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...often on the dangerous fringe list 20 years ago. Aggressive advancement is the hallmark of American medicine. Yet there is, somewhere, a line to be drawn. Why? New diagnostic tests often give us more information than we can actually use or even interpret. If you do enough MRIs or blood tests, for example, you're bound to find something that's off - and that means getting still more tests. New treatments directed against minor problems, or yielding minor improvements, can be major new expenses. Wrist arthroscopy, a high-tech newcomer to my field, seems to treat problems for which...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Pushing the Envelope with Treatment | 3/6/2007 | See Source »

...spending less time in our zone, our penalty kill has been much better, and our goaltending has been very good,” Donato said. “Those all add up to a better brand of defensive hockey for us.” Yale drew first blood when defenseman Brad Mills netted a power-play score at 12:34 of the opening frame. But the Bulldogs’ one-goal lead did not even last until the first intermission. After sophomore blueliner Brian McCafferty took a shot from the red line on the left side of the Yale...

Author: By Karan Lodha, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Men's Hockey Advances Past ECAC First Round | 3/5/2007 | See Source »

...Police asked for a search warrant after a hiker in a nearby park not far from the Grant home found a plastic bag with rubber gloves, blood stains and metal shavings and brought it to the sheriff's department, says Hackel. Grant's husband Stephen had appeared frequently on local television after his wife's disappearance pleading for her return. But after police discovered the his wife's remains hidden in the garage, Grant fled to northern Michigan, where he was later found wandering shoeless in a snowed-in wooded area. As he was treated for frostbite, Grant admitted...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In Detroit, Rich Crime, Poor Crime | 3/5/2007 | See Source »

...dirt road in Guatemala. Days later, four Guatemalan policemen - including the head of the organized crime investigation unit - were accused of the murders. But before they could be tried for the crimes, the four were assassinated inside their maximum-security prison cell, left face down in a pool of blood, shot with their throats slit. Authorities and opposition politicians in Guatemala say the policemen were part of a group operating within Guatemala's security forces who were responsible for drug trafficking and death-squad style killings. The four were murdered before they could reveal the full extent of their allegedly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Murder Spree in Central America | 3/5/2007 | See Source »

...According to Mansfield, the "starting point" would be Al Fayed's testimony that Diana told him she was afraid for her life. In addition, Mansfield wants the inquest to look into the rumor that Diana was pregnant when she died, why her body was embalmed and questions surrounding the blood samples taken from Henri Paul, the chauffeur who also died in the Paris crash, which showed him over the legal drinking limit. Mansfield also noted that letters sent from Prince Philip to Diana and from Diana to her former butler Paul Burrell would be key pieces of evidence...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Diana Inquest: A Case for Murder? | 3/5/2007 | See Source »

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