Word: guineas
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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They are laboratory animals, a veritable ark-full--alligators, bats, birds, dogs, mice, rabbits, rats, guinea pigs, monkeys, lizards, sheep zebrafish. And while one might not guess it from examining the average furry inhabitant of a Harvard laboratory, these animals are at the center of a storm of conflict between University officials, government regulators and animal rights activists...
...result is Theroux's ninth and possibly best travel book, an observant and frequently hilarious account of a trip that took him to 51 Pacific islands, from New Guinea to Easter Island to Hawaii. His goal was to retrace, in part, the bold voyages of early Polynesian seafarers who gave this vast area a common culture, now corrupt and moribund. Theroux took the big hops by plane or ship. But his preferred mode of travel was a collapsible, 16-ft.-long French-made kayak, which he paddled -- carefully -- through dangerous waters infested by crocodiles, sharks and stinging Portuguese...
...BLOTCH ABOVE AUSTRALIA AND NEW GUINEA in this satellite image, released last week, represents the ocean's hottest water, at 30 degreesC (86 degrees F). That's unusually steamy, and it may be partly a result of the global warming that scientists think is on its way. The good news: NASA reports that the ozone hole feared over northern latitudes this spring never showed up, but only because the winter was warmer than usual. A cooler season next year, which is quite possible, and goodbye ozone...
...HARD TO BREAK. SENATORS CLAIBORNE PELL and DAVID BOREN, the chairmen of the Foreign Relations and Intelligence committees, have been traveling through Southeast Asia during the Easter-Passover recess on a military C-20B (cost: $2,614 an hour), stopping in Hong Kong, Taiwan, Indonesia and Papua New Guinea (to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Battle of the Coral Sea). Even though commercial flights were available, sources say, one of the reasons for going military was that wives travel free. Boren argues that the spouses were invited by some of the governments to participate in events. Says he: "Surely...
...putting more money into overseas exploration than they are investing at home. "You have to go where you can find the reserves and make a profit," explains Wayne Allen, president of Phillips, which has hiked foreign spending 15% since 1989 to bankroll drilling in such places as Gabon, New Guinea and Italy. All told, according to a Salomon Brothers survey, U.S. oil companies are increasing foreign investment nearly 10%. At the same time, the 21 largest firms are cutting exploration spending in this country...