Monday, Oct. 07, 2002

TIME.com

Vox Web Last week we asked, "Do you think a better understanding of their religious bond might make Jews, Muslims and Christians less prone to conflict?"

The Results:

16.8% Yes 83.2% No

BACK ISSUES 9/11 Memorial Edition time.com/9112002

See TIME.com to order copies of "A Nation Remembers," TIME's Sept. 11 memorial edition featuring profiles of 11 lives changed forever by that day as well as essays by Michael Kinsley, Rudolph Giuliani and Andrew Sullivan.

COVER STORY Your Aching Head time.com/headaches/

This week TIME explores the chemistry behind headaches and outlines new treatments, some of which are still on the horizon--and some of which have already landed in your local pharmacy. Effective treatment depends on accurate diagnosis. See TIME.com for a list of symptoms and helpful websites.

ABSTINENCE Let's Talk About (Not Having) Sex time.com/mtv

Sexual abstinence is experiencing a revival--at least in some American classrooms. TIME looks this week into the surge in abstinence-only sex ed and talks to the creator of Worth the Wait, one of the movement's most popular programs. Want more? Visit TIME.com for the results of a TIME/MTV sex-education survey, and tune in to MTV Thursday, Oct. 3, at 10 p.m. E.T.

ANNALS OF EDITING Good News From Google time.com/google

The uber-search engine Google sent a shiver of fear down the spine of editors everywhere last week when it launched its automated news site. But while News.google.com is fast and complete, TIME.com managing editor Joshua Macht notes, there's just no substitute for the human touch.

Web Exclusive Russian Roulette

Russia may have lost its superpower status, but it still has the power of veto on the U.N. Security Council--whose approval could legitimize an attack on Iraq. With that in mind, the Bush Administration sent an envoy to Moscow last week in hopes of persuading Russian President Vladimir Putin to support a tough new U.N. ultimatum on Iraq. TIME Moscow bureau chief Paul Quinn-Judge reports on why Putin is playing hard to get, why he'll ultimately yield and how he'll try to use the negotiations to pursue his own agenda in neighboring Georgia. At time.com/putin

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