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...probable lineups will be: HARVARD YALE Meiklejohn, f.b. f.b., Roscoe Chauning, r.w. r.w., Harper Whitney, c.w. c.w., Towle Howard, c.w. c.w., Morton Sherman, l.w. l.w., Bogert (undecided), h.b. h.b., Lassiter (undecided), h.b. h.b., Childs Burrage, f. f., Combs Laroussilhe, f. f., Jenkins Mayorga, f. f., Anthony Oettinger, f. f., Nicholls Oppenheimer, f. f., Pierson Schwyzer, f. f., Wilmerdering Sweeney, f. f., Tarlton White, f. f., Stoddard

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: RUGBY FIFTEEN TO MEET YALE OUTFIT TOMORROW | 4/18/1934 | See Source »

Members of the New York Electrical Society could see such a picture of the operating room of the not-too-distant future while Columbia University's Professor Marston Taylor Bogert was explaining to them last week why synthetically perfumed anesthetics should be developed soon. Synthetic perfumes, said Professor Bogert, are steadily replacing natural scents. If vanilla perfume can be made from foul-smelling asafetida, why not a pleasant anesthetic...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Stink into Scent | 2/22/1932 | See Source »

...Since it requires more than two tons of roses to make one pound of attar of rose, synthetic perfumes are usually much cheaper than natural ones. This fact has led perfume-seekers into strange, malodorous places. Said Professor Bogert: "Castor oil is the raw material for certain scents. One of the components of jasmine flower odor, when concentrated, is as fetid and repulsive as the odor of a civet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Stink into Scent | 2/22/1932 | See Source »

...Dewing, Bogert, J.w. r.w., J; Ware, Kirkland, SutcliffMackell, Fawcett, c. c., Beale, Gallagher, BlackCook, Mills, r.w. l.w., N. Ware, Summers, PorterWllmerding, l.d. r.d., Martin, DeanGilligan, r.d. l.d., Gleason, Choate, WatersTownsend, g. g., deGive...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WEEK-END SPORT SUMMARIES | 3/2/1931 | See Source »

...Wilda Bogert Chamberlin (Clarence Duncan Chamberlin flew the Atlantic two years ago) : "Ladies who want a grand passion had better stick to their businessmen. . . . Children are not for a flyer's wife." The Chamberlins live mostly at hotels. Mrs. Carrie Williams (Roger Quincy Williams flew the Atlantic this summer) : "For a whole year at a time I hardly see Roger at all. . . . The economic conditions of aviation make our living as insecure as everything else. . . . The mother of the baby girl across the street died at her birth, and I've taken a great deal of care...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AERONAUTICS: Wives' Words | 9/23/1929 | See Source »

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