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The Year In Medicine From A To Z
From teen suicides to flu-shot shortages to the Vioxx recall, 2004 proved to be a very busy year
By DAVID BJERKLIE; ALICE PARK; SORA SONG

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Dec. 6, 2004
A AIDS When the epidemic first emerged in the West more than 20 years ago, AIDS was circulating primarily among young gay men. Today, a record 39.4 million people, nearly half of them women, are infected with HIV, according to the latest report from the Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS. The virus moved deeper into Asia and Eastern Europe, and new cases arose in every region of the globe, evidence of the need for more effective programs for treatment and prevention, such as halting the transmission from mother to child. Breast feeding accounts for as much as half of new infections among children in...


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Parents Behaving Badly
Feb. 21, 2005
If you could walk past the teachers' lounge and listen in, what sorts of stories would you hear? An Iowa high school counselor gets a call from a parent protesting the C her child received on an assignment. "The parent argued every point in the essay," recalls the counselor, who soon realized why the mother was so upset about the grade. "It became apparent that she'd written it." ...

Bible-Belt Catholics
Feb. 14, 2005
Eight years ago, a handful of Roman Catholic families in Huntersville, a suburb of Charlotte, N.C., started a new parish. The home of their church, St. Mark, was a bowling alley. Our Lady of the Lanes, as they jokingly called it, was an apt symbol of the scarcity--and supple ingenuity--of Catholics in a region known as the buckle of the Protestant Bible Belt. ....

The 25 Most Influential Evangelicals in America
Feb. 7, 2005
There is no pope, no central ruling body. American Evangelicalism--with its home-schooling Fundamentalists and PTA-attending megachurch moms, its neo-Calvinists and Pentecostals, its multiple denominations and thousands of unaffiliated churches--seems to defy unity, let alone hierarchy....

Grow Up? Not So Fast
Jan. 24, 2005
The years from 18 until 25 and even beyond have become a distinct and separate life stage, a strange, transitional never-never land between adolescence and adulthood in which people stall for a few extra years, putting off the iron cage of adult responsibility that constantly threatens to crash down on them. They're betwixt and between. You could call them twixters....

The New Science of Happiness
Jan. 17, 2005
So, what has science learned about what makes the human heart sing? More than one might imagine--along with some surprising things about what doesn't ring our inner chimes. Take wealth, for instance, and all the delightful things that money can buy....

TIME 100: Winston Churchill
Apr. 13, 1998
The political history of the 20th century can be written as the biographies of six men: Lenin, Stalin, Hitler, Mao Zedong, Franklin Roosevelt and Winston Churchill. The first four were totalitarians who made or used revolutions to create monstrous dictatorships....





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