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Word: mcgraw (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...York; Nell H. Borden, Assistant Professor of Advertising in the Harvard Business School; M. T. Copeland, Professor of Marketing in the Harvard Business School; Mac Martin, President of the Mac Martin Advertising Agency of Minneapolis; Malcolm Muir, Vice-President and Chairman of the Sales Board of the McGraw-Hill Company, Publishers, of New York; Stanley Resor, President of the J. Walter Thompson Company, Advertising Agency of New York; Tim Thritt, Advertising Manager of the American Multigraph Sales Company-of Cleveland; and C. K. Woodbridge, President of the Associated Advertising Clubs of the World, and President of the Dictaphone Corporation...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: In the Graduate Schools | 11/30/1925 | See Source »

...Kahn 391,776 Rudyard Kipling 4,998 Sebastian S. Kresge (5 & lOc Stores) 188,608 William B. Leeds 57,445 Florence Pullman Lowden 14,736 A. Lawrence Lowell (Harvard).... 36,566 Cyrus H. McCormick 269,036 Ganna Walska McCormick 12,632 Harold F. McCormick 168,276 John J. McGraw 2,544 Clarence H. Mackey 320,490 Edward B. McLean 255,729 Dwight W. Morrow 290,344 Pola Negri 15,108 Meredith Nicholson 1,586 Ignace Jan Paderewsky 16,161 Ann Pennington 1,641 Senator Lawrence Phipps 157,741 Mary Pickford 34,075 Col. William C. Proctor (Ivory Soap...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TAXATION: Publicity | 9/14/1925 | See Source »

Lafayette, unbeaten, took on the Leopard's spots and sought to pounce on Penn, also unbeaten. To no avail. A field goal by Chief Leopard Berry was wiped out by a pass by Chief Quaker McGraw, caught and carried by one Joe Laird. The Leopards went back to Easton, dark bruises mingled with their spots and the score: Penn 6, Lafayette 3. The Quakers rejoiced in being the only unbeaten, untied Eastern team of the season, Pittsburgh having tied Penn's nearest rival, Syracuse...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Football: Nov. 10, 1924 | 11/10/1924 | See Source »

Another year of professional baseball reached its denouement. At the Polo Grounds, Manhattan, Manager McGraw and his "Giants" made their supremacy of the National League a mathematical certainty by banging out a 5-to-1 victory over Philadelphia. At Shibe Park, Philadelphia, the Washington "Senators" fattened their percentage at the expense of Manager Connie Mack's once-famed "Athletics," and lifted the American League pennant beyond the reach of the New York "Yankees" (1923 world's champions). For the first time in four years, the World's Series was thus rendered other than an all-New York affair...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Denouement | 10/6/1924 | See Source »

...Giants' four years of plenty (a major league record) are chiefly asscribable to the shrewdness of John McGraw, their square-jawed manager, and to heavy financial backing. Not only has McGraw the acumen for constructing and lubricating a baseball machine but he has also been supplied with dollars sufficient to maintain a far-flung network of "scouts" on the lookout for fresh material; sufficient to purchase such material at any price...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Denouement | 10/6/1924 | See Source »

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