Nine years ago, to escape the terror and unrest of their war-torn homeland, 10,000 boys of the Dinka tribe of southern Sudan began an unaccompanied trek that would take them hundreds of miles into Ethiopia, back to Sudan, and finally to a refugee camp in Kenya.
Articles with 1996
The sounds we hear too rarely
Maybe it’s because I don’t hear as keenly as I used to that I’ve been paying more attention to my auditory sense.
Seeking order in the natural order
It is a popular misconception that evolution is “just a theory.”
Imperfect, yes, but the best we have
“In a child’s power to master the multiplication tables there is more sanctity than in all your shouted amens and holy holies and hosannas.”
In the beginning there was a comet
We watched the long slide of Comet Hyakutake from the dark southeastern sky, up across the north pole, into the light of the setting sun.
Small bird, big curve
“God loves a curved universe,” said designer and engineer Buckminster Fuller.
Spiritually homeless in the cosmos
I was recently at Grinnell College in Iowa talking with a group of talented young nature writers. They had read a couple of my books, and generally approved of the way I tried to relate science to human values. However, they took me to task for what they perceived as condescension towards astrology, crystal therapy, parapsychology, and other New Age superstitions.
It’s smarter to be born in spring?
Are people born in the spring smarter than the rest of us?
Deep Blue vs human self-esteem
It was the highbrow face-off of the century: Garry Kasparov, the world’s best chess player, vs. Deep Blue, an IBM computer that can evaluate 100 million board positions per second.
And they’ll all speak English
If memory serves me right, my first true love was Princess Aura, daughter of Ming the Merciless of the planet Mongo.