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...capital city of Dhaka, where the President's residence was knee-deep in water, streets had been transformed into canals. Boatmen were charging whatever the market would bear to move people to safe ground, but some clung to the roofs of their flooded huts to ward off looters. Ricksha Driver Mohammed Nasser, 18, boasted that he was making $5 a day carrying passengers through flooded streets. He will need the money: the shanty he shared with his mother and sister was washed away...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bangladesh A Country Under Water | 9/19/1988 | See Source »

Doctors have little doubt that crack is driving the new epidemic of drug- affected infants. "When crack cocaine hit Oakland, the number of small, sick babies just went through the roof," says Fulroth. The statistics bear him out. In 1984 some 5% of the newborns at Highland General Hospital, which serves Oakland's rough inner city, were contaminated with the drug. So far this year, about 20% of all babies born at Highland have been afflicted by crack. The problem, however, is not confined to low-income, minority patients. Says Chasnoff: "Our findings cut across all socioeconomic backgrounds...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Crack Comes to the Nursery | 9/19/1988 | See Source »

...activists, charging that RJR's Premier is not a tobacco product but a device that introduces the drug nicotine into the body, have urged the Food and Drug Administration to regulate Reynolds' invention just like any new drug. The Government will decide in December whether Premier's packaging must bear the Surgeon General's warning. Smokers may be put off by Premier's price: 30 cents more a pack than regular brands...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: NEW PRODUCTS: Less Smoke, Plenty of Fire | 9/12/1988 | See Source »

...certainly has an entrepeneurial capability," Shuster says. "He could have made departments across the board suffer the costs of the state's economic cuts. But the choice he made instead was a much more dramatic, tougher decision, that is to pick out parts of the university that would bear the brunt and parts that would remain strong...

Author: By Emily M. Bernstein, | Title: A New Breed of Ivy Presidents | 9/11/1988 | See Source »

...hard to find patients at St. Christopher's who will complain about the lack of honesty when they were in the hospital. Or of the suffering because medication was only given when the pain became too enormous to bear. Or of the indignities forced on the dying. "I saw a man die full of wires and plugs and little bleeping things," says Cancer Patient Ted Hughes, 56. "He was treated like an embarrassment and put in a side room with curtains around his bed." By comparison, says Patient Phyllis Sadler, 87, "I am looked after with such love and kindness...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cicely Saunders: Dying with Dignity | 9/5/1988 | See Source »

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