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...Uravan, Colo. last week, the U.S. Vanadium Corp., a subsidiary of Union Carbide & Carbon, gave a fillip to the wastelands' glamorous new reputation and the boom under way. U.S. Vanadium opened the biggest uranium refining mill in the U.S.; by using a new process, it hopes to extract uranium from ores heretofore passed by. Spotted within a 200-mile radius of U.S. Vanadium's property are seven other mills (see map) which produce virtually all U.S. uranium...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: METALS: The Uranium Boom | 10/13/1952 | See Source »

Within 100 years, says President James Bryant Conant of Harvard, science will have found a safe contraceptive that can be taken by mouth and the world will have a remedy for overpopulation. Last week British researchers reported an early lead in that direction. They had made an extract from a common countryside herb called gromwell (Lithospermum officinale) and given it first to female rats. The rats stopped ovulating. When the gromwell was stopped, they promptly resumed ovulating and proved, by becoming pregnant, that their fertility had been only temporarily arrested...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Gromwell the Protector? | 10/6/1952 | See Source »

Next, the researchers gave the gromwell extract to humans to check for harmful effects. They found none. Then they made tests to see whether a woman taking gromwell continued to ovulate. She did not. Finally, they withdrew the gromwell and she resumed normal ovulation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Gromwell the Protector? | 10/6/1952 | See Source »

...swallow of gromwell (or any of a dozen other chemicals on which scientists are working) does not make a contraceptive summer. But the case for gromwell has a bit of legendary support: Shoshone Indians have long insisted that an extract from the western species (Lithospermum ruder ale) helps them to control the size of their families...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Gromwell the Protector? | 10/6/1952 | See Source »

...Eliot." For those who feel that Pound's poetry is intolerable because of his political behavior, that the verse of Eliot is fickle because of the author's flirtation with the classics and religion, and so on with the heirs of 1912, then Full Cycle may extract a chuckle here and there. Viereck, however, falls to equally deplorable sins of banality and conceit. "Cow? Bad enough! But sacred--calf?" From the technical point of view, one can say that the poet has a good sense of rhythm and sound. But these attributes are regrettably eclipsed by the bitter, turtle...

Author: By Jonathan O. Swan, | Title: The Advocate | 9/27/1952 | See Source »

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