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...summary: HARVARD, 3 WORCESTER, 1 Williams, g. g., Leary Bradley, r.f. r.f., Ryder, Oben Sheridan, l.f. l.f., Karle Macneil, Brown, r.h. r.h., Simonds Jacobsen, c.h. c.h., Sanderson Phillips, l.h. l.h., Bullock, Goodrich Wittkin, Hammond, r.o. r.o., Pino (Capt.) Johnson, r.i. r.i., Johnson Lewis, Manning, c. c., Adams, Varney Johansen, l.i. l.i., Jackson Sinnott, l.o. l.o., Edmands...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 1939 BOOTERS TROUNCE WORCESTER ACADEMY | 11/7/1935 | See Source »

...hundred-and-eighty-four canvases and pieces of sculpture were on view. In general critics from Manhattan were inclined to agree with their Chicago confreres. Jurymen Lloyd Goodrich, Waldo Peirce and Henry Varnum Poor awarded the $500 Frank G. Logan prize to pretty Doris Lee of Woodstock. N. Y. for an animated cartoon of U. S. farm life entitled Thanksgiving. In an old-fashioned kitchen with modern linoleum on the floor, a pair of twins are squalling for their dinner in a highchair, a cook is basting the turkey, a scrawny aunt hurries in with a basket of vegetables...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Proletarian Gloom | 11/4/1935 | See Source »

...insects, down to embryonic skeletons in unlaid eggs. A method of developing sensitized paper by heat may find its industrial application in making wrappings for fruit, to warn consignees when shipments have not been kept below spoiling temperature. Akron. The tourists did not show up at the B. F. Goodrich rubber plant looking like janitors but they were obviously not wearing their best clothes. Reason: they had been forewarned that what clothes they wore through the plant would be thoroughly impregnated with the odor of rubber and soapstone...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Industrial Insides | 11/4/1935 | See Source »

Said Dr. James W. Schade, director of Goodrich research: "The cost per mile of automobile tires is today one-tenth what it was before the scientists tackled the job of improving the rubber. Formerly the manufacturer was taking a chance in guaranteeing 3,000 miles per tire. Today the customer is dissatisfied if he does not get more than 15,000 miles. Meantime the weight has been reduced...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Industrial Insides | 11/4/1935 | See Source »

...that menaces airplanes usually forms on the leading edge of the wings. Goodrich has developed a "deicer" consisting of a pair of rubber tubes which ordinarily lie flat against the wing. When ice formation begins the tubes are pulsated by an air pump. This movement cracks the ice coat, lets the wind blow it away .The "deicer" is already in use on some transport planes, is slated for thorough experiment on military aircraft...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Industrial Insides | 11/4/1935 | See Source »

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