Word: labs
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...more than just a symbol of your affection. Algordanza, meaning “remembrance,” doesn’t mess around with traditional mining techniques: the creative company uses a synthetic process to convert the ashes of a lost loved one into a diamond in a Swiss lab. A mere half kilogram of your beloved’s remains are required to produce the desired effect. After a waiting period of about six to eight weeks, the diamond is complete and can be cut to the consumer’s desired specifications. Algordanza offers the more traditional shapes...
...singledom this Valentine’s Day perhaps should read no further. The following young couples, married or engaged, have taken a romantic plunge that remains foreign to many of their peers. But the experiences that led them there—late-night talks in freshman dormitories, commiserating over lab work, and even Internet flirtation—are as familiar as the sight of a tourist taking a shot of the John Harvard statue. FIRST IMPRESSIONSLuke A. Langford ’06-’07 and Amy L. Langford walk side-by-side into the Science Center?...
...ends - at least until appeals - Shawn Carpenter's quest for justice. Carpenter, whose story was first written about in TIME magazine in August 2005, was a network security analyst working at Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque when he discovered that the lab's network was coming under a methodical series of attacks emanating from Chinese IP addresses. When the Navy veteran found out that dozens of Army bases and defense contractors around the country had been suffering identical Trojan horse attacks on their secure networks, he went to his bosses to present the evidence he had collected...
...German and Comparative Literature Judith L. Ryan suggests. “There are surely different points of view about whether it’s more desirable to be at Cambridge, for example, than at Harvard. It doesn’t surprise me that Cech wants to continue doing lab research, which would be impossible if he were president of a large university like Harvard.” Undoubtedly, some Harvard watchers and gadflies will blame the Faculty of Arts and Sciences and its cantankerous professors who, through their contentious relations with the previous president, not only emptied Mass. Hall...
...researcher could only see the back of the monkey’s head and didn’t realize the monkey was suffocating until it was too late, according to Gibbons. But reports of other violations were the result of procedural failures, he said. SAEN cited a Harvard lab for depriving monkeys of water, part of an experiment that involved giving monkeys grape juice as an incentive. To make the monkeys crave the juice, they were not given water—normally a legal practice, Gibbons said. Gibbons said the lab received a violation because researchers did not file...