Word: tars
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...side effects of psychosurgery than Dr. Edward K. Wilk of Taunton, Mass. "Personality blunting," he says, "has been the inevitable price paid for a complete lobotomy operation [and] reveals itself in the higher realms of creative imagination, foresight, ambition and social sensitivity." Some long-confined schizophrenics are so tar gone that this damage might hardly show. But the less severe the case, the greater the risk. And if psychosurgery is to be used in other psychoses, and even in neuroses, says Dr. Wilk, personality damage cannot be tolerated...
Though, for example, the Elis beat North Carolina, 7 to 2, while the varsity lost to the Tar Heels by the same score, Barnaby still feels that his team may defeat the Blue in the traditional 15-match meeting...
Woodward started out with orthoto-luidine, an oily liquid extracted from coal tar, whose molecule has one six-carbon ring and one methyl (CH3) group. Step by step he attached more atoms, carefully choosing his reactions so that the atoms would fall in the proper places. After some 20 laboratory steps, his 22 Ibs. of original raw materials were reduced to 1/28 oz. of a genuine steroid. The compound's molecule has the steroid nucleus with an oxygen atom attached at one end and a carbome-thoxy (C02CH3) group at the other...
...Luxemburg and Captain Heath Alexander at two and three for the Tar Heels both won their matches in two sets. The Crimson fourth man, Dave Watts, played steadily to take his first set easily, 6-2, only to lose the next two, the last by 6-0, to Bill Izlar...
Coach John Kenfield of the Tar Heels thought that his team yesterday played its best match of four so far on its northern trip. The squad will go to play Yale today, sporting a 19-4 record, including its 8 to 7 loss last month to the Crimson at chapel Hill, North Carolina...