Word: harold
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...John H. Bartol '36; Francis G. Brigham, Jr. '37; Whitney G. Case, 2nd '36; Richard J. Currie '36; Thomas B. Edmands '36; Richard T. Fisher, Jr. '36; Edward H. Gerry '36; Germain G. Glidden '36; Albert G. Hale '36; Melvin F. Bill, Jr. '36; Robart C. Hunter, Jr. '36; Harold E. Jahn '36; Philip E. Lillenthal '36; Robert S. Playfair '36; John G. Seaunell '36; William A. Smith '36; Howland B. Steddard '36; Nelson D. Warwick '36; Leavitt S. White '37; LeMoyne White...
...their fold. Verne Marshall, crusading editor of the Cedar Rapids Gazette, did not object to Sioux Citizens having their gambling and highballs, but his nostrils quivered at the smell of bargaining between lawbreakers and officials. After a legislative investigation which resulted in the conviction of State Liquor Commission Chairman Harold M. Cooper for disposing illegally of State liquor seals. Editor Marshall early this year prodded Woodbury County (Sioux City) into a grand jury investigation...
Harvester's new chairman is Cyrus' younger brother, Harold Fowler McCormick, whose first wife was the late Edith Rockefeller McCormick. Later he married Singer Ganna Walska, whom he divorced in 1931. When Brother Cyrus retired to the board-chairmanship in 1918, Harold succeeded him as Harvester's president, held the office for four years, has since been chairman of Harvester's finance committee...
Violins: Roger Birnique 1L, Seymour Bunshaft '39, A. German Hills '37, Finley H. Perry '39, and Donis Rhodes '38. Trumpets: Harold Calmer '39, Roger W. Loewi '39, Waine T. Ray '39, and James L. Tyson '39, Clarinets: Hughes Call '39, Jan LaRue '39, and George W. Phillips '39. Flutes: Guy Molton G., Robert T., Rand 1G., Nilakanta Sastry 2 GB, Royal S. Schaaf '39, and Francis M. Schull 1G. Cellos: Paul A. Alexander '39, Arthur D. Gardiner '39, and Philip E. Morin '39. French horn: Sidney R. Ballou '35. Trombone: Russell B. Edmond '39. Viola: Eit Cantor 1L. Tympani...
Heavy Neon. Isotopes are forms of the same element having different atomic weights. Most famed isotope is "heavy hydrogen" for which Columbia's Harold Clayton Urey won last year's Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Dr. Gustav Hertz of Berlin's Siemens Engineering Works told how he extracted 98% pure ''heavy neon" (atomic weight 22) from ordinary neon (atomic weight 20). The separation, accomplished with the help of mercury in a long series of connected flasks, was so ingenious that Dr. Hertz's description of it was heartily clapped, and when he had finished...