Search Details

Word: chester (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...Evarts A. Jr. 16 178 6.1 Burroughs St. Louis, Mo. Hoague, Theodore Jr. 21 195 5.9 New Prep Weston Jones, H. Bradley 17 178 5.10 Milton Academy Los Angeles, Calif. Lacey, Thomas 18 172 5.9 Exeter Keene, N. H. McElwain, William H. 19 175 6.1 Noble & Greenough Brookline McLaughlin, Chester B. Jr. 18 167 5.10 Deerfield Bronxville, N. Y. McMillan, Donald B. 29 160 5.11 New Prep Brookline Mayersohn, Arnold L. 18 155 5.10 Albany Academy Albany, N. Y. Robinson, Lynn M. 19 177 5.11 Willoughby High Cleveland, Ohio Spitzer, Joseph B. 18 150 5.11 Cambridge Latin Cambridge Thayer, Philip...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Freshman Football Statistics | 9/28/1937 | See Source »

Also at the University is "Flight From Glory" with Chester Morris and Whitney Bourne, dealing with the lives of outcast aviaters into whose world in the desert is suddenly thrust a woman. Most people are either arch admirers or ardent haters of Chester Morris. Others will find "Flight From Glory" a moderately exciting aero thriller...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Crimson Moviegoer | 9/27/1937 | See Source »

...Robinson cinema. What typewriters they forgot to destroy they took with them, sold for 50? each. Next night they came back. This time they were greeted by a policeman who was surprised to discover that the pillage and wreckage had been done by six barefooted, dirty-faced moppets, twins Chester & Leo Froelich, 9; John Rudecki, 9, and his 8-year-old brother Walter; Walter Miranda and his 6-year-old brother Norbert. John Rudecki, the only one who tried to escape, was extricated with difficulty from between the blades of a ventilating fan. Bundled off to the station house, they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Youngsters | 9/13/1937 | See Source »

Director Lubitsch's legendary experiment is not so fantastic as it sounds. Mushrooms, which sprout overnight, sprout erratically. Until an Irish Quaker from West Chester, Pa. took a hand in the procedure 33 years ago, mushroom growing was a matter of almost pure chance. Last week the industry Edward Henry Jacob built up from, a six-foot plot in his cellar was the largest mushroom business in the U. S., and it was busy reaping the harvest from history's most important single improvement in mushroom growing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Snow Apples | 9/6/1937 | See Source »

From the point of view of the mushroom business, Philadelphia (of which West Chester is a suburb) has three advantages-temperate climate, propinquity to a sophisticated market and to a big supply of horse manure. Just after the Revolution, when Philadelphia was the U. S. capital, local high livers discovered the mushrooms that had grown wild locally for years. Farmers thereupon tried to grow them artificially. Sometimes they got good crops, sometimes none. Then in 1904 Edward Henry Jacob, an accountant in a cream separator plant, began experimenting with mushrooms...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Snow Apples | 9/6/1937 | See Source »

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