Word: biochemist
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Everything I Love." After giving Heyns a standing ovation, the faculty heard the student-government president, Dan Mclntosh, concede that the strike should end. Various faculty members then rose to make comments. Biochemist John B. Neilands, noting that the use of police had injected much of the emotionalism into the dispute, called the police's conduct a "brutal and obscene sight." Chemistry Professor George Pimentel countered that only civil law could deal with "demagoguery, vituperation and threats," said that "everything I love at Berkeley is at stake." Electrical Engineering Professor Charles Susskind compared the agitators with "the Nazi students...
Paroled after serving 16 years of a 30-year stretch for atomic spying, Biochemist Harry Gold, 55, emerged from Pennsylvania's Lewisburg Federal Penitentiary into a drenching rain. "The sun is shining for me," beamed Gold. He had told the Government all about his work as a Communist spy, and had testified in 1951 as a vital Government witness in the espionage trial of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg. "I have wiped the slate clean as far as it is possible," he said. "I made a hideous mistake...
...peeves of Bill Buckley's conservative National Review is Linus Pauling, the Nobel-prizewinning biochemist who espouses no end of peace causes and regularly attacks U.S. foreign policy. In a strident article in 1962, the Review accused Pauling of "acting as megaphone for Soviet policy" and lending his "name, energy, voice and pen to one after another Soviet-serving enterprise." A second Review article took note of the number of libel suits brought by Pauling and derided the "brazen attempts at intimidation of the free press by one of the nation's leading fellow travelers...
...international finance, and both have shaken encrusted bankers by putting their trust in modern methods and young associates. And both are driven by a desire: restore all the past glory to a many-faceted clan, whose current members range from Berlin's Otto Warburg, a Nobel-prizewinning biochemist, to Connecticut's Economist-Author James Warburg (The West in Crisis...
Died. Norair Sisakyan, 59, biochemist and head of medical studies in the Soviet space program, who evaluated the pioneering tests performed on Soviet dogs Belka and Strelka during 1960's Sputnik V flight, urged that the biological aspects of manned space flights "be attacked with vigor," and since then had a major hand in every flight involving living creatures, from Yuri Gagarin in 1961 to last month's launching of two dogs in still-orbiting Cosmos 110; of undisclosed causes; reportedly in Tyuratam, U.S.S.R...