1. The manometric patterns described in the four papers have some features in common. 2. None of the three papers was going to set the world on fire. 3. The other papers had apparently satisfied the examiners. 4. At the end of the day, the publisher who sells the most papers is the winner. 5. Beyond the uncertainty, neuroscientists interviewed about the two papers were uncomfortable with issues like stereotype, prejudice and identity. 6. Brett, at the Library of Congress, said that the other papers had not been considered as part of the negotiations. 7. But some journalists said the two papers had crossed an important line that normally separated news organizations from government. 8. But the two papers are the first published efforts to map exactly what happens in the brain when it perceives a racial difference. 9. Detroit Newspapers oversees the combined business operation of the two papers. |