Word: morton
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This spring, for the first time in its lively three-year career, the New York City Ballet Co. finished a season (February-March 1951) in the black. Chairman Morton Baum called his executive committee together, told the good news and got approval for an extra season. This week, at Manhattan's City Center, the ballet was ending its three-week special run. Red ink was dripping into the ledgers again, but balletomanes had had a look at three new works...
...Dederick, Economics Frank de Leeuw, Economics; Robert L. Dix, Government;-Andrew J. Dow, Economics; Hubert L. Dreyfus, Philosophy; Frederick L. Dunn, Anthropology; David A. Durfee, History; Harold P. Furth, Physics; Charles F. Gallagher Far Eastern Languages; Donald A. Glanella, Economics; Edward B. Glassman, Comparative Philology and Roman Languages; Morton D. Goldberg '50, Social Relations; Jonas M. Goldstone, Biology; David J. Gordon, English; Nathanial Greenspun, Economics; Paul Gross, History and Science; Donald Hall, Jr., English; James C. Heighan, History and Science; Gordon D. Henderson, Social Relations; Norman M. Hinefeld, Economic; Eliot L. Hoffman, Government; Charles Campbell Hughes, Anthropology; William R. Jones...
...Chapel is siumpy furnished with seven wall candelabra, four wooden benches, and floor matting. James P. Morton '51 designed the interior decoration, which was financed by students representing all seven Houses...
...Vinnie Morton almost broke the tie in the fifth when he sent a long ball toward the outfield, but it was caught for the third out just short of the fence. Morton had been consistent all afternoon, batting out two singles early in the game...
...hospital has marked many firsts in medicine and surgery. In 1816, Surgeon Philip Syng Physick was the first American to use animal tissue to sew up wounds. In 1887, Dr. Thomas G. Morton performed the first successful operation for the removal of a diseased appendix. Some other surgeons are remembered for odd reasons: as late as the 1870s, Dr. David Hayes Agnew insisted on stropping his scalpel on his boot sole, and Dr. George C. Harlan, for handiness, held instruments between his teeth...