Word: patent
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...raise the specter of undesirable technology transfer. I don't think of myself as particularly jingoistic or chauvinistic, but I am concerned that many of these initial contracts are with foreign firms. Regardless of our best intentions in the matter, and despite contractual niceties that attempt to respect American patent law, I am concerned that we are too easily allowing our basic research expertise to be converted into foreign profits...
STANFORD. Calif.--The office of Technology Licensing at Stanford is optimistic that the United States Patent Office will reconsider and issue the university a paten for gene splicing and cloning techniques...
...technique under debate was the creation of Genetics Professor Stanley Cohen, and Herbert Hoyer, a biochemist from the University of California at San Francisco. In 1980 the Patent Office awarded them a patent for earlier work in gene cloning which has since brought $1.4 million to Stanford and UCSF...
...given, the patent would create revenue for Stanford that would be used for research and education. After 15 percent of the money is taken for administrative expenses, the remainder is divided evenly between the school, the department and Cohen, the Stanford Daily reported...
...owners of the terminal, the Pennsylvania and the Baltimore & Ohio railroads, would spend $19 million for a parking garage, replacement terminal and conversion of the station into a visitor center. The bill's sponsor, former Illinois Representative Kenneth Gray, a Democrat known for his dynamic style and patent-leather shoes, assured his colleagues that the annual rent could be recouped from parking fees and concessions...