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...women for eight years, doctors at Boston's Brigham and Women's Hospital and other institutions found no evidence for the assertion. Earlier studies had pointed to the same conclusion, but diehards still think the link may exist. They point out that all the women in the study ate plenty of fat; it was just that high-fat diets generated no more cancer than moderate-fat regimens. Perhaps women who eat negligible amounts of fat do have reduced breast-cancer levels. It's hard to test, since such women are scarce in the U.S. But because high- fat, low-fiber...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Relax, Mrs. Sprat | 11/2/1992 | See Source »

...Even with my feeble understanding of politics, I knew that Reagan wasn't going to be my sort of politician. And the next year, when he declared ketchup to be a vegetable in school lunches, I knew he was the wrong man for the job. For my friends who ate a balanced meal only at school, shriveled hamburgers, tater tots and ketchup just didn...

Author: By Beth L. Pinsker, | Title: Examining a Voting Record | 10/31/1992 | See Source »

...marching up to that slippery patch of the life cycle once known as "the dangerous age." This is the generation of American women that reinvented feminism, wrote Our Bodies, Ourselves, and learned to examine their cervices with mirrors. But can they prevail over menopause -- the hormonal bog that ate up Ur-feminist Simone de Beauvoir and that reportedly reduces sleek Hollywood women to palpitations and tears...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Chronicling The Change | 10/26/1992 | See Source »

Last summer, for instance, the Let's Go staff mangaged to swing a lunch deal with Cafe of India, right next door, says Muneer I. Ahmad '93. "It was a swell partnership. We laughed, we cried, we ate well," he says...

Author: By Molly B. Confer, CAMBRIDGE JOURNAL | Title: Student Groups And Their Haunts | 10/7/1992 | See Source »

...Lies in the interest of the liar, or "The dog ate my homework." Here rest the domains, familiar to everyone, of being on the spot, of feeling guilty, of fearing reprimand, failure or disgrace, and on the other side of the ledger, of wishing to seem more impressive to others than the bald facts will allow. Complicity between liar and auditor rarely occurs in this category; the liar wants to get away with something. If a lie turneth away wrath, or win a job or a date on Saturday night, why not tell it? Because to do so is immoral...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The U.S. Political Campaign: Lies, Lies, Lies | 10/5/1992 | See Source »

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