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...results have been both disappointing and intriguing: the experiments have detected far fewer neutrinos than solar models predicted. Scientists were especially baffled by a recent report from a Soviet-American research team that set up a detector to monitor neutrinos emitted by the fusion of hydrogen atoms, the sun's main reaction. After four months of operation near the Soviet town of Baksan, the experiment has yet to turn up a single solar neutrino...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Real Gone Neutrinos | 9/10/1990 | See Source »

Experimental evidence indicates that neutrinos come in three varieties: the electron neutrino, the muon neutrino and the tau neutrino. Solar fusion gives off the electron type. Bahcall and Bethe speculate that electron neutrinos change into the muon or tau versions somewhere between the sun and Earth. "It's as if they started out sweet," marvels Bethe, who won the Nobel Prize in 1967 for explaining how nuclear fusion powers the sun, "and then suddenly turned salty." Thus the Baksan experiment may have come up empty- handed because it was not designed to detect muon or tau neutrinos...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Real Gone Neutrinos | 9/10/1990 | See Source »

...world of politics, the fusion of style, conviction and prescience had the paradoxical effect of giving Reagan flexibility. When Reagan seized the opportunity, late in his second term, to negotiate American intermediate-range missiles out of Europe, he provoked far less anguish among his movement conservative supporters than Richard Nixon did when he went to China. Reagan, unlike Nixon, had a reserve fund of trust, and he drew on it. A more pertinent example of a low-cost Reagan switch comes from his days as Governor of California. Reagan, as part of his general opposition to high taxes, believed that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: The Leadership Thing | 7/30/1990 | See Source »

What is a TV viewer, particularly one who has AIDS, to make of this story? Is the treatment a miracle cure? Or is it a mirage that cruelly raises the hopes of AIDS sufferers -- the medical equivalent of cold fusion? No one, and certainly not journalists, can know the answers. The case illustrates the press's growing lack of restraint in medical coverage, especially where AIDS is concerned. CNN called the treatment "experimental and controversial," but by leading off newscasts with the story and cutting to the hospital for frequent live reports, the network was in effect trumpeting the blood...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Ethics: Medical Progress - Live! On CNN! | 6/25/1990 | See Source »

Perhaps her prize-winning senior thesis bestillustrates the fusion of interests whichcharacterizes Robertson's Harvard career...

Author: By Susan D. Wojcicki, | Title: Witty Woman | 6/7/1990 | See Source »

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