Word: frequent
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...associated with cancer, and perhaps with other diseases. Dr. Lay Martin of Johns Hopkins is trying to find out, hoping that the proportions of those substances in gastric juices may help early diagnosis of stomach cancer. For some undetermined reasons cancer of the digestive tract has become more frequent recently, observed Dr. Thomas Richardson Brown of Baltimore...
...undergraduates, a pat on the back from the faculty, and at least a Gideon bible from the graduate students. . . . What would the campus be without the spectacle of Mr. Berry making a weekly pilgrimage to his laundress? . . . What would the Sun's advertising columns be without Mr. Berry's frequent full-page contributions? . . . Mr. Berry belongs to Cornell. Mr. Berry's hat is just as much a part of its owner as his glasses with the heavy black band, or his full dress suit, or his tweed knickers...
They both feel somewhat sheepish on account of the lives they are leading, so they decide to fight their way tooth and nail back to the Good Life. True, it's uphill work because of Stevie's lingering desire for strong stimulants and Angle's frequent bouts with the pipe, but love, running true to form triumphs, and a year later finds them both ensconsed in the ancestral mansion. Neither Farrel nor Gaynor sing...
Results of the frequent three cornered elections in America reveal a pressing need for a similar system. The recent Republican mayoralty contest in Chicago is an excellent example of the ineffectiveness of the present methods. Victory was assured to one faction because a split opposition permitted a minority vote to elect. Under the alternative plan, the votes which were lost on the third candidate might have given victory to the second. That a minority man should be elected to office is almost a refutation of the fundamental principal of American Democracy...
Whether or not Professor Carver will accept the challenge could not be ascertained last night. He has long been in the public eye as an advocate of conservatism and he has made frequent expressions for the press and periodicals on the subject of prohibition. He is well-known in the field of economics, the economics of agriculture in particular, and it has been learned from reliable sources that he was invited to consult with President Hoover before the latter made recommendations concerning farm relief...