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Arthur Weiss (13 June 1912 – 26 August 1980) was an American script writer for two decades on action/adventure TV shows like Mission: Impossible, Mannix, The Fugitive, Super Friends, The Time Tunnel and Sea Hunt. His most famous creation was the script for the movie Flipper in 1963, which became a TV series and was remade as a ...
Tv ShowEpisodeDateBody Language8 December 1973Quicker Than the Eye9 November 1974The Power Pirate8 September 1973The Baffles Puzzle15 September 1973Arthur Weiss. LZ Rassenti, L Huynh, TL Toy, L Chen, MJ Keating, JG Gribben, ... The role of the T3/antigen receptor complex in T-cell activation. The role of T3 surface molecules in the activation of human T cells: a two-stimulus requirement for IL 2 production reflects events occurring at a pre-translational level.
Arthur Weiss is an American Immunologist who is currently an Ephraim P. Engleman Distinguished Professor of Medicine and a professor of microbiology and immunology at the University of California, San Francisco. He has been a member of the National Academy of Sciences since 2003. [1]
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Interview Date: Saturday, May 5, 2012 Location: Boston, MA Click hereto see other interviews from the Oral History Project
Member, National Academy of Sciences, 2004Member, Institute of Medicine, 2004University of California, San Francisco profileUCSF Cancer Center profileHHMI Investigator profileYear. A brief guide to competitive intelligence: how to gather and use information on competitors. A Weiss. Business Information Review 19 (2), 39-47. , 2002. 101. 2002. Competitive intelligence through UK eyes. W Sheila, B Ahmad, W Arthur, P David.
1 apr 2004 · Arthur Weiss. Nature Reviews Immunology 4 , 301–308 ( 2004) Cite this article. 40k Accesses. 380 Citations. 23 Altmetric. Metrics. Abstract. Twenty years of investigation have yielded a...
19 mag 2024 · Weiss is a leading researcher in the field of signal transduction in the immune system, focusing on the roles of tyrosine kinases and phosphatases in regulating lymphocyte activation and how abnormalities in signaling pathways can lead to immunologically-mediated diseases.