By Meredith Wadman of Nature magazine The e-mail that ended one career for Alison Singer, but started another, arrived as she was cooking dinner for her daughters one evening in January 2009. [More]
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Feed SubscriptionObama: Health, Economy to Affect Keystone Decision
By Jeff Mason and Matt Spetalnick WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama said on Tuesday health and economic factors would be taken into account when he decides whether to approve TransCanada Corp's Canada-to-Texas Keystone XL pipeline proposal.
Read More »Arithmetic Progression: U.S. Education Assessment Shows Modest but Steady Gains in Math Scores
New data from a national math test show that U.S.
Read More »Chock-Full Church Made Choral Clarity
Venice's Church of the Most Holy Redeemer has held a musical celebration every year since its construction in 1592. And recently, the church has inspired debate among historians: How could its echoing chambers clearly portray the complicated music performed during the festival
Read More »Nerves Fray as Power Still out for 1.6 Million in Northeast
By Mary Ellen Godin MERIDEN, Connecticut (Reuters) - Cold, tired and frustrated, residents of more than 1.6 million homes in the Northeast remained without power on Tuesday and some were told it could take 10 more days to restore electricity after the rare and deadly October snowstorm. [More]
Read More »U.S. Glossed Over Cancer Concerns Associated with Airport X-Ray Scanners
Look for a PBS NewsHour story on X-ray body scanners, reported in conjunction with ProPublica, to air later this month. [More]
Read More »Who Will Be the First Advanced Battery Maker to Fail?
An economic chill will soon arrive in the world market that provides the batteries that power electric cars. [More]
Read More »NASA Balloon Flight Experiment
University students via for a chance to install their instruments on the next NASA science balloon [More]
Read More »Mississippi to Vote on ‘Personhood’ of Fertilized Eggs
"When do you believe life begins?" Johnny DuPree, Democratic candidate for governor of Mississippi, asked during a public debate on October 14. The question was rhetorical, and DuPree's answer--not a surprise in one of the most socially conservative US states--was the same as that of his Republican opponent: "I believe life begins at conception." [More]
Read More »Could an Artificial Cave Help Protect Bats from Deadly Fungus?
The deadly fungal infection known as white-nose syndrome (WNS) has killed at least a million bats since it was first observed in 2006. In some areas more than 90 percent of the bats have been wiped out.
Read More »Asteroid Plans Close Earth Flyby
On November 8th, Earth will have a close encounter with a sizable asteroid. But not too close, thankfully
Read More »Japan Winter Power Enough Despite Nuclear Lack
By Risa Maeda TOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese utilities will largely avoid power shortages this winter despite prolonged reactor shutdowns amid public concerns over nuclear safety, but hurdles remain for next summer, the government said on Tuesday. [More]
Read More »Wireless Services Increasingly Strained as Mobile Explodes
A new report warns that the exploding usage of radio waves by broadband-devouring smartphones and video threatens to deplete a finite wireless spectrum . “If you look at traffic patterns over the past five years, we went from things like illegal music downloads, to legal music downloads, to video,” said technology adviser and report author Michael Kleeman at University of California San Diego
Read More »Massive Fraud Uncovered in Work by Social Psychologist
By Ewen Callaway of Nature magazine When colleagues called the work of Dutch psychologist Diederik Stapel too good to be true, they meant it as a compliment. [More]
Read More »Believing in "Bad Vibes"
Imagine that your co-worker has just moved into a new office. The woman who used to work there spent many unhappy months in the office complaining about her job. In fact, she ended up quitting in a fit of rage
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