Word: cobb
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...executive board relinquished their posts to the offices of the 1942 board. The officers retiring include President Spencer Klaw, Managing Editor Alfred J. Gilbert, Advertising Manager H. Field Haviland, Jr., Business Manager Henry Doerr III, Editorial Chairman Richard D. Edwards, Executive Editor William W. Tyng, Photographic Editor John C. Cobb 2nd, Sports Editor D. Donald Peddie, and Circulation Manager Julian M. Sobin...
...Bennett, with action in five games, is well out in front of Dartmouth's Gus Broberg, who has scored a total of 64 points, an average of 12.8 points per contest, Broberg, with only three games to his credit, has scored 39 markers, a total matched by Captain John Cobb of Yale, who has, however, seen action in four games...
...COBB LE BARON La Jolla, Calif...
...Interventionist Cobb, unlike many U. S. interventionists, knows at first hand what war is. Born in Italy of Boston parents, he enlisted with the Canadians in World War I, was twice gassed. He is the author of Paths of Glory (TIME, June 3, 1935), a superb war novel, in which three brave French soldiers were executed for "mutiny" after a sadistic general had ordered a hopeless attack...
Medieval Arabian physicians foreshadowed Boston's famed Dr. Stanley Cobb in believing that much of arthritis is psychological. In the 9th Century, the great physician Rhazes attended an emir who was so badly crippled that he could not walk. First Rhazes ordered the emir's best horse to be saddled and brought into the court yard. Rhazes gave the emir hot showers and a stiff drink. Then, brandishing a knife, he cursed his patient, threatened to kill him. Furious, the crippled man sprang to his feet. With his patient hot on his trail, the doctor leaped...