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...Basketball team looked wistfully out over the floor of the I.A.B. and voiced an almost unheard of complaint from a basketball coach. "I have so many tall men, I just don't know what to do!" he exclaimed. "It I ever started them all at once, they'd just clutter up the floor." Until Jan. 10, when the Freshmen rolled into Dartmouth on the crest of a four-game winning streak and were rolled right out on the short end of a 66-59 score, no one could imagine that Munro could have any complaints. With a defeat things have...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LINING THEM UP | 1/18/1956 | See Source »

Artistic taste today is likely to dismiss Painter John Singer Sargent as briskly as it does that whole great clutter of heavy gilt frames, dusty plush draperies and ornate grandeurs that marked his vanished era. It is only 30 years since Sargent died, half a century since the Edwardian peak of his fame; yet the interval can hardly be measured by years alone. Just how far and fast fashions have changed since Sargent's day could best be seen this week at Boston's Museum of Fine Arts, celebrating the centennial of the painter's birth with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Painter of Appearances | 1/9/1956 | See Source »

...Amid a clutter of flasks and tubes, beakers and retorts in the Sandoz Laboratories in Basel, Researcher Dr. Albert Hoffman was doing a routine experiment when he had a common laboratory accident: somehow, he absorbed some of the fluid he was working with. He became muddled and confused. Four days later, satisfied that the offending substance was lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD-25), he weighed out a minute dose and took it deliberately. It struck him "like a bolt of lightning." Hoffman had to go home, but he had lost his perception of time and space, and the short bicycle ride...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Artificial Psychoses | 12/19/1955 | See Source »

When the rebuilders finish April 15, the inside of 11 Rue Scribe will be a supermodern island of U.S. business efficiency in the old world. Gone will be the curlicued wrought iron balustrades, the clutter of desks on the ground floor, the buckety old elevators so useful to a lonely tourist trying to strike up an acquaintanceship with a pretty Iowa schoolmarm. In their place will be $750,000 worth of electronic gadgets, air conditioning, an escalator and labor-saving business machines. Last week, as traditionalists complained, American Express President Ralph T. Reed explained: "Travel has become big business...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TRAVEL: Home Away from Home | 10/24/1955 | See Source »

...Colonel Stapp had done just about all he could with the Edwards sled and track. After a tour of duty at Wright Field, he moved in 1953 to New Mexico's Holloman Air Force Base, where he found no need for "moonlight requisitions." He got a comfortable clutter of laboratory buildings, sufficient equipment and a good staff. Now, the nine officers (including their chief, Stapp) attached to Holloman's Aero-Medical Field Laboratory hold 24 advanced scientific degrees among them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: The Fastest Man on Earth | 9/12/1955 | See Source »

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