Word: organisms
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...leading petroleum men are beginning to see blue sky on the horizon again. Standard oil-usually a good judge of such matters-has shown its faith in the future of the oil business by taking advantage of the present slump to buy up producing companies. Furthermore, the Lamp-house-organ of the Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey -now has designated next June as the probable time when consumption would again overtake production and lead to a decline in surplus stocks...
Professor James T. Addison '09, professor of religion and missions of the Episcopal Theological School, will give an address this evening at 5.30 o'clock in St. john's Memorial Chapel on Brattle Street. Preceding his address at 5 o'clock will be an organ recital. The recital and address are open only to the members of the University...
...elder brother, living under the same roof (and this is no mere metaphor) the Bulletin ventures to suggest an abatement in the firecracker brand of undergraduate journalism. The CRIMSON has a good tradition to maintain, a tradition which contains no yellow streak. It is the dally organ, not of its editors alone, but of the entire membership of the University. These editors abide their little hour and go their way, but the tradition of the paper ought to be in their hands a trust. --Alumni Bulletin...
...Oxford classical scholar, who has been connected with the Admiralty for more than two years, having been Parliamentary Secretary to the Admiralty since 1921 until he was appointed First Lord last year in Mr. Law's Administration. He was formerly on the London Times editorial staff and organ-ized The Times' war correspondence in the South African...
...supporters. The most conspicuous is Sir James Barr, consulting physician of the Liverpool Royal Infirmary and former Vice President of the British Medical Association, who has the Abrams machines, and lauds Abrams' achievements. In the U. S., Pearson's Magazine, sensational radical organ, espoused his cause, and published long supplements on Abrams. Upton Sinclair, the fighting Socialist pamphleteer and health apostle, has spent some time in Abrams' laboratory, and is sincerely convinced of his scientific genius and humanitarianism. But he is hardly a competent judge of cures...