Word: processing
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...school. He didn't walk in the door until 20 minutes to 8 that night." "Did you get upset?" asks Cardis. "I did, but I tried not to." "Did you forgive him, or are you still working on it?" "Still working on it." "That's appropriate. It's a process," Cardis says. He pulls out a set of flash cards bearing positive legends such as "Choose to forgive rather than getting even." The flash cards are familiar to Bell from last year--as were forgiveness homework assignments and forgiveness refrigerator magnets and lessons from Cardis and Enright's 23-page...
...aircraft that caused the Italian cable-car tragedy [JUSTICE, March 15]. Some of us know the huge adrenaline rush of low flying. It is addictive, and the faster and lower the better. Sensations are heightened in valleys, with mountainsides just off the wing tips. It is a visual flying process and certainly no place for inept pilots. This is no place for ad hoc or reckless flying. There can be no excuses: there is no escape from this ultimate responsibility. There is no air-traffic controller, no guardian angel. Low-flying accidents are usually fatal and are always traumatic...
...learn, by trial and error, to control a type of brain waves called slow cortical potentials. By hooking the patients up to a computer via an electroencephalogram, the researchers taught two ALS sufferers to mentally signal the computer to pick out letters on a screen, spelling out messages. The process is agonizingly slow--the average pace is about two characters a minute--but it should eventually improve. And compared with utter silence, it must seem blistering...
Diabetes can kill its victims in all manner of nasty ways. The complications include heart disease, stroke and kidney failure--and these are just a few of the ills that can result from the body's inability to process sugar...
...stay in circulation: the dangers are real, but they're outweighed by the drug's lifesaving potential. But even if the FDA goes along with the decision--which it need not but generally does--the very fact that the meeting took place raised questions about the agency's approval process. Rezulin got its thumbs-up via the so-called fast-track system, which slashes through some of the FDA's red tape in order to get an important medication into patients' hands quickly. Drug companies love it, since it gets profits rolling in sooner...