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...second serious handicap to research has been high overhead. Almost one third of all money spent on projects pays for indirect costs and eats into precious funds necessary for experiments. Regrettably, the majority of grants stipulate only a ten to twenty-five percent cut for meeting such costs. The difference must be made up by the school. Experts feel this overhead difficulty will only be cured when the faculty accepts grants which pay for "total cost"--both indirect and direct...

Author: By Steven C. Swett, | Title: Public Health --- The World's Welfare | 4/24/1953 | See Source »

...major handicap in cancer research has been the difficulty of growing human cancers in laboratory animals so that a whole arsenal of chemicals, viruses and antibiotics may be tested directly upon the human instead of the animal varieties of the disease. Dr. Helene Wallace Toolan of Manhattan's Memorial Center reported that during the last year she had found what seemed to be the answer: human cancers took hold readily and grew well in rats that had first been dosed with cortisone. The hope in it for humans: more human cancer tissue to experiment with safely...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Reports from the Front | 4/20/1953 | See Source »

...Frank Small, a New Zealand housewife, flubs around the fairways (handicap: 17) like any other golfer, but off the tees she is phenomenal. Last January, she was naturally elated when she scored the golfer's dream: a hole in one. Then, in ten weeks of play, she scored three more. Last week Mrs. Small was the sensation of the Antipodes. Playing on her home course at Invercargill, where there are four short holes (190, 135, 120 and 114 yds.), Mrs. Small sank Hole-in-One No. 5. Two days later, playing before a buzzing, unbelieving gallery, she smacked another...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Extraordinary Luck | 4/13/1953 | See Source »

Freddy Brisson, who went to work as a Hollywood agent, is resigned to being introduced as "Rosalind Russell's husband." Before they were married, he was usually introduced as his father's brother, because Singer Carl Brisson feared that having a grown son might handicap his career...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theater: The Comic Spirit | 3/30/1953 | See Source »

Hair Raising. In Chicago, Mrs. Helen Lucas, after testifying that she had spoiled her husband's romance with another woman by hiding his toupee, got a divorce, then generously gave back the toupee since she "had no desire to handicap him in his future romantic adventures...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Miscellany, Mar. 23, 1953 | 3/23/1953 | See Source »

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