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Byers did not know that his case was hopeless until two weeks ago. Autopsy last week revealed that he had only six teeth left. Both jaws were rotted. His brain was abscessed. Distributed through his bones, calculated Dr. Frederick Bonner Flinn of Columbia University, were 36 micrograms of radium. Ten micrograms is a fatal quantity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Radium Drinks | 4/11/1932 | See Source »

Kirtland defeated Leverett, 4-1; A. E. Evans '33 (K) defeated R. C. Vose 3-0; A. R. Bonner '34(K) defeated C. F. Webber (Lev) 8-1 G. F. Webber '88 (Lev) defeated W. G. Neleom (K), 3-2; E. A. L. Janfwen '32 (K) defeated Andrew Marshall. Jr. '34 (Lev) 3-0 W. V. Brown Tutor (K) defeated H. A. Stone...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DUNSTER, KIRKLAND, AND LOWELL WIN CLASS A SQUASH | 2/10/1932 | See Source »

...story of an Arctic egg hunt reached Pittsburgh last week. Month ago George Miksch Sutton, onetime Pennsylvania game commissioner, and John Bonner Semple, retired Sewickley, Pa. manufacturer of Navy ordnance* were 40 mi. north of Churchill on the western shore of Hudson's Bay. With them were Olin S. Pettingill of Bowdoin College and Bert Lloyd, Saskatchewan ornithologist. They were collecting birds, plants and insects. Competing with them was a party of the Canadian Ornithological Society. Hope of both groups was to be the first to find eggs of a Harris's sparrow...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Rare Eggs | 7/27/1931 | See Source »

...King (salary $7,500). They were turned out not by the full Commission of five but by Chairman George Otis Smith and Commissioners Claude L. Draper and Marcel Garsaud organizing as a quorum of three. Also dismissed just as he was submitting his resignation was Executive Secretary Frank R. Bonner, often accused of being too friendly and lenient with private power companies seeking licenses before the old Commission...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: UTILITIES: Backfire | 1/5/1931 | See Source »

Between Messrs. Russell & King and Secretary Bonner had long raged a war of power policy. Solicitor Russell was intent upon squeezing what he claimed was "water" from the capitalization of private power companies. No less zealous was Accountant King in making them toe the financial mark. The complaints of these two against Secretary Bonner and their disclosures of the old Commission's methods before the Senate Interstate Commerce Commission were largely responsible for subsequent legislation to reorganize the Federal Power Commission on a full-time non-Cabinet basis (TIME, March 10). The discharge of Messrs. Russell and King, stirred...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: UTILITIES: Backfire | 1/5/1931 | See Source »

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