September - 1994 Articles
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Comment: A right to know . . . what?
24 September 1994
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Sizewell gears up
24 September 1994
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No solar pole
24 September 1994
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Probes approved
24 September 1994
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Science: Bathroom tiling to drive you mad
24 September 1994
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Science: Prehistoric prey met death through a keyhole
24 September 1994
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Technology: Namibians who live in glass houses . . .
24 September 1994
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Hard sell for particle physics?: The killing off the superconducting Supercollider sent shock waves through particle physicics. Now researchers face a dilemma: should they expect governments to give them money to answer the fundamental questions about th
24 September 1994
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Technology: Superconductors move into mobiles
24 September 1994
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Science: Crystal clear way to better clotbusters
24 September 1994
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Science: The long and the short of discouraging gulls
24 September 1994
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Science: Designer teepees for Panamanian bats
24 September 1994
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Technology: Spacecraft designers reinvent the wheel
24 September 1994
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Technology: A brighter ghost in the machine
24 September 1994
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Patents: Don't go broke with brokers
24 September 1994
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Technology: Britain in DAB hand at digital
24 September 1994
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Technology: This won't hurt . . . at all
24 September 1994
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Breast exercise
24 September 1994
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Last call?
24 September 1994
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Patent row splits breast cancer researchers.
24 September 1994
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Comment: Industry's hot line
24 September 1994
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Europe's research 'gold mine' is opened up
24 September 1994
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Seal breeding plan hits the rocks
24 September 1994
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Oil spill damages set at billions
24 September 1994
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Roll up for the flexible transistor
24 September 1994
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Growth drug falls short
24 September 1994
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How not to get lost in space
24 September 1994
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Indian plague
24 September 1994
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Whirlwind reaps a corn circle?
24 September 1994
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Recycling paper goes easy on the bleach
24 September 1994
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The fat, hairy women of Pompeii
24 September 1994
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Was it arsenic that did for old Boney?
24 September 1994
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Simple 'spelling error' to blame for dwarfism
24 September 1994
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Levy to conserve cash for health service R&D
24 September 1994
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Americans make logs from a skip-full of dollars
24 September 1994
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Patents: Jelly bullets
24 September 1994
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Patents: High flyers
24 September 1994
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The Last Word: This week's questions - Kettle Hums
24 September 1994
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Letter: Optimum population
24 September 1994
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Letter: Optimum population
24 September 1994
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Letter: Causal connection
24 September 1994
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Feedback
24 September 1994
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Letter: Unholy smell
24 September 1994
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Letter: Caught in a quake
24 September 1994
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Letter: Written records
24 September 1994
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Letter: Coppice crops
24 September 1994
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Letter: Teamwork
24 September 1994
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Letter: Support the support
24 September 1994
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Letter: Light on Einstein
24 September 1994
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Letter: Disappearing data
24 September 1994
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Letter: Disappearing data
24 September 1994
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The Last Word: Primary school
24 September 1994
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The Last Word: Round water
24 September 1994
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The Last Word: This week's questions - Burnt Out
24 September 1994
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Letter: Hot coal?
24 September 1994
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Letter: Growth means cars
24 September 1994
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Patents: Hip replacement
24 September 1994
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Patents: Tune in, drive on
24 September 1994
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Patents: Burning issue
24 September 1994
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Greening the heart of England: An ambitious scheme to recreate the forests that once covered Britain is under siege. Pressure is mounting, says Fred Pearce, to use it for environmentally destructive activities
24 September 1994
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A quantum revolution for computing
24 September 1994
By harnessing the bizarre properties of the quantum world, physicists believe they could construct a computer with undreamt-of power. Julian Brown explains how it might be done
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Cotton without chemicals: Fashion designers are making organic cotton a selling point. Jasper Pleydell-Bouverie reports on the problems facing growers as they try to met the demand.
24 September 1994
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Review: A starring role in the universe
24 September 1994
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Review: A dark blue on the light blues
24 September 1994
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Review: National reserves
24 September 1994
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Review: A hard row to hoe
24 September 1994
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Letter: Awkward truths
24 September 1994
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Washington Diary: Embarrassing times all round - Andreas Frew reports from the heady heights of Capitol Hill
24 September 1994
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Review: Florida's records
24 September 1994
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Forum: Gossip on the grand scale - Alison Brooks on why watching soap operas is a habit that is difficult to kick
24 September 1994
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Forum: After the transformation - Steve McKillup looks at life in a 'new' university
24 September 1994
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Review: Relatively comfortable with the bizarre
24 September 1994
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Review: Surely you're serious, Mr Feynman
24 September 1994
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Science: Lost ocean found deep in the Earth
03 September 1994
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Science: 'Handshake' from future makes a mockery of time
03 September 1994
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Science: 'Micro-quasar' in the Milky Way
03 September 1994
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Science: Our Galaxy's very own big bang
03 September 1994
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Science: Fun and games in four dimensions
03 September 1994
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Science: Transplant troubles could be solved 'in the bag'
03 September 1994
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Can Lake Pedder resurface?: International support is growing behind an ambitious plan to drain a massive Tasmanian reservoir and restore a unique glacial lake beneath its surface. Ian Anderson reports
03 September 1994
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Money overboard
03 September 1994
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Coal-fired orchids
03 September 1994
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Jobs and roads
03 September 1994
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Magellan's swan song
03 September 1994
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Speedy Russians
03 September 1994
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Technology: Light works for sewage
03 September 1994
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Technology: Light balloon begins to take off
03 September 1994
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Save the Taj
03 September 1994
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Well-adjusted robot on target for brain surgery
03 September 1994
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Mechanical mole goes down the hole
03 September 1994
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Double standards for egg and sperm donors
03 September 1994
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Quake leaves its mark on tree rings
03 September 1994
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Greenhouse targets beyond 2000
03 September 1994
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Rain of debris makes space a safer place
03 September 1994
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Soweto teachers take maths on the road
03 September 1994
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Lusher times at Masada
03 September 1994
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Opt-outs could weaken population treaty
03 September 1994
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Britain grounds hopes for growth in aerospace R&D
03 September 1994
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Comment: Listen to the past
03 September 1994
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Comment: If only pigs could fly . . .
03 September 1994
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Wise women
03 September 1994
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Satellite spies strange stripes in the desert
03 September 1994
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Gulls and terns all at sea about sex
03 September 1994
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Technology: Making fowl work less of a strain
03 September 1994
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Technology: Photographers zoom in on smart film
03 September 1994
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Forum: Will you walk a little faster . . . - Reflections through the academic looking-glass by Tim Birkhead
03 September 1994
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Review: The truth about Darwin's old foe
03 September 1994
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Letters: Aeroplane aerosols
03 September 1994
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Letters: Ethical hypnosis
03 September 1994
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Letters: Self-fulfilling
03 September 1994
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Letters: Save the wartbiter
03 September 1994
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Letters: Streaks ahead
03 September 1994
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Letters: SuperBritish
03 September 1994
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Feedback
03 September 1994
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Letters: Correction
03 September 1994
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Letters: Igloo to you
03 September 1994
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Letters: Sand test
03 September 1994
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Make way for the digital library
03 September 1994
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Forum: Is the pen still mightier than the sword? - Robin Harbour feels we should think twice before disposing of written records
03 September 1994
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Thistle Diary: Putting the lid over the leaks - More comment from Westminster by Tam Dalyell
03 September 1994
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Technology: Fungi waste cleans up around sawmills
03 September 1994
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Technology: Putting thieves in the picture
03 September 1994
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Science: A nap in tme may save lives
03 September 1994
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A matter of life and death: Stabilising the world's population is at best a bumpy process as developing countries industrialise and death rates fall. Jean-Claude Chesnais asks if it is possible to smooth the transition
03 September 1994
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Will tomorrow's children starve? The People problem
03 September 1994
By 2050, the world could be groaning under the weight of 12 billion people. Next week in Cairo, in the biggest meeting of its kind for a decade, delegates will debate how best to control this population boom
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Thoroughly modern families: Despite a widespread belief that the poorest countries are not ready for modern contraception, Rajamani Rowley argues that there is a huge unmet need
03 September 1994
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Review: In search of the changeable brain
03 September 1994
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Trainers for you brain: Physiologists know that rhythmic pulses of light can relax the brain. But manufacturers of New Age stroboscopes claim they can go one better - and expand your mind, John McCrone reports. . .
03 September 1994
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Review: Medieval astronomy's hidden half
03 September 1994
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Review: From Abacus to Zenith
03 September 1994
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Review: Climate shaping in the cities
03 September 1994
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Review: A Fen frame of mind
03 September 1994
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Review: Intellectual treasury of the Silk Road
03 September 1994
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The Last Word
03 September 1994