Word: eggs
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...prices reduces economic growth 1 percentage point a year. But petroleum has already risen more than that, and subtracting a point from growth leaves almost nothing. So if prices stay put, says a Bush Administration official, "growth is going to be a giant goose egg for the year. A big fat zero...
...however, strongly support Hume's greatness on the ground that the force of his personality definitely affected the age in which he lived. It is not a question of the cart before the horse in either case, merely the old problem of which came first, the chicken or the egg. In any case, there is much to be said on both sides...
...marks a major advancement over other pregnancy-ending techniques. The drug, which is most effective if used within seven weeks of conception, prevents the hormone progesterone from being absorbed by the lining of the uterus. Without that nourishment the uterus cannot support the growth of the embedded fertilized egg, and the woman miscarries. Taken with prostaglandin, a naturally occurring substance that causes mild uterine contractions, the drug is 95% effective. Developed in 1982 by Dr. Etienne-Emile Baulieu, RU 486 has so far been used by an estimated 55,000 women in 15 countries...
What makes a man? Biologists have long known that the answer lies not in what but in Y. To create a male child, a father's sperm must carry a Y chromosome to fertilize a mother's egg, which always bears an X chromosome. But the site of the specific gene on Y that determines maleness has been elusive. Last week, though, scientists in Britain announced in Nature that they have identified a section of DNA that apparently directs the development of the testes, the male reproductive glands. The gene is being called SRY for sex-determining region...
...make it worth retelling. Shifts in Soviet leadership have historically moved from the bald to the hirsute: from the chrome-dome Lenin to the brush-cut Stalin; from Khrushchev to Brezhnev; from Andropov to Chernenko. Which brings everyone to Mikhail Gorbachev, who is nearly as bald as a darning egg, and to the upstart Boris Yeltsin, whose mane of graying locks ruffles conspicuously these days in the winds of change...