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...story of Joe Green, a technical writer at Cray Research who turned a moribund discussion group called rec.arts.poems into a real poetry workshop by mercilessly critiquing the pieces he found there. "Some people got angry and said if he was such a god of poetry, why didn't he publish his poems to the group?" recalls Godwin. "He did, and blew them all away." Green's Well Met in Minnesota, a mock-epic account of a face-to-face meeting with a fellow network scribbler, is now revered on the Internet as a classic. It begins, "The truth is that...
...same researchers involved in the previous Wrentham experiment publish a follow-up study to the test. Fifty three children with Down syndrome were involved in the test, but there is no radioisotopes they nay have received...
...political and economic situation in Japan and its neighbors changes far faster than the time it takes to write and publish a book. Electoral developments in Japan, Taiwan and South Korea over the past 18 months reveal an increasingly multifaceted and demanding body politic that will force a change in economic priorities from production to consumption. Moreover, Fallows may give too much weight to the dreams of an elderly elite. Perhaps Japan's "corporatists" do want to dominate the world's high-tech industries, but that doesn't mean their success is guaranteed, any more than the success of Japan...
...Near the scene of the fatal accident, investigators found Camus's mud-stained, accordion-style black briefcase; among its contents were 144 handwritten manuscript pages containing about 80,000 words -- a first version of the first part of his intended work. Camus's widow Francine refused all entreaties to publish the unrevised fragment, but his daughter Catherine, now 48, who inherited her father's estate after her mother's death in 1979, decided that the manuscript would be made public eventually and that she might as well be the one to shepherd it into print. She spent three years deciphering...
Jones' charges reached the front page of the Washington Post 82 days after she made them, and fully 10 weeks after reporter Michael Isikoff researched a somewhat confirmatory analysis that his editors declined to publish until last week. At the New York Times, Jones until last Saturday rated a few paragraphs in stories deep inside the paper; it also printed a column by William Safire chiding other journalists for taking her seriously. The Los Angeles Times, by contrast, unhesitatingly reported Jones' charges in February. Of the TV networks, ABC ran a brief and oblique mention on an evening newscast...