Word: winternitz
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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There were 6,600 different items in the auction, some of them in lots of more than 5,000. To Chicagoans, auctioneering Samuel L. Winternitz & Co.'s 995-page inventory brought nostalgic reminders of the hotel's heyday in the '20s. To the buyers who flocked into auction headquarters in the 21-story Electric Garage, the lots were mouth-watering reminders of the days before rationing and stop-production orders. Items...
Waterman, F. S., III; White, B. M., Jr.; Winternitz...
Medicine. When Dr. Milton Charles Winternitz resigned as dean of Yale's School of Medicine in 1935, he had quadrupled its $2,000,000 endowment, made it a first-class school. He was succeeded by Dr. Stanhope Bayne-Jones (Yale '10), who further added to the school's reputation. Dr. Bayne-Jones's most noteworthy achievement: establishing Yale as one of the nation's foremost cancer research centres, by means of the $10,000,000 Jane Coffin Childs Memorial Fund for Medical Research...
Last week pink-cheeked, likable Dr. Bayne-Jones unexpectedly resigned as dean, declining a five-year reappointment. Reasons: to have more time for bacteriological research and to head a campaign to double the School of Medicine's endowment, now $8,500,000. It was rumored that Dr. Winternitz, 55, might be brought back as dean...
Human Relations. Eleven years ago Robert Hutchins and Milton Winternitz, then deans of Yale's Law and Medical Schools, respectively, put their heads together and started Yale's Institute of Human Relations. Purpose: to find ways & means whereby mankind could learn to live together more harmoniously. The Institute has not yet found the formula. Its director is placid, pipe-smoking Dr. Mark Arthur May. Last year Dr. May and his colleagues reported that they had formed some theories at least about why men do not live harmoniously, published their theories in a book called Frustration and Aggression (TIME...