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...Association, meeting in Manhattan, put on a big show (see below). It also elected a new president (term: one year). Surgeon Frank Howard Lahey, "the Mayo of Boston," is famed for his scientific achievements. In 1922, Dr. Lahey started a small clinic on Commonwealth Avenue, with Drs. Lincoln Fleetford Sise and Sara Murray Jordan, outstanding woman gastroenterologist (specialist in intestinal disorders) in the U. S. Dr. Lahey specialized in clipping thyroids. So dexterous was his technique that within 17 years he and his associates had performed over 15,000 operations, lost only 100 patients...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: New President for A. M. A. | 6/24/1940 | See Source »

Others racing for Harvard in the order in which they finished were: Sheldon, J., 3.09.8; Sise, A. 3.10.1; Garrett, 3.13.0, W. Thurston, 3.20; H. Wolverine, 3.20.2; E. M, Dickson, 3.22. The last six Crimson competitors times didn't count in the totals as Dartmouth had only fourteen men skiing. They were Wilson, R., 3.23.6; Streeter Bass, 3.25.6; Whittemore, R. 3.35.0; Wigglesworth, E. 3.38.0; Weiner, H. 3.43.2; Pickhard, F. 4.02.0, and Emmons...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Crimson Edges Dartmouth by 50 Second Margin in Slalom | 4/15/1940 | See Source »

Because Canadian Associated's job was to organize an industry as well as to parcel out orders, it got as its president not an airplane pilot but a seasoned businessman: aristocratic, 60-year-old Paul Fleetford Sise, onetime overseas infantry officer who had worked for Westinghouse before becoming president of Canada's Northern Electric Co. and board member of many another Canadian company...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: War in Canada | 12/4/1939 | See Source »

Meantime Canada's air industry, too, will be spurred and expanded. Canada will build bodies into which will go U. S. or British engines. Head of Canadian Associated Aircraft Ltd., a company formed to parcel out contracts among its six affiliates, is Paul Fleetford Sise, no airman but chosen on his business record (president, Northern Electric Co. of Canada) as just the right sort of wealthy, urbane, widely acquainted executive to do a Dominion...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: IN THE AIR: Wings for an Empire | 11/13/1939 | See Source »

...seconds; Howard Chivers of Dartmouth was third in 42.1; Dave Bradley of Dartmouth fourth, 43.1. The fourteen Harvard men besides Rogers, whose times were counted in the team score, placed as follows: H. Adams Carter '36, fifth, 43.9; David Emerson '38, sixth, 44.8; Charles Lawrence, eighth, 46.4; Albert F. Sise, tenth, 47.6; Andrew E. Ritchie, Jr. '34, twelth...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Ski Team Defeats Dartmouth Scoring Major Slalom Upset | 4/20/1937 | See Source »

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