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Dan Gookin is a computer book author who wrote the first ...For Dummies books including DOS for Dummies and PCs for Dummies, establishing the design and voice of the long-running series that followed, incorporating humor and jokes into a format for beginners on any subject. He also is a member of the Coeur d'Alene City Council.
In the Patient Zero study, the average length of time between sexual contact and the onset of symptoms was 10 + 1 ⁄ 2 months. [8] While Shilts' book does not make such an allegation, the rumour that Dugas was the principal disseminator of the virus became widespread. [15] In 1988, Andrew R. Moss published an opposing view in The New York ...
Alpha Books, publisher of the Complete Idiot's Guides, is a member of Penguin Group. It began as a division of Macmillan. Pearson Education acquired Macmillan General Reference (MGR) from Simon & Schuster in 1998 and retained the line while the rest of MGR was sold to IDG Books. [1] Alpha moved from Pearson Education to Penguin Group in 2003 ...
Catch the Sperm is available in seven versions: . CTS Style 1 (2001) CTS Style 2 (2002) Duel (2003) Carnival (2003) Summer (2003) Swiss Soccer (2003) Christmas (2003). Each version has its own theme, sperm characters, virus villains, and screen graphics, some of which seem to have been designed to parody the original images .
Wiley has also launched an interactive online course with Learnstreet based on its popular book, Java for Dummies, 5th edition. [7] A spin-off board game, Crosswords for Dummies, was produced in the late 1990s. [8] The game is similar to Scrabble, but instead of letter tiles, players draw short strips of cardboard containing pre-built English ...
The book was published shortly after Willner's medical license was revoked for, among other things, treating an AIDS patient with ozone therapy. [ 2 ] The following month, on October 28, 1994, in a press conference at a Greensboro, North Carolina hotel, Willner jabbed his finger with blood he said was from an HIV-infected patient.
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Inventing the AIDS Virus received a positive review from David Crowe in Natural Life, [5] mixed reviews from Tina Neville in Library Journal and Richard Horton in The New York Review of Books, [6] [7] and negative reviews from the sociologist Steven Epstein in The Washington Post, [8] the physician June E. Osborn in The New York Times Book Review, [9] and Phyllida Brown in New Scientist. [10]