur" by Strix (previous headline inspiring Cambridge to challenge Prince Philip to tiddlywinks) | Historically important; photocopy |
Sport
| Dec 1994 | v85 n12 p66(1) | "Silver screen sportswriter: with "Cobb," Ron Shelton establishes himself as the top sports filmmaker" |
The Sporting News
| 3 Jan 1994 | v217 n1 p41(3) | "A cup full of doubts" (Los Angeles Kings; Montreal Canadiens) |
Sports Illustrated
| 31 Mar 1958 | E6-E8 | Regional pages between 76 & 77. "Wink Up and Fiddle". (Cambridge University playing the Goons.) Photos. | Historically important; original (NATwA) |
| 23 Jul 1956 | "The Wonderful World of Sport"/"STORM ON LONG ISLAND SOUND" ("Two dozen small boats, including the entire Turnabout class of 13, flipped like tiddlywinks in Long Island Sound.") | ||
| 7 Apr 1958 | M5-M8 | "Wink Up and Fiddle" by John Lovesay. Regional pages between 96 & 97. Same content as in 31 Mar 1958 Sports Illustrated ("The 'Goons,' of course, were the Duke of Edinburgh's Royal Champions who last month, with the university's senior proctor, students and townspeople looking on, met the Cambridge Tiddlywink Club in mortal battle.") | Historically important; photocopy; original (Library of Congress) |
| 13 Apr 1959 | "They Said It" ("Harold Haydon, dean of students at the University of Chicago, on being informed that his school had accepted a challenge from Cambridge University for an international tiddlywinks match: 'Only students who maintain the university's scholastic standards will be eligible.'") | ||
| 30 Nov 1959 | "The Question: Do You Care Whether Or Not Your School Has A Good Football Team?" by Jimmy Jemail ("Sure I do. I played halfback for Canisius College in Buffalo for three years. I'd like to see Canisius win the national championship, that's how much I care. Isn't that better than the University of Chicago, formerly a great football power, winning the tiddlywinks championship from Cambridge University?") | ||
| 20 Mar 1961 | "Czech Giant Killers" by Jack Olsen ("With the puck at last in play, the sly Czechs would start another private game. Often for as long as 30 or 40 seconds they would skate aimlessly back and forth in their own defensive zone, passing the puck to one another with no more purpose than kids playing tiddlywinks at recess time.") | ||
| 18 Dec 1961 | "Scorecard"/"DEATH OF POOL" ("If that isn't enough to turn your stomach, here's the clincher: BRPAA [Billiard Room Proprietors Association of America] will attempt to "attract potential women players to the game." In this connection the new organization is already gloating over widely printed newspaper pictures of Queen Mother Elizabeth wielding a cue at London's Press Club.
To all of this nonsense, we say: BRPAA, go home. Or go out and organize the Tiddly-Winkers. Let pool alone. Pool is the last refuge of the harassed male.") |
||
| 30 Jul 1962 | 7-8 | "Scorecard"/"WINKS AND CUBES" re Oxford tour of US ("The Oxford University Tiddlywinks Society, an honored if not very ancient organization, is about to land on our shores with the purpose of competing against such American tiddlywinks teams as The Cin Cin Irregulars, a New York club that meets in a pub, and various similarly attuned groups along the Atlantic seaboard from the Lake Tarleton Club at Pike, N.H. down through the Berkshires to Philadelphia.[...]") | photocopy |
| 17 Dec 1962 | 22, 28 | "The Harvards and the Yales" ("Wednesday morning. The Gargoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society posted a notice in Phillips Brooks House: "It's so colossal only the mighty parlor of P.B.H. could hold it! So stupid that Sports Illustrated is covering it—Saturday only, Yale vs. the undefeated G.U.T.S. 10 a.m. Free.'") | transcript |
| 7 Jan 1963 | 72 | "19th Hole: The Readers Take Over". 3 letters ("Having been non-U my entire life, I humbly suggest your reporters concern themselves less with the self-conscious mewings of the Harvards, their tiddlywinks, light touch-tacklers and shy but acne-faced football team and more with such solid sports as model train construction (HO), water ballet and cut the pie." | transcript |
| 25 Nov 1963 | "19th Hole: The Readers Take Over" Letter from Don Streeter, Westminster, Mass. ("Now Walter Bingham comes along and wants to go to touch football. He should go to Harvard. They have a good tiddly-winks team there; that seems to be his sport.") | ||
| 31 Oct 1966 | "For Indians, It Was A Day to Bite the Dust" by Gwilym S. Brown, Tom C. Brody ("Ric Zimmerman, the tall, intelligent, left-handed quarterback whose poise and passing have helped Harvard to serve up the kind of vitamin-rich, well-balanced offense that has been lacking in Cambridge for many years, would not go that far, but he has a few ideas of his own on why the Harvards love beating the Dartmouths at anything, even tiddlywinks.") | ||
| 28 Feb 1972 | 72 | "19th Hole: The Readers Take Over". Letter from Franklin F. Russell of Oxford (see also 31 Jan 1972 page 76) ("The Oxford club has also asked the Blues Committee for a half-blue, citing Cambridge as an example, but it has been turned-down on the ground that if half-blues were given for chess, the bridge and tiddlywinks chaps would not be far behind.") | transcript |
| 19 Feb 1973 | "Cook It Up And Dish It Out" by Jeannette Bruce ("By the time I left I had acquired a sack of unbleached, unmilled, whole-grain flour, Biblical honey—so named because it comes from the manna plant, which I thought was very cute—and organic cookies, carob candy bars for instant stamina, dried apricots and a snack of toasted tiddley-winks.") | ||
| 23 Apr 1973 | 95 | "19th Hole: The Readers Take Over". Letter from Tim Schiller comparing tiddlywinks with Gene Tenaces plight in baseball ("While reading your article on Gene Tenace, I was struck by the similarity between his plight and our own. Although tiddlywinks doesn't quite yet command the public attention that baseball does, we have experienced similar feelings.") | photocopy |
| 26 May 1975 | 89 | "Beating Their Brains Out" by John Underwood. About MIT winning
tiddlywinks championship in England ("'"It's not just sports at MIT, it's everything. There's something like 170 activities on campus. The rule is, if a group of kids wants something, it's made available. We had the world Frisbee champion here giving classes. A couple years ago somebody wanted to start a tiddly-winks team. They went to the student government. They got the money for it.'
(When asked about the latter, Publicist Close looked as though he had been hit with a cream pie. 'Oh, don't mention that,' he said, grinning sheepishly. Why not? 'It's embarrassing. Tiddly-winks.' What prompted it? 'The world championships. In London. Please don't mention it.' The team went to London? 'Yes.' How'd it do? Subdued voice: 'They won.' [...])") |
original |
| 22 Dec 1986 | v65 p74(9) | "A Grand And Heavy Legacy" by Kevin Cook. ("'After one of Richie's[Rich Mount] games, immediately Rick will find something negative to say. It's that competitive instinct. Rick's probably right. But I'm a mother, I don't think like that. If I were raising Richie by myself, he would probably play tiddlywinks instead of basketball.'") | |
| 27 Nov 1995 | [only in mail subscription editions] "Tiddlywinks!"/"To Squop, or Not to Squop?" by Mark Wexler. Photo of Larry Kahn and Dave Lockwood (by Rick Tucker). ("Larry Kahn bent over a felt-covered table and contemplated his predicament. "O.K., so I can't pot my nurdled wink," he said smugly.'"I sure as heck won't let you piddle free so you can boondock my red.'") | Important; original (NATwA) |
The Stage Yearbook
| 1927 | Page 12 |
|
The Strand Magazine (UK)
| Dec 1899 | Volume 18 Number 108 Grand Christmas Double Number | Advertisement, "Gamage's Grand Christmas Bazaar"
|
photocopy |
Time
| 14 May 1928 | 26 | "In Iowa" about publisher John Cowles (coincidentally a cosigner of Harvard Crimson 1919 letter) ("The smart set of Des Moines [...] often amuse themselves with [...] a modern variation of famed tiddle-dy-winks") | photocopy |
| 15 Feb 1932 | "INTERNATIONAL: Arms for Disarmament" ("Only 20 of the 57 participating delegates [to the Geneva Conference] were found to hold plenary powers from their governments. This meant that they might as well be at home playing tiddlywinks. ") | ||
| 6 Mar 1933 | "Theatre: New Plays in Manhattan: Mar. 6, 1933" ("Hangman's Whip (by Norman Reilly Raine & Frank Butler; William A. Brady Jr., producer). [...]For 30 years, with whip and gun, Cockney Trader Prin (portly Montague Love, who muscles people around with his stomach) has put the fear o' hell into the natives living far up an African river. He has also broken most of the white assistants that have served under him for, as he says, 'I ain't run this river plying tiddly-winks.') |
||
| 15 Jun 1936 | "Books: Sesquipedalian" ("He [Dexter Williams Fellows] has taught Ubangi women to play tiddlywinks on their platter lips. ") | ||
| 1 Jan 1940 | "POLITICAL NOTES: 1940" ("The work of administering his Federal Security Administration last week took Paul Vories McNutt into New Jersey, for a luncheon at Newark with bankers, corporation officers, and politicos of both parties. The tall 'Orchid Man' said the visit had no political significance, but 'we weren't playing tiddlywinks.'") | ||
| 1 Sep 1941 | "Tiddlygolf" ("If the accident rate rises in suburban U.S. communities this fall because citizens are hit by flying sticks, insurance companies can blame a game called Kangaroo Golf. Invented and patented by internationally famed Composer-Organist Pietro Yon, virtuoso at Manhattan's St. Patrick's Cathedral, it has the same object as golf and can be set up in any good-sized yard (see cut).
In the game, wooden pegs (kangaroos) are used instead of balls and they are driven from a portable, slope-topped wooden tee—the projecting end of the kangaroo is struck with a sharp downward chop to send it jumping as in tiddlywinks.") |
||
| 23 Jun 1941 | Volume 37 Page 21 | "ARMY: Girls for Our Boys" ("Who should visit Camp Joseph T. Robinson, Ark. but rotund Elsa Maxwell, professional party-liner for café society. Last week, interviewed by the New York World-Telegram, Miss Maxwell had some unexpectedly shrewd observations to make about the U.S. Army's morale. Said she:
'. . . You can't relegate them to the nursery or 1918. The pace has changed. These men are not going to stand for . . . rationed entertainment. It's the bunk to them. Tiddlywinks is no substitute for a girl.'") |
|
| 12 Jul 1943 | "AIR: Sascha's Show" ("In Hollywood last summer Walt Disney, restless creator of Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck and many another cinanimal, was playing mental tiddlywinks with the idea of putting together a monthly animated-cartoon digest") | ||
| 8 Nov 1948 | "The Eternal Apprentice" ("[Jay] Oppenheimer liked to ride his horse Chico 40 rugged miles in a day, exploring the Sangre de Cristo Mountains up to the peaks. In the evenings, he would nibble on canned artichoke hearts, drink fine Kirschwasser, and read Baudelaire by the light of an oil lamp. He invented an abstruse variety of tiddlywinks, played on the geometric designs of a Mexican rug.") | ||
| 10 Mar 1958 | "People" ("Later in an arduous week, the Prince [Philip] scratched himself from a tiddlywinks joust to which he had been challenged by the Cambridge University team. He said with regret that he would have liked to lead his team, the Goons, but "unfortunately, while practicing secretly, I pulled an important muscle in the second or tiddly joint of my winking finger. Wink up. fiddle the game, and may the Goon side win. ") | ||
| 14 Sep 1962 | 56-57 | "Winking In" re Oxfords tour of the US. Photo. ("For the visiting British players, the U.S. tour was a ruddy marvel. The five-week campaign carried them from the towers of Manhattan to the arch of the Golden Gate, from the green hills of Stratford, Conn., to the quiet lanes of Philadelphia. ") | Historically important; original |
| 8 Jan 1965 | "Cinema: Game Night" ("Rattle of a Simple Man. "Have ye got a dartboard?" asks the scoutmaster from Manchester. There are no tiddlywinks at hand, and the London prostitute with whom he is spending the night to win a £50 bet on his virility has grown weary of ticktacktoe.") | ||
| 12 Mar 1965 | "Bechuanaland: Walking the Tightrope" ("Cynics called it "the tiddlywinks poll," but when all the cardboard disks were counted last week, Bechuanaland had wisely and overwhelmingly elected as its first Prime Minister an African leader with just the right qualifications: moderation, modesty and multiracial understanding.
"The Black Englishman." The man who won at tiddlywinks is Seretse Khama, 43, a tall, bearded Oxonian who 16 years ago threw away his right to the paramount chieftainship of the powerful Bamangwato tribe to marry an English girl.") |
||
| 14 Jul 1967 | "Parker's Pachyderms" with brief mention | ||
| 15 Aug 1977 | "THE PRESIDENCY by HUGH SIDEY: L.B.J.: The Softer They Fall" ("Horace Busby, who was Johnson's press secretary then, remembered that the Stevenson folks rushed out and found Judge T. Whitfield ("Tiddlywinks") Davidson at a fishing hole and got him to issue an order holding up certification of the primary winner. Lyndon's forces went on up to Justice Black, who did not like Johnson but overruled Tiddlywinks' order just the same.") |
||
| 8 Jan 1979 | "Nation: Why Moscow Stalled SALT" ("Says one Administration official: 'Compared with SALT II, passing the Panama Canal treaties was playing tiddlywinks.'") | ||
| 24 Mar 1980 | "Television: War Games" by Gerard Clarke. ("At an early briefing, a commanding officer calmly sends his subordinates off to battle: 'That's my last word. Be professional, and let it all hang out.' A few days later, problems have arisen, and he is less amiable. 'By God,' he says, 'either you do it, or I'll find a job for you in the tiddlywink factory. I hope I've made myself clear. I ain't talkin' to hear my head rattle.'") | ||
| 21 Apr 1980 | "Show Business: Arts Gratia Arfis" (just about every sport except tiddlywinks has a shot at a fall spot" as a television show) | ||
| 28 Sep 1981 | 44 | "We, the Jury, Find the..." by Otto Friedrich, Evan Thomas ("Three jurors adamantly held out for conviction. Says Yurack: "The rest of us could have gone home and played tiddly winks." On the eighth day, the jury gave up") | excerpt |
| 23 Apr 1990 | volume 135 number 17 page 21(1) | "Grapevine" (anecdotes about Ed Meese, the insurance industry and others) | |
| 30 Jul 1980 | "Los Angeles: Uncovering the Manhole Men" ("The disappearance of 300 manhole covers weighing as much as 300 lbs. each over ( the past three weeks had Los Angeles police mystified. It seemed unlikely that tourists were swiping them as souvenirs or that many people could easily use them as tiddledywinks or Frisbees.") | ||
| 9 Mar 1987 | "Sport: Par Cut Off at the Knees" ("Almost no amateur golfers play by the rules. They have come to an accommodation with themselves and one another to bump the ball in the fairways or nonchalant it on the greens. The game most of them play combines croquet with tiddledywinks.") | ||
| 4 Apr 2001 | "Why I'm 'Postal' Over the Prospect of No Saturday Delivery" by Jessica Reaves ("Tough tiddlywinks.") | ||
| 27 Oct 2008 | "Top 10 Fringe World Titles"/"6 of 10"/"Tiddlywinks" |
Town & Country
| Dec 1978 | 68 | "Monopoly's Parker Brothers" | transcript |
Toy Novelties
annual directories listing manufacturers, including:
| 1944-45 (24th) | 187 | ||
| 1947 | 299 | ||
| 1959 | 303 | ||
| 28 Jun 1963 | |||
| 1964 | 334 | ||
| 1969 | 402 |
Toy Topics
| Feb 1979 | Letter by Fred Shapiro |
Toys and Games You Can Make (Science and Mechanics Publications)
| ©1947 | 57 | "Magnetic Tiddlywinks". 1 photo. | original |
T.P.'s Weekly
| 13 Mar 1914 | Page 330 | "What is Spoof?"
|
Trade Marks Journal (UK) (at Boston Public Library)
(see Trademarks section)
TV Guide
| 23-29 Feb 1980 | [Eastern New England edition] | original | |
| A100 | NBC ad | ||
| A103 | Listing for Real People program, 27 Feb |
others possible
Unitarian Review
| May 1891 | Page 402 Volume 35 | "Editor's Note-Book" ("This century emphasizes the theory of united and organized effort. Possibly, it exaggerates the value of association as compared with the individual. Certainly, the sympathy and cooperation of others is a cordial; yet it is easy to overdo the fashion of joining in bunds and orders under every banner, from Tiddledy-winks to Social Regeneration. In union there surely is strength, but individuality possesses a delicate and distinct vitality of its own.") |
Us
| 29 May 1979 | 3 | Table of contents | original |
| 22-23 | "The world's best winker is making a career out of child's play". Photo | original |
Verbatim
| Dec 1977 | 4 | "Winking Words" by Philip M. Cohen. Taken from Games and Puzzles magazine #24 | Important; photocopy <z> |
| Sum 1984 | 21 | "BIBLIOGRAPHIA" review of "A dictionary of slang and unconventional English, 8th edition" | photocopy |
Washingtonian Magazine
| Nov 1983 | 119 | "Getting Together". NATwA in club listing | original |
| Jan 1985 | 21 | "Information Please". Query re drinking game "Quarters" | transcript |
Wired
| x x 1993 (1.5) | "Street Cred Terminal Scholarship" (Scott Bukatman's whirlwind study investigates an Information Age that's all too willing to play tiddlywinks with personal identities as they drift in and out of digital realities.) | digital copy |
Woman's Own (UK)
| Nov 1964 | Query by Guy Consterdine |
Woman's Work
| 1918 | Page 57 Column 2 |
|
Women's Sports and Fitness
| Oct 1990 | 28> | "Tour de Tater: spuds and cyclists reign supreme at the Ore-Ida women's challenge bicycle race" |
Woman's Work
| Mar 1918 | Volume 33 Number 3 |
|
Working Woman
| August 1995 | v20 n8 p46(8) | "The gospel according to Mary" (businesswoman Mary Cunningham Agee) |
Work With Boys: A Magazine of Methods
| ___ 1915 | Volume 15 Number __ Page 347 | "Work That's Being Done"
|
The Writer
| Jan 1894 | Page 22 Column 2 | "A Hundred and Fifty Recent English Words" by H. A. Schuler ("Of new terms relating to sports and games I have admitted only eight: Base-ballist, caroussel, craps, mamooz, pigs-in-clover, pool-selling, tiddledy-winks, tricycler.") | photocopy |
Yankee
| Feb 1978 | 169 | "Games people played" by Lee Dennis (mention of "Tiddledy Winks" in a list) | transcript |
Youth
| Mar 1977 | 44-51 | "Winks", text and photos by Daniel Dern. 2 photos, 2 drawings (history, rules, culture) | Important; photocopy |
(Miscellaneous)
| 1966 | Large Canadian (?) national weekly magazine article about Waterloo (Winking World 10 page 9) | ||
| 1972 | Canadian? national magazines |