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...time on a forgery charge testified that she saw Treloar walk into the cell and hit Daniel "ten or twelve times" with a club. Another white prisoner testified that on another occasion the sheriff caught Daniel "hollering out a window," clubbed him "three or four times." Respected Dr. Maubry McMillan, summoned at midnight to treat the stricken Daniel in jail, said Treloar told him: "I had to tap him on the head." Another physician testified that Daniel died nine days later of a brain hemorrhage...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MISSISSIPPI: Justice in Water Valley | 8/18/1958 | See Source »

...months ago Chemist Glenn Seaborg talked warmly of the compensations of his calling: "Stable employment, reasonably good pay, and considerably less pressure and worry than many other groups-such as educators." Sometime in August, Seaborg, who won a Nobel Prize with Physicist Edwin McMillan for discovering plutonium (the pair also discovered berkelium, californium, four other elements), will leave his post as associate director of the University of California's Radiation Lab at Berkeley to become a fulltime educator. New job: chancellor of the university's Berkeley campus (18,981 students), replacing Clark Kerr, now president of the university...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Transmutation | 8/4/1958 | See Source »

...solid ranking among the top schools in the U.S., Berkeley is the biggest and juiciest chunk of the California orange. Berkeley's trees have had time to grow, and its faculty, mature and luminous, includes six Nobel laureates (among them: Radiation Laboratory Physicists Ernest Lawrence and Edwin McMillan, Chemist Glenn Seaborg). Partisans compare Berkeley, not always defensively, with Harvard, fairly assess their school as stronger in the physical sciences, less impressive in the humanities...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: The Big, Big C | 7/28/1958 | See Source »

...discover new elements." Born in the mining town of Ishpeming, Mich., he found his calling in a Los Angeles high-'school science class, pursued it at the University of California (Ph.D., chemistry, 1937), became a key developer of the atomic bomb. In 1951, with Colleague Edwin M. McMillan, he won the Nobel Prize for his discovery (in 1940) of element 94 (plutonium), has since played a heavy role in finding subsequent elements (through No. 101). Although he finds little time nowadays for following football very closely (he is faculty representative to the Pacific Coast Conference), Seaborg does play golf...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: BRIGHT SPECTRUM | 11/18/1957 | See Source »

...Birdie has converted them all. "The way they're thinking now," says Birdie, "is that any one of them can make up for Klu. Because of Klu's absence, we're getting a complete team effort. Even Frank Robinson is playing well, bad arm and all. McMillan, Temple-everyone is putting out. If the big man was in there but not hitting, it might be different. They'd be waiting for him to pick them up. Now they know they got to pick themselves up. So they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: A Game of Inches | 7/8/1957 | See Source »

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