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...been transformed from a purely economic institution to a political one, Britain has been slow to adapt, said Lord Roy Jenkins, chancellor of Oxford University...

Author: By Rosalie R. Obrien, | Title: Community BRIEFS | 10/14/1994 | See Source »

...patrimony. Cuba, to be sure, has many Potemkin surfaces, plus all the brutality of a police state, but its people are worldly enough at least to know how much salt to sprinkle on their slogans, and its leader, up against his ninth American President, is canny enough to adapt a little to the times. While Cuban official billboards occasionally note how "Pride" in the Revolution has led to "Upset" and "Disenchantment," North Korean propaganda manuals are still churning out sentences like "Korea has large amounts of slime in Lake Sijung and other places, which is very effective against diseases...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cuba Si, North Korea No | 9/12/1994 | See Source »

Microbes' extraordinary ability to adapt, observes Harvard microbiologist Fields, "is a fact of life. It's written into evolution." Indeed, the end run that many organisms are making around modern antibiotics is a textbook case of Darwin's theory in action (anti-evolutionists, take note). In its simplest form, the theory states that new traits will spontaneously appear in individual members of a given species -- in modern terms, mutations will arise in the organisms' genetic material. Usually the traits will be either useless or debilitating, but once in a while they'll confer a survival advantage, allowing the individual...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MEDICINE: The Killers All Around | 9/12/1994 | See Source »

...last week, as the House opened its new session complete with tribal dress in the back benches. But Verwoerdian notions about decorum, among other topics, no longer hold sway in a government whose face has changed dramatically overnight. Parliament, with its stuffy, Westminster-style affectations, has already begun to adapt...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dispatches: Bring on the New Dishes | 6/6/1994 | See Source »

...resources that should have been destined for their citizens. In the case of China, whose size, population, and regional influence, make it abundantly more independent than the comparatively tiny island of Cuba, there is all the more reason to believe that Deng Xiaoping's government will find ways to adapt to the loss of its MFN status without changing its policy on human rights...

Author: By Gil B. Lahav, | Title: Playing With Fire | 5/4/1994 | See Source »

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