Word: grosse
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Clark, Forrester A. '58; Connell, Lawrence, Jr. '58; Devens, Charles, Jr. '59; Erickson, Clifford W. '58; Foster, Robert R. '59; Francis, Edward L. '59; George, Joseph A. "58; Gross, James C. '59; Hasiotis, Christos A. '57; Hodges, Arthur C. '57; Hoffsis, Robert S. '58; Hoffsis, Robert S. '58; Huff, Warren L. '59; Huggins, Kenneth R. '55; Johanson, Ronald J. '59; Lawson, Thomas E. '59; Lindgren, Keith M. '58; Maguire, Lawrence E. '58 (Captain); Marlow, Gordon A. '59; Pforzheimer, Carl H. III '58 (Manager); Carr, John F. III, (Assoc. manager in charge of Freshman Football...
...Federal government possesses a "residual power" to punish gross violations of civil rights by the states, and must exercise this power if it is to maintain its leadership of the free world, Zechariah Chafee, University Professor emeritus, told a Baltimore audience yesterday...
Never in its history was the U.S. so prosperous. Gross national product, personal income (before and after taxes), nonfarm employment and average take-home pay of factory workers were all at record peaks. But in and out of this good news ran the red line of danger: between September and October, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported last week, the Consumer Price Index (1947-49: 100) jumped 0.5% to hit an all time high of 117.7. The rise, the seventh in eight months, meant that the cost of living is now 2.4% dearer than a year ago. Main reason...
...seized the Suez Canal, the boom had started abroad in anticipation of a huge increase in the free world's oil consumption-and of possible trouble when Egypt could legally take over the canal in 1968. Today, more than 1,500 steamships and motorships, totaling 7,500,000 gross tons, are being built around the world. Great Britain, leader in the field, is constructing more than 2,000,000 gross tons, cannot promise deliveries on new orders until 1962. France is building 73 tankers and dry-cargo ships totaling 465,462 gross tons. This month the German shipbuilding industry...
...years ago Harvard Medical Student Judah Folkman, working under famed Heart Surgeon Robert Gross, got the idea that holes between the ventricles of the human heart might be closed with plastic (polyethylene) patches. Like all such ideas, it was tried first on dogs. Last week in Boston Children's Medical Center, a mongrel named Airplane, with a strip of collie in his bar sinister, was dubbed "Dog Research Hero of the Year," invested with a new collar and silver medallion by Cardiologist Paul Dudley White for having helped to prove the operation feasible. Airplane now leads a pampered existence...