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...hide the damage." While Morton maintained that Diana was right to be jealous of Camilla, Junor insists that for years after the wedding, Camilla was just one of Charles' many good friends. Junor also asserts that the infamous bracelet Charles gave Camilla before his wedding had a more benign significance: the initials "GF" on it stood for the platonic "Girl Friday," Junor claims, not pet nicknames Gladys and Fred, as Diana believed. Junor also alleges that Diana made late-night anonymous phone calls to Camilla, saying things like "I've sent someone to kill you. They're outside...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Defending The Prince | 11/9/1998 | See Source »

Since those giddy days, Muhammad Ali, ne Cassius Clay, has done two things nobody thought possible: he has finally stopped talking, and he has become universally popular. Those who know him now only as a benign, spectral presence at sports events and testimonial ceremonies can have no idea how much noise this man once made or what confusion he sowed in some people's heads. Previous athletes had been loved or hated, and that was that, but Ali had been both at the same time. Half of you wanted to see his head handed to him, the other half sort...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Celebrating The Greatest | 11/2/1998 | See Source »

...Chile almost half the citizenry still revere Pinochet as a strong leader who saved the nation from economic and political collapse after his bloody U.S.-backed 1973 coup, in which leftist President Salvador Allende was killed. Since becoming a Senator, he has tried to project a more benign, grandfatherly image. But in countries like the U.S., where Pinochet assassins executed one of his exiled opponents in 1976, he's unlikely to get much sympathy. "The international community is sending a very positive signal for democracy and human rights," says Palma. Retired Chilean army General Luis Cortes Villa, head...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Knocking at Midnight | 10/26/1998 | See Source »

...Boston Globe, explores how Rosen-type therapists saturated the psychoanalytic profession with bad science, unearned hubris and treatment that was patently dangerous to patients and families. Dolnick does not launch into a diatribe against all forms of psychotherapy. Although psychotherapy can be effective for treating neuroses (relatively benign emotional disorders), Dolnick targets psychoanalysts who tried to cure psychoses (marked disorders of perception or reality) with talk therapy alone. From the 1940s to the 1970s an aggressive cabal of psychoanalysts fit such a bill; they scoffed at the biological origins of mental illness, eschewed treating schizophrenia with drugs and thought that...

Author: By Joanne Sitarski, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: 'Madness' Charts Psychotherapy's Wayward Drift | 10/9/1998 | See Source »

Skeptical readers might interpret this as a misguided cry for juvenile delinquency. On the contrary, a quality prank is benign and can actually liven up the atmosphere of the College. Victims of a well-conceived prank may feel a bit sheepish at first, but they will eventually appreciate the attention and welcome the obligation to retaliate...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DARTBOARD | 10/2/1998 | See Source »

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