Word: rayed
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Princeton's free-stylers do not measure up to the standards of Hutter, Barker, Kendall, Coleman, and their mates, so that the Nassau men cannot be conceded at the most more than four first places. Bob Snyder, helping Greenhood in the dive, has a chance to place, and Ray Benedict, Harley Stowell, Bob Murphy, and Jack Kennedy ought to score seconds or thirds. The often-vital last event, the 400 relay, is certain to be taken by the Crimson...
...internal medicine (diagnosis), 2) sur gery, 3) pediatrics (children), 4) obstetrics & gynecology, 5) ophthalmology, 6) otolaryngology. 7) dermatology (skin) & syphilology, 8) psychiatry (mind, emotions) & neurology (nerves), 9) urology (kidney, bladder), 10) orthopedic surgery (bones, muscles), 11) radiology (X ray, radium), 12) pathology (diseased tissue...
...year apiece, 1,510,000 U. S. citizens are entitled, if sick, to 21 days board and nursing in a semiprivate hospital room, use of maternity delivery room, ordinary X-ray and laboratory examinations, anesthesia. For $18 a year man & wife may get the same accommodation, for $24 a year an entire family (TIME, April 6, 1936, et seq.). From those fees 15% goes for hospitals' charges, 12% for administration expenses of the service, the balance into reserve. During the four years since these hospital services developed subscribers paid $7,681,517 to hospitals. $1,230,000 to administration...
This year, Bob Murphy and Ed Howitt wage terrific battles for second and third place in the 440 while Frank Coleman wins by a large margin. While Hutter runs away with the 100, it's Freddie Griffin who has the real race on his hands for the lesser honors. Ray Benedict always has to work his head off in the 220 while Digger Kendall coasts to a record, and Jack Kennedy in the backstroke, Jim Munroe and Phil Walker in the breast, and Forbush and Synder in the dive, are never sure of their places unless they...
...National Social Hygiene Day" last week, radiorators, notably General John Joseph Pershing, Dr. Parran and President Ray Lyman Wilbur (M.D.) of Stanford University discussed such matters over 350 broadcasting stations. Dr. William Freeman Snow, director of the American Social Hygiene Association announced that, of the $500,000 which he needs to propagandize for Dr. Parran's program, he already had collected $102,000. Senator Robert Marion La Follette of Wisconsin and Representative Alfred Lee Bulwinkle of North Carolina urged Congress to appropriate $271,000,000 towards a 13-year campaign for prevention, treatment, control of venereal disease...