Word: statisticians
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Medicine Show (by Oscar Saul & H. R. Hays; produced by Carly Wharton & Martin Gabel) is a Living Newspaper-type play about U. S. health. Though less vividly dramatized than . . . one third of a nation or Power, it trenchantly exposes the medical plight of the U. S. poor. Its relentless statistician raps out some pretty disquieting facts: that of 1,400,000 annual deaths, 250,000 are preventable; that Chicago has just one free hospital; that 1 ,600 U. S. counties lack hospital facilities; that at Manhattan's Harlem Hospital four ambulances annually served 250,000 patients...
...Only from 2,000,000 to 3,000,000 private jobs need be supplied to find work for everyone employable," said Mr. Krock, quoting from "private economists" (a report by Du Pont Statistician Edmond Earl Lincoln which had been around Washington since late January). Mr. Krock's economists even showed that 3,724,000 more persons were employed in December 1939 than ten years earlier...
Between 1929 and 1938, 19 smaller insurance companies, most of them under the control of Middle Western States, went to the wall and initial indicated losses to policyholders totaled $130,000,000. Famed Insurance Statistician Alfred...
...impressed as anyone by this comparative record was SEC's Leon Henderson whom Business has come to regard as its foe. No one was more astounded than insurancemen when Commissioner Henderson broke in on Statistician Best's testimony to point and dramatize the Best statistics...
Four years ago, when Emil Hurja was a Democratic statistician quietly estimating how many votes his boss would get for the Presidency, his staff in Washington included a young man named James Twohey. It was Mr. Twohey's job to analyze newspaper opinions, turn them into charts and figures for Mr. Hurja...