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Word: rubbering (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...scored five goals against their own man. Frame made five of the tallies. W. D. Vogel oeC, one, and B. H. Broadbent '32, one goal. It is a characteristic of the University players to do well in the second half. This afternoon the University team will play an informal rubber game with the graduate team...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: UNIVERSITY SOCCER TEAM HANDS JAYVEES 7-0 DEFEAT | 11/19/1930 | See Source »

...Some Dow products: calcium chloride, used for refrigeration; diethylaniline, used in the dye industry; industrial chloroform, used by dry-cleaners and for medicinal purposes; ethyl chloride, used in antiknock gasoline and to make rubber more flexible; ferric chloride, used in photoengraving; phenol, used in making synthetic resins like Bakelite; acetic anhydride, used in the rayon industry; sodium sulphide, used in tanning; epsom salt; acetyl salicylic acid (aspirin). It also manufactures insecticides, aromatic chemicals, magnesium metal, alloys. ?Chemical Markets Medal awarded by Chemical Markets magazine; Perkin Medal, by Society of Chemical Industry, American Chemical Society, Societe de Chimie Industrielle, American...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In Midland, Mich. | 11/17/1930 | See Source »

...hard by Theodore Roosevelt's Sagamore Hill. Here he designed and built an amazing house, "Laurelton Hall." which looks a little like a M axfield Parrish palace, a little like a factory, is magnificently kept up and contains a mosaic chapel, greenhouses, fountains, innumerable stained glass windows, rubber trees, orchids, and, frightening to children, a colossal bronze crab...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: From Oyster Bay | 11/17/1930 | See Source »

Says he: 70% of all convictions are obtained by forced confessions. Mildest method: protracted questioning, sometimes going on continuously for over 24 hours, keeping the prisoner awake, thirsty, hungry. Usual method: beating the prisoner about the head and neck with lengths of rubber hose (which leave no bruises). If that fails to work, fists, boots, bats, lighted cigars may jog the suspect's memory. Scars or bruises are explained by saying the prisoner "fell downstairs." But Lavine tells of other refinements: "I have seen a man beaten on the Adam's apple so that blood spurted from...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Jogging Prisoners' Memories | 11/3/1930 | See Source »

Here is what one station house looked like after detectives had been "shellacking" some suspected Italian kidnappers: "An inch of blood covered the floors, walls and desks in the different rooms. Broken blackjacks, rubber hose and the parts of four broken chairs were scattered in the mess. The men ruined their clothes and looked more like workmen employed in an abattoir than detectives." Third-degree methods, says Lavine, are sometimes applied to women. "He [the detective] merely shows what a big, strong guy he is by starting to lift her from the ground by her hair. That usually makes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Jogging Prisoners' Memories | 11/3/1930 | See Source »

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