Word: guess
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...decades, MS researchers have been forced to make their best guess as to what causes the disease, which affects 300,000 Americans, mostly women, between their 20s and 40s. Since 1990, thanks to work done in Hafler's lab, however, they've known that MS sufferers have hyperactive T cells - cells that cruise the body looking for bacteria, viruses and other pathogens - a condition that triggers an inflammatory response and destroys the protective myelin sheath around nerve cells in the central nervous system, which connects the brain and body. This can lead to gradual nerve damage and weakening...
...usually overcome. Americans generally, but sports fans especially, are a forgive-and-forget bunch, for whom hope always springs eternal for next season, regardless of their team's performance the previous year. Remember how the public disparaged Kobe Bryant when he stood trial for rape in 2003? Guess who had the NBA's best-selling jersey last season...
...registered Republican for 30 years before Bush and his henchmen hijacked the GOP. I guess that makes me the enemy now, but even so, what is Coulter trying to prove? I couldn't care less whether Coulter thinks she is more of a man than any liberal, since she certainly is not a lady! I care about the qualities of the gop, which once had a foundation in integrity, honesty and manners. Coulter is a poor substitute for Paris Hilton in entertainment value, and she is turning a lot of us old fogies off with her belligerence in the name...
...your favorite video game character? Are any based on yourself, even a little? -Deanna Trevethan, York, PennsylvaniaThat is a difficult question because I don't really have a favorite-though I have been making Mario for a very long time. I guess it is possible that I put some of my own personality into...
...reduction in the U.S. combat presence would probably produce one clear benefit: a lower U.S. casualty rate. But a chilling truth is that as the U.S. death toll declined, the Iraqi one would almost surely soar. Just how many Iraqis would die if the U.S. withdrew is anyone's guess, but almost everyone who has studied it believes the current rate of more than a thousand a month would spike dramatically. It might not resemble Rwanda, where more than half a million people were slaughtered in six months in 1994. But Iraq could bleed like the former Yugoslavia did from...