Word: cancers
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...week the President, deprived of cancer-stricken John Foster Dulles, led the nation between these extremes. He took charge of a three-hour National Security Council meeting, battened down the U.S. determination to fight, if necessary, to defend the Western position in Berlin. He called in congressional leaders of both parties to muster a show of national unity. He tried to restrain U.S. allies from sliding off on tangents, kept up a stern front as Communism's Khrushchev changed pace from "global holocaust" threats to such seeming concessions as an indefinite extension of the May 27 deadline for Berlin...
Asked if he did not fear Federal encroachment, Neuberger replied, "I am not afraid of the role of my government." He said it is ridiculous for the U.S. yearly to spend "more on chewing gum than on cancer research...
...issue today," Neuberger concentrated on the "need for greatly expanded Federal aid to medical research." The government's role in medicine, he said, is not "to infringe on the doctor-patient relationship, but to provide medical tools and knowledge"--"You can't go to the corner drugstore and buy cancer research," he pointed...
Four Faculty scientists have received research grants totaling $89,719 from the American Cancer Society. The largest amount, $64,000, was awarded to Howard H. Hiatt '46, associate in Medicine, for a study of cell control mechanisms...
...subject of research by Robert P. Geyer, associate professor of Nutrition, with a grant of $14,498, while Robert S. Chang, assistant professor of Microbiology, will continue genetic research with an award of $6,172. Paul C. Zamecnik, Collis P. Huntington Professor of Oncologic Medicine, received $4,715 for cancer research...