Word: revealed
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...first order of business is figuring out where the spores came from. That won't be easy. While new tests on letters received by Senators Tom Daschle and Patrick Leahy reveal a genetic fingerprint (called the Ames strain) that's traceable back to the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Disease at Fort Detrick, Maryland, officials point out there are as many as 12 private labs that receive military samples for research. Officials are also checking into an ongoing anthrax-development project at the Army's Dugway Proving Ground in Utah. While the possibility of an Army connection...
...tradition of the 'The Double Helix.' Yes, Watson is at it again, recalling the turbulent decade that followed the world-shaking publication of the Watson-Crick model of DNA...Watson seems more tempered this time around, especially in the treatment of Rosalind Franklin. But the urge to reveal all will surely upset a few who may not see it that...
...disparate reactions of the musical community and the art world to America’s “war against terror” reveal the ever-widening rift between the two factions of expression. But this, of course, was not always the case. Last weekend, the Wasserman Forum presented a talk titled, “Losing the Revolution: A discussion on the loss of seditious potential when avant-garde art and rock music stopped sleeping in the same bed.” Although the discussion itself quickly degenerated into anti-war proselytizing and reminiscence about the good old days...
...makes the man’s eventual obsession with the letters seem plausible. The man starts writing him letters in response, pretending that he is his wife. Eventually, the man travels to the other man’s home town and befriends him, waiting for the right time to reveal himself. Here, Schlink toys with a genre he hasn’t yet explored in Flights of Love: situational comedy. The story certainly isn’t overtly hilarious, but Schlink obviously sees the humor in his contrivance, and uses it to his thematic advantage in the characyers?...
...facelift, which cost $44 milion, has blown the cobwebs off. A giant spyhole has been cut in the first floor to reveal two levels at once. The 3,000 exhibits, dating from 1500 to 1900, are assembled by topics such as birth, family and death. Baby things, wedding gowns and funeral tapestries bring people of the past back to life. And it's no longer "Look, don't touch." Visitors can assemble an 18th century chair or try their hands at tapestry weaving...