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When I was young I was a self-professed “banana”—that is, yellow on the outside and unrepentantly white on the inside. Growing up 1.5-generation Asian American (born abroad, raised domestically) is a strange splice of cultural bravado and insecurity. Perhaps it is this realization of guilt that is driving me to write and to think a little more about the identity conflicts that plague recent American arrivals...

Author: By N. KATHY Lin | Title: The Banana Diaries | 10/24/2007 | See Source »

...done something unprecedented: he made a movie-tie-in music video that doesn’t suck. Every other rapper who decides to promote a movie with a video seems to believe that “thou shalt splice together a lame performance scene with random clips from thy film” is the lost eleventh commandment, but not the King of the South...

Author: By Richard S. Beck, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Popscreen - T.I. | 3/1/2006 | See Source »

ROLL 3 to 6 ball revolutions The region where the oil thins out is called the splice. The ball begins rolling, and any tendency to curve starts taking hold...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: High-Tech Rollers | 1/1/2006 | See Source »

...view of life at the end of 1993: science looks ahead; art looks back. Each discipline could help the other. Those stratospheric Maytag repairmen from the Endeavour might be hired to wire the TV set of the future for 500 channels, and then maybe the gene wizards could splice some decent programming into it. Biosphere II might be a good place to lock away all those fun couples -- Burt and Loni, John and Lorena, Ted and Whoopi -- until they sort things out. But this is science fiction, mere dreamery. Art doesn't solve problems any more than (pace Janet Reno...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TAKING STOCK IN A YEAR OF SOBER LOOKS BACK, AND DAZZLING VIEWS OF THE FUTURE | 11/3/2005 | See Source »

...biology are only part of what makes wholesale gene prospecting so promising. Hydrogen has been touted as a clean-burning replacement for fossil fuels, for example, and, says Patrinos, "there are already bugs out there that produce hydrogen." If gene prospectors could isolate the responsible gene, he explains, and splice it into a common bacterium, just as genetic engineers have done for years with the gene that produces human insulin, "we can duplicate it on industrial scales...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mother Nature's DNA | 6/13/2005 | See Source »

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