Word: research
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...graduate student in Biophysics, Daniel Steinberg '10, presents "The Public's Stake in New Medical Research" as the first aspect of the new atom explosion into the medical field. Donald N. Michael 16, graduate student in Social Relations, will discuss "The Public Reaction to Atomic Developments" in an analysis of the effect of the discoveries on the public mind...
Harvard yesterday received a $100,000 research grant from the American Cancer Society. The grant was part of $300,000 given to aid the study of cancer in Massachusetts...
Emphasizing the breadth of the University's cancer research program, Dr. C. Sidney Burwell, Dean of the Medical School, said, "History reveals the importance of a broad attack on any broad medical problem. Knowledge acquired in one field is helpful to workers in another...
Cases like Elizabeth's have become almost routine at the institute. Last year 904 major operations were performed. Under Dr. Penfield, the institute has won an international reputation, attracted doctors and research fellows from all over the world. The institute houses both a hospital and McGill's neurological laboratories; when they are not treating patients, Dr. Penfield and his staff teach neurology and neurosurgery to McGill's medical students...
What scared admen themselves was the cost of television advertising. Though the youngest and least-tested medium, it was already the most expensive. Young & Rubicam's Director of Research Peter Langhoff estimated that a half-hour television show in New York cost an advertiser $60.17 for every 1,000 sets reached. Though not exactly comparable, the radio network cost is only $2.40. The villain was production expense. For example: production costs of Ford's hour of radio drama are $10,000 a week. Besides actors, ten production people are needed. Production costs of a similar Ford show...