Word: normally
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Dates: during 2000-2000
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...senior vice president of central operations. "But we're at the mercy of the sellers." Those sellers, on the other hand, are at the mercy of--wow!--no one, and with capacity shortages driving up unregulated wholesale prices as much as 50 to 100 times the normal rate, they're doing quite well. "Owners of power plants can extract monopoly rents," notes Edward Smeloff, executive director of the Pace University Law School Energy Project...
...1990s, the debate between the Baptists (the first three letters stand for beta-amyloid protein) and the Tauists had intensified--and for a while the Tauists appeared to be gaining ground. For one thing, the normal function of beta amyloid (if it had one) remained mysterious. All that scientists knew was that it was secreted by virtually every cell in the body, that it came primarily in two lengths, and that, in the brain, the slightly longer version was more likely to aggregate into plaques...
...contrast, clearly played a critical role in the brain. In its normal form it helps support the axons--long projections that carry signals from one nerve cell to another--holding them together like ties on a railroad track. When tau goes bad and clumps into tangles, the axons shrivel up and die. The case for tau further solidified in 1998, when researchers discovered a form of dementia associated with mutations of the tau gene. People with these mutations did not develop the plaques associated with Alzheimer's disease, but at death, their brains were riddled with tangles...
There's nothing new or mysterious about voyeurism. Television programmers have just rediscovered normal human behavior [TELEVISION, June 26]. From the beginning of time, people have enjoyed watching others. The thrill we get from seeing Survivor is the same thrill that Jimmy Stewart got from secretly observing his neighbors in Rear Window and that parkgoers get from watching lovers neck on a bench. SHERRI CADEAUX Holland, Mich...
...mouth don't stray to the heart. Are doctors giving patients the proper pills? A study shows that while 90% of folks with artificial heart valves are prescribed antibiotics, only 60% of those with less extreme conditions are getting them. And unbelievably, 25% of people with a perfectly normal heart are given antibiotics. Advice: if an echocardiogram doesn't show a heart-valve problem, don't take antibiotics. If it does, demand them...