In the News
Rafsanjani is in Poll Position in Iran "Iran goes to the polls [in June 2005] for its ninth presidential election since the 1979 revolution."This article features questions and answers about election topics, such as Hashemi Rafsanjani (the "leading candidate to replace Mohammed Khatami"), voter turnout, and "the most powerful players in Iran today."From the Guardian Unlimited, the online companion to the British newspaper The Guardian. [Odd] A Romanian couple has named their son Yahoo as a sign of gratitu Daily Libertatea said on Thursday Cornelia and Nonu Dragoman, both from Transylvania, met and decided they were meant for each other following a three-month relationship over the net.They married and had a baby this Christmas, whom they decided to name after one of the worldwide web's most popular portals."We named him Lucian Yahoo after my father and the net, the main beacon of my life,"Cornelia Dragoman was quoted as saying. New Brain Tumor Model Developed A collaboration of researchers, led by Dr. Martine Roussel (St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), has developed a novel mouse model of medulloblastoma -- the most prevalent malignant pediatric brain tumor -- that the researchers hope will more accurately represent the genetic changes involved in human brain tumor development. The Worldwide Guide to Movie Locations "Have you ever wondered 'Where did they film that?' ... The Worldwide Guide to Movie Locations is the essential travel guide to filming locations of Hollywood blockbusters, indie cult films and arthouse cinema throughout the world."Browse by movie name, actor or director, or location. Also includes an interactive map for movies filmed in North London. From an author who has published books on the subject. UCLA Brain Scientists Crack Mystery Of How Alcohol Causes Intoxication Scientists at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA have deciphered how a naturally occurring gene mutation in rats' brains lowers the animals' tolerance to alcohol, leading to rapid and acute intoxication after the equivalent of one drink. What's in Vista's Future? Microsoft is staking everything on its new OS. What will work, and what won't? You tell us. In Monkey Bites. A Ruler Of Gold And DNA: New Tool Could Expedite Scientists' Push To L Scientists from the US Department Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and the University of California at Berkeley have developed a ruler made of gold nanoparticles and DNA that can measure the smallest of life's phenomena, such as precisely where on a DNA strand a protein attaches itself. Nanoparticles Used To Target Brain Cancer Tiny particles one-billionth of a meter in size can be loaded with high concentrations of drugs designed to kill brain cancer. What's more, these nanoparticles can be used to image and track tumors as well as destroy them, according to researchers at the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center. People Can Put A Price Tag On Economic Justice, Economists Say Economists have developed a mathematical model to measure the value that people place on distributive justice -- whether goods are distributed fairly among all members of society. The authors found that, on average, people are willing to sacrifice about 20 percent of their disposable income to live in an equitable society. Satellites Continue To See Decline In Arctic Sea Ice In 2005 Researchers from NASA, the National Snow and Ice Data Center and others using satellite data have detected a significant loss in Arctic sea ice this year. On Sept. 21, 2005, sea ice extent dropped to 2.05 million sq. miles, the lowest extent yet recorded in the satellite record. Incorporating the 2005 minimum using satellite data going back to 1978, with a projection for ice growth in the last few days of this September, brings the estimated decline in Arctic sea ice to 8.5 percent per decade over the 27 year satellite record.
MP3 Music Downloads
Preview songs, Download Free Music,Burn CDs at ITunes.com

|