Word: bulletin
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Tears in the Lobby. When the news of Hammarskjold's missing plane clattered into Manhattan on the Telex line direct from Leopoldville, shocked secretariat officials rushed to the cable room on the U.N. skyscraper's 38th floor, hovered anxiously for hours over the machine. When the final bulletin confirmed the Secretary's death, one high-ranking officer turned to another. "I suppose we should lower the flag." he said dully. "Yes." replied the other, "perhaps we should." Below, news was already spreading from floor to floor. Pale and shaken employees gathered in groups in the corridors...
...that reason the project that was supposed to have saved Wink may sound its eventual death knell. Says one merchant: "A lot of people would have moved out a long time ago. only they didn't have any way to get the money to go." Says Wink Bulletin Editor Melvin Dow: "I'm just afraid we're going to end up with a well laid-out city but no people...
...Fenn, Jr. '44, editor of the Business School Bulletin, has been appointed to join the White House staff to work with Ralph Dungan, special assistant to the President...
...sophomore year of the Class of '36 and Harvard's 298th with the statement that "a University is primarily a group of creative scholars." James Bryant Conant 'I4 added, "Universities are the custodians of the great spiritual values which the human race has so laboriously won. . . ." An Alumni Bulletin survey proclaimed that Harvard men had written 308 books between June and December, and the Harvard Medical School celebrated its 150th anniversary with an address in Sanders Theatre from President-Emeritus Lowell. The Geographical Laboratory was getting daily messages from Rear Admiral Byrd in Little America, and President Conant...
Safety Rules. Drs. Kevorkian and Bylsma thought that they were applying the Russian method for the first time in the U.S. Then they learned, from a recent Bulletin of the American Association of Blood Banks, that as long ago as 1935 Surgeon Leonard L. Charpier had used a similar technique in a Chicago suburb. Dr. Charpier kept the work secret and died without writing up his records. But he was responsible for about 35 cadaver-blood transfusions in two years. Then the modern system of blood banking, which permits blood to be stored for three weeks without deterioration, was developed...