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...greatest mysteries in immunology is why more people do not succumb to autoimmune diseases. For example, researchers now realize that nearly everyone harbors T cells that will react against their own nerve tissue. Yet less than 1 person in 1,000 develops multiple sclerosis. What else is the body doing to police its overly zealous defenders? Scientists do not expect the uncertainties to persist much longer. "We're at a point where we know when a child would be at a 50 to 100 times greater risk of getting a long list of autoimmune diseases," says Stanford neurologist Lawrence Steinman...

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

...first game against Brown turned into a pitching duel between the Crimson's Chris Carr and the Bear's Christy Trexler. Carr was the first to succumb in the heated battle, when she surrendered two hits in the fifth inning to Brown's Michelle Pagliaro and Shannon Blumer, which eventually led to the Bear's only two runs of the game...

Author: By Deirdre Mcevoy, | Title: Batswomen End on Winning Note | 5/8/1991 | See Source »

...past decade, AIDS researchers have focused on the last phase of the infection. Their main question: Why do people with the AIDS virus, or HIV, succumb to cancers, opportunistic infections and nerve disorders? During the past two years, however, a small number of immunologists and virologists have started asking a different, and potentially more useful, question: Why do so many people with the virus live in such good health for so long -- in some cases for more than 12 years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Body Wins Round 1 | 4/15/1991 | See Source »

What is at stake in the gulf war is the Vietnam legacy, whether it should be seen as a historical aberration or the historical norm. In Vietnam, was America defeated by a constellation of contingencies, or was character destiny? Did it succumb to an unfavorable local topography (that neutralized American technological superiority), a misapprehension of the enemy and an undermining cultural revolution at home? Or did it succumb to itself, to overweening ambition and moral blindness, to a refusal to acknowledge its own mortality and limits...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How The War Can Change America | 1/28/1991 | See Source »

Perhaps the problem is not the number of these "latter day Sophists" (to quote Brandeis's Frederic T. Sommers), but the appeal they have. In this case, the problem lies not with the stars but within vocal campus groups who succumb to the radical chic. Which leads us to our next group of candidates...

Author: By J.d. Connor, | Title: The Myth of 'Politically Correct' | 12/11/1990 | See Source »

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