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...most Chicago hotels and restaurants had had their food handlers examined, ousted all those infected. But the Chicago health authorities were badly worried by "an unexpected, even startling" number of cases revealed in the answers to its questionnaire. Believing the danger much greater than appreciated by most physicians. President Herman X. Bundesen of Chicago's Board of Health arranged for a nationwide radio broadcast to warn and instruct the country. Some authorities believe that one in every ten or 20 persons harbors dysentery parasites. The disease may recur long after an apparent cure. Applicants for food-handling jobs should...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Dysentery in Chicago | 11/20/1933 | See Source »

Michigan's kick-blocking ends and Halfback Herman Everhardus' toe again helped to keep Michigan on the Humpty Dumpty wall. Everhardus booted a field goal against Iowa, kicked the extra point after Bill Renner had forward-passed to a touchdown. Left End Ted Petoskey crashed through to block the kick-for-point after Iowa's touchdown...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Football, Nov. 20, 1933 | 11/20/1933 | See Source »

From the Class of 1936: Sidney Stuart Alexander, Edward Lewis Bassett, Simon Michael Bessie, George Small Franklin, Jr., Charles Allen Haskins, John Bamber Hickam, Robert Charles Hunter, Harold Burton Jaffee, Leonard Wallenstein, Jarcho, Millard Lucien Kaplan, Alfred Pope, Robert Hey Rawson, Theodor Herzl Rome, Robert Dayton Sall, Herman Elbert Schroeder, Emmanuel Sliver, Robert Morton Terrall, Richard Edward Voland, Harold Phelan Welch...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Hanford Awards 41 Detur Prize Books To Students Of High Scholastic Rank | 11/15/1933 | See Source »

...from early 1931 until last month when little Oregon State jostled it with a scoreless tie. Michigan came perilously close to slipping from the top of the Big Ten, where it has been for three years. That it did not slip was largely due to a crack halfback named Herman Everhardus and to Willis Ward, a rangy Negro end. It was Ward who, after hard-fighting Illinois had marched to a touchdown in the first period, shot through and blocked the place kick which would have given Illinois a seventh point. In the next period Everhardus raced around...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Football: Midseason | 11/13/1933 | See Source »

Charles Francis Adams, onetime Secretary of the Navy; Newton Diehl Baker, onetime Secretary of War; Joshua Reuben Clark Jr., onetime Ambassador to Mexico; Laird Bell Chicago attorney; Hendon Chubb of Manhattan's insurance firm of Chubb & Son; W. L. Clayton, Houston cotton tycoon; John Cowles, Des Moines publisher; Herman Lewis Ekern, onetime Attorney General of Wisconsin; Philip La Follette, onetime Governor of Wisconsin; Mills Bee Lane, Savannah banker; Frank Orren Lowden, onetime Governor of Illinois; Orrin K. McMurray, Dean of the University of California's law school; Roland Sletor Morris, onetime Ambassador to Japan; John C. Traphagen. president...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Government-Out-of-Business | 10/30/1933 | See Source »

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