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...Francis Drake Hotel the night before she was to address the conclave. "They told me I needed a cast to my knee. I said no. They said I would lose my foot. I said, 'I have to make a speech tomorrow and prefer to lose my foot.'" Harold Stassen, also 88 today, was in the U.S. delegation. The former Governor of Minnesota and perennial presidential hopeful recalls the thrill on June 21 as a plenary session in the city's Opera House received a motion to sign the charter: "Nobody spoke. Somebody said, 'Let's vote...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE U.N. AT 50: WHO NEEDS IT? | 10/30/1995 | See Source »

Other genetics experts argue that the time has come to re-evaluate the approach taken by most gene therapists, and perhaps even to redirect their efforts. Last spring Dr. Harold Varmus, head of the National Institutes of Health, appointed an independent committee of scientists to look into how the NIH spends its gene-therapy research dollars (some $200 million a year) and whether the government is getting its money's worth. "I've been a bit concerned that we weren't fulfilling the promise of gene therapy in any obvious way at this point," Varmus explains. "My intuition tells...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: HAS GENE THERAPY STALLED? | 10/9/1995 | See Source »

Keaton is usually enshrined with Charles Chaplin and Harold Lloyd in silent comedy's holy trinity. In fact, his true film siblings are the old adventure stars Douglas Fairbanks and William S. Hart. Like Fairbanks, Keaton performed gorgeous, reckless stunts; his films were thrillers culminating in wild cyclones (Steamboat Bill, Jr.) and boat disasters (The Navigator). Like Hart, Keaton was the American loner: a dour, improbably heroic figure beneath a hostile...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CINEMA: KEATON THE MAGNIFICENT | 10/9/1995 | See Source »

Dartmouth's president James O. Freedman came in a close second in the Ivy League, receiving $307,725, with Princeton's president Harold Shapiro just behind...

Author: By Jonathan N. Axelrod and Victoria E.M. Cain, S | Title: Rudenstine's Salary Is Average For Presidents | 9/29/1995 | See Source »

...Harold Longley is the new Unix systems manager Longley, who had worked at City Research Supercomputer Co. in Minnesota has extensive experience in UNIX systems programming and management and in UNIX security, according to HASCS director Franklin M. Stern...

Author: By Douglas M. Pravda, | Title: Two New Hires at HASCS | 9/13/1995 | See Source »

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