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...need to treat our students as adults,” he said...

Author: By Jessica E. Vascellaro, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Head History Tutor Questions Grading | 2/4/2002 | See Source »

...Kelly McMasters, a surgical oncologist at the University of Louisville, is less equivocal about the need for mammograms. "We have the technology to find cancer early and treat it. Not to use that technology is totally irresponsible...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mammograms: Can We Live Without Them? | 1/25/2002 | See Source »

...also treat Larry Summers with kid gloves. He had a deadline to meet, and he’s provocatively not meeting it—without asking for an extension. If you do that for your papers at the end of the term, what happens to your grade...

Author: By Andree Pages, | Title: Show Compassion for Harvard's Workers | 1/23/2002 | See Source »

...legal abortion is legislated away or ruled off the table, we're gong to see a return of the "back-alley butchers" made infamous during the court battles leading up to Roe. Women will die - women whose lives might have been saved by sane, realistic abortion laws that treat women like grown-ups, rather than as overgrown wards of the state...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Roe v. Wade v. Bush | 1/22/2002 | See Source »

Taken from embryos only days old, stem cells are nature's blank slates, capable of developing into any one of the more than 200 cell types found in the human body. Scientists hope these cells may someday be used to treat a range of degenerative diseases, including Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and diabetes. But using human embryos for research poses ethical problems, and until last year federal funding for such work was blocked. After much soul searching, President Bush decided last summer to allow federal grants for research that used only the 60 or so stem-cell lines that have...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Our A To Z Guide To Advances In Medicine | 1/21/2002 | See Source »

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