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Word: armstrong (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

...Deal. General disapproval by bankers of President Roosevelt's financial policies is old and enduring. But last week there was little expression of it in Boston. Guest Speaker Glenn Frank, erstwhile president of the University of Wisconsin, rapped at the Administration, as did President Henning Webb Prentis of Armstrong Cork Co., and both were resoundingly clapped, but the vast majority of topics discussed in the four-day conclave dwelt upon problems more pertinent to bankers than to the nation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business & Finance: Canapes and Compromise | 10/25/1937 | See Source »

Point after Curtis Harvard J. V. Providence '41 Hoar, Kelley le. re. Quirk, Workerski Cabitor, Harrington, Tonks, lt. rt. Gorski Mellon, Jenkins lg. rg. Petrarca Wood, Fuller, c. c. Sarris Snyder, Emerson, Ellis rg. lg. Marczio Armstrong, Reed, Jenkins, Gale rt. lt. Zrako, Alex Smith, Soule, Kennedy re. le. Sullivan Robinson, P. Johnson, Squibb qb. qb. Danahy Curtis, Thompson lhb. rhb. Pawshki, Donke Cordingley, Jones, Boulger rhb. lhb. Barry Sargeant, L. Johnson, Lewis, Gardnor fb. McCarthy, Cerra...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: JAYVEES THRASH PROV. COLLEGE FRESHMEN 25-0 | 10/16/1937 | See Source »

...being a rather inconsequential hodge-podge. In their efforts to please everyone, the producers have put a great many ingredients in their cinematic soup and include in their cast along with Ida Lupino, Gail Patrick, and Richard Arlen, Andre Kostelanetz, Connie Boswell, the Yacht Club Boys, Martha Raye, Louis Armstrong, McClelland Barclay, Peter Arno, and two "rhythm swimmers" who pretty nearly steal the show with their performance in a sequence of "Whispers in the Dark...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Crimson Moviegoer | 10/5/1937 | See Source »

...only scientific fact known about this disease is that it is caused by a specific virus. This was ascertained during the 1933 epidemic by one of the most vigorous and concentrated attacks on a disease ever made by Medicine. Immediate discoverers of that virus were Dr. McCordock; Dr. Charles Armstrong, virus expert of the U. S. Public Health Service; Dr. Leslie Tillotson Webster of Rockefeller Institute; Dr. Ralph Stewart Muckenfuss, then of St. Louis, now director of New York .City's famed Bureau of Laboratories...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Sleeping Sickness | 9/20/1937 | See Source »

Prophylactic teams, each composed of a specially trained doctor, a nurse and a clerk, this summer started to experiment on a national scale with the Peet-Schultz prophylactic under the general direction of Dr. Charles Armstrong of the U. S. Public Health service who last year found that the spraying of Alabama children's noses with alum did some good in preventing infantile paralysis. Half-a-dozen teams operated in Omaha last week. These teams soon found that metal tipped atomizers are apt to Injure the nostrils of young children, who jerk and sneeze when treated. Children...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Polio of 1937 | 9/6/1937 | See Source »

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