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...five members of the Practical Politics Committee under the leadership of Robert Grinnell '36 have been active in organizing the rally and will serve as ushers. They include: Robert Amory, Jr. '36, Arthur A. Ballantine, Jr. '36, Francis F. Brooks '37, Lincoln Bryant 2G, Robert L. Clifford 2G, Sylvester Cunningham '38, Hayden Estey '36, George D. Haskell, Jr. '36, John S. Howe '36, Joseph F. Knowles, Jr. '36, John W. Laverack '37, Lambert Murphy '36, Malcolm D. Perkins '36, Henry V. Poor '36, Edward Rawson '36, Henry B. Robbins '36, William Smoot '36, Oliver H. Straus '36, Barrett Wendell...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: G.O.P. NOMINEES SPEAK IN CAMBRIDGE TONIGHT | 10/31/1934 | See Source »

Then there are about 20 men who are aiding Grinnell to prepare publicity and do some stenographic work. Among then are; Joseph F. Knowles, Jr. '36, Robert Amory '36, Oliver H. Straus '36. William W. Wolbach '38, and Sylvestor Cunningham...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Student Speakers Urge Election of Bacon at Cambridge Rallies in Practical Politics Work | 10/29/1934 | See Source »

Last week young Mr. Rand bought Dr. Cunningham's sphere for $500,000, will henceforth operate it with the help of Dr. Carl William Iuler, 36, as the Ohio Institute of Oxygen Therapy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Tank Hospital | 10/8/1934 | See Source »

James Henry Rand Jr., chairman-president of Remington-Rand (office equipment) had sufficient faith to entrust Mrs. Rand to Dr. Cunningham's aerotherapeutics. And their son James Henry Rand III, onetime University of Virginia medical student, had sufficient faith to understudy Dr. Cunningham for the past seven years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Tank Hospital | 10/8/1934 | See Source »

...Cunningham, 54, originally from Kansas City, believes that organisms which live only in the absence of oxygen cause certain forms of diabetes, pernicious anemia, and cancer. To him, the logical treatment is to saturate the patient with oxygen under pressure, which theoretically permeates to the morbid organisms and kills them. The Bureau of Investigation of the American Medical Association, after due consideration, has denounced this theory of therapy as so much quackery. Nevertheless, Henry Holiday Timken, reclusive roller-bearing tycoon, had sufficient faith in Dr. Cunningham's ideas to give him $1,000,000 to construct his tank hospital...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Tank Hospital | 10/8/1934 | See Source »

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