Word: helene
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...Helen Clark of Kennebunk, Maine, is a smuggler of sorts. At 77, the retired registered nurse doesn't look the part. She still does volunteer work--administering flu shots, cutting toenails and organizing blood drives--at the Southern Maine Medical Center, where she worked for more than four decades, first in the maternity ward and later in the operating room...
...effect on a country. Having fled his wife Vi (Melissa Jaffer) six years before, Sandy returns to Millers Point to find a changed order: son Matt (Christopher Pitman) is a union reformer who speaks of peaceful assemblies and containment, not pickets and work stoppages; commodity trader daughter Belle (Helen Dallimore) sleeps with one of the men who calls in the dockland dogs...
...There has to be hope in a community, and I think we have that now," says Helen Coleman, who has lived in the 77th for 35 years and works for a local nonprofit organization, trying to bring businesses and leisure facilities for kids to the neighborhood. She says new injunctions against gangsters gathering in public have reduced the number of them hanging out on the streets--and the resulting shootings she used to hear. She has seen relations between the police and the community improve too, and she says Bratton deserves a lot of the credit for that. "The vibes...
They didn't delve into biochemistry, though, and it turns out they probably didn't get the stages right either. In the 1970s psychiatrist Helen Singer Kaplan, who founded the Human Sexuality Program at New York Weill Cornell Medical Center, pointed out that before you get physically aroused, you have to feel sexual desire--a statement that seems pretty obvious. It's also pretty obvious to anyone who has been in a heterosexual relationship that men and women tend to experience sexuality somewhat differently. So where Masters and Johnson saw sexual arousal as a linear progression toward orgasm, researchers like...
...unnecessary these ongoing measures may be," says the official. "That's the problem in the post--Sept. 11 world. The only certainty is that you can never be too careful." --With reporting by Timothy J. Burger, Sally B. Donnelly, Viveca Novak, Elaine Shannon and Douglas Waller/Washington, Bruce Crumley/Paris and Helen Gibson/London