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...crucial match was the heavyweight bout. A Harvard win by decision would tie the meet, a pin would give the varsity the match and the Big Three title. But Tom Gaston could only wrestle Yale's Bill McCormick to a 2-2 draw...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Eli Team Downs Wrestlers, 18-13: Wins Big 3 Title | 3/6/1961 | See Source »

...embassies and consulates were being looted and burned around the world. In the streets of Brussels, pro-Lumumbist demonstrators tried to march on Congolese Army recruiting centers; others, carrying banners declaring ENOUGH HUMILIATION WITHOUT REACTION, in retaliation mobbed the U.A.R. and Russian embassies. Last week the government of Premier Gaston Eyskens, a dapper economics professor, collapsed. King Baudouin dissolved Parliament and called elections for March...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Belgium: Nowhere but Up | 3/3/1961 | See Source »

...pounds, Tony Woodfield wrestled to a draw with Bruin John Fish, and at 130 George Doub downed Brown captain Gene Bouley. Nick Estabrook lost an 8-7 decision and Tom Hardesty was easily defeated by Brown's Delaney, but Harvard swept the next four matches. Heavyweight Tom Gaston fell to Bruin star Bill Wood, who is undefeated this year in dual matches...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Matmen Beat Brown; Penn Downs Fencers | 2/27/1961 | See Source »

...French microscope at the Toulouse Electron Optics Laboratory is housed in a shining aluminum sphere 78 ft. in diameter. Professor Gaston Dupouy, head of the laboratory and the microscope's chief operator, explains that he protects bacteria by enclosing them in a tiny air-filled cell that fits on the microscope's stage. The cell has two windows, one on the top, the other on the bottom, which are covered with collodion film less than four-millionths of an inch thick. The windows are so small (four-thousandths of an inch in diameter) that this gossamer stuff...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Living Electron Pictures | 2/17/1961 | See Source »

...dead. The cost to the Belgian economy had been $150 million irrevocably lost, with an additional $80 million recoverable if factories worked overtime to make up for lost production. In general, Belgians were bone-weary, and grateful that things had not turned out worse. Expectation was that tenacious Premier Gaston Eyskens would bull his troublesome Loi Unique through Parliament, then quickly call for a snap election. Although Socialists allowed privately that they had no hope of winning the election, they were content with the indirect assurances given by Social Christian (Catholic) Boss Théo Lefevre that Premier Eyskens would...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Belgium: Peace of Exhaustion | 1/27/1961 | See Source »

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