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...TREAT YOURSELF. Always wanted to go to Istanbul? Dying to tour the South Pacific? Travelocity's Dream Maps feature lets you enter any price and departure city, then shows you all available flights in the world. On LastMinuteTravel, select destination "Anywhere" along with your price and departure date--then let your imagination take flight...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sleuthing Fares | 12/11/2000 | See Source »

...faceless mob were behind both of them. No on watching had the sense that Yemen is over a thousand miles from Ramallah over the Arabian desert and that few Palestinians have ever even seen Yemen. (By contrast, British news agencies like the BBC and ITN were very careful to treat these news items as distinct events from different regions of the Middle East...

Author: By Waheed Hussain, | Title: Race and the Middle East | 12/8/2000 | See Source »

Currently, hemophiliacs can use bio-engineered Factor VIII to treat themselves, but at very high cost, White said...

Author: By Lauren R. Dorgan and David H. Gellis, CONTRIBUTING WRITERSS | Title: HMS Professor Announces Promising Gene Therapy Results | 12/7/2000 | See Source »

...devices less than one-thousandth the diameter of a human hair--that will scan the body for the molecular signatures of cancer--the aberrant proteins found on malignant cells, for instance--and map the locations and shapes of tumors. If engineered to carry drugs or genes, the sensors could treat cancers one cell at a time, attacking malignant cells but leaving healthy ones unharmed. The result: an end to the pharmaceutical carpet bombing we call chemotherapy, not to mention its attendant miseries...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Coming Up Next: Nanosurgery | 12/4/2000 | See Source »

Which doesn't mean we're all going to spend the 21st century treating books like NASCAR racetracks. But as an effective tool for cramming large chunks of information (the technology it is based on is already a big hit with law students), Speeder Reader is proof positive that we also don't have to treat books like slabs of paper that sit on shelves anymore. Printed text, which has remained basically unchanged since Gutenberg first got his fingers inky, is about to bloom into a thousand different forms. The one you use will increasingly depend on what you need...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Team Xerox | 12/4/2000 | See Source »

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