Word: armstrong
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Deerfield Wood, Chalmers B. 18 175 5.11 St. Mark's CENTERS Bird, Benjamin L. 18 160 6.1 Episcopal Academy Dowd, James R. 19 160 6.2 Boston Latin Hadden, Arthur L. 19 155 6.1 Groton Rutenburg, Alexander 17 149 5.6 Boston Latin Sears, Douglas 16 160 6. Newton High BACKS Armstrong, John P. 19 185 6.2 Browne & Nicholas Bailey, George W. Jr. 18 173 6. Exeter Bassett, Cortland A. 18 143 5.8 Athol High Boulger, Thomas A. 18 138 5.9 Bexley High Curtis, Charles W. 3d 18 150 5.8 Choate Davisson, Richard L. 18 173 5.10 St. Paul's Ditrinco, Vincent...
Food Future. Dr. Edward Frankland Armstrong, president of the Association of British Chemical Manufacturers, said: "Food is the first of all the weapons of preventive medicine and it must be the function of the agriculturists in the near future to grow complete foods and not mere market produce. Life is so complex that we have forgotten how entirely food is its foundation and mainstay. We must discover what chemical substances in food, if any, can give intelligence, courage and alertness to the inhabitants of a city. Can we feed to produce nervous strength and agility in the same...
Peter is now a second year student in Armstrong College, Durham University, and will return there directly. He is concentrating in pure science, and now plans to take a few post-graduate courses in the Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences when he gets his degree. From early childhood, he has been mechanically minded, and hopes to devote his life to research in physics and chemistry...
Chartered last May, the Seattle Guild had 36 members in the Post-Intelligencer city room. Last month Publisher William Vaughn Tanner fired 225-lb. Head Photographer Frank ("Slim") Lynch and Dramacritic Everhardt Armstrong, active Guildmen. When the Guild protested, Publisher Tanner declared he had ousted the photographer for "inefficient management," the writer for "gross insubordination...
Last week the Seattle Guild's demand for the reinstatement of Lynch and Armstrong was refused. The Seattle Central Labor Council promptly announced that the Post-Intelligencer was "unfair to organized labor." The Guild ordered its membership out, claimed 40 newsmen from the Post-Intelligencer's staff of 68 answered the strike call. A picket line around the publishing plant was formed, aided by the redoubtable Teamsters', Loggers' and Longshoremen's unions. Careful to explain that they "were not on a sympathetic strike," the Post-Intelligencer's typographical men simply refused to pass through...