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...hypertension after controlling for other factors such as diet and smoking. While not disputing the short-term increase in blood pressure and stress hormones found by other studies, one of the authors of the report, Dr. Gary C. Curhan, suggests people who drink a large amount of coffee develop some sort of resistance over time. The study backs up a similar investigation by Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health published in 2002, which found similar results for men. Decaffeinated coffee was found to have very similar results to caffeinated coffee, while the results for tea were inconclusive. The study...

Author: By John R. Macartney, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Coffee Is Safe, HSPH Study Says | 11/14/2005 | See Source »

...where stem cells that occur naturally in the blood are isolated and multiplied through a patented process. A week later, a batch of several million stem cells is returned to Bangkok. These are inserted by surgeons into the patient's arteries or heart, using procedures that Patel helped to develop in the U.S. Patel says that when the cells are released into coronary arteries using an angioplasty catheter, they appear to form new vessels and improve blood flow; when injected directly into the heart with a syringe, they seem to grow into new tissue and improve pumping efficiency. He believes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Take Heart | 11/13/2005 | See Source »

...caps, rising sea levels and perhaps even more intense hurricanes devastating our coasts. Most climate scientists believe the warming is directly related to rising concentrations of atmospheric carbon dioxide that have resulted from burning fossil fuels like petroleum. Instead of increasing our addiction to damaging fossil fuels, we should develop the political will to reduce our use. ALAN F. ARBOGAST DEPARTMENT OF GEOGRAPHY MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY East Lansing, Mich...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Nov. 21, 2005 | 11/13/2005 | See Source »

...where stem cells that occur naturally in the blood are isolated and multiplied through a patented process. A week later, a batch of several million stem cells is returned to Bangkok. These are inserted by surgeons into the patient's arteries or heart, using procedures that Patel helped to develop in the U.S. Patel says that when the cells are released into coronary arteries using an angioplasty catheter, they appear to form new vessels and improve blood flow; when injected directly into the heart with a syringe, they seem to grow into new tissue and improve pumping efficiency. He believes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Take Heart | 11/12/2005 | See Source »

...participated in the Harvard-China Summer Exchange 2005 and visited Fudan during her stay, described wonderful treatment in Shanghai as she and other members of the program were given tours and special lectures by industry leaders. “We got the sense that they were really trying to develop a dialogue with Harvard and they thought it was important to open up more communication and exchange between Chinese students and American students, particularly those at Harvard,” she said. James R. Henry ’06, also a member of the Summer Exchange, said...

Author: By Joyce Y. Zhang, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: University Buys Harvard Textbooks | 11/10/2005 | See Source »

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