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Almanac -- February 1997
The February AlmanacArts & Letters
February 28: today is the last day that libraries can place orders for
catalogue cards with the Library of Congress, which is halting production of
the cards. Libraries wishing to maintain card catalogues will have to turn to
commercial suppliers. The Library of Congress has since 1902 sold
duplicates of
its three-by-five-inch cards to libraries around the world. However, card
sales
have declined since 1968, when cataloguing information became available in an
automated format; they fell to 579,879 last year, from a peak of 78 million in
1968. Critics of automated systems point out that errors in conversion
have led
to books' being lost and have limited cross-referencing options, and that the
cards themselves -- many of which are being discarded -- have inherent
historical
value.
GovernmentFebruary 22: as of today many people who have been receiving federal food stamps are no longer eligible for this form of assistance. According to a provision of
the 1996
Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity
Reconciliation Act -- the sweeping welfare-reform bill signed by
President Bill
Clinton last August -- childless able-bodied adults aged 18 to 50 cannot
collect
food stamps for more than three months of any three-year period unless they
have part-time jobs or are in employment-training or workfare programs. When
the provision took effect, last November 22, states were required to give
three
months' notice to recipients who stood to lose their food stamps unless they
met the new requirements. State and local governments can apply for
waivers for
residents of areas where the unemployment rate is 10 percent or more or where
it is deemed that appropriate jobs are lacking. According to the Congressional
Budget Office, the provision could mean that a million fewer people at a time
receive food stamps, at savings to the federal budget of $5.1 billion over six
years. Soup kitchens, shelters, and food banks are gearing up for an increase
in demand for their services.
EnvironmentThis month the Water Environment Federation, a nonprofit educational and technical organization, will report the final results of a survey commissioned by the Environmental
Protection Agency on the state of the nation's sewage
sludge, or the residue left behind after sewage has been treated. This is the
first comprehensive inventory of the methods by which wastewater-treatment
plants use and dispose of sludge. It is intended to assess compliance with
regulations issued in 1993. Among the topics the survey will address is public
acceptance of the use of sludge as both agricultural and nonagricultural
fertilizer, a frequent but controversial practice. Opponents argue that toxins
that may remain in treated sewage pose health risks to grazing animals and
nearby human populations. As part of its efforts to emphasize the positive
qualities of the substance, the EPA has recently abandoned the term
"sludge" in
favor of "biosolids."
Food
February 14: Valentine's Day; Americans will buy some 30 million
heart-shaped boxes of chocolates today.
Many recipients may puzzle over the
contents, however, since few chocolate assortments come with "maps." Some
general guidelines: Round or oval pieces are likely to be creams (before being
coated with chocolate, cream centers are usually forced through a funnel,
resulting in a dome shape). Square pieces probably contain some sort of nougat
or caramel (hard or chewy centers are usually cut from large slabs into small
squares). Thin rectangular pieces are probably brittles. There are exceptions,
of course: some top-of-the-line chocolates are manufactured in a more
complicated and delicate process involving molds of varying shapes.
The SkiesThose hoping for the best glimpse of Comet Hale-Bopp this month should look low in the east in the predawn sky February 4-19, when the Moon
will not
interfere. February 5: Jupiter and Venus lie close together in the
southeast just before sunrise -- an event that should be visible to the
naked eye
for observers in the southernmost states (viewers elsewhere may need
binoculars). 10: this evening the slender crescent Moon sits just above
Saturn in the southwest. 22: Full Moon, also known this month as the
Snow, Hunger, and Frightened Coyote Moon.
[For daily information on the skies, visit the Skywatcher's Diary of Michigan State University's Abrams Planetarium.]
Health & SafetyFebruary is a peak month for respiratory syn cytial virus (RSV), a nearly ubiquitous illness -- virtually all children contract it by age three -- that usually resembles the common cold but sometimes progresses to pneumonia or bronchiolitis. RSV can be especially serious in very young infants and the elderly, and in those with congenital heart or lung disease. Each year some 90,000 children with RSV are hospitalized; 4,500 of them die. RSV is highly contagious: it can live for days on clothes, toys, or countertops. Efforts to develop a vaccine have so far been unsuccessful, even disastrous: some children vaccinated in one trial became very ill, a few fatally so.
25 Years Ago
Alfred Adler, writing in the February, 1972, issue of The Atlantic
Monthly: "The confusion of science with technology is understandable.
Certainly the two often appear to be aspects of a single larger process, as
when science proposes new laws of physics, which inspire the development of a
technology for their exploration, which in turn exposes inaccuracies in the
laws and forces science to seek a more profound level of theory. But in fact
their divergence is great. It is the divergence of engagement from
fulfillment,
of means from ends. . . . If truth is a path, then science explores it,
and the
brief stops along the way are where technologies begin (they build towns and
pave a highway). Technology is results, science is process; though the two
fuse
and separate and then fuse once more, as ends and means must, their opposition
is profound."
Illustrations by Juliette Borda Copyright © 1997 by The Atlantic Monthly Company. All rights reserved. The Atlantic Monthly; February 1997; The February Almanac; Volume 279, No. 2; page 16. |
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