Word: carbonization
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While the show will reflect TIME's values, it won't be a carbon copy of the magazine. Pamela Hill, the CNN senior vice president in charge of creating it, explains that "both organizations will be developing and completing their own story ideas." And the results won't appear only on your tube: this week's TIME includes an exclusive account of America's secret use of poison gas during the Vietnam War. The reporters? CNN senior producer Jack Smith, producer April Oliver and correspondent Peter Arnett...
...example of Harvard's attention to regional concerns, Sorenson cites environmental research directed at reducing carbon dioxide levels in China...
...Shroud of Turin has long been an important topic of discussion in Italy [RELIGION, April 20]. The carbon 14 dating analysis has not solved the question of its age, at least for those who will never cease to believe in the shroud's authenticity. In one of his Provincial Letters, Pascal wrote, "God does not manifest himself to men with all the evidence which he could show." Pascal also stated, "For it is not true that all reveals God and it is not true that all conceals God. But it is at the same time true that he hides himself...
...give man the intellectual resources to discover life's secrets? Why must science and faith be at odds? The physical evidence presented by the believers helps convince me that the shroud was used to cover a crucified man, but it does not come near to contradicting the carbon aging tests. The questions that need to be answered are, Who was this man, and who determined the sacrifice that his faith dictated? WAYNE B. ANDERSON Longmont, Colo...
Three of the warmest years of the 20th century were bunched in the 1990s. Does this reflect a long-term warming of the globe by carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases, as many atmospheric scientists have contended? Or was the hot spell just a random, unexceptional fluctuation in the weather? A study published last week in Nature magazine by climatologist Michael Mann and colleagues from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, may help melt away any lingering doubt about global warming. The scientists developed what amounts to a time-traveling thermometer. Applying innovative statistical tools to reams of evidence gathered from...