Word: nathaneal
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Pearl River, N.Y., plant where Lederle develops the ultrasecret cultures for its new drugs. The detectives observed that Fox regularly invented excuses to remain in the lab after working hours and that he made frequent visits to Biorganic Laboratories, an East Paterson, N.J., company run by Chemist Nathan Sharff. All this struck Cyanamid as highly suspicious, but the detectives found no concrete evidence that Fox was filching drug formulas...
...Research Factories." The problem is being studied at 23 major campuses by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. It has stirred worried words from Princeton's President Robert F. Goheen, the University of Chicago's Chancellor George W. Beadle, and Harvard's President Nathan M. Pusey, who recently issued a report summing up Harvard's philosophy: the university "will serve society well only as it remains true to its essential nature-a university, not an agency of government." Unquestionably, federal support has richly benefited universities in new facilities, sharply improved faculty skills and graduate...
...Utah's Bonneville Salt Flats, Los Angeles Physician Nathan Ostich, 52, roared down the twelve-mile straightaway in his jet-powered Flying Caduceus racing car for an assault on the world's land speed record (394.2 m.p.h.). He was up to 331 m.p.h. at the three-mile mark when the sleek red-and-chrome car suddenly veered off course. Ostich popped the eight-foot parachute brake; the Flying Caduceus skidded wildly for nearly two miles, snapped off a wheel, hopped briefly into the air and shuddered to a halt. Unhurt, Ostich surveyed the wreckage and growled...
Federal research money is flowing into U.S. universities and university-related laboratories at the rate of about $1 billion a year-roughly one-quarter of their total income. One beneficial result is the "new life" stirring in university laboratories, says Harvard's President Nathan M. Pusey in the Harvard Alumni Bulletin. What worries Pusey (and other educators) is the danger of federal interference. Government agencies, warns Harvard's chief, show "an increasing desire to say how things are to be done in laboratories, and who may or may not appear in them...
...Nathan Oliveira...