Word: l
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...facts, as New York Timesman Edwin L. Dale Jr., 33, reported this week: 1) in 1952-55, retail prices of manufactured goods, as well as food prices, declined a bit on the average; 2) the main inflationary factor is not a wage-price spiral so much as the fact that service businesses (mostly small), along with landlords, doctors and dentists, keep pushing up prices of "non-goods"-services, utilities, rents, transportation fares...
Cavities & a Grave. Dr. James L. Gilmore, a Pittsburgh obstetrician, had consulted Graham about what he believed to be a lung abscess. Graham jolted him with the news: it was cancer. Gilmore went home to Pittsburgh to decide whether he wanted an operation to remove the diseased part of his lung. In a few days he returned, ready for the operation, and told Surgeon Graham that while in Pittsburgh he had had some teeth filled. Said Graham with a laugh: "I like an optimistic patient." Replied Gilmore: "Yes, but I ought to tell you that I also bought a cemetery...
...smoke, had his own answer: it was caused by smoking. Dr. Graham, who smoked half a pack a day, was at first unconvinced by his ebullient colleague. World War II halted further studies of this problem, but in 1947 a second-year medical student named Ernest L. Wynder went to Graham and suggested a statistical study of lung cancer in relation to cigarette smoking...
...vitality ("I never go in a hat even in winter"). In all verbal matters, Pnin would rather be wrong than hesitant, and no doughtier comic immigrant has set foot on the shores of U.S. fiction since Timofey's "tvin" dialectician H*Y*M*A*N K*A*P*L...
...committee of Law School alumni has begun a drive for $1,250,000 for the construction of two buildings for the School's International Legal Studies program, according to Milton Katz '27, Henry L. Stimson Professor of Law, the director of the program...