Word: suddenly
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...result was to aid England which has been losing gold to the U. S. Over a longer period, agreed bankers last week, it should encourage foreign financing in the U. S., likewise issues by domestic companies. Yet last week the state of U. S. business was such that no sudden demand for funds was expected, no immediate revival held likely...
...which gushed sudden wealth into eastern Texas last winter (TIME, Feb.2), caused horror and tragedy there last week. Near Gladewater, Sinclair Oil Company's No. I Cole well was brought in. Instantly the null gusher went wild. While 14 men were trying to get the well under control, a spark caused by tool friction suddenly turned a plenteous natural blessing into a howling inferno. Some of the workers managed to dodge out of the flames, two jumped for safety into the slush pit where they were boiled alive. The rest were quickly roasted. Fatalities, originally estimated at twelve, then...
...judged most worthy of a solo engagement with the Chicago orchestra. Newshawks went after his "story," found that he had been running errands for the Chicago Daily News, forthwith played him up as a messenger boy. That troubled Joseph Rosenstein, because he felt it made him look like a sudden-wonder prodigy whereas he has studied music for years, been generally well educated. He did not rent a dress suit for his Chicago Symphony concert. He bought one, only he forgot to try it on beforehand, found at concert time that the trousers were four inches too long, beyond benefit...
Anaphylaxis, or sudden, violent death after serum injection, occasionally occurs. Immunologists are seeking explanation. The Chicago child had lingered a month. Her doctors searched the medical literature for enlightenment. In 1903, they found, Maurice Arthus, who is now professor of physiology at the University of Lausanne, had described the "Arthus Phenomenon" in rabbits. Repeated injections of a protein (serums are protein) make rabbits sensitive to the same protein. Subsequent doses become progressively more poisonous. Four years ago Dr. Wesley Emmett Gatewood of Portland, Ore. and Dr. Clarence William Baldridge of Iowa City reported six cases which seemed to prove...
Following the sudden death of his father, thin, tall DuBose Heyward, descendant of the First Families of South Carolina, became the only man in his family at the age of nine. He sold papers for a time, and ill health later prevented him from obtaining formal schooling. In 1924 he dropped his moderately successful insurance business, took up writing...