Word: morganized
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Richard Morgan, IV '36 won all his bouts, taking two in the foil and two in the saber. Captain Phillip E. Lilienthal '36 won all three of his matches in foils, and Richard Ford '36, a member of last year's championship intercollegiate opee team, had a clean sweep in this event...
...realm. A law school professor who has just returned from the Potomac where he had been doing some work for the Labor Advisory Board swears to the truth of the following incident. He was present himself, he says. Last month during the ill-fated munitions investigation, when J. P. Morgan had come down from New York to air his views on finances and housemaids, the law school professor saw him late one afternoon in the lobby of the Shoreham. J. P. was standing alone in front of one of the big windows, looking out over snow-covered Rock Creek Park...
...three scholars of different countries dug up the Mendelian laws almost simultaneously, and the modern science of heredity got under way with a bang. Thomas Hunt Morgan made the tough, quick-breeding fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, the most famed insect in the scientific world, correlated hundreds of Mendelian characters with invisible transmitting agents called genes, strung out along the germ-cell chromosomes. It became apparent that Mendel's peas were priceless landmarks in the history of biological science...
...being equipment trust certificates and a small first mortgage bond issue. But in order to handle boom traffic, the road had to embark upon a development program which included double-tracking the main line from Jacksonville to Miami. Consequently $45,000,000 of bonds were marketed through J. P. Morgan & Co. Peak year for the 812-mile "Flagler System" was 1926, when gross revenues were $29,400,000, of which $2,700,000 were retained as clear profit. Next year revenues started to toboggan, reaching a low of $6,600,000 in 1933. Deficits piled up year after year until...
Harvard won both the foils and sabre competitions by 5-4 margins. Captain Philip E. Lilienthal '36, Richard Morgan, 4th '36, and William F. Gerber '37 turned in outstanding performances for Harvard, while Bertsche, Jacobs Petter, and Weidel showed up well for Columbia...