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Word: bartons (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Robert P. Johns, Emma S. Young, T. O. Burstin, Barton MacDonald, George J. Nixon, Paul L. Hamilton, William E. Putnam, 3rd, C. G. Bingham, Jr., Marion Benbow, L. Rapport, Virginia Briggs, Reid Jorgenson, W. G. Hazard, E. Ball, E. Fisher, G. Seels, O. W. Phinney, H. Weld, T. W. Thorndike, Jr., E. A. Jonson, G. W. Westalke, R. M. Campbell, Roger Potter, Nancy White, Persis White, Prescott Winkley, E. S. Baker, Eleanor Friedman, Charles B. Feibleman, Cyrus Wood, R. M. Low, Barbara Klingenhargen, James P. Reiher, Lillian Townesed, G. C. Kibbs, Leda Wilson, John P. Faville, E. H. Pringle...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: OVER 150 ATTEND DANCE AT CRIMSON | 8/1/1933 | See Source »

After contrasting such empire-builders as "Mister Harriman." "Mister Vanderbilt," J. P. Morgan. "Mister Mellon" and Bruce Barton with Trailblazer Meriwether Lewis, Poet MacLeish concludes: You have just beheld the Makers making America: They screwed her scrawny and gaunt with their seven-year panics: They bought her back on their mortgages old-whore-cheap: They fattened their bonds at her breasts till the thin blood ran from them: Men have forgotten how full and clear and deep The Yellowstone moved on the gravel and grass grew When the land lay waiting for her westward people...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: U. S. Poems | 7/10/1933 | See Source »

...shell and rowed two miles up the Charles River at Harvard's commencement. Of the nine, all 70 or over but still spry, four were in Who's Who. They were Stroke Joseph Lee. now a social worker. Russell Sturgis Codman, hotelman and Harvard trustee, Henry Barton Jacobs, Baltimore doctor, Charles Pelham Curtis, Winchester, Mass., lawyer. The other five, prosperous respectable citizens who probably deserve to be in Who's Who also, were William Hussey Page, Manhattan lawyer and onetime president of the New York Athletic Club; Horace Binney, retired surgeon-in-chief of the Boston City...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Old Oarsmen | 7/3/1933 | See Source »

Babies. Professor Everett Dudley Plass of Iowa University asked the American Medical Association to consider birth control.* Dr. Barton Cooke Hirst of Philadelphia argued vehemently against the subject. "An undue limitation of fecundity has been one of the precursors to the extinction of a civilization or the subjugation of a people by a more virile and prolific race. We have already gone some distance on this road. . . . If a breeder of livestock defied the laws of eugenics as we do. he would be ruined." The A. M. A. as usual pigeonholed the subject...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: In Milwaukee | 6/26/1933 | See Source »

Tall, well set up, "Jack" Fuess went to Amherst where he roomed for a year with Bruce Barton and knew its present President Stanley King. He married an Andover girl. Elizabeth Gushing Goodhue (no kin to Grace Goodhue Coolidge), has a son, John Gushing Fuess, who will be Harvard's baseball manager in 1935. The Fuesses live in what they call "the ugliest house in the world," a drab, gingerbready place on Hidden Road in Andover. "Jack" Fuess plays good contract bridge, good golf. When he dubs he remembers his German ancestry and cries: "Drei hundert tausend donnerwetters...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Kudos Jun. 12, 1933 | 6/12/1933 | See Source »

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