Word: carlsons
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Died. Chester Carlson, 62, inventor of xerography, the dry-copying process that changed the routine in countless offices; of a heart attack; in Manhattan. In 1934, Carlson, a physicist in a New York electrical firm, became so frustrated over the lack of copies of documents that he decided to do something about it. He worked four years to develop an electrostatic copying process, which has since become Xerox, an $800 million-a-year firm whose growth gave Carlson a fortune estimated at more than $150 million...
...Kansas Republicans chose four-term Congressman Robert Dole, 45, while Democrats picked William I. Robinson, 57, Wichita lawyer, to contest the seat of veteran Republican Senator Frank Carlson, 75, who is retiring...
...seven Harvard chemists have been developing the steps in the syntheses for about four years. Besides Corey, the group includes research fellows Neils H. Andersen, Robert M. Carlson, Joachim Paust, Edwin Vedejs, Isidoros Vlattas, and Rudolph E. K. Winter...
...Price Jr., dean of the John Fitzgerald Kennedy School of Government, announced yesterday the appointment of Alvin Bronstein and Jack W. Carlson as Fellows of the Institute of Politics...
...Carlson received both a masters in Public Administration and a Ph.D. in economics from Harvard in 1963 after serving two years as a jet fighter pilot with the Air Defense Command. He taught economics at the Air Force Academy in Colorado for six years. In 1965, he held a one-year appointment as Assistant for Special Studies with the Secretary of the Air Force...