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Word: reveale (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Such winning gestures reveal a side of the President only glimpsed before. By being less calculating and more confiding -- acting less like a politician, really -- Bush could become even more appealing to voters. For Democrats, the President's new human dimension is another piece of bad news...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The White House: In a Sentimental Mood | 6/17/1991 | See Source »

...White House tapes came as a timely reminder that Nixon is not simply an author and global analyst but an unindicted co-conspirator who is lucky to have escaped prison. Listen to any random conversation, on any day, and the mask of respectable elder statesman melts away to reveal a deceitful, lowbrow, vindictive character, dangerously armed with the full power of the IRS, FBI and CIA, and all too willing to use it. Audit his enemies, he orders. "We have to do it artfully so that we don't create an issue by abusing the IRS politically," says Nixon, warming...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Watergate Revisited: Notes from Underground | 6/17/1991 | See Source »

Call it a case of plumbing panic. Within two years, the President and Barbara Bush develop the same overactive thyroid disorder, and best-selling pooch Millie suffers from a bout of doggie lupus. Heightening the drama, doctors reveal that both of these diseases hail from the mysterious realm of autoimmune disorders, which occur when the body unaccountably begins attacking itself. Pundits confidently calculate the odds of such a coincidence at 1 in 3 million. Latter-day Clouseaus begin looking everywhere for a culprit. Dan Quayle raises questions about the ancient plumbing at the Naval Observatory -- the official 100-year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Stalking: Who Done It At the White House | 6/10/1991 | See Source »

Although we may never know precisely what triggered the Bushes' conditions, scientists have made extraordinary advances in just the past decade in understanding what goes wrong in autoimmune disorders such as Graves' disease. Their discoveries, driven in part by the intensive study of the AIDS epidemic, reveal that the immune system is not a single straightforward defense system but many elaborate systems whose cellular members constantly patrol the body looking for friends and challenging foes. "The immune system is very like the brain -- it has to recognize everything," says Dr. Howard Weiner, associate professor of neurology at the Harvard Medical...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Stalking: Who Done It At the White House | 6/10/1991 | See Source »

Although many anticipated that the intensive review might reveal some wrongdoing, University administrators boasted that Harvard emerged from the review in perfect form...

Author: By Joshua W. Shenk, | Title: Harvard Admissions Off The Hook (But What About Those Legacies?) | 6/6/1991 | See Source »

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