Word: alberts
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Albert E. Berry, Harry F. R. Dolan, Philip H. Dolan, Albert D. Foster, Jr., Verner S. Gaggin, Jr., Hubert J. Kelley, Paul D. O'Brien, William Reardon, William J. Robinson, John D. Sicher, Roderick H. Sears...
...McVeigh, Jr.; Malcolm McVickar; D. D. Malcolm; W. E. Mayne; C. W. Morse; R. F. Mozley; Thomas Newbold; W. L. Pettingell; C. F. Poole; G. R. Poor; D. L. Putnam; L. K. Rainsford; S. P. Reed, Jr.; Hyman Rudnick; Fitzwilliam Sargent, 3rd.; Richard Sears; E. W. Sinnott, Jr.; Albert Stickney, Jr.; H. L. Stowell; G. F. Stubbs, Jr.; J. W. Suter; T. J. Taylor; R. L. Thayer; W. N. Trenerry; A. S. Trueblood; J. F. Tynan; F. J. Ulman; J. W. Valentine; T. S. Watson; F. L. H. Wendell; Warland Wight, Jr.; J. C. Wood...
...doctor, Dr. Libman now accepts only rare cases which other doctors refer to him. Some of his old patients, however, still climb the high stoop of his brownstone house in Manhattan's East 64th Street. Up that stoop, as patient or friend, have gone Adolph Lewisohn, Samuel Untermyer, Albert Einstein, Alexis Carrel, Sarah Bernhardt...
...worked for Hearst, boasts that the opposition has never beaten him. Twelve years ago, he says, he had the idea for a fast working camera but did nothing about it until he saw the Tribune's strips. Then he buttonholed the Times's Editor-in-Chief Albert E. Dale, offered to produce a camera that would match the Tribune's pictures for some $900. He closeted himself in his laboratory for three weeks, worked 20 hours a day, emerged with a box 6 in. by 6 in. by 8 in. locked and sealed, and a bill...
Leonardo's book was forgotten again from 1810 until 1879 when the drawings, which Albert, the Prince Consort, had had mounted, were exhibited. A few scholars began to study them. One of the first. Dr. P. Muller-Walde, went mad. Another, Theodore Sabachnikoff, was so broken by his publisher's issuing his photographs of the collection without text or preparation, that he died of dismay. In 1930 the Windsor librarian gave Kenneth Clark the job of cataloging the entire collection. In the first of the two volumes published last week he includes some 30,000 of Leonardo...