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Shameel Arafin '97 left Cal Tech after his junior year, abandoning the prospects of a career in electrical engineering to study literature...

Author: By Charles G. Kels, | Title: A Whole New World | 2/3/1997 | See Source »

...class at Cal Tech, only 30 percent were women, and that was the highest percentage ever," Arafin says. "Here, I can go out into Boston and party quite...

Author: By Charles G. Kels, | Title: A Whole New World | 2/3/1997 | See Source »

...White House courtship of Kaye was never casual. While disguised as a social minuet, it was really part of a high-tech operation situated not far from the Oval Office and used to track and nurture potential donors to the President's re-election effort. Kaye's name was entered into a secret White House database under the designation "major contributor," a status befitting the $137,000 he gave to the Democratic cause last campaign. The filing system, dubbed WhoDB for White House Office Data Base, was used by Clinton's campaign team to stay on top of donors...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A SECRET CASH LINK | 2/3/1997 | See Source »

What lies on the other side of the bridge? For pessimists the new millennium is time's equivalent of those stretches of pre-Columbian ocean on which European mapmakers wrote, "Here be monsters." Either/or: The imagination projects either apocalypse or high-tech wonders, either hell or heaven. Clinton, whose theology is politics, projects a nation going through the biggest changes since industrialization depopulated the farms 100 years ago. Once a balanced budget is in place, he thinks, the basic source of American political conflict in the past decade will have vanished. The country will be ready to search...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THERE IS A BALM IN CHILIAD | 1/27/1997 | See Source »

...time the newest AIDS medications become available even to rich patients, most of today's 23 million sufferers will be dead, and many millions more will be yearning for a cure. But there are low-tech measures available now that can save millions of lives, even before a vaccine is found. Education, literacy and social justice will make the world's poor less susceptible to infection. Even the self-interested West cannot afford to sit back and watch the number of infected climb while scientists seek medical solutions. Rich nations have to contribute to prevention efforts throughout the world right...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Jan. 27, 1997 | 1/27/1997 | See Source »

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