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.../homepages/mathman/ that has become the nerve center for the counterinsurgency. Here parents like Marianne Jennings of Mesa, Ariz., share dispatches from the front. Not long ago, Jennings watched her daughter Sarah, a straight-A algebra student, reach for a calculator to find 10% of 470. "It made my blood boil," says Jennings. In response, she and other parents pressured the school district to offer traditional math as a choice...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THIS IS MATH? | 8/25/1997 | See Source »

...matter what the pundits, politicians and experts say, everyone is only guessing about how this bold experiment will fare. All the opinions boil down to basic attitudes: you're either an optimist or a pessimist. Optimists start from the premise that it is so much in Beijing's interest to make Hong Kong work that it is bound to keep its promises. As Frank Ching, senior editor and columnist for the Far Eastern Economic Review, writes, "China did not spend two years negotiating the Joint Declaration, five years drafting the Basic Law...with the idea that it would tear them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: HONG KONG: THE BIG HANDOVER | 6/30/1997 | See Source »

...likely to get for some time. In the largest study of its kind, a team of researchers led by Francine Grodstein of Boston's Brigham and Women's Hospital tracked the health histories of some 60,000 post-menopausal nurses over a period of 18 years. The results boil down the benefits and risks of estrogen to a fairly concise set of percentages...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: EVERY WOMAN'S DILEMMA | 6/30/1997 | See Source »

Maier says that the computer makes it simple for him to "boil down" his notes the night before lecture to a one page handout...

Author: By Karen M. Paik, | Title: Computers Revolutionize Harvard's Academic Life | 6/5/1997 | See Source »

...more. In essence, say scientists, the developing nervous system has strung the equivalent of telephone trunk lines between the right neighborhoods in the right cities. Now it has to sort out which wires belong to which house, a problem that cannot be solved by genes alone for reasons that boil down to simple arithmetic. Eventually, Berkeley's Goodman estimates, a human brain must forge quadrillions of connections. But there are only 100,000 genes in human DNA. Even though half these genes--some 50,000--appear to be dedicated to constructing and maintaining the nervous system, he observes, that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FERTILE MINDS | 2/3/1997 | See Source »

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