172,499 research outputs found
Letter, 1935 Dec. 9, to Superintendent Morris E. McCarty, Lafayette, Ind.
Letter from F. C. Hockema to Superintendent Morris McCarty suggesting McCarty contact Amelia Earhart directly regarding lecture arrangements, December 9, 193
Letter to E. C. McCarty from John S. Watts
Letter to E. C. McCarty from John S. Watts, former judge, attorney, Santa Fe, regarding what he had found out about the estate of his deceased brother, Isaac McCarty. Watts had not received any letters or payment from the McCarty family to do the investigation thus far. He learned that the partner Ceran St. Vrain and Preston Beck were both away for month. St. Vrain had paid the debts of McCarty amounting to 30.000, the remaining could be divided between St. Vrain and the family. There was also a contract for flour with the goverment, the value of which was unknown. Watts did not want to proceed further without authorization and promise of compensation. A transcript in the handwriting of the author. Document in English, 3 pp/fr, missing heading page
George W. McCarty
Digital image created at the Georgia Tech Library, 2010. Scanned at 600ppi.||Physical Condition: GoodInscription, left upper corner, front: "Mr. Geo. W. McCarty, President - Chairman, Ashcraft-Wilkinson Co., [illegible] SAL RR, Class 1908 ME."||George W. McCarty Jr. graduated from Georgia Tech in 1908 with a degree in M.E. As a senior he was one of four founders of the ANAK Honor Society on campus
McCarty, Charles C.
Body shipped to Buckhanon, WV. Jessie B. McCarty - wife.https://stars.library.ucf.edu/cfm-ch-memoranda-1932/1529/thumbnail.jp
James McCarty.
R-C of J. McCarty. 14 Jan. HR 168, 23-1, v1, 1p. [260] Horse lost in engagement with Indians; 1812
John L. McCarty.
R-C of J. McCarty. 6 July. HR 1045, 25-2, v4, 1p. [336] Entries on Cherokee land
McCarty, Maclyn
Maclyn McCarty, 1982. Photo by Ingbert Grüttner
McCarty, Maclyn (1911-2005) was an American geneticist who devoted his life as a physician-scientist to studying infectious disease organisms and best known for his part in the monumental discovery that DNA, rather than protein, constituted the chemical nature of a gene.
Born in South Bend, Indiana, in 1911, Dr. McCarty received his medical degree from The Johns Hopkins University, where he then spent three years as a pediatric house officer before joining Dr. Avery’s laboratory at The Rockefeller Institute. In 1946, he established his own laboratory at Rockefeller, at which point his research turned to focus entirely on group A Streptococcus.
Dr. McCarty served as The Rockefeller Institute Hospital’s physician- in- chief from 1960 to 1974 and as the university’s vice president from 1965 to 1978. He was also an editor of The Rockefeller University Press’s Journal of Experimental Medicine from 1963 nearly until well past his retirement in 1981. Dr. McCarty also served as chairman of the Public Health Research Institute in New York from 1985 to 1992. He was a member of the National Academy of Sciences and a charter member of its Institute of Medicine. In addition to the Lasker Award, he received the Wolf Prize in Medicine and an Eli Lilly Award in Microbiology and Immunology.
See also C-Reactive Protein: From Pneumococcal Pneumonia to Cardiovascular Disease Risk, DNA: The Transforming Principle and the Birth of Modern Genetics, National Academy of Sciences Biographical Memoirs, and Marjorie McCarty Oral History
Years at The Rockefeller University: 1940-1981; emeritus 1981-2005https://digitalcommons.rockefeller.edu/faculty-members/1094/thumbnail.jp
Susie McCarty sits at her desk
Susie McCarty sits at her desk, c.1980\u27shttps://digitalcommons.georgefox.edu/gfu_photos_1980_1984/1117/thumbnail.jp
Connecting the dots: implementing and evaluating a network intervention to foster scientific collaboration and productivity
This article presents the design and implementation of a network intervention to foster scientific collaboration at a research university, and describes an experimental framework for rigorous evaluation of the intervention's impact. Based on social network analysis of publication and grant data, an innovative type of research funding program was developed as a form of alteration of the university's collaboration network. The intervention consisted in identifying research communities in the network and creating a new collaborative relation between pairs of unconnected researchers in selected communities. The new collaboration was created to maximally increase the overall cohesion of the target research community. In order to evaluate the impact of the program, we designed a randomized experiment with treatment and control communities based on the Rubin Causal Model approach. The paper describes the intervention design, reports findings from the program implementation, and discusses the statistical framework for future evaluation of the intervention
Marriage record of Carter, Robert E. and McCarty, Emma M.
Marriage license for Robert E. Carter and Emma M. McCarty. John C. White was the Notary Public
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