Word: wauwatosa
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Occupational Hazard. In Wauwatosa, Wis., surprised by police as he crept about in the offices of the State Washed Sand and Gravel Co., James Freeman, 19, was arrested on a burglary charge, taken out to a squad car where he fainted when reinforcements arrived...
...Grand, St. Louis, Mo.; Alan T. Howe, Boston, Mass.; Warren M. Little, Brookline, Mass.; Hubert C. Maguire Jr., Belmont, Mass.; Robert C. Mello, Rutland, Vt.; Irvin G. Murray, Farmington, Conn.; John Richards 2d, Groton, Mass.; Robert Rittenburg, Boston, Mass.; Robert S., Twitchell, Long Beach, Calif.; John D. Walecka, Wauwatosa, Wisc.; Donald R. Whitehead, Wollaston, Mass.; Thomas S. Derr Jr., Waban, Mass...
Down to a bunting-draped Milwaukee depot one morning last week rode 75 bewhiskered, top-hatted men and hoopskirted women in three horse-drawn wagons. They piled into two yellow and maroon coaches and set off for a round trip to Wauwatosa, five miles westward, hauled by the same tiny, puffing "Old No. 1" locomotive that made the same trip to Wauwatosa 100 years ago. The Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul & Pacific Railroad-whose tracks now cover 11,000 miles and reach through twelve states from Chicago to Seattle-was celebrating its centennial...
...Roland B. Brandis, Jr., of Greensboro, N. C., Richmond '37; Ernest R. Dalton, of Hopedale, Bowdoin '37; Stephen Enke, of Cambridge, Stanford '36; Edgar J. Kemler, of Baltimore, Md., Johns Hopkins '37; Robert J. M. Matteson, of Bennington, Va., Middlebury '38; Paul F. McGuire, of Wauwatosa, Wis., Wisconsin '37; Hugh L. Stewart, of Arlington, Va., Kansas State '31; James E. Wood, of Washington, D. C., College of the Pacific '29; Burton O. Young, of Arlington, Va., Oberlin...
...local medical organizations in the Red Lacquer Room of Chicago's Palmer House. Purpose: consideration of the proposed Federal health program. Dr. Harrison H. Shoulders of Nashville, Tenn., speaker of the House, Dr. Irvin Abell of Louisville, Ky., president of the Association, and Dr. Rock Sleyster of Wauwatosa, Wis., president-elect, exhorted the delegates. All three opposed "political control," reiterated the A. M. A.'s desire to "benefit the people." Said President Abell, referring to the National Health Conference: "Without calling the organized medical profession . . . into conference, a vast plan affecting health and medical care has been proposed...