Word: growed
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Haseltine's discovery of the tat-gene may prove to be extremely important in the drug development process. Without the tat-gene the virus can't grow, so if researchers can find a chemical which interferes with the workings of that gene, or any other essential virus process, they are well on their way toward finding a drug treatment program...
...first salvo in a major assault on the three networks by Rupert Murdoch, the media mogul who last year bought Metromedia's six TV stations and 20th Century-Fox studios. Rivers' program is the first offering from Murdoch's new Fox Broadcasting Co., which he hopes will grow into a full-fledged fourth network. Along with the Rivers show, FBC plans to introduce two nights of prime-time programming next March (one announced show: a half-hour sitcom based on the movie Down and Out in Beverly Hills) and, if all goes well, an additional night each succeeding year...
Gallo has long maintained that no matter who actually discovered the virus, his lab was first to grow large quantities of it; this tricky step, he insists, was crucial to developing a workable blood test. "We had the science first," says Acting Assistant Secretary of Health Donald Macdonald. "We feel strong in our position." But mass-producing the virus "doesn't matter," counters Lipsey. "What matters is who made the invention first...
...hair is graying, and he now wears fraying business suits in place of the outrageous codpiece he sported in the '70s. But Cleaver proved that he remains a powerful orator, telling delegates to the California Republican Convention that he is "a man with the courage to change, to grow" and one who now is determined to defeat the Democrats, "who have made black people dependent on the federal budget." He drew the most enthusiastic ovation of any Senate candidate there...
...give" a constitution to his people. Democracy can be helped and nurtured, but it cannot be given. It was imposed on Japan and to a lesser extent on West Germany by American occupation ! forces, but that happened in the exceptional and transforming circumstance of crushing defeat. Democracy must grow organically, in its own soil. Rebellion against arbitrary rule is relatively easy, but it is extremely difficult to organize a free society. Freedom, as logicians might say, is a necessary but not a sufficient condition for democracy...