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...About the Timing "When will I get back to normal" is a hard question to answer, even for a good doctor

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hair of the Dog | 7/20/2006 | See Source »

...said to have a strong core constituency of African-Americans who rally around her, they did not show up in full force at Tuesday's polls. "Low voter turnout often means that incumbents find themselves in trouble," said Matt Towery, a Georgia Republican pollster. "Had this been a normal turnout race, she would have won," he said. Towery also speculated that McKinney suffered from general voter disenchantment with their elected officials for failing to address issues like the economy and global security." They're taking it out on everybody," he said...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: McKinney's Tight Race | 7/20/2006 | See Source »

...multiple places by massive air bombs that gouge out yawning craters, making for a lengthy and terrifying experience for anyone brave or desperate enough to travel; one new patient had spent eight hours on the road, shuttled by eight separate vehicles, to reach the hospital, a journey that under normal circumstances would take only 20 minutes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Can the Peacekeepers Help? | 7/19/2006 | See Source »

...major Alzheimer's conference in Madrid, has strengthened that link. In one, Swedish researchers looked at 1,173 people over 75 and concluded that people with borderline type 2 diabetes - that is, chronically elevated blood sugar - were about 70% likelier to develop Alzheimer's than those with normal sugar levels. Another study, based in the U.S., looked at the medical records of 22,852 type 2 diabetics, none of whom had any sort of dementia at the outset, and found that the more elevated their blood sugar tended to be, the bigger the risk they'd develop Alzheimer's. Several...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Another Diabetes Problem: Alzheimer's Disease | 7/17/2006 | See Source »

...Mumbaikers share his gloom. Within a day, the city was almost back to normal. The train tracks were cleared, the victims cremated or buried. Commuters jammed station platforms once more. "It was a terrible thing, of course," says Mangesh Tandel, a clerk who had narrowly missed boarding one of the doomed trains, "but life goes on. We are all working class in Bombay, and for us the most important thing is work. There are no communal problems on a train." Look at the rescue efforts, says Tandel, or at the long lines of people who waited outside hospitals to donate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Recurring Nightmare | 7/17/2006 | See Source »

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