Word: nose
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...Johnson Jenkins says she smells trouble. Stretching out before her is a vast panorama of blackened slopes, a grim legacy of the fire last August that burned more than 150,000 acres of the Sequoia National Forest. But it isn't the charred timber that makes her wrinkle her nose. The ill odor, she says, is coming from Washington, specifically from President George W. Bush's controversial plan to increase logging in national forests in the name of reducing the risk of fires...
...pulling in his favor - French consumers, whose spending could qualify as patriotic. It's a resilience not unique to France, though. Says Fitoussi: "What we're seeing in the O.E.C.D. economies is the stagnation and decline of investment. The only thing that's prevented U.S. and European economies from nose-diving has been the strength of consumer spending." In France, the consumer outlook has held steady. But spending in November declined 1.7% from the previous month, so analysts are anxiously awaiting December results. German consumers have already surrendered. According to retail giant Metro, 2002 was the worst year for German...
...have more than kept themselves busy despite the inactivity—Hagermen was the third-highest American finisher at a recent Senior World Cup event, and Jakus competed in Hungary. Both sabers were recruited from the fencing hotbed of New York City, right beneath Columbia’s nose...
...travels in extreme wine territory." A former foreign correspondent and UPI bureau chief in Africa, John Platter dropped out of journalism to buy a farm in the South African Cape, then began making his own wine and writing about it. "I was lucky. I just found I had a nose for it," he says. His safari with Erica, also an ex-journalist, to 13 African wine-producing countries was a nostalgic reminder of a 17,000-km honeymoon trip from London to Nairobi via the Sahara Desert and Abidjan, Ivory Coast in a battered Land Rover. The Platters' latest expedition...
...magic bullet against a range of pathogens. Because CpG introduces a nonspecific stimulation of the immune system, Levy feels it has little chance to offer adequate protection. "CpG could end up being as efficient as lighting candles in church," he says. According to Titball, one drawback to the CpG nose spray is that the protective effect starts to wear off after two weeks, so vaccines are still considered the most important defense against bioterrorism. So darpa and Porton Down are also applying Coley's CpG to improve the anthrax vaccine currently used to innoculate U.S. troops. That drug requires...