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Reed and Institute
Singer performed research at the University of Colorado ’ s School of Medicine, Walter Reed Army Medical Center Institute of Research, the National Institute of Mental Health, the United States Air Force and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Singer began to study brainwashing in the 1950s at Walter Reed Army Medical Center Institute of Research in Washington, D. C., where she interviewed U. S. soldiers who had been taken prisoner during the Korean War.
Federal government agencies engaged in related work include the Food and Drug Administration ( FDA ), the National Institutes of Health ( NIH ), Walter Reed Army Institute of Research and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute ( HHMI ).
Edge, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Washington, DC 20307, Thomas A. Marciniak, M. D., National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD 20205
Sharp and Grove developed receiverless wireless voice transmission technologies for the Advanced Research Projects Agency at Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, in 1973.
Victoria Hall ( originally the Saltaire Institute ) is used for meetings and concerts, and houses a Victorian Reed Organ Museum.
Mefloquine was developed in the 1970s at the United States Department of Defense's Walter Reed Army Institute of Research as a synthetic analogue of quinine.
Mefloquine was invented at Walter Reed Army Institute of Research ( WRAIR ) in the 1970s shortly after the end of the Vietnam war.
Halofantrine is a relatively new drug developed by the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research in the 1960s.
Norton also serves on the boards of the California Institute of the Arts, Reed College, Crossroads School ( Santa Monica, California ), and the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
in physics from Reed College in 1960, and began graduate work in physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
* Playing it firm, fair and smart: the EU and the ICC's indictment of Bashir, Opinion by Reed Brody, March 2009, European Union Institute for Security Studies
* Walter Reed Army Institute of Research ( WRAIR ), near Washington, D. C., is the largest biomedical research facility administered by the DoD.
Oliver Reed Smoot, Jr. ( born 1940 ) was Chairman of the American National Standards Institute ( ANSI ) from 2001 to 2002 and President of the International Organization for Standardization ( ISO ) from 2003 to 2004.
David Patrick Reed ( born January 31, 1952 ) is an American computer scientist, educated at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, known for a number of significant contributions to computer networking.
Morris studied art at the University of Kansas and at Kansas City Art Institute and philosophy at Reed College.
Universities such as New York University, Amherst College, Princeton University, Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Yeshiva University, and Reed College have formal policies allowing students to defer admission.
Sternberg also oversaw the establishment of the Army Medical School ( 1893 ; now the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research ) and of the U. S. Army Nurse Corps ( 1901 ).
He was responsible for the 1893 establishment of the Army Medical School ( precursor of today's Walter Reed Army Institute of Research ), the organization of a contract dental service, the creation of the tuberculosis hospital at Fort Bayard, New Mexico, and of a special surgical hospital at Washington Barracks.

Reed and legal
With both legal pretext and a convenient staging area in the western side of the Yucatán peninsula, Chan Santa Cruz was occupied by the Mexican army in the early years of the 20th century, ( Reed 1964 ).
Although Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau, Jr. believed the government lacked the authority to buy gold, Reed joined with Treasury general counsel Herman Oliphant to provide critical legal support for the plan.
Reed worked quickly to restore order, and subsequent briefs were noted for their strong legal argument and extensive research.
Although Reed ethically objected to having a sitting Associate Justice of the Supreme Court testify in a legal proceeding, he agreed to do so once he was subpoenaed.
Reed Elsevier is a publisher and information provider operating in the science, medical, legal, risk and business sectors.
With legal advice provided by British Democratic Party leader Anthony Reed Herbert, Hill soon issued the writ against McLaughlin, who attempted to get around the problems by renaming the BM the British Nationalist and Socialist Movement and claiming that the BM in fact no longer existed.
Amongst the most significant legal victories of the movement after the formation of NOW were a 1967 Executive Order extending full Affirmative Action rights to women, Title IX and the Women's Educational Equity Act ( 1972 and 1974, respectively, educational equality ), Title X ( 1970, health and family planning ), the Equal Credit Opportunity Act ( 1974 ), the Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978, the illegalization of marital rape ( although not illegalized in all states until 1993 ), the legalization of no-fault divorce ( although not allowed in all states until 2010 ), a 1975 law requiring the U. S. Military Academies to admit women, and many Supreme Court cases, perhaps most notably Reed v. Reed of 1971 and Roe v. Wade of 1973.
He also played a boxer on a 1954 episode of Reed Hadley's CBS legal drama, The Public Defender.
She had a recurring role on the CBS legal drama The Defenders ( 1961 – 1965 ) as the fiancee of Kenneth Preston ( played by Robert Reed ), partner in the father-and-son law firm led by patriarch Lawrence Preston ( E. G.
Doran also guest starred on many television programs, including three appearances in the role of Bonnie Landis in the CBS legal drama The Public Defender, starring with fellow Texan Reed Hadley.
Gleason also appeared on television, including the Reed Hadley legal drama The Public Defender and the Christmas 1957 episode of John Payne's The Restless Gun.
One of the notable efforts of that administration was the legal fight to get Reed Smoot seated as a senator in the Smoot Hearings.
In the 1950s, he appeared on NBC's The Donald O ' Connor Show as himself, as a con man in two episodes of the NBC sitcom It's a Great Life, in Reed Hadley's legal drama, The Public Defender, on the ABC situation comedy The Pride of the Family, and on two Rod Cameron series, the syndicated City Detective and the western-themed State Trooper.
He appeared too in the 1954-1955 CBS legal drama, The Public Defender, starring Reed Hadley.

Reed and name
Later the name was changed to Hughes, Hubbard & Reed.
Patricia Hayes, who had been seen from time to time previously as next door neighbour Mrs. Reed, was given a first name Min and became a starring character along with her husband Bert, previously played by Bill Maynard and now by Alfie Bass.
Son Reed Cross was named after a London street because " Volvo isn't a very good middle name ", according to Howard.
The name, meaning ' long piece of firewood ', was chosen to fix in their son's mind the wrong that had been done to Tāwhaki, in order that one day Wahieroa might avenge him ( Reed 1963: 165 ).
Also, in the 1970s Jerry Reed song " Amos Moses ," in the 1990s George Strait song " Adalida ," in Dan Baird's 1992 song " Dixie Beauxderaunt ," the 1999 Jimmy Buffett song " I will Play for Gumbo ," the 2008 Toby Keith song " Creole Woman ," and its name is the title of a song by jazz songstress Marcia Ball.
In the year 1783, a settler by the name of Thomas Reed traveled through the valley between the Thomaston Mountains and the Gap Rocks.
Reed responded to this confusion by naming his alter ego biographer in the Hilda Tablet plays " Herbert Reeve " and then by having everyone else get the name slightly wrong.
American film critic Rex Reed created controversy ( and a minor Hollywood myth ) when he suggested that Jack Palance had announced the wrong name after opening the envelope.
* Reed ( name ), a human surname or given name
* Reed, California, former name of Ostrom, California
Reed issued an order permanently enjoining the government from enforcing COPA, commenting that " perhaps we do the minors of this country harm if First Amendment protections, which they will with age inherit fully, are chipped away in the name of their protection.
( Under each of his successors, the bank's name has changed: George Moore shortened it to " First National City Bank " and formed a holding company, First National City Corp .; under Walter B. Wriston these became " Citibank " and " Citicorp "; under John Reed the firm merged with Travelers Group to become Citigroup.
He told John Reed to name his price.
He Anglicized his name to John Reed.
Reed was born Donna Belle Mullenger on a farm near Denison, Iowa, the daughter of Hazel Jane ( née Shives ; 1899 – 1975 ) and William Richard Mullenger ( 1893 – 1981 ).< ref name = filmref >
Species bearing his name include Blyth's Hawk-Eagle, Blyth's Reed Warbler, Blyth's Leaf Warbler and Blyth's Pipit.
In 1970, Reed Group merged with the International Publishing Corporation and the company name was changed to Reed International Limited.
Alfred Reed ( January 25, 1921, New York – September 17, 2005, Miami, Florida ) was one of North America's most prolific and frequently performed composers, with more than two hundred published works for concert band, wind ensemble, orchestra, chorus, and chamber ensemble to his name.
* Brute ( Reed Richards ), the name of an alternative universe version of Mister Fantastic who became a member of the Frightful Four in the main Marvel Universe
Because of persecution as a result of him having the Richards name, Reed later decides that he should be kept in the Baxter Building for home schooling, possibly as long as college.
" The late Reed Lindsey, who was a student / athlete in the 1920s and later retired as University registrar, once said that " it was a good fighting name of the time.

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