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...knows," he wonders out loud as he looks out of his office window across the rolling Massachusetts campus, "may-be someday a cure for cancer will be discovered down there on the other side of the pond (where the University's science buildings are located). After all, streptomycin was found at Rutgers, not Princeton," he says. "A man with brains can go a long way on the campus of a land-grant college," the President adds."There is a good deal lost for the college administrator in not forcing himself to spend time with the students," says President Mather. Here...

Author: By Stephen R. Barnett, | Title: Fast Expanding University of Massachusetts Seeks to Discard Outworn 'Cow College' Label | 10/2/1954 | See Source »

...left than Mendes-France. Such a Popular Front would bring with it a defeatist, pacifist policy that would undo much of what has already been accomplished towards strengthening the West. Dulles' trip to Paris this week shows that U.S. planners have finally seen the fallacy of a one-shot cure-all for the ills of Europe. For those who would fight communism with slogans, the present road of careful compromise seems much too slow. But it may have far fewer hidden pitfalls...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Diplomacy by Impulse | 9/30/1954 | See Source »

...feasible suggestion that the hirsutic embellishment is due to the tablets' improving the circulation of the scalp by their vasodilating [artery-widening] action." He offered no theory of his own. Instead, he added lamely: "I confess that I have not yet personally tried the tablets to cure my own baldness...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Cure for Skinheads? | 9/27/1954 | See Source »

...liked, according to Magarshack, was to make her household resemble the Czarist government as closely as possible. She gave her serfs court titles: "Maid of Honor," "Court Chamberlain." When her family physician came to treat her little adopted daughter, he was told: "Remember! If you don't cure her . . . Siberia!" Mother Turgenev discouraged marriage among her serfs because she liked their undivided attention for herself, so her women bore illegitimate children instead and either drowned them at birth in the estate lake or brought them up secretly for years in locked rooms. "A maid who did not offer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Slavs & Slaves | 9/27/1954 | See Source »

...still alive today," Niehans last week told a twelve-nation conference of physicians at Karlsruhe, Germany. "Since then I have made 5,000 injections. I have found a means to cure those armies of persons bodily and mentally depressed, suffering from defective functioning of organs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Help from Animal Cells? | 9/13/1954 | See Source »

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