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That view is echoed by Dr. Michael Silber of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. "It's certainly a minority of Ambien patients who develop problems with sleep eating," says Silber, who first described the effect in a 2002 research article in the journal Sleep Medicine. It generally disappears after the patients stop taking Ambien and--significantly--can also occur in folks who don't take Ambien...
...Iraq is evidence of the futility of toppling Saddam Hussein, consider that the worst repressor of individual freedom in the Middle East--Iran--is still busy fomenting strife among its neighbors. Iran's militant regime is sowing chaos in the Middle East as it goes flat out to develop nuclear weapons. It needs a distracted West and a war-torn Iraq to accomplish that goal...
...fewer broken hips. A companion study found no beneficial effect on the rate of colorectal cancer. But those women were not at any particular risk of colorectal cancer. Other studies have concluded that men and women who have already had one precancerous polyp surgically removed from their intestinal tract develop fewer subsequent polyps if they take calcium supplements. The take-home message? Calcium and vitamin D supplements are no magic bullets, but if you're going to take them, try to take them every day. These latest studies, which are part of the giant U.S. Women's Health Initiative...
...Undergraduate Council (UC) position paper supporting co-educational rooming has been gaining momentum among student groups since it passed nearly unanimously at Sunday’s council meeting. The bill calls for the College to develop a “relatively uniform policy” allowing students to live with members of the opposite gender. The Handbook for Students states that the College does not “ordinarily permit” co-ed rooming groups, but that House Masters may grant exceptions if “the configuration of space ensures a large degree of privacy...
...holdouts, not surprisingly, have been Russia and China. While officials from the two nations have agreed in principle that Iran must not be allowed to develop nuclear weapons and expressed some frustration with Iran's intransigence, they have both been reluctant to act too forcefully or quickly against Tehran. According to U.S. officials, since last Friday, in a series of meetings in New York among the veto-wielding "permanent five" members of the Security Council-the U.S., Great Britain, France, Russia and China-the Russians have pushed for changes in the French-British draft that are, one U.S. official complains...