Word: ricks
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...Rick Osterberg '96, coordinator for Residential Computing, said the new policy will strengthen e-mail security...
...Even to sniff on this line would involve breaking into a manhole or climbing telephone poles," said Rick Osterberg '96, HASCS's coordinator of residential support. 'Sniffing' allows hackers to view the information travelling on a network line...
...Victor Laszlo approaching the airplane... He seems to be with two other people... There's a woman, a very attractive dark-haired woman, and... I believe the man wearing the trench coat is the proprietor of a popular gathering place here in Casablanca who goes by the name of Rick... No, Ted, no last name is available to us. It's just Rick. You know, like Madonna or Roseanne... Now Rick and the young woman are exchanging a few words... They both look very serious, almost grim, probably talking about the increasingly uneasy international situation... I can only make...
...Scott acquired his firm, said the company will cooperate fully with the government's probe. Frist confirmed that Columbia's board forced the change, angered by the surprise federal searches and concerned that its business and reputation were being damaged by the probes as it mulled a major merger. "Rick Scott and David Vandewater have done a fabulous job in putting this group of assets together," said Frist. "They were the right people. But in any institution there is a time for a different style . . . It might have been an impediment if they had stayed." Wall Street responded favorably...
Your article on the biotech company CellPro and the development of a new treatment for cancer [MEDICINE, May 19] left out some vital facts. The stem-cell technology used in CellPro's product to help treat its ceo, Rick Murdock, was developed not by CellPro but by the researchers at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. To date, CellPro has paid Johns Hopkins nothing for its use of our stem-cell technology, thus depriving us of resources that could be applied to further cancer research. In March a federal jury found that CellPro willfully infringed Johns Hopkins' patents...