Word: doctorings
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Manhattan last week arrived His Grace the Right Honorable and Most Reverend Doctor William Temple, 54, Lord Archbishop of York. This Primate of England is ecclesiastically outranked only by the Defender of the Faith, King George V, and the Primate of All England, the Archbishop of Canterbury. On shipboard the stout, brisk Archbishop received newshawks, spoke newsworthily when one of them suggested that "the church has not shown strength in recent years in maintaining world peace." Replied Dr. Temple: ''I'm afraid I don't know that the church has ever done much to keep...
...beaming as if there were nothing in the world which pleased him more than the comical antics in The Barber of Seville. He beamed at Tito Schipa as the love-smitten Count, at Ezio Pinza as the crafty music-master, at Louis D'Angelo as the doddering old doctor, at Richard Bonelli who flourished razor and brush with the ease of a professional. The little Italian barber had reason to be pleased that night. In the company of such experienced singers his 22-year-old daughter was making her début, not in a minor...
...best seller of 1934 was Kemmerer on Money, a timely tract on the gold standard whipped out by Princeton's famed money doctor. Onetime financial adviser to the Philippines, the Dawes Commission and eleven foreign nations, Professor Edwin Walter Kemmerer has lately been in high domestic favor with hard-money men and balanced budgeteers. Last week in Philadelphia Dr. Kemmerer ventured a prophecy on prices by the end of Depression. Said he: "We may reasonably expect that the cost of living, the wholesale and general price levels will be something like double what they are today...
...Reginald Fitz '06, associate professor of Medicine and University Marshal, will be the guest of Winthrop House at dinner Thursday evening, December 5. After dinner Dr. Fitz will speak in the Senior Common Room; his topic will be "A Doctor's Life May Be Adventuresome...
...young North Brookfield, Mass, practitioner three years out of Harvard Medical School, he was called to attend a sturdy French huntsman named LeTourneau who had accidentally blown off his face with a shotgun. The man's family and another physician, an old Army man, agreed with the young doctor on the best thing to do. Dr. Warriner gave the mangled huntsman a fatal dose of morphine...