A prep course for the month-long World Cup soccer tournament, a worldwide pheno
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scue program . Inky survived longer in captivity than any other seriously ill py gmy sperm whale , and Dr.Joseph H. Geraci , a consulting veterinarian and marine mammal expert , said she enabled scientists to greatly expand their knowledge o f the species ' physiology and behavior , including the discovery that it emits the highest-frequency sonar-like sound of any whale . Even in being released , I nky will continue to provide information until saltwater exposure disintegrates the bolts attaching the radio transmitter and microcomputer to the whale 's smal l dorsal fin . Geraci said the tiny equipment will tell scientists remaining on NOAA 's Relentless `` what she 's doing out there , what temperature she likes , how deep she 's diving , and that should tell us how well she 's made the adapt ation to freedom . '' Foreign money is pouring into Japanese stocks again , convinced that the Japane se economy 's four-year slide is over and that a robust corporate profit turnaro und is imminent . Many foreign buyers also are betting on another , perhaps more important turnaround : a change in Japanese investors ' gloomy view of their ma rket , which has left most of them watching unimpressed on the sidelines as the gaijin ( foreigners ) snap up Japanese shares . The Nikkei-225 stock index has s oared from 17,417.24 at year 's end to 20,973.59 as of Tuesday , a 20.4 percent gain that makes the Tokyo market among the world 's best this year . In recent d ays the Nikkei has been particularly strong , breaking above the 20,000 mark whe re it had been lodged since February to a nine-month high . Optimism about Japan is running high among many American portfolio managers . The bulls believe that the Japanese economy is finally bottoming and that Japan therefore offers an op portunity to buy stocks on the ground floor of a recovery . Any money manager wh o missed loading up on U.S. stocks for two years while the U.S. economy languish ed naturally doesn't want to make the same mistake twice . And those who played the U.S. market correctly are eager to repeat that success . Barton Biggs , glob al investment strategist for Morgan Stanley & Co. and someone whose opinion carr ies substantial weight with institutional investors , recently told clients that `` the Japanese market is a buy right now . '' Biggs ' case is that Japan 's ma ny ills including a floundering political system , collapsed corporate earnings , a strong yen and horrendous unrealized real estate loan losses at banks are al ready so well known to investors that they must be mostly discounted in the stoc k market . `` What isn't discounted is that Japan is still a huge , powerful eco nomy with a formidable business class running world-class companies located in t he center of the fastest growth area of the world , '' Biggs told clients in a M ay 11 report . Strictly by the numbers , Japan still looks problematic . Real ec onomic growth , which was 4 percent in 1991 , plunged to about 1.5 percent in 19 92 and was a negative 0.1 percent last year . The problem last year was largely internal : Japan 's wealthy consumers sharply reduced their spending as the coun try 's major corporations launched unprecedented restructuring efforts ( includi ng layoffs and deep cuts in capital spending ) to cope with weaker global demand for Japanese exports . In short , 1993 was the year in which corporate Japan fi nally bit the bullet and admitted that the glory days of the 1980s were gone for good . This year , Morgan Stanley expects only 0.7 percent real economic growth for Japan , far below expected U.S. growth and even below what still-suffering Europe should muster . But in 1995 , the Japanese stock market 's U.S. fans expe ct the restructuring payoff to begin . Merrill Lynch & Co. is telling clients th at Japanese corporate earnings could rocket 35 percent next year from this year 's depressed levels . Morgan Stanley 's Biggs expects that a combination of revi ved domestic demand and faster export growth will lead to 5 percent to 6 percent economic growth in Japan for 1995 and 1996 . `` When that happens , profits sho uld explode , '' Biggs contends . `` I guess that reported earnings per share in the industrial sectors could double in the first year of recovery . '' Even so , many investors would argue that Japanese stocks already reflect 1995 earnings gains , and more . After all , the Japanese market 's price-to-earnings ratio is around 70 now , based on estimated 1994 earnings per share . Even cut in half , the Japanese P-E would be 35 , still far above the 15 to 20 P-Es of most world markets . The bulls contend that the P-E argument isn't important , and not just because Japanese stocks have always sold for high P-Es . Adjust for accounting differences and look at real , cash earnings of Japanese companies versus cash e arnings of American or European companies , and many Japanese stocks appear quit e reasonable , says John Hickling , one of Boston-based Fidelity Investments ' s enior international managers . By Morgan Stanley 's figuring , Japanese stocks n ow sell for 7.8 times estimated 1995 cash earnings , versus 8.3 times for U.S. s tocks . Hickling , who manages Fidelity 's Japan stock fund and Overseas stock f und , among others , says `` a lot of the ( Japanese ) stocks I own sell for les s than 10 times 1994 cash flow , '' which is cheap if you consider how depressed earnings still will be this year , he says . `` I think the Japanese market loo ks terrific , '' Hickling says , and he 's focused in particular on industrial g iants such as Toyota . `` You just have to look at what they 've done to their c ost base '' to see rich future profit potential there , he says . William Stack , manager of the Lexington Global stock fund , also believes that Japan 's leadi ng industrial and export companies are poised for surprising turnarounds . `` On e of my strongest investment convictions today is Japanese cyclical stocks , '' says Stack , whose fund owns issues such as Toyota and Honda Motor . Yet beyond the obvious potential pitfalls in the bullish case on Japan another dive in the economy , or a further steep strengthening of the already overvalued yen ( which would hurt exports ) there 's one glaring market problem : The Japanese themsel ves aren't buying stock . Still traumatized by their four-year bear market , Jap anese regard the latest market surge as the work of `` silly gaijin , '' says Ja mie Rosenwald , whose Rosenwald Capital Management has long been active in Japan . Rosenwald will be in Japan next week , specifically to look for hints that ca sh-rich Japanese institutions are ready to begin trickling back into the stock m arket . If he can't find signs that that 's ready to happen , he admits , he wil l have to reconsider his bullish view of the market . Rosenwald believes that if domestic investors join in , the Nikkei could hit 25,000 in a hurry . But witho ut their participation and soon he says , `` this rally could fizzle real quickl y . '' VIERVILLE-SUR-MER , France A brisk wind is blowing off Omaha Beach into the sou venir shop of Madame Sylvie le Gallois , a short , alert woman who speaks almost no English but is fluent in capitalism . `` Oui , '' she says , she has heard t hat thousands of veterans soon will be flocking to the beach for the 50th annive rsary of World War II 's Normandy invasion . She hopes that many will be stoppin g to pick up the D-Day license plates , replica Zippo lighters and special `` 50 Ans '' edition bottles of champagne displayed in her window . So business will be good , she is asked in halting French . Her eyes roll as if she has just been offered a prize truffle . `` Oh , '' she gushes , `` oui , monsieur ! '' Drivin g around the city of Caen or through the coastal towns along the invasion beache s , it is difficult to see which is winning commercial opportunism or genuine af fection . Is it `` Vive le Debarquement ? '' Or is it `` Vive '' la buck ? Is th e real spirit of the moment reflected in an advertisement for a risque revue , o r in the American , British and Canadian flags displayed outside Norman farmhous es ? Sit down to eat and you find your silverware flanking a placemat battle sce ne complete with parachutes floating into Ste.-Mere-Eglise . Reach for a lump of sugar for your thick Norman coffee and discover a drawing on the package of a t ruckload of GI 's reaching down to shake the hands of the French citizenry . Wal k down the street and you will find replica `` clickers , '' the toys used by ai rborne Allied troops to locate each other in the dark , selling for five bucks a pop . Probably one of the most overt examples of invasion capitalism is a poste r slapped on buildings throughout Caen . They advertise a coming revue titled `` Nuit du Debarquement , '' which promises `` major dynamite '' and features a sc antily clad woman floating to Earth with a parachute . The veterans have noticed the displays . `` You know what this is , don't you ? It 's D-Day . Dollar Day , '' says 74-year-old Jack Alexander , as he looks at souvenir tents recently pl aced next to Utah Beach . The big-ticket items were fleece-lined World War II-st yle bomber jackets for the equivalent of $ 600 to $ 800 . Alexander , who lives in Severna Park , Md. , landed here a half-century ago five days after the initi al wave of GIs , but he shrugs when asked if he is alienated by the area 's comm ercialism . `` Hell , no , '' he says . `` The Yanks probably taught it to them . '' But there is true warmth amidst the mercantilism one that springs from a on ce-oppressed people . Cynics must take into account a postcard sent recently by a woman living near Paris to the Caen Memorial , the city 's new museum dedicate d to World War II and the Normandy invasion . She begins by asking that the card be given to any of the D-Day veterans. `` .. . and others who risked their live s in order to save us and give us back our liberty . Thank you a thousand times . '' The card is in French but she adds in English , `` We shall never forget wh at you did for us . '' ( Begin optional trim ) Less obvious are the French who h ave given rooms in their homes gratis to visiting former soldiers who arrived in an overbooked town . But quite visible are the French families who lead their c hildren reverentially around the American Cemetery and Memorial as well , as the classes of French schoolchildren on field trips who listen as teachers tell the m about their country 's liberation . `` We have worked very hard to learn about the ` Debarquement , ' ' ' says Dromain Marc , an instructor at the Jean Moulin School near Paris . His class of 9- and 10-year-olds play around him , in the s hell holes and on the concrete chunks of destroyed German bunkers at Pointe du H oc , the precipice scaled by the U.S. Rangers . `` It is history . It is the pri ce of the liberty . '' ( End optional trim ) And then there are surprises like J ean Marc , a thin , deferential Frenchman with an unruly moustache who owns a sm all Normandy tour business . No , he doesn't want his last name used or his tour s promoted , but he would be glad to bring over veterans on his tour if they wou ld like to be interviewed . The countryside has undergone an amazing change late ly , he says . Normandy folk are not known as loquacious , he says but locals ha ve become surprisingly talkative when it comes to sharing tales about the day th e Allies landed . `` Maybe it is time after 50 years , '' he says . Of course th ere are some who will take advantage of the invasion memories for the buck , he says . But the show of generosity is real . `` Norman people don't forget . And next winter when everyone is gone , they will still remember . '' NEW YORK For Kenny Vixama 's first-grade teacher , an alarm went off when she n oticed that the 6-year-old often invented his own text for the simple storybooks his class was reading . Though a bright child , as he read his eyes did not fol low the left-to-right pattern of a successful reader . He had trouble identifyin g specific words when asked to find them . And he showed confusion with certain patterns of letters a basic stumbling block in learning to read . Kenny 's diffi culties had landed him in the bottom 20 percent in reading achievement among the first-grade students at Public School 41 in Greenwich Village . If Kenny 's pro blems went uncorrected , he seemed headed down a path of reading failure that ha s become frustratingly hard to address for teachers across the country . That wa s when reading specialist Barbara Mandel intervened . Mandel is a soldier in a q uiet revolution that is transforming the way some elementary schools deal with s low readers . The program she teaches is known as Reading Recovery , and since 1 983 , when it was introduced in this country at Ohio State University , it has s pread to 48 states and brought thousands of first-graders up to average or above reading levels . Developed in the 1970s by New Zealand educator and psychologis t Marie Clay and used extensively in that country , the program 's premise is th at the best way to avoid reading failure is to prevent it in the first place . T he simple theory has won a cult-like following among an army of U.S. teachers wh o have gone through yearlong training to more effectively tutor children in the most fundamental skill . Ohio State professor Gay Su Pinnell , who helped establ ish the university 's pilot program and heads a de facto national organization o f Reading Recovery teachers , estimates that by the end of the year , 9,000 teac hers will have been trained and will have reached 50,000 to 60,000 students . Pr ograms are booming in Ohio , California and Texas , and even in small states , l egislatures and local school districts are approving special funding for trial p rograms , she said . But Reading Recovery has not been universally endorsed , ma inly because of its high personnel costs and selectivity . Though implementation costs vary from district to district , all have to foot the bill for teachers l ike Mandel to take a year off for rigorous training . Then , they must dramatica lly scale back the teacher 's regular duties to allow time to work with a small number of children . Some principals have complained that the program unfairly c oncentrates limited funds on first-graders , leaving little for programs geared toward vulnerable children in later years . In the District of Columbia , where about 23 teachers have been trained , Deputy Superintendent Maurice Sykes said , `` We 've had to do a lot of convincing '' to win over principals despite Readi ng Recovery 's early successes . `` This has been our flagship intervention prog ram , '' Sykes said . `` We have hard empirical data that demonstrates that chil dren who 've gone through the program will do better , that it is a long-term in vestment in the child 's future. . . . But for the principal with `` X ' dollars to spend , there 's a real tendency to put the money into programs that serve t he most children . '' Reading Recovery assumes that every child can learn to rea d if confusion with the language is detected and corrected as soon as it becomes a problem . Many educators see the program as a first step in a long struggle t o break the failure chain that has cluttered junior high and high schools across the country with nonreaders . By the time students reach upper grades , experts say , the inability to read has usually taken an enormous academic and social t oll . Sykes , whose district has contracted for special tutoring services for il literate high school students , said most of the older students `` were probably exhibiting problems as early as first grade . But no one was scrutinizing ; bac k then , there was no Reading Recovery . '' Studies of Reading Recovery children show that 80 percent who go through the 12-20 week intervention never need furt her reading remediation or special education , according to specialist Angela Ja ggar , a New York University professor who is conducting follow-up studies of ch ildren who went through the program , which began in Manhattan 's District 2 in the mid-1980s . `` What the schools have traditionally done is wait until a long time has passed in a child 's life to decide they 're having difficulty in read ing. . . . The longer you wait the harder it is , '' explained Jaggar . `` This program helps us understand how kids learn naturally , to spot their confusions and respond immediately with a repertoire of strategies . '' In Kenny Vixama 's case , Mandel several weeks ago began one-on-one tutoring sessions . The first l essons allowed him to show off what he knew , a phase called `` Roaming Around t he Room , '' designed to build the child 's self-confidence . Then , in each str uctured 30-minute session , Kenny worked first on familiar materials and built g radually to more challenging ones , with Mandel intervening when a difficult wor d or phrase stopped him . At one recent session , with a timer clicking in the b ackground , Kenny stumbled over the word `` how . '' Mandel quickly pulled out p lastic letters to spell the word , let Kenny sound it out , write it on a slip o f paper , rhyme it and find its proper place in a scrambled sentence . With each small victory , Kenny was able to move on through the text , his finger followi ng the words , a technique Mandel purposely used to keep his attention properly focused . She watched intensely , keeping a written record of Kenny 's progress to help structure the next day 's session . With 12 of the maximum 60 lessons un der his belt , Kenny seemed a candidate for success . But there were frustration s . Though Kenny 's problems were detected early in the year , it had taken unti l spring to work him into the program . Because Reading Recovery is only offered in first grade , Kenny would have only the few remaining weeks of school to wor k . Mandel , who helped eight children move up to average reading ability this y ear , expressed a complaint common in the movement there 's never enough time or teachers to reach all the children in need of help . In Jackson , Miss . , Supe rintendent Ben O . Canada has decided to shoulder the costs that come with wide- scale implementation of Reading Recovery . In 1991 , using federal Chapter 1 fun ds for needy students , the Jackson district began implementing Reading Recovery in eight of its lowest performing schools . Seventeen teachers were trained in the technique . Now , Reading Recovery has expanded to 37 Jackson schools and 81 teachers , and the district is cited as a national model of how the program can turn around reading progress in small school districts . `` Being in this for m any years , I '' ve seen so many fly-by-night programs , fancy packaging for thi ngs that didn't work . This has caused a revolution here almost , '' said Ida J. McCants , Chapter 1 administrator for the Jackson schools . `` The teachers are revitalized . The strategies they 're learning are helping them get through to children . And the parents are delighted . They see real growth in a short perio d of time . '' Yet even the program 's strongest advocates concede that Reading Recovery is only a beginning in the enormous fight against illiteracy . `` We 'r e optimistic , '' said Pinnell . `` But we know this problem is bigger than we a re . ''
The new supersonic jetliner sponsored by a $ 1.5 billion NASA research contract would require major breakthroughs in aircraft technology . Among them : Aerodyn amic drag must be cut to an absolute minimum . One technique involves a radical new design in which massive pumps would suck turbulent air off the skin of the w ings through millions of microscopic holes . The so-called laminar flow over the wings would be virtually free of turbulence , cutting the drag . The 311-foot-l ong jet must be so light that its structure would probably be built in large par t with thin sheets of titanium , held together through an exotic process called super plastic diffusion bonding . Engines that power supersonic jets are notorio usly noisy , but the new planes would have to keep quiet if they want a chance a t wide acceptance . A new design for the exhaust nozzles is expected to allow th e plane to meet existing airport noise standards . Inside the engines , the comb ustion chamber , or `` combustors , '' would operate at 3,600 degrees , hot enou gh to melt existing steel alloys and about 700 degrees hotter than existing engi nes . NASA is betting that a new fiber-reinforced ceramic composite liner would stand up to the heat . To prevent severe environmental damage , the engines must emit no more than five grams of nitrogen oxide for each kilogram of fuel burned . One proposed system would mix fuel and air in the engine upstream from the no rmal burning zone , allowing the lean fuel mix to vaporize better . The other pr oposed system would create a stratified fuel mixture , first injecting excess fu el and then adding air later in the combustion to create a lean stage a concept called rich burn-quick quench-lean burn . NASA is still hoping to find ways to r educe the sonic boom generated by the jet as it flies over the ocean . A boom , which is the acoustic shock wave trailing an aircraft , is a function of an airc raft 's mass , shape and its speed . Although cutting the boom is possible , it must be done without significantly hampering flight efficiency . Dan Rostenkowski 's problem is that so many prospective jurors in America know all too well the perils of home renovation , the bore and expense of giving chin a and crystal to people you 'd sooner not be obligated to , the inordinate cost of a daughter 's wedding , the pitfalls of auto leasing , the hoary dilemma of w hat to do about an underemployed son-in-law and the never-ending vexation of how Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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