Word: chicago
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...promptly informed his doctors at the University of Chicago that he would try the drug. Almost unanimously they advised against it; one called the idea suicidal. Besides, it could produce severe side effects. But Nichols took the drug anyway--and it eliminated his polyps...
Although bringing a new drug to market can be time-consuming (up to 15 years) and costly ($500 million), Nichols was undaunted. In 1989 he started his own pharmaceutical company, Cell Pathways, with Dr. Rifat Pamukcu--the lone physician at the University of Chicago who had supported his decision to forgo surgery--as chief scientific officer. At first, Nichols used his own money, then he turned to friends, and finally he sold off shares to venture capitalists, eventually raising $81.5 million but leaving him with only an insignificant interest in Cell Pathways. Getting rich was never his goal...
...received his Ph.D. in paleontology, evolutionary biology and molecular evolution from the University of Chicago and had post-doctoral training at Indiana University...
WHRB also airs recordings from the Cleveland and Chicago Symphony Orchestras and has its own "Sunday Night at the Opera" program from 8 p.m. until midnight on Sunday...
Maybe Michael Jordan wouldn't have retired if he had known it would come to this. Six years after his eponymous restaurant opened in Chicago, it is being renamed, and redesigned, to honor the city's latest athletic hero, Cubs player SAMMY SOSA. The restaurant's owners (Jordan is not among them) claim business has abated since the former MVP is no longer on the court and only rarely at a table. New figurehead Sosa has agreed to dine regularly on the premises, which when they are officially rechristened next year, will feature Caribbean cuisine and a statue...