Word: dependables
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...predicament is improving. Reader's Digest and McCall's, among other magazines, run ads for incontinence products, though Modern Maturity rejects them as not "upbeat" enough. Television networks have eased restrictions. June Allyson, whose mother has the problem, is currently appearing in TV and print ads for Depend disposable pads and undergarments. Manufacturer Kimberly-Clark estimates that sales of all such products will reach $200 million this year. Procter & Gamble's Attends, once sold only to institutions, went on sale to the public nationwide last year, after consumers urged the company to make its Pampers in an adult size...
...preference would be not to come back after the sabbatical I plan to take next year," Brinkley said. "Of course, my plans depend on what positions are available elsewhere, so I may well be back...
There is also concern that tapping the deep aquifers will cause smaller pockets of water closer to the surface to disappear, along with scattered oases, on which Bedouin tribes depend for survival. "You may completely depopulate a large area of desert and end a way of life that has existed for millenniums," says Debney...
...increasing use of wiretaps and tapes, says another investigator, is "like opening a Pandora's box of the Mafia's top secrets and letting them all hang out in the open." Both top Mafia trials will depend heavily on tapes as evidence, as have numerous RICO cases around the country. The FBI's bugging has increased sharply, from just 90 court-approved requests in 1982 to more than 150 in each of the past two years. The various investigating agencies, including state and local police, have found novel places to hide their bugs: in a Perrier bottle, a stuffed...
...guess they have become a $3 billion-to-$4 billion-a-year business. But their cost, often $300 to $500 per bed per day, puts them beyond the reach of the innumerable addicts who do not have employers or insurance companies willing to pay. Clinics and residential programs that depend on a mix of private donations and government funding are jammed to overflowing; tales of three-month waiting lists to get in are common. Last year Washington counted a mere 269,711 people in treatment programs that receive government assistance, and federal funding for treatment has actually been reduced...