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...prolong penicillin's stay in the blood, Army Captain Monroe James Romansky and Technician (4th Grade) George E. Rittman suspend the drug in a mixture of beeswax and peanut oil and inject it into a muscle. They find that the suspension maintains a good level in the blood for six or seven hours after injection and keeps appearing in the urine up to 32 hours. The drug is extracted from the urine with banana oil, from the banana oil with a special phosphate solution...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Stretching Penicillin | 9/11/1944 | See Source »

CONNALLY: "Mr. President, I very much hope that the effort of our country to take a leading part in the establishment of machinery for the preservation of the peace will not take on any partisan tinge. . . . The Senator [Bridges], it seems to me, would inject a little partisanship...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE CONGRESS: An American Attitude | 6/26/1944 | See Source »

...England, two Harvard Medical School specialists, Majors Charles Emerson and Richard Ebert, have devised an apparatus for transferring blood within battle lines weighing only 34 pounds, which can be used to draw blood from a healthy donor and to inject it into the veins of a wounded soldier in five minutes...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Scientists Pioneer; Advancements in Medicine | 6/16/1944 | See Source »

...house and laid me under a grapevine a few yards down the road. Out of a large cylinder he took two bottles. One held powder, the other liquid. He mixed the two in a bottle, which he hung to the grape arbor by a string, and prepared to inject me with plasma...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World Battlefronts: THE BEACHES OF SALERNO | 9/27/1943 | See Source »

...were nearly always associated with an outstanding individual and not with a political system. We think of Queen Elizabeth, and Sir Francis Drake, or Marlborough, Pitt and Nelson and of the Duke of Wellington; and it is on the ability to keep alive the spirit of adventure and to inject into public opinion new, fanciful and unorthodox ideas that the vigor of national life depends. Nothing could be more ghastly than a uniform cowlike public opinion which is left willing to browse on artificially fertilized fields and chew the cud of common pasture...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Pasture Politics | 4/26/1943 | See Source »

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