Word: heyd
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ADVERTISING SALES: Headquarters: John Heyd, Hugh Wiley (Directors); Mike Ward Atlanta: John Helmer (Manager) Boston: Don Jones (Manager) Chicago: Kathy Kayse (Manager); Tim Derr, Randy Holloway, Linda Isaacs-Ausman, Tim Schlax Dallas: Matt Turck (Manager) Detroit: Jeff Cornish (Manager); John Wattles Los Angeles: Tom Ott (Manager); Lisa Bentley, Brett Wilson New York: Dick Raskopf (Director); Peter Krieger, Maureen McAllister (Managers); Rick Anderson, Laurie Benson, Bruce Beresford, Peter Britton, Mike Callahan, Joan Campo, Chris Carter, Russ Harden, Tom Kealy, Bruce Kostic, Lisa Lockley-Martinez, Dave Thomas, Teri Wagner San Francisco: Fred Gruber (Manager); Jay Howard Washington: Hal Bonawitz (Manager...
...first team included: Norman Juvonen (E), Cornell; Barney Berlinger (E), Penn; Robert Shaunessy (T), Harvard; Edward Savitsky (T), Cornell; and Alvin Krutsch (G), Dartmouth; Joseph DeDeo (G), Princeton; Donald Warburton (C), Brown; Frank Finney (QB), Brown; John Crouthamel (HB), Dartmouth; John Heyd (HB), Princeton; and Paul Choquette (FB), Brown...
...Louis A. HEYD JR. New Orleans...
Publisher Gannett was absent. Toastmaster was his good friend-bald, shrewd Surgeon Charles Gordon Heyd, former president of the American Medical Association. Dr. Heyd sounded the theme of the meeting: doctors and businessmen must form a political alliance against the New Deal. Chief speakers were Dr. Emerson, who delivered his stock arguments, the committee's treasurer, Sumner W. Gerard, who claimed that the New Deal was out to rook doctors for the sake of a "piece of cheese," and defeated Democratic Congressman Samuel Pettengill of Indiana, who delivered a full-throated 1940 campaign speech...
...Journal of Surgery last week produced a 416-page issue chock-full with 87 articles about the minor surgery which an ordinary doctor can perform in his own office. Dr. Pool blessed Editor Welton's venture. So did the president of the American Medical Association Surgeon Charles Gordon Heyd of Manhattan. And Philadelphia's self-controlled Surgeon William Wayne Babcock, who once awed doctors by violating a surgical apothegm and performing an operation on his wife, contributed the first paper. This was terse, factual advice...