Word: julians
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...George R. Agassiz, Mrs. Irving Babbitt, Mrs. P. deM. Barbey, Mrs. Frederick H. Briggs, Mrs. George Sargent Burgess, Mrs. William B. Cabot, Miss Annie B. Chapman, Mrs. H. E. Clifford, Mrs. Julian L. Coolidge, Mrs. Archibald T. Davison, Mrs. L. Day, Mrs. George H. Edgell, Mrs. Henry H. Fay, Mrs. Harry Ganz, Mrs. Anna, L. Gray, Mrs. Holmes Hinkley, Miss Anna E. Holman, Mrs. Edward J. Holmes, Mrs. Thomas B. Hughes, Mrs. Edward W. Hutchins, Mrs. Edward Hale Lane, Mrs. Charles G. Mixter, Mrs. John Montague, Mrs. Arthur W. Moors, Mrs. Andre Morize, Mrs. Theresa R. Osgood, Mrs. Thomas...
...presented before the Chicago Medical Society last week. The stomach is lined with mucous membranes which exude a sticky substance called mucin. Mucin lubricates the stomach. It also combines with hydrochloric acid in the stomach and slows up the digestive action of pepsin. It occurred to Dr. Samuel Julian Fogelson & associates of Northwestern University that lack of sufficient mucin might have a great deal to do with ulcers...
...Harvey Couch, one of President Hoover's R. F. C. directors, is president of the Louisiana & Arkansas, whose employes objected to a 15% wage cut. To a special board of settlement President Hoover appointed Chief Justice Walter P. Stacy of the North Carolina Supreme Court, Justice Julian H. Moore of the Colorado Supreme Court and Dr. Davis R. Dewey of Massachusetts Institute of Technology...
...thought would have snapped. A civil engineer, a city planner, a man of action decorated by the U. S. and the City of Bordeaux for War service, Col. Collis took corrective steps. For three months he grappled with the problem; then he marched to his good friend Editor Julian Starkweather Mason of the New York Evening Post with a plan. Editor Mason and his assistant Ralph Renaud liked it. Last fortnight Post readers found front-page "jump" stories marked with one of a variety of symbols, like this...
Above the roar of City Hall Park, Manhattan, in the big, musty room of the Federal District Court, famed Judge Julian William Mack rapped for order. There was a polite pandemonium caused not by expectant gum-chewers but by 50 lawyers who were trying to find seats on the Defense side of the case. United States v. Sugar Institute, Inc. They filled the jury box (for there was no jury). They flowed over into the spectator rows, squatted on rickety benches. The only one who was sure of a seat was John C. Higgiris of Sullivan & Cromwell...