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...Allied Chemical and Dye Corporation of New York gave $500,000 to the American Chemical Society to found a prize of an annual value of $25,000, to be awarded to the American chemist of either sex who, in a period to be determined, makes the most outstanding contribution to the science of chemistry. This is one of the largest prizes in existence, being outranked only by the Nobel prizes of about $40,000, awarded annually, and the Bok peace prize of $100,000, to be awarded but once. A committee of leading chemists will administer it, including Drs. Edgar...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Chemistry Pays | 9/24/1923 | See Source »

...opened its case by calling to the stand A. Mitchell Palmer, former Alien Property Custodian whom Mr. Garvan succeeded, Mr. Palmer, Attorney General in 1919 and prominent candidate for the Democratic Presidential nomination , in 1920, made a frontal attack on the claims which the Government set up in the dye case. It was during his term as Alien Property Custodian that the plans for the sale of the German patents were first made, although the sales were mainly completed by Mr. Garvan. Part of Mr. Palmer's testimony was his disclosure of the circumstances under which President Wilson...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: The Darkest Hour | 7/9/1923 | See Source »

...inning, jolly-good-fellows, fond of an honest roughhouse, chivalrous to the weaker sex, lovers of God's outdoors, their simple lives are a constant succession of triumphs over scheming bullies at a rival military academy, bears, wildcats, inertia and German plotters who attempt to purloin an important dye formula from an old friend of the Rover family. From the time when an aeroplane (not driven by a Rover or there would have been no accident) crashes into a lake in the first chapter till the last (which holds promise of yet another sequel, The Rover Boys Shipwrecked...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Dick, Tom, Sam | 7/2/1923 | See Source »

Bacteriologists have long used anilin dyes of various colors to " stain " different species of bacteria. The tubercle bacillus does not stain easily, but when it does, it clings tenaciously to the dye, in spite of immersion in alcohol and strong acids, and for this reason is called " acid-fast." Non-acid-fast bacteria (such as the typhoid bacillus) yield readily to the " antibodies" produced by the injection of dead bacteria of the same disease. But the acid-fast germs are encased in or contain fatty cells called " lipoids," which resist digestion when injected into the body and thus generate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Tuberculosis at Bay | 6/25/1923 | See Source »

...Republican National Convention and since 1915 he has been a member of the United States Senate, where his term expires in 1927. Senator Wadsworth as chairman of the Military Affairs Committee, was principal author of the Army Reorganization Bill and was also prominent as a supporter of the Dye Embargo of the Tariff Act, which was opposed by Senator Moses. These men, as well as a possible third speaker, will be entertained before the meeting at a dinner given them at six o'clock in the Union. At this the new committee members of the club and a few special...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MOSES AND WADSWORTH TO SPEAK AT MEETING OF REPUBLICAN CLUB | 10/6/1922 | See Source »

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