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...will be known), you will find most of your day taken up by lectures and laboratories. Probably, you will live in Vanderbilt Hall, an enormous dormitory, done up outside as a sort of Spanish palace. It sports Boston's most elegant address--1007 Avenue Louis Pasteur. Regrettably, elegance vanishes a few steps beyond the front door: the hallways are done up as a sort of Spanish dungeon, and the dining hall's best efforts are about comparable to those of Central Kitchens. Unless you have a car, the trip to Cambridge will take you 40 minutes on the MBTA. (Last...

Author: By Edwin Walter, | Title: MED SCHOOL: Hard Grind For Future Harvard M.D.'s | 10/15/1965 | See Source »

...will want to get out because there is nothing at all to do in the immediate vicinity of Avenue Louis Pasteur: once in the middle of a grassy field, the six original buildings now sit in the midst of some of the city's most depressing blocks. True, they are only a few minutes from Brookline's splendor, but the proximity of dreary Roxbury is much more evident. If you make loud enough inquiries, you will find you can use such facilities of the other-side-of-the-river as Lamont, Widener, Holyoke Center, and the IAB pool. You will...

Author: By Edwin Walter, | Title: MED SCHOOL: Hard Grind For Future Harvard M.D.'s | 10/15/1965 | See Source »

Last week the British Medical Jour nal finally noted some encouraging news for cold-sore sufferers; in Paris, a team of Pasteur Institute virologists, led by Dr. Pierre Lépine, has developed a vaccine that shows definite promise. They grew herpes simplex virus in cultures of kidney cells taken from sheep embryos; then the live virus was inactivated by exposure to ultraviolet light. As part of the testing program, the vaccine was injected into 20 patients who suffered from recurrent cold sores. After one year, eleven of the patients have had no recurrence of their herpes simplex eruptions, seven...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Virology: A Vaccine for Cold Sores | 9/18/1964 | See Source »

Until recently all rabies vaccine was made much as Pasteur made it: by injecting the virus into the brains of rabbits. The vaccine that was later extracted contained rabbit-brain protein, and it was likely to set up painful local reactions. In some cases it caused paralysis or death. In 1957, Eli Lilly & Co. began marketing a vaccine made in fertilized duck eggs. Only the occasional person who is allergic to eggs will get a bad reaction from it. For dogs, a preventive vaccine made from live, though weakened, virus has proved effective. But it has been considered too risky...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Infectious Diseases: Preventing the Incurable | 8/14/1964 | See Source »

...Standing at left. Louis Pasteur...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Infectious Diseases: Preventing the Incurable | 8/14/1964 | See Source »

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