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...tooth powder had been tested first in the laboratory by Dr. Helmut A. Zander of Tufts College Dental School. Then schoolchildren in Walpole, Mass, were used as human guinea pigs. In the first year, 216 children at the Stone School, who used powder containing penicillin, got 55% fewer cavities than 162 children at the Plimpton School, who used a powder identical in ingredients except for the penicillin. In the second year, the Stone School showed 54% fewer cavities than Plimpton, which seemed to prove that mouth bacteria did not become resistant to penicillin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Dentocillin | 9/4/1950 | See Source »

Probably the most popular of all New Statesman features is the "WeekEnd Competition," for which readers are invited to try their hands at everything from formal French sonnets to clerihews. Prizes range from one to six guineas ($2.94 to $17.64). In one competition, calling for parodies of the style of any novelist named Green or Greene, third prize (one guinea) went to "M. Wilkinson" for his parody of Novelist Graham Greene. "M. Wilkinson" turned out to be Novelist Greene himself, who complained that two other entries under different pseudonyms had won him no prizes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Puzzles & Politics . | 9/4/1950 | See Source »

From Norway to New Guinea. That was just to Sverdrup's liking. As venturesome as an earlier Norseman named Lief, he was born with "a yen for the different." He quit Norway at 17 to study at Minnesota's Augsburg College, later got a degree in civil engineering at the University of Minnesota. After a World War I stint as a lieutenant (he got his citizenship while in uniform) Sverdrup teamed up with John Ira Parcel, one of his old professors at Minnesota, to tackle big construction jobs. They built nine bridges over the Missouri River, four across...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business & Finance: A Norseman Named Leif | 8/7/1950 | See Source »

Tobacco & Trinkets. Sverdrup, still a civilian, hopped to Australia to plan a vital supply highway from Melbourne to Darwin. Later, after donning a colonel's uniform, he led the building of 200 airstrips and airfields and scores of military roads and bridges. The landing fields on New Guinea were stamped out of jungle & tall grass by the bare feet of Sverdrup's loinclothed "Papuan Aviation Battalion," who were paid in tobacco and trinkets. After rising to brigadier, then major general, Sverdrup came back to Missouri to work harder than ever in peacetime. His firm designed a $30 million...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business & Finance: A Norseman Named Leif | 8/7/1950 | See Source »

After the Bath. First he used a doctor and four nurses as human guinea pigs. They were trained while taking chlorophyll to use an osmoscope (smell measurer) on each other 24 hours after they had taken baths. Sure enough, they found that underarm odor was cut in half, or even abolished, for as long as 18 hours after a dose of chlorophyll. The results were confirmed in experiments with a group of twelve college girls...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: A Sweeter Smell | 7/31/1950 | See Source »

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