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...never forget your face or how you like your veggie burgers cooked. Sometimes he'll have my burgers on the grill long before I get close enough to ask for them. Only mothers and Winston always seem to make the food just right every time. Despite the heat and hard work, he is the only Harvard person I known that I can count on daily for a smile...

Author: By Gabriel B. Eber, | Title: Those I Will Not Forget | 5/16/1997 | See Source »

Harvard eased its way to a second place finish in its preliminary heat, trying to conserve itself for the afternoon's all important grand finale...

Author: By Matthew F. Delmont, SPECIAL TO THE CRIMSON | Title: Men's Lightweights Take Easterns | 5/14/1997 | See Source »

...process occurring on Planet Earth. TIME's latest article on the possibility of life originating on some of the moons in our solar system is another extension of this false hope of finding life by means of a chance process. Your story says "all the moons lacked was the heat needed to get biological chemistry going." Life is much more complex than this. The statement made by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory that "we have organic chemicals mixed into a bath of water. That's a recipe for life" is absurd. The idea that a chemical cocktail stimulated by heat...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: May 12, 1997 | 5/12/1997 | See Source »

...head coach of the Indiana Pacers. But at a reported $4.5 million a year, along with part ownership and a promise to succeed president Donnie Walsh, the 40 year-old Bird will be much more than the Pacers' coach. Like Pitino and the Celtics and Pat Riley and the Heat, the very identity of the Pacers is now indistinguishable from that of Larry Bird. Which is exactly how the Pacers like it. The self-described "hick from French Lick" is an institution in Indiana, nearly to the degree he has been in Boston. Yet it is perhaps fitting that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Goodbye, Larry | 5/8/1997 | See Source »

...Huich'on kindergarten in central North Korea, the starving children appear almost skeletal. Nurses in Pyongyang hospitals can see their breath because the buildings have no heat. U.S. Congressman Tony Hall, on a visit to North Korea, spotted a teenage girl, so malnourished she looked like a six- or seven-year-old, picking weeds and grass to eat. Emergency food shipments from China, South Korea, Europe and the U.S. are being rushed in, but U.S. intelligence agencies warn that not enough will arrive in time to prevent tens of thousands from starving to death. North Korea, says World Food Program...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: READY TO IMPLODE? | 5/5/1997 | See Source »

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