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Word: nones (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

...awarded is soccer. The writer of this doesn't know much about it, but a lot of people get a great deal of fun out of it. Varsity Coach Jack Carr and his staff have a brilliant record in developing stars out of men who played little or none at all before college...

Author: By John J. Reidy jr., | Title: Athletics a Compulsory and Important Part of Freshman Year | 9/1/1937 | See Source »

Wightman Cup, The only thing that could be said in favor of a weak British team's chances against a strong U. S. team was that none of this year's British players was married and they would therefore, presumably, have no worries about absent husbands. True, two of the U. S. tennists- Alice Marble and Carolin Babcock-had sore backs and Helen Jacobs, in the year since she lost the U. S. singles championship to Alice Marble, had dislocated her thumb, torn a shoulder ligament and banged her knee with a racket. But pretty Kay Stammers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Tennis | 8/30/1937 | See Source »

...Nonetheless, there are no laws to prevent licensed dentists who cannot gather the $3,000 necessary to equip a regular office, from putting their equipment in satchels, packs or motor trailers, so long as they confine their practice to their own States. In the cases of the Albany itinerants, none had licenses to practice anywhere. None had dental training. Nevertheless they found patients who were willing to be fitted for plates and dentures in their parlors and kitchens. Two of the four practitioners were second offenders. All were subject to fines, to prison terms...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: House-to-House Dentists | 8/30/1937 | See Source »

...vomiting, slight fever). From a case of this lymphocytic choriomeningitis. Dr. Charles Armstrong and associates of the National Institute of Health acquired a virus with which they inoculated mice. Half of the mice also received injections of Sulfanilamide. Those did not die of the infection, but those who received none of the drug did die, causing Dr. Armstrong and associates to infer that the sulfanilamide may be the desperately sought cure for the common cold, influenza, infantile paralysis and the other virus diseases...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Again, Sulfanilamide | 8/30/1937 | See Source »

...setting for a memorable first novel in which able descriptions of prison life about evenly balance the confused accounts of the breakdown of a sensitive prisoner. The story of Number 957 (name: Alexander William Mansell; sentence: life servitude; eyes: brown; height: 5 ft. 7 in.; age: 20; ruptures: none), Museum deals less minutely with its central character than with the stones which enclose him. The work of an Irish agitator who spent 14 years in Dartmoor and Parkhurst prisons, was twice sentenced to death, it is written in a sensitive narrative prose, interrupted with passages of Joycean inner-monologs, suggests...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Lifer | 8/30/1937 | See Source »

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