In the News
An Alzheimer's Vaccine? Promising Results In Mice Could a new vaccine be the key to stopping Alzheimer's disease? A new study shows that immunization could offer a way to blunt or even prevent the deadly, memory-robbing disease. Immunized mice showed a significant reduction in the build-up of protein plaques linked to Alzheimer's and also better cognitive performance than control mice that had not received the vaccine. Memoir: Ex-HP CEO Fiorina Carly Fiorina, former CEO of Hewlett-Packard, comes out with a memoir called Tough Choices. A controversial figure in Silicon Valley, Fiorina reinvents herself for whatever's next. Soil Fungi Linked To Insect-Associated Decline Of Resistant Grape Root Although the destructive phylloxera insects have been reported feeding on grape rootstocks in several declining Northern California vineyards, the cause of the damage appears to be fungal activity rather than the loss of rootstock resistance, report researchers at the University of California, Davis. University Of Chicago Researchers Find Human Brain Still Evolving Human evolution, Chicago researchers report, is still under way, in what has become our most important organ: the brain. In two related papers published in Science, they show that two genes linked to brain size are rapidly evolving in humans. The researchers looked at variations of microcephalin and ASPM within modern humans, and found for each gene one class of variants has arisen recently and has been spreading rapidly because it is favored by selection. Quantum Physics Discovery May Bring About Changes In Optical Communica Results from experiments conducted at the University of California, Santa Barbara may lead to profound changes in optical communications. The discovery is reported in the October 28th edition of the journal Science. "We are working toward sending information 100 times faster than it can be sent now,"said UCSB physicist Mark Sherwin. Little Evidence Found For IVF As Most Effective Infertility Treatment In vitro fertilization can improve pregnancy rates among couples with unexplained infertility, but there is little evidence to show whether IVF results in more live births than other treatments, according to a new review of recent studies. 1930's Dust Bowl A brief description of the Dust Bowl in the Oklahoma Panhandle community of Boise City, Cimarron County, with pictures of "Black Sunday April 14, 1935. The dust storm that turned day into night."Excerpted from The Dust Bowl, Men, Dirt and Depression by Paul Bonnifield. On the Web site of the Cimarron Heritage Center in Boise City. Pioneer Plasma TV Will Deliver "Absolute Black" At a press conference at the Consumer Electronics Show here in Las Vegas, Pioneer demonstrated a concept TV that, they say, delivers "absolute black," meaning no light at all escapes from the black portions of the screen. The innovation could produce amazingly beautiful imagery, and might breathe new life into plasma technology. RSS Reminder It may not be immediately obvious from a quick glance at the Sciencebase site that you can now syndicate our news and blog entries from a range of categories. And, since we enabled fulltext in our feeds, you don't even have to visit the site to read our words of ... After 150 Years Of Research, Discovery Of How Flames Burn Is Finally M A compound discovered to be ubiquitous in fire has amazingly eluded detection in spite of 150 years of research on how flames burn, according to a recent paper appearing in the journal Science on its Science Express Web site (May 12, 2005), co-authored by Cornell University Professor Terrill A. Cool.
MP3 Music Downloads
Preview songs, Download Free Music,Burn CDs at ITunes.com

|