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...would like to offer one correction to The Crimson's July 3 article about the recent measles immunization effort at UHS. The article stated that everyone born before 1957 who has never had measles should be immunized. Actually, only those born after 1957 and who have not had a booster since 1980 need immunization. Measles was so prevalent before the first vaccine was introduced in 1957 that those born before that time can be assumed to have natural immunity. An individual's immune status can be checked with a blood test, but it takes extra time...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Measles | 7/31/1990 | See Source »

...media monster. He knows there is something cancerous about American celebrity ("The spotlight," he says, "sheds a poison"), but he can't see that he himself will eventually succumb. In the '50s Winchell gets trounced by television while archrival Ed Sullivan becomes an unlikely Sunday-night institution. A scrappy booster of F.D.R.'s, Winchell gets flummoxed and outfoxed by Roy Cohn and the red- baiters. An anomaly, Winchell throws in his famous fedora and moves to a resentful retirement in Arizona. Herr's vision of Winchell's fate is a fitting postlude, balancing irony and sympathy. He knows that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: A Novel Treatment of a Legend | 5/21/1990 | See Source »

...communications satellite was stranded in space last week, the fledgling U.S. commercial launch business may have been set adrift with it. Owned by Intelsat, a Washington-based consortium of 118 countries, , the satellite, which was to handle phone calls and television transmissions, failed to separate on schedule from its booster and tumbled into a useless low orbit. Though Intelsat technicians managed to lift it a bit higher, the five- ton payload nonetheless seemed destined to plunge back to earth within a few months, unless NASA can arrange a rescue by the space shuttle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Lost In Space: The launch industry falters | 3/26/1990 | See Source »

Rescue or no, the mishap dealt a blow to all three U.S. companies that build rockets for commercial use. Martin Marietta, which made the booster for the Intelsat mission, had completed its first successful launch in December but may now have to delay plans for a second Intelsat lift-off this summer. The episode could also tarnish McDonnell Douglas, which carried out a commercial launch last year and has nine more on order, and General Dynamics, whose first venture is planned for June. The three aerospace giants entered the commercial field after former President Ronald Reagan took the U.S. Government...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Lost In Space: The launch industry falters | 3/26/1990 | See Source »

...country is now trying to free itself from dependence on foreign know-how by developing its own booster. The H-2, scheduled for its first test launch in 1993, will be able to put a two-ton spacecraft into high earth orbit. That is competitive with Europe's Ariane 4, the U.S. Titan and the Soviets' Proton booster, all of which are being marketed as commercial launchers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Space: Japan Goes to the Moon | 2/5/1990 | See Source »

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