Word: mason
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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From Surgeon James Tate Mason of Seattle, who was to become its president next week, the American Medical Association expected a vigorous administration. Dr. Mason, 53, co-founder of Seattle's prosperous Mason Clinic and Virginia Mason Hospital, expected to apply his hard business sense to the current problems of U. S. doctors, which are chiefly economic...
Four weeks ago a blood clot formed in a blood vessel of Dr. Mason's left leg. When gangrene threatened. Dr. Mason last week had the leg amputated...
From the other side of the Mason and Dixon line comes word of assurance that in spite of the Stakhanovism of the New Deal professors and men of action, life in Dixie is still being lived according to the tenets of a Southern gentleman. A recent graduate of M.I.T., now working on the engineering corps of the Tennessee Valley Authority, has taken the time off to write a friend at Harvard about a minor incident that occurred a week...
...Present Social and Economic Order; John MacI. Cassels, An Economic Analysis of Milk Marketing and Prices; Elizabeth W. Gilbey, Statistics of Consumption; Robert A. Gordon, A Case Study of Enterprise and Profits in the Modern Corporation; Wassily W. Leontief, Inter-relationship of American Industries in 1929; Edward S. Mason and Associates, The Trust Problem and Policy; Talcott Parsons, Informal Institutional Control in the Medical Profession, and Comparative Study of the Leading Professions in the U.S. and Europe; and Carle C. Zimmerman, The Community during the Depression...
...honorary advisory board will eventually consist of not more than 21 members. At present it contains such men as John Mason Brown, dramatic critic for the New York Evening Post and former member of the HDC, Donald Ocuslager, New York scene designer and former officer of the club, Frederick C. Packard, Jr. '20, professor of Public Speaking, and J. Tucker Murray '99, professor of English...