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...existing for only a single moment of historical controversy, lived richly and fully--and in very interesting times. We whirl with the young Hall through the wild nightlife of Jazz Age London, watch her early involvement with the women's suffrage movement, and chafe with her when, at the outbreak of the First World War, she is prevented by her sex from being able to fight at the front...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Radclyffe Hall: More than a Martyr | 3/13/1998 | See Source »

...OUTBREAK The emergence in hospitals of drug-resistant staph infections was alarming enough. But now a study shows that kids are getting infected outside the confines of the hospital--a whopping 25 times as many today as in the late...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Health Report: Mar. 9, 1998 | 3/9/1998 | See Source »

Rumors flew of strange influenza-like diseases affecting animals, even moose, according to the pandemic's chronicler, Alfred W. Crosby Jr. One rumor turned out to be true--disturbingly so for anyone familiar with the subsequent history of influenza research and the recent Hong Kong outbreak. Farmers in 1918 discovered that something was making their pigs very sick, with high fevers and bad coughs. No such pig flu had ever been noticed before 1918, but every fall thereafter an influenza-like illness attacked the nation's hog population. In 1928 a researcher from the Rockefeller Institute, Richard E. Shope, went...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Flu Hunters | 2/23/1998 | See Source »

Shortridge and Webster immediately recognized the gravity of the chicken-flu outbreak in Hong Kong, at least for the region's chicken industry. They knew that while avian influenza did not ordinarily make its host sick, a benign virus could reassort to produce a pathogen of almost inconceivable lethality. Webster's Memphis lab had observed such a transformation in the wild on two occasions, the first in April 1983, when a relatively mild influenza struck chickens on the vast chicken farms of Pennsylvania. The birds got visibly sick, some died and egg production fell, but overall the outbreak remained only...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Flu Hunters | 2/23/1998 | See Source »

Meanwhile Osterhaus had called Webster in Memphis to learn more about H5. Only then, in that phone call, did the human-flu research community at last learn of the earlier outbreak of chicken flu on the three Hong Kong farms; and only then did Webster and Shortridge learn of the first human case--even though Shortridge's laboratory and Lim's are housed in adjacent buildings...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Flu Hunters | 2/23/1998 | See Source »

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