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...only score in the second quarter came on an exciting Brown pass play. Quarterback Dan Bogan flipped a short pass to Dominic Starsia who then lateralled to Bruce Watson who scored to give Brown a 12-3 lead...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Freshman Sports Bears Take Two Games From Yardling Squads | 11/14/1970 | See Source »

Died. Louise Bogan, 72, distinguished American lyric poet; of a heart attack; in Manhattan. "I have no fancy ideas about poetry," Miss Bogan once remarked. "It is something you have to work hard at." And work she did, from 1931 to 1969 as writer and poetry critic for The New Yorker, and as the author of six volumes of verse. A consummate lyricist, she wrote with forceful emotion and maturity, as in "Juan's Song...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: Feb. 16, 1970 | 2/16/1970 | See Source »

...Yorker review by Louise Bogan is perhaps the most dangerous, since it comes from someone who should know better. "Berryman is out to get language itself, to distort and maim it, not in the direction of wit but in the direction of funny grammar and burnt-cork comedy." She accuses him of "pulling human speech toward some totally disjunct and invertebrate set of noises." Such a reaction betrays a tin ear and a wooden sense of humor, for the dream songs may be one of the more successful experiments with wit in the language. The poem, taken as the whole...

Author: By Stuart A. Davis, | Title: John Berryman - 1 | 4/12/1966 | See Source »

...last Goethe's long relegation to librarefied limbo may be ending. In 1962, Poet W. H. Auden published a handsome translation of his Italian Journey. In 1963, Poetess Louise Bogan collaborated with Elizabeth Mayer on a readable resetting of Elective Affinities. Poet Louis MacNeice, before his death, released a version of Faust that is uniformly the finest in the language. And Poets Robert Lowell, Stephen Spender and Randall Jarrell are all hard at work on English versions of Goethe's verse...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: To Die and To Become! | 9/24/1965 | See Source »

...Engineers held its annual congress in Detroit last week, it could boast some top men as members: General Motors President John Gordon and G.M. Group Vice President Edward Cole are both engineers; so are four of Cole's five division vice presidents and Chrysler Vice President B. W. Bogan. The huge, complex auto companies are still marshaled by financial experts but, says Don Frey, "there are more engineers in management positions now than in the entire postwar period." And, like Frey and lacocca, they are getting closer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Management: The Mustang Twins Move Up | 1/22/1965 | See Source »

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