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Your report on steroid use in professional sports, "Baseball Takes a Hit" [March 15], included a photograph of Organon USA Inc.'s product Durabolin. The drug, which was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the control of metastatic breast cancer in women, is no longer marketed in the U.S. and has not been for some time. We voluntarily discontinued marketing and selling it about three years ago. Organon never produced or promoted Durabolin for the purpose of athletic-performance enhancement. By including a photo of Durabolin, TIME erroneously and unfairly suggested that the company has contributed to the problem of unlawful steroid use.
PATRICK J. OSINSKI, VICE PRESIDENT AND GENERAL COUNSEL
ORGANON USA INC. Roseland, N.J.
Wooing the Diehards
Joe Klein's Column "How To Win Over A Nation of Partisans" [April 12] was exactly on the mark. Partisan hysteria from both right and left in this campaign has reached a stage at which the linchpins of American political progress reasonable dialogue and compromise are nearly nonexistent.
BOB JONES
Woodstock, N.Y.
Perhaps the current partisan acrimony arose partly from the Federal Communications Commission's elimination in the 1980s of the fairness doctrine in radio and television broadcasting. If broadcasters and talk-show hosts had to make an earnest effort to present both sides of an issue, maybe voters could find a middle ground.
DOUGLAS A. CLARK
South San Francisco
Klein was dead wrong in advising John Kerry's campaign to move to the middle and stay away from "the usual partisan claptrap." Why should the Democrats be the goody-goody party while President Bush and the Republicans govern like right-wing extremists with no apologies to anyone? The Democrats need to fight back hard, get down and dirty and remind their supporters that the election of 2000 was stolen. The Democrats have turned the other cheek once too often. Now it's time to hit back, and hard.
FRANK CHILLE
Cherry Hill, N.J.
In his Column, Klein stated that "The Republican strategy this year appears to be hardball." But for nearly four years the Democrats have barraged Bush with name calling and personal attacks. I can't understand how anyone can consider the President the aggressor in the current partisan unpleasantness or how Kerry's below-the-belt blows are counterpunching. It's like blaming the victim.
ROBERT WATERS
Des Moines, Iowa
Just Call Him Humble Bill
William F. Buckley has always seemed wrongheaded to me, but I've had to admire his articulateness. His answer to the first of your "10 Questions" [April 12], however, included the phrase "humble folk like you and I," instead of "like you and me." One hopes this grammatical bobble was not an unintended error. Or is this Buckley's folksy way of uniting with the masses against ivory-tower academics? Does this mark a late-in-life turn to grammatical populism by Buckley? I am accustomed to conservative solipsism but not conservative solecism. Humble folk like I expect more from unhumble folk like he.
MICHAEL GRIFFITH
Cincinnati, Ohio
Buckley responds: I intended a little fun, in the context of teasing the pretensions of left-wing faculty. Archie Bunker-talk can come in handy. It is used as "yassir" might have been used, to suggest subordinate status.
Mexican-American Values
In "New Patriots In Our Midst," Michael Elliott contested Harvard professor Samuel Huntington's view that Mexican Americans are not interested in assimilating into U.S. society [April 12]. I reject Huntington's unfounded fears about immigration in general and Mexican Americans in particular, whether they are new immigrants or those of us whose roots reach centuries deep into U.S. history. Perhaps Huntington should venture outside academia's cocoon and learn to appreciate the patriotism and contributions made to America by those who are not Anglo-Protestant. American Hispanics serve as an important conduit to all of Latin America, which is probably the U.S.'s last potential ally in a world so much against us.
SATURN NINO NORIEGA
Alamogordo, N.M.
Rather than replacing Mexican culture with U.S. culture, Mexican Americans are integrating the two, creating a biculture that celebrates both Cinco de Mayo and the Fourth of July. It's the best of several worlds, all in one place. Mexican Americans can enrich us, just as the Italians, Irish, Germans, Danes and others have. That multiethnicity is what makes America great. I suggest that Professor Huntington search elsewhere for elements that corrode U.S. culture. He might start with Jerry Springer and some TV shows that ridicule our core values.
MIGUEL GOMEZ WINEBRENNER
Chicago
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