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...Rountree 10-18 6-7 26; Nee 2-7 0-0 6; Ware 0-0 2-22; D'Antoni 0-1 0-0 0; Etheridge 2-4 0-0 4; Wood0-1 1-3 1; Verdeaux 0-0 0-0 0; Sienkiewicz 0-0 2-22; Tamm 0-0 0-0 0; Amon 0-1 0-0 0. TOTALS...

Author: By Daniel G. Habib, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS | Title: M. Hoops Beats Up On Yale, Brown | 2/3/1999 | See Source »

...Massachusetts, Diane Watson, who was dying of cancer, took the drug under a doctor's supervision because she could not bring herself to discuss her illness with her family. Says she: "MDMA opened up a great emotional sharing." In another case, Kathy Tamm of San Francisco, who suffered from severe attacks of panic long after being raped, was able, while using Ecstasy, to confront her memories of the assault. As Tamm explained to her psychiatrist, "Not only did MDMA enable me to recover my sanity, it enabled me to recover my soul." Therapists who endorse MDMA say that it does...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behavior: A Crackdown on Ecstasy | 6/10/1985 | See Source »

...candidates see a federal judgeship less as a prestigious and challenging job than as very hard work for low pay. Senator Charles Percy has privately remarked that he has had to offer, the job to ten people just to get one. Says U.S. Court of Appeals Judge Edward Allen Tamm: "Federal judges are working harder than they ever did in private practice, but they never get their heads above water." Worn down by the work load, comparing their salaries ($54,500 to $57,500) with the six-figure incomes of really successful lawyers, a discouraging number of federal district...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Judging the Judges | 8/20/1979 | See Source »

...chosen profession." Young Andrei lost no time in mastering his: by 1942, having graduated with honors in physics from Moscow State University, he went to work in the war industry. After World War II, he studied with the theoretical physicist (and later Nobel laureate) Igor. Tamm. Soon he was at work on the Kremlin's No. 1 priority project: development of the Soviet Union's hydrogen bomb. "When I began working on this terrible weapon, I felt subjectively that I was working for peace, that my work would help foster a balance of power," Sakharov recalled years later...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: PILGRIM OF CONSCIENCE | 2/21/1977 | See Source »

Sakharov's top-secret assignment also included research on industrial uses for thermonuclear energy with Mentor Tamm. There was little life but science-and the mandatory state "supervision" that went with it. For all of the 18 years (1950-68) that he held his top-level security clearance, Sakharov was never without the shadow of a bodyguard, even when he slept or went swimming. There were, however, compensations. He won the Stalin Prize and was thrice awarded the country's highest civilian medal, the Order of the Red Banner of Labor. He was the youngest member ever elected...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: PILGRIM OF CONSCIENCE | 2/21/1977 | See Source »

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