demo

(singke) #1
NEW HOPE FOR ALZHEIMER’SThe Mayo
Clinic and Alzheimer’s research advocates
shared Alice Park’s Aug. 20 story on a study
that suggests lowering blood pressure could
help lower the risk of cognitive decline.
George Vradenburg,
chair of the nonproit
UsAgainstAlzheimer’s,
tweeted that, while
more research is
needed, the results
“suggest opportuni-
ties” for treatment.
David S. Benedict of
Williamsburg, Va.,
whose wife has mild
cognitive impairment,
called for broadening
the discussion even
more. “There needs to be more attention
paid to... integrative and functional medi-
cine,” he wrote.

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telephone and may be edited for purposes of clarity and space

WHAT YOU
SAID ABOUT ...

PERFECTLY SERENA Sean Gregory’s Aug. 27
cover story about Serena Williams earned
high marks close to home: the tennis star’s
husband, Reddit co-founder Alexis Oha-
nian, tweeted that he was “so proud.” Many
readers found inspira-
tion in Williams’ life.
“Serena sounds like
a wonderful, loving,
human mom,” tweeted
actor Olivia Wilde.
Endurance racer Ame-
lia Boone of San Jose,
Calif., praised the ar-
ticle’s depth: “While
I admire athletes for
their accomplish-
ments, I’ve always respected them more for
being human,” she tweeted. Also on Twitter,
@Ishikamohan described Williams’ story
of coming to terms with her own perceived
shortcomings as “so familiar.” And MaryKay
Hartung of Palm Harbor, Fla., was glad to see
the “remarkably positive” Williams on the
cover instead of “yet another” politics story.

‘Her
struggle
mirrors the
struggle
of so many
women.’
APRIL BLAINE,
Hilliard, Ohio

‘Maintaining
healthy
blood
pressure is
important
for brain
health, too.’
AMERICAN HEART
ASSOCIATION,
on Twitter

BEHIND THE COVERThis week’s cover might seem a little
familiar. To illustrate our story on the mounting troubles
facing President Trump, we commissioned longtime TIME
collaborator Tim O’Brien to create a third installment in his
series of Oval Oice covers, this time featuring a looded oice
with the President loating above the waterline. “The question
of the third cover was if he would still be at his Resolute desk
or not,” says O’Brien, a Brooklyn-based artist whose work has
appeared on more than two dozen TIME covers since 1989,
depicting subjects ranging from the Catholic Church to Osama
bin Laden. “I felt that it was too comical or perhaps morbid to
see him sitting there. But to have him at the top suggests he’s
still ighting despite the deepening issues.”

Conversation


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GREAT PLACES
For international
readers, this
week’s cover
introduces
a new TIME
franchise: the
World’s Greatest
Places. We
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irm, to produce artwork featuring some
of our 2018 picks. “It was fascinating
to research all of the places as we took
a digital journey around the globe,” said
designer Clint Campbell.
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