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...didn't really happen organically. Over the past decade, Berkeley has become a paragon of school-lunch reform, thanks to the woman who helped hire Cooper--California cuisine pioneer Alice Waters. "We have to go into the public-school system and educate children when they're very young," says Waters, whose famed Berkeley restaurant, Chez Panisse, features seasonal meals made from local produce. Waters started educating children 10 years ago, creating the Edible Schoolyard at Berkeley's Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School. There, kids spend 90 minutes a week planting and harvesting produce and cooking their own healthy food...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Retooling School Lunch | 6/11/2006 | See Source »

...Frankfurt can't worry too much about cooling down Spain when the economies of much of the rest of the euro zone - witness Germany and Italy - are in cryonic suspension. Clearly, the Spanish government has to rely on its own efforts. Late last year it presented an ambitious National Reform Program that promises, among other things, an improvement to Spain's mediocre higher-education system and a doubling of the country's expenditures for research and development. The government wants to encourage flexibility in Spain's overly segmented labor market and encourage mobility by getting more Spaniards to rent instead...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Can Spain Sustain? | 6/11/2006 | See Source »

...Chicago, Detroit, Philadelphia, the Bronx Zoo in New York City--have quietly made the decision to stop exhibiting elephants altogether, some as soon as they can find homes for the animals and others after the deaths of the ones they have. For zookeepers, it's a continuation of a reform movement that began a generation ago and swept through most major U.S. zoos. The old concrete-and-steel cages that resembled prisons for animals are mostly gone. In fact, the cages themselves are mostly gone. The barriers between people and animals today consist largely of moats and unobtrusive ramparts that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Who Belongs in the Zoo? | 6/11/2006 | See Source »

...reform movement, say critics, didn't go far enough, and those natural-looking habitats are just an illusion created to enhance the visitors' experience. "From the animals' point of view," says Hancocks, "they are not better than they were when they were in cages. It's all done for theatrics...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Who Belongs in the Zoo? | 6/11/2006 | See Source »

...Socialist Party Secretary, is solidifying her standing by espousing what many in the party leadership consider decidedly un-socialist, practically treasonous ideas. In recent weeks she has advocated a much tougher line on young delinquents. She wants to yank troublesome kids from middle school classes and put them in reform schools; withhold state family allowances from dysfunctional families until they take parenting classes, and even send teenage miscreants to military boot camp. Socialist voters, mindful of the youthful rampages last fall in the poor outlying housing projects and this spring at universities, approve of her tough-love approach...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: France's Rising Socialist Star | 6/9/2006 | See Source »

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