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jordan 10,The Hard Truth About Diabetes Many readers applauded
our Sept. four story on diabetes. Your article was straightforward
and educational, and I hope people will take it to heart, wrote a
nurse. Several individuals vowed to begin taking preventive
measures at as soon as; 1, after studying the story, went for a
walk. A mother wrote and shared her ordeal: Try watching your child
use a lancing device on his sweet small hands numerous times a day,
when your parenting instinct screams, 'Don't touch that, it is
sharp!' ããDiagnosing Diabetes
I lastly recognized that I'm opening the door to poisoning by sugar
and becoming diabetic. Your stories The Growing Diabetes Crisis and
Helping to Break Poor Habits had been what I needed to study
(Society & the Arts, Sept. four). Unlike many technical
articles, these had been short, clear and informative. I've turned
over a new leaf (of lettuce) and will never again add sugar to my
diet. At the age of 55, I began to have blurred vision and
unquenchable thirst. Now I have an informed understanding of my
doctor's prognosis that I had opened the door for diabetes. Because
of these excellent articles, I have a guide to follow each
day.Carole Nelson--Ventura, CaliforniaWhen I read about the jump in
the incidence of diabetes over the last decade, I looked at the
potato chip in my hand in horror, put on my shoes and went to get a
walk. Thanks for a timely reminder.Elizabeth Ray--Cedar Rapids,
IowaDiabetes is so widespread in our part of the world, yet so
little is known about it. In the rural areas it often goes
undiagnosed. Your story informs people about causes and preventive
measures, and I thank you. In the long run those educated about the
disease may help fight it in our rural communities. I hope that
science progresses fast enough to find a cure, but after learning
about the disease and knowing people in my family who are diabetic,
I've started taking preventive measures.Bikal Kumar
Pokharel--Katmandu, NepalI found your post objective and truly
informative, but it made me cry. I am diabetic and have been so for
eight years. I am almost 18 years old, have learned to live with my
illness and desperately want to have a great life. I try to be
optimistic, yet when I read phrases such as the silent killer and
that people diagnosed at a young age could have terrible
complications by the age of 30 or 40, I got really scared. I am
well aware of the dangers I am in, but I did not want to be
reminded.Hara Tsami--Messene, GreeceDiabetes has long been a
misunderstood disease, and there is a true need to educate the
public. Since the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
statistics you cite had been limited to individuals 18 years and
older, they did not include the children who also have type-2
diabetes and, more important to me, the 1 million Americans who
have type 1, an equally serious and complicated form of the
disease. Each year more than 30,000 Americans are newly diagnosed
with type 1. As the father of a daughter (diagnosed at 10, now 32)
with this devastating form of the disease, I know firsthand the
complications she can expect in her life- time if we do not find a
cure. While insulin does allow individuals with type 1 to live, it
is not a cure and does not prevent life-threatening complications
like blindness, kidney failure, heart attack, stroke and limb
amputations. In order to survive, my daughter must take daily
multiple injections of insulin and test her blood by pricking her
finger six or more occasions each day. While trying to balance
insulin injections with the amount of their food intake, people
with type 1 must constantly be prepared for potential hypoglycemic
(low blood sugar) and hyperglycemic (high blood sugar) reactions,
both of which are life-threatening.Ross CooleyChairman of the
BoardJuvenile Diabetes Foundation InternationalNew York, New YorkI
applaud you for your article on diabetes. I am a registered nurse
who deals daily with patients suffering the numerous complications
of the disease. It is unfortunately 1 that many individuals take
lightly, not understanding how serious its long-term consequences
can be. Your article was simple and educational, and I hope people
will study it and take it to heart. I wish all newly diagnosed
diabetics could come and see some of the patients I've taken care
of who are blind, bilateral-leg amputees in kidney failure because
they let their diabetes control them.Heidi S. Vawdrey--Provo,
UtahThank you for such a timely and informative article. Last year
both my parents had been diagnosed with type-2 diabetes and would
often pose questions I couldn't answer. Thanks to NEWSWEEK, I'm
more informed and in a better position to help.Rose Mas--Sunrise,
Florida?Gracias, Intel? Your article A Silicon Republic tried to
portray the Intel company as the savior of the Costa Rican economy
(Business, Aug. 28). In reality the situation is scandalous. Here
is a rich and powerful company that doesn't pay taxes to a country
that desperately needs the money. These are old practices. And
experience shows this type of policy only deepens the dependency of
Latin America on the United States while widening the gap between
rich and poor countries. It is shameful that multinational
companies take advantage of the desperation of Third World
countries.Oscar Mejia--Sagamihara, JapanCosta Rica has not been
called a banana republic for about 50 years, and the introduction
of Intel has certainly not made it into a Silicon Republic. You
should have described this nation as one of the few Latin American
countries that pride themselves on their truly democratic
institutions, the absence of armies and their high level of
educational, industrial, economic and social statistics. It is true
that the 2,000 workers of Intel enjoy higher wages than any worker
did a few years ago, but so do all the other workers. The lowest
classes have been able to improve their lives because of Costa
Rica's upward-moving economy. But Intel had nothing to do with
that. We resent being called a silicon republic.Alice
Raine--Alajuela, Costa RicaRussia's Troubled Waters Vladimir Putin,
a man who built his political prestige on his career as a KGB
officer, apparently didn't care enough to shorten his vacation,
return to the Kremlin and take care of the ongoing Kursk tragedy
(Into Troubled Waters, Europe, Sept. 4). Whether he likes the idea
or not, Putin has let the Russian military down.Bernard J.
Henry--Garches, FranceAccepting History Your story Japan's Art of
War was excellent (Society & the Arts, Sept. four). It is sad
that so many artists willingly supported the war effort by drawing
militaristic propaganda pictures. This story sheds light on a dark
period in history and helps us to face our past. But certainly
reluctance to confront history is not a Japanese monopoly. Remember
the much-scaled-down Enola Gay exhibit at the Smithsonian
Institution?Tetsuo Aoki--Yokosuka, JapanI don't blame the painters
who did work in praise of the Japanese Empire. They had families to
protect. Youth who criticize war supporters don't understand what
happened to dissidents.Naomi Haga--Osaka, JapanYour post quotes the
motto put a lid on something that stinks. With such sayings,
Japanese people will never confront their past. And today's society
is built with the same debilitating values that brought the darkest
periods of history: blind discipline and respect to hierarchy,
incapacity to face and discuss problems, and lack of personal
opinion. When a nation remains passive when faced with propaganda,
nostalgia for imperialism and pure-race ideology, it is an
accomplice to the modern-day problems.Franck Peret--Tokyo, JapanThe
suggestion that the biography Hirohito and the Making of Modern
Japan would be myth-shattering for most Japanese is not only
misleading, it is incorrect. What Herbert P. Bix writes about has
been widely known in Japanese-language documents for decades.
Implying that most Japanese had been unaware of the responsibility
of Emperor Hirohito to get a war fought in his name is an insult to
their intelligence.Ryann Connell--Tokyo, JapanThe Extreme
Environment Your post If You Can't Take the Heat (Society & the
Arts, Aug. 7) clearly describes a pattern of increasingly frequent
extreme climatic events in numerous parts of the world. However,
you fail to acknowledge explicitly that these global changes have a
probable human cause. According to the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change, such occurrences may be a symptom of increasing
concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere due largely to
the burning of fossil fuels. I was disappointed that you did not
address the possibility of mitigating global climatic change by
reducing carbon dioxide emissions. As major carbon dioxide
polluters, developed nations like the United States do have the
power to prevent irreversible changes to our climate.Andy
JoyceResearch ClimatologistUniversity of DurhamDurham, EnglandU.S.
Troops in Japan As an American airman stationed in Japan I was
troubled to study your rather sensational and inaccurate account of
U.S. service members on the island of Okinawa (So Long, Soldiers,
Asia, Jul. 24). Rather than make us out to be uneducated, alcoholic
rubes on a two-year tour with nothing better to do than fight and
impregnate local women, you should have talked to the scores of
servicemen and servicewomen who are bettering themselves through
off-duty college education, volunteering with orphanages and
beautification projects and giving everyday assistance to the
Okinawan community. And while the sidebar on fatherless children is
a sad one, what about all the successful intercultural marriages
between Okinawan women and servicemen? Aren't there a lot of
fatherless children in the States as well? While the actions of a
few members of our armed services have tarnished our image, we are
not all ignorant troublemakers.Brendan C. Vargas--Misawa, JapanI am
totally against any reduction or withdrawal of U.S. troops from
Japan. Japanese people born following World War II have never
experienced a compulsory draft or any kind of military draft, and I
could never endure the idea that our beloved ones would be sent to
the battlefield. This may sound very rude but, to me, U.S. troops
are mercenary soldiers. They are indispensable, and we are obliged
to cover any necessary cost for it.Yuko Nakano--Tokyo,
JapanPortraits of Asia I feel very honored to be mentioned in your
article Women on the Rise in the NEWSWEEK Special Issue The New
Asia. (Jul. 25) However, you give me too much credit. I am not the
only one who is revolutionizing attitudes toward museums and
promoting the idea of corporate and individual philanthropy, which
is new to Indonesia. A whole group of individuals has been involved
in doing this. Also, the Indonesian Archives Building Gajah Mada is
not our leading history museum. That honor must surely go to the
Indonesian National Museum.Tamalia AlisjahbanaExecutive
Director,Indonesian Archives Building Gajah MadaJakarta,
IndonesiaIn your post titled NGOs about new idealism in Asia,
NEWSWEEK described Malaysian society as conservative. But I
disagree. It is not uncommon, especially among the Malaysian
Chinese women, to have sexual relationships with a host of men
prior to tying the final knot. Being affluent, these women have
become the trendsetters in the city. I think it is only a matter of
time before their lifestyle catches on among other races and
becomes socially tolerable. So, perhaps we are turning out to be a
conservatively promiscuous society, but to label us conservative is
a gross misstatement.F. J. Lutz--Kuala Lumpur, MalaysiaIt is with
agitation and sadness that I study NEWSWEEK's post on the apathy of
Filipino youth, Where Can I Park? I am a member of the Filipino
youth culture and, trust me, some of us still join protest marches
that bring issues to the government's attention. Student activism
may not be as fiery as it was in the old days, but it does still
exist. I disagree with your portrayal of our generation as
self-centered, materialistic and shallow. There is a considerable
section of the population whose lives are hedonistic, but most of
those Yuppies are blinded by the trappings of newfound wealth and
independence.Michelle I. Claveria--Quezon City, PhilippinesNew
Ideas, Old Ideology Will the youthful Chinese with M.B.A.s now be
allowed to exercise their expertise to the fullest in their country
where elders presume to possess wisdom and crush those with
contrary? Is China wise enough to let its young create a dynamic
future?Michael Driver--Ichihara, JapanAssessing Europe's Change
Denis MacShane, a labour member of Parliament, thinks reduced
deficits, tax cuts and discouraging dependence were the ideas of
Bill Clinton and Tony Blair (Cool Eyes on the Prize, World View,
Sept. four)? Everyone knows the ideology came from the leadership
of Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher.Robert Bunker--Hong
KongTwenty years ago American and European politics had been indeed
miles apart. Europe was still debating, albeit softly, which
political system it would ultimately adopt. America was going
through Reaganomics. But the real revolution was actually the 1988
electoral plot used by Francois Mitterrand to get re-elected. As he
knew a socialist could not possibly win, he simply eliminated the
ideology from his program. Suddenly socialism was out, the stock
exchange was in and Mitterrand had effectively killed the lutte de
classes. France's Lionel Jospin, Britain's Tony Blair and Germany's
Gerhard Schroder have somewhat refined the strategy by using Bill
Clinton's populistic strategies, but the change was already
there.Rene Gardea--Prague, Czech RepublicPeople Aren't Penguins
Your post Sex and the Single Fly takes the prize (Society & the
Arts, Sept. four). It was insulting to human females, and I cannot
remember when I have read an article as absurd and illogical. The
arguments bounce back and forth effortlessly from indigo buntings
to humans to dragonflies, with no consideration for whether there
is any real basis of comparison between human sexuality, insects'
and other mammals'. Your caption For women, playing around can
bring them more resources, as well as healthier kids is completely
unsupported, unless 1 considers the bit about the crickets and the
Adelie penguins an argument.Kathleen Brandt--Zijpe, NetherlandsI
read your theories equating the sexuality of people and animals,
but I believe there is a basic difference between the two. A human
being has soul or a spirit and is defined mainly by his or her
mind, while an animal does not have a soul or a mind. So unlike
what your story theorizes, there are a lot of things that can be
totally different between a person and an animal.Charles
Roaz--Taipei, TaiwanMemoirs From Bahrain I've just returned from
Bahrain as a chaplain member of a response team assembled by the
U.S. Naval Hospital. During our week in the tiny emirate, the team
debriefed more than 150 sailors and Marines who participated in the
rescue and recovery efforts after the crash of the Gulf Airbus (The
Crash of Flight 072, World Affairs, Sept. 4). Most arrived at the
crash site with hopes of rescuing survivors and within minutes
threw themselves into the grim task of retrieving bodies and body
parts from the hot waters of the Persian Gulf. While hundreds
watched, these brave warriors worked throughout the night to beat
the first rays of the scorching Arabian sun. What they saw and
touched will linger in their memories for a lifetime. The crash
occurred at the beginning of the Muslim weekend, when these men and
women had already prepared to get a few hours of rest from their
awesome daily responsibilities. Yet there wasn't a single report of
hesitation when they were called into the effort. I am truly
grateful to be one of the few Americans who saw their faces and
shook their hands.Father Tom Hall, C.S.P.United States
NavyLieutentant Commander Chaplain CorpsCatania, Italy;Recent
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