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Doomsayers predict many French wines are destined to fade away as market pressure from New World competitors increases. Bordeaux, as one of the world's most imitated bouquets, has suffered mightily. But you'll be hard-pressed to see much gloom at this summer's fifth Bordeaux Wine Festival (bordeaux-fete-le-vin.com). In fact, this year, the world's largest wine region has ample grounds to celebrate: American wine pope Robert Parker is one of the many critics who believe the 2005 Bordeaux vintage is the finest in a century, heralding Bordeaux's comeback...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cheers Leader | 6/12/2006 | See Source »

...vaguely pharmaceutical Vitamin Water. Those aren't foods, quite; they're food products. History suggests you might want to wait a few decades or so before adding such novelties to your diet, the substitution of margarine for butter being the classic case in point. My mother used to predict "they" would eventually discover that butter was better for you. She was right: the trans-fatty margarine is killing us. Eat food, not food products...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Six Rules for Eating Wisely | 6/11/2006 | See Source »

Doomsayers predict many French wines are destined to fade away as market pressure from New World competitors increases. Bordeaux, as one of the world's most imitated bouquets, has suffered mightily. But you'll be hard-pressed to see much gloom at this summer's fifth Bordeaux Wine Festival. In fact, this year, the world's largest wine region has ample grounds to celebrate: American wine pope Robert Parker is one of the many critics who believe the 2005 Bordeaux vintage is the finest in a century, heralding Bordeaux's comeback. From June 29 to July 2, some...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cheers Leader | 6/11/2006 | See Source »

...obvious and unfortunate consequences for life on campus. More troubling, however, is what our college experience is teaching us about our relationship to institutions on the whole, particularly when institutional decision-making doesn’t affect the narrow sphere of our activities. If the college years truly predict behavior later in life, then our current habit of abdicating our responsibility to discuss and engage in issues that are bigger than ourselves sets the stage for a future of disassociation from democratic society. Incidentally, the signs are beginning to appear already. We of the DotNet generation are more involved...

Author: By Hannah E. S. wright, | Title: A Self-Reliant Education | 6/7/2006 | See Source »

...treatments are effective in most people with asthma, but they don’t cure people. They’re mostly aimed at symptom relief,” Umetsu says. “If we target NKT cells, better therapies are available.”Umetsu hesitates, however, to predict that an asthma cure is imminent.“I suppose if we figure out a way to eliminate NKT cells in the lungs, that might be a potential way of curing this disease,” Umetsu says, “but that’s just speculation...

Author: By Laurence H. M. holland, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Revolution in the Labs | 6/7/2006 | See Source »

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