Word: stanleys
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...answer to Stanley Woodward, New York Herald-Tribune sports writer, who had predicted a Harvard victory, Barres said that he had 'not yet met a Princeton, Harvard, or even Yale man who has not made the same choice...
...than bacteria by passing a solution from diseased tobacco plants through a Chamberland filter. In time it was found that many animal and human diseases were also due to such viruses: rabies, distemper, foot-and-mouth disease, encephalitis, poliomyelitis, measles, yellow fever, certain tumors, common colds. At Princeton Dr. Stanley grew acres of tobacco plants, infected them with the disease known as tobacco mosaic, ground up their wizened leaves, extracted their juices. This liquid was highly infectious to normal plants. But the deadly principle could not be cultured like a bacterium. Dr. Stanley found that it could be digested - that...
...Sweden, Nobel Laureate The Svedberg had designed an ultracentrifuge - a machine which separates heavy molecules from light ones, inferentially measuring their molecular weights, by whirling them at enormous speeds. In this ultracentrifuge the molecular weight of the Stanley crystals was found to be about 17,000,000 units (17,000,000 times as heavy as a hydrogen atom...
...coaching hockey at Milton Academy a decade ago, he trained Barry Wood who later became All-America quarterback at Harvard. As Boston University's baseball coach, he immortalized himself by switching Mickey Cochrane from third baseman to catcher. Since the Blackhawks, who won the world's championship Stanley Cup in 1934, were last year the lowest scoring team in the league, Bill Stewart should have started work on them early in October, but he was busy umpiring the World Series...
This was promptly demonstrated when. in their opening game last week, Bill Stewart's Blackhawks took a 3-to-0 licking from the revived New York Americans. On the same night the Detroit Red Wings, out to defend the Stanley Cup they have held for two years, played an inauspicious 2-to-2 tie with the Toronto Maple Leafs. Meanwhile, as the other teams in the circuit started their 48-game schedules, Howie Morenz Jr., 11, hung on his wall a hockey stick covered with autographs of his late father's friends, who had taken care...