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...kits as a portable source of protein. But a global scramble for bluefin tuna and the world's changing eating habits is threatening the sea's stock of the species. Environmentalists and marine biologists predict that this year approximately 50,000 tons of tuna will be caught in the Med. That represents thousands of jobs - at least 5,000 in Spain's traditional tuna-trapping business alone - and over 50% of the global market for bluefin tuna, a staple of the world's sushi restaurants. Appetite But the jubilation of Sevilla and his colleagues may not last. Like many...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Mediterranean's Tuna Wars | 7/16/2006 | See Source »

...Were Cervantes ever to sail his boat around the Mediterranean's 46,000-km coastline, he would hear similar tales in languages from Arabic to Italian. The 22 countries that border the Med face a battle over resources that raises a stark question: To what extent can traditional lifestyles and economic activities coexist with a global appetite for the produce of the Mediterranean region? Few events so eloquently capture the tussle between international commerce and the locals over the Mediterranean's resources as the annual summer hunt for bluefin tuna. Much of the Med's tuna is no longer caught...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Mediterranean's Tuna Wars | 7/16/2006 | See Source »

...Army surgeon general as reported by Miles, "an anesthesiologist repeatedly dropped a 2-lb. bag of intravenous fluid on a patient; a nurse deliberately delayed giving pain medication, and medical staff fed pork to Muslim patients." Doctors were also tasked at Abu Ghraib with "Dietary Manip (monitored by med)," in other words, using someone's food intake to weaken or manipulate them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How Doctors Got Into the Torture Business | 6/23/2006 | See Source »

...creation of several other popular television shows and that was born while he was still an undergraduate living in Eliot House.‘YOU CAN GET PAID TO DO THIS?’Cuse arrived at Harvard from the Putney School in Vermont as a pre-med, but he soon realized his calling was elsewhere.“I had gone to this boarding school where biology consisted of being able to tell the difference between a Black Birch and a Staghorn Sumac,” he says. “And I found myself in introductory chemistry with...

Author: By Reed B. Rayman, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Carlton Cuse | 6/5/2006 | See Source »

...their take-home midterm and received zeros, according to a Crimson article.These incidents caused little stir on campus, but for some, they exposed a competitive atmosphere at the College that can push students to cheat in extreme circumstances.Bradford P. Stoner ’81, who was a pre-med student in Quincy House, says that he remembers a prevailing “intense concern” at the time, particularly among pre-meds, that some students were “bending rules.” “There was a general sense that Harvard students were honest?...

Author: By Claire M. Guehenno, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: The Same As It Ever Was | 6/5/2006 | See Source »

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