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Wired January 2002 Hillary Rosner |
Body and Soul The first great bioethics debate began 2,000 years ago with a clash between the scalpel and the cross...  |
Wired January 2002 Mark Robinson |
Accidental Genius What turns a good idea into the next insanely great thing? Inspiration, perspiration, and the law of unintended consequences...  |
Wired January 2002 Todd Lappin |
Eureka! Great moments in the march of technolust...  |
Wired January 2002 Wil McCarthy |
Runaway Train First railway track started doubling every 18 months. Then things really got weird...  |
Wired January 2002 Jeff Howe |
The Next Wave Taller, sleeker, and much, much faster, it was the finest invention ever to issue from America's shores. Welcome to the "new economy" of the clipper ship...  |
Salon.com January 14, 2002 Allen Barra |
"The Hidden Hitler" by Lothar Machtan Critics have been far too quick to dismiss this controversial new book alleging that Hitler was gay...  |
Science News January 12, 2002 |
TimeLine: January 9, 1932 Dr. John J. Abel, professor of pharmacology at the Johns Hopkins Medical School, elected AAAS head... Animal immunized against parasite for the first time... Vitamin prepared chemically for the first time...  |
Salon.com January 8, 2002 George Rafael |
A is for Arabs From algebra and coffee to guitars, optics and universities -- an alphabetical reminder of what the West owes to the People of the Crescent Moon...  |
Science News January 5, 2002 |
TimeLine: January 2, 1932 Concrete ribbons to carry traffic of great highway... Prevention of tooth decay accomplished for first time... Splitting of primeval star may have made solar system...  |
Reason January 2002 Nick Gillespie |
Trivial Pursuits Perhaps the oddest thing about the past decade remains its inability to generate a pithy, generally agreed-upon descriptor. In defense of the unnamable '90s...  |
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