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16 result(s) for "Kantrowitz, Joseph"
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Water for the Future
This book is the result of a joint research effort led by the U.S. National Academy of Sciences and involving the Royal Scientific Society of Jordan, the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities, and the Palestine Health Council. It discusses opportunities for enhancement of water supplies and avoidance of overexploitation of water resources in the Middle East. Based on the concept that ecosystem goods and services are essential to maintaining water quality and quantity, the book emphasizes conservation, improved use of current technologies, and water management approaches that are compatible with environmental quality.
Is This Too Raw for Kids? What parents should know about Wrestlemania
JUST A FEW YEARS ago, the center of 11-year-old Anthony Arroyave's sporting universe was baseball's Ken Griffey Jr. No longer. Now it's Triple H, Jeff Hardy and Scotty Too Hotty.
Forgetting to Remember
For two decades, the murder of 8-year-old Susan Nason was a mystery. Police in the San Francisco suburb of Foster City, Calif., ran out of leads not long after finding Susan's decomposed body in a wooded ravine. Then, in January 1989, Eileen Franklin-Lipsker, Susan's best friend at the time of the murder, looked into her 6-year-old daughter's eyes and suddenly remembered.
The Right Way to Read: In the old days, preschoolers had no more pressing business than to learn how to play. New research shows that they benefit from instruction in words and sounds
WHEN YOU WALK THROUGH THE BRIGHTLY COLORED door of the Roseville Cooperative Preschool in northern California, you're entering a magical, pint-size world where 3and 4-year-olds are masters of the universe. At the science table, they use magnifying glasses to explore piles of flowers, cacti and shells. In the smock-optional art area, budding da Vincis often smear blotches of red, blue and yellow directly on the table. (It's wiped off with a damp cloth when the next artist steps up.)
Busy Around the Clock
TAKE A DEEP BREATH AND SPEND a week with the Lee family in Minneapolis. The three oldest kids— Anna, 12, Nathan, 9, and Kristian, 7—play one sport or another practically all year round. (Baby Ilsa is only 1½, so she gets a break here.) Anna's the complete jock, participating in soccer, volleyball, basketball and softball.
Keeping hope alive: parents of missing kids must learn to live with 'chronic uncertainty.'
Patty and Jerry Wetterling's nightmare began on Oct. 22, when their son Jacob, 11, was abducted as he bicycled along a lonely stretch of road near their St. Joseph, Minn., home. Although investigators have received more than 12,000 tips, they have not yet been able to single out a prime suspect.
Keeping Hope Alive
Almost 24,000 children have been reported missing since 1984. The trauma that their parents go through is discussed.