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Questions an interviewer should not ask: An interviewer should not ask you questions which are not job-related. It is illegal to ask questions about age; social, religious, or political preferences; ethnic background; national origin; sex; or arrest record. Questions about marital status or family plans are not usually asked and are illegal in some states...

Author: By John Noble, | Title: Some questions often asked in interviews | 10/4/1985 | See Source »

Since then, the Cornell professor has been vigorously promoting an equally unorthodox theory about the origin of oil and gas. Nearly all geologists believe that petroleum is the product of ancient decayed organisms. Gold insists that natural gas is an inorganic component of the earth's mantle, as much as 200 miles below ground, and is continually thrust toward the surface by geological and mechanical forces. "When choosing a hypothesis," he says, "there's no virtue in being timid...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: A Theory As Good As Gold | 9/9/1985 | See Source »

...minutes last week Secretary of Education William Bennett and his 27 pupils discussed the origin and meaning of the Declaration. When Bennett asked to whom the document was addressed, one student answered King George III; another said the British Parliament. Bennett told his class, "I think it is fair to say it was written for the whole world, for everybody . . . We were establishing a nation. And we were telling the world why we were doing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Class Act: Bennett At the Blackboard | 9/9/1985 | See Source »

...Eastern half of the country at long intervals early in the summer, periodic cicadas emerge from the ground where, in their juvenile form, they have been feeding on the sap of tree roots. All cicadas in a particular region are presumed to be of the same origin and appear in synchrony in early summer. In Northern states and along the eastern edge of the Great Plains, they appear every 17 years; in the Southern and Mississippi valley states, it takes 13 years for a new brood to emerge...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In Missouri: the Cicada's Song | 7/15/1985 | See Source »

...point for economic and political concerns," he says. "This immigration will eventually move Europe to a lower priority in the way we look at the world." It is a mistake, though, to think of immigrants as an undifferentiated clump, politically or otherwise. Not only do they differ by national origin and social class and ideology but also according to whether they plan to stay permanently or eventually return home. "What binds Americans to one another, regardless of ethnicity or religion, is an American civic culture," says Brandeis Professor Fuchs. "It is the basis for the unum in E pluribus unum...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Changing Face of America: Just Look Down Broadway | 7/8/1985 | See Source »

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