Word: koch
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Time to Come (by Howard Koch & John Huston; produced by Otto Preminger) leafs back to an instructive page of U.S. history. It tells the sorry tale of Woodrow Wilson's vision of a just peace and powerful League of Nations after World War I, of the conniving that crippled that vision at Versailles, and the opposition that destroyed it at home...
Robert Kagan '44, Roland Kahn '43, Brian Kiely '43, Charles E. Kitchen '42, Marvin A. Klemes '42, Leif L. '42, Robert A. Koch '44, Robert W. Komer '42, Freeman Fu-Chang Kee '42, Herbert J. Kramer...
After graduation (1875) he went to Germany, studied bacteriology, biochemistry, pathology. That was the golden age of bacteriology, when men like Pasteur, Koch and Ehrlich were starting their researches. But in the U.S. there was not one pathology laboratory. Medical education was cut and dried; students memorized lecture notes, had no experimental and little clinical training...
...Until five years ago, most recorders were made in Germany or England. The English revival had been started by the late untidy-bearded Arnold Dolmetsch, musical antiquary. One of his pupils, Margaret Bradford (who now helps run the American Recorder Society), got a Haverhill. N.H. cabinetmaker named William F. Koch to make some. Now Manufacturer Koch turns hard, red cocobolo wood into 90% of the recorders sold in the U.S. All a recorder maker needs is this South American wood, a lathe, a few tools, and an exceptionally acute ear. But Manufacturer Koch will have to hump. Schirmer...
Captain: Joseph M. Koch...