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Since two tenured professors left Harvard in1987 and 1990 respectively, the department hasonly Professor of Linguistics Susumu Kuno andThomas Professor of Linguistics and the ClassicsCalvert Watkins, who have been at Harvard sincethe 1960s, according to Wolff...

Author: By Alessandra M. Galloni, | Title: Knowles Explains Linguistics Plans to Council | 10/14/1993 | See Source »

...Linguistics Department at Harvard seems tohave been singled out," Horn says. "[Professor ofLinguistics Susumu] Kuno and Watkins are close toretirement and there is no commitment to thejunior professors...They [Harvard administrators]don't see a downside to this decision...

Author: By Alessandra M. Galloni, | Title: Students Mourn Dept. | 10/8/1993 | See Source »

...Tokyo stock market, Nomura ignored its own myth. Rather than helping small investors, the company furtively paid out millions of dollars to a few large corporate customers to cover losses they had suffered in the market's fall. Even worse, Nomura had allegedly helped arrange loans to Susumu Ishii, the onetime leader of one of Japan's largest crime syndicates. Last week Yoshihisa Tabuchi, the company's president, resigned to take responsibility for Nomura's damaged reputation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Financial Markets Playing Favorites | 7/8/1991 | See Source »

Japanese police have been investigating West Tsusho, which press reports say is an arm of a company controlled by Susumu Ishii, onetime head of Japan's second largest crime syndicate. Documents filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission show that Bush helped West Tsusho invest heavily in two American firms: Quantum Access, a Houston-based software company, and Asset Management International Financing & Settlement, a New York City-based firm...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The White House: My Brother, The Middleman | 6/24/1991 | See Source »

...these immune cells produce such diversity was elucidated during the mid- 1970s by Immunologist Susumu Tonegawa, now at M.I.T., who in 1987 was awarded the Nobel Prize for his achievement. Tonegawa proved that the B-cell genes that dictate the production of antibodies occur in distinct segments. These pieces, like cards in the hands of a Las Vegas dealer, are constantly and speedily shuffled into different combinations. Coupled with mutations that occur as B cells divide into plasma cells, such genes, in theory at least, could account for as many as 10 million antibody variations. Other scientists have shown that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Stop That Germ! | 5/23/1988 | See Source »

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