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...there is a body of scientific opinion" that disagrees. Swire has been seeking lab notebooks and memos from the NIH, under the Freedom of Information Act. So far, he says, "we've found lots of things that strengthen our complaint and nothing that damages it." Among the findings: a photograph illustrating one of Gallo's key papers on the discovery of the virus actually depicted the Pasteur strain. The mistake may have been accidental, but it has proved embarrassing to Gallo, who last month published a formal admission of the error...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: A Different Kind of AIDS Fight | 5/12/1986 | See Source »

Last Wednesday's Crimson carries an account and photograph of a section of my course Historical Studies A-12 meeting in the shantytown in front of University Hall. It also carried a letter from a student in the section objecting to the location of the section. I was asked by students whether this was appropriate or not. The following is what I said before lecture on Thursday...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Coercion | 4/19/1986 | See Source »

...accompanying photographs give the most vivid glimpse into the past Harvard community. They reveal a sense of humor which enlivens Harvard memories. The 1885 baseball team in their odd, unmatched uniforms, and the three football players bumbling a play, reach back to days when Ivy sports were less professional. An 1871 posed photograph of the Natural History Society in suits, bowties, and hats captures two mischievous members stuffing a small alligator into a jug. Only in these pictures might a nostalgic Harvard alum finally recover a piece...

Author: By Esther Morgo, | Title: Our Perfect Past? | 4/17/1986 | See Source »

...Africa. The sponsors of apartheid kept off their own TV screens the sight of cops clubbing protesting blacks, while not caring what the rest of the world thought. But foreign outrage began to matter when international banks shut down on loans to South Africa. With TV cameramen forbidden to photograph scenes of violence, foreign correspondents have had to conjure up with words alone the reality of the day's death toll. It isn't effective TV. Now that South Africa has ended its state of emergency, will cameras really be allowed to show what is going on? South Africa...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: Newswatch: The Visuals Did Marcos In | 3/17/1986 | See Source »

...remains of a samurai's dream." Eustacia Soliven, a Manila dentist, reflected later, "Maybe we have learned something from all this. After all, the best things we see in France are the reminders of the excesses of Kings." A few came to plunder and destroy. One man threw a photograph of the departed First Lady into an ornamental fish pool. But mostly, since an invitation to the Malacanang Palace had long been considered a jewel beyond price to the average Filipino, they came as tourists and as survivors. One excited old man said he had lived a block away...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Philippines Escape From a Gilded Palace | 3/10/1986 | See Source »

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