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...further risk of contracting asbestosis. But it will do little to help those already exposed to the asbestos dust. Asbestosis and related cancers may not develop until 30 years after exposure to the particles, but once they do, they are painful and often fatal. "He hurt with every breath he took, because his lungs were torn and scarred on the inside from breathing asbestos fibers," said Mrs. Robert Thomas of her husband, who died five months...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Death from Dust | 1/28/1974 | See Source »

...expectations. "I really think this is going to turn things around," said one "People are sick and tired of all the grubby sneaking around that's been going on. We're going to take all that and put it right out into the open. LOVE will be like a breath of fresh...

Author: By William England, | Title: Love Thy Neighbor | 1/22/1974 | See Source »

This is what is meant when Hornier says that "merger is not the important or relevant issue." And this is what is meant when she and President Bok announce a new committee to study such things as sex blind admissions and women's education, but say in the same breath that the committee is specifically not to concern itself with merger...

Author: By Emily Wheeler, | Title: Is Merger Relevant Yet? | 1/18/1974 | See Source »

Floating Residency. "Our sound is flowing," explains French Horn Player Barry Benjamin from behind a bristling walrus mustache. "It would be ideal if we never had to breathe-although Olivier's breathing never harmed his Hamlet." Even pausing for breath, the Dorian has achieved an increasingly secure rank as one of chamber music's most sparkling and eloquent ensembles. In 1969 Brooklyn College appointed its members to posts on the music faculty. At about the same time, the State University of New York assigned the group to a "floating residency" consisting of one-to four-day concert-lecture...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: The Dorian Mode | 12/24/1973 | See Source »

THIS KIND of thing gets tiresome as soon as the film begins, but gradually the philosophical gruel becomes downright insidious. If one actually were to try to excavate one idea from Siddhartha, it might be that "everything changes," (they also say that "everything returns" in the same breath--the logic isn't clear) "like the river"--a direct steal from Heraclitus's idea that one never steps into the same river twice. At any rate the logic of the film reveals that one should not fight time, or chase wealth, but live in the present and for the moment. There...

Author: By Richard Turner, | Title: Nirvana's Last Stand | 12/7/1973 | See Source »

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