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...University of Louisville School of Medicine, and Dr. Jon Jones, now at the Carolinas Medical Center in Charlotte, N.C., seems to have overcome the most formidable challenge of such a procedure--long-term limb rejection. While immune-suppressant drugs have improved the success rate of all kinds of organ transplants, the arm is composed of several different tissues, which trigger different degrees of rejection reactions. Doctors have been fighting them all with an intensive, three-pronged drug attack that includes steroids, which Scott is required to down every day for life...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: High Five for a New Hand | 8/28/2000 | See Source »

...missed a pension check or wanted Gore to call back and pray with them. Once someone stopped the 36-year-old Congressman in a grocery-store parking lot with 11-year-old Karenna at his side. The constituent wanted to thank him for making it easier to get an organ transplant. "I was at that moment struck by how he really impacted people," she says...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Democratic Convention: The Daughter Also Rises | 8/21/2000 | See Source »

Before we start giving you the details, there's a little background you need to know about your skin. (We promise to keep the chemistry to a minimum.) Considered by scientists to be an organ, the skin weighs 9 lbs. on average and has three main layers: the epidermis, the dermis and the hypodermis. No thicker than a page in this magazine, the outermost layer, the epidermis, is filled with layers of specialized skin cells known as keratinocytes. When these cells, which start out plump with water in the deepest layer of the epidermis, migrate to the skin's surface...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Face-Lift In A Jar? | 8/14/2000 | See Source »

...Novartis Research Foundation's new Genomics Institute, Schultz is boning up on genetics. But he also keeps one foot planted in pure science. His lab at the Scripps Research Institute, where he starts his day by 5 a.m., uses combinatorial methods to study everything from nanotechnology to organ regeneration. His scientists have invented 80 new amino acids and used them to make proteins seen nowhere in nature, and they are trying to create an artificial bacterium with two extra bases in its DNA and five unnatural amino acids in its proteins. "The question is," says Schultz, "Why are there only...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Combinatorial Chemistry: Doing It Nature's Way | 8/7/2000 | See Source »

...George Soros b) a Pizza Hut ad c) cosmonaut organ sales d) $20 that didn't come from the Russian...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: News Quiz Jul. 24, 2000 | 7/24/2000 | See Source »

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