In the News
Special Report: Saudi Arabia Collection of news articles and commentary about politics and current events in Saudi Arabia. Includes articles on topics such as the August 2005 death of King Fahd, elections, and Islamic extremists. Also includes a link to a feature about the Hajj (annual pilgrimage to Mecca). From the Guardian Unlimited, the online companion to the British newspaper The Guardian. Magnetic Transistor Could 'Dial In' Quantum Effects A team of theoretical and experimental physicists from Rice University is preparing a unique probe in hopes of "dialing in"elusive quantum states called "quantum criticalities."The team is using nanotechnology to create a probe capable of trapping and tuning a single electron to create the rarified physical state. The probe, a transistor thousands of times smaller than a cell, is described online this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Exercise Improves Quality Of Life For People With Breast Cancer Group exercise sessions can help to improve the physical and psychological wellbeing of people diagnosed with breast cancer, a new British Medical Journal study reveals. Deep Thinking: Scientists Sequence A Cold-loving Marine Microbe At home in the deep, dark Arctic Ocean, the marine bacterium Colwellia psychrerythraea 34H keeps very cool -- typically below 5 degrees Celsius. How does the bacterium function in this frigid environment? To find out, scientists at The Institute for Genomic Research (TIGR) and collaborators have sequenced and analyzed C. psychrerythraea's genome. X-factor News The latest issue of the X-factors webzine is now online featuring crystallised anticancer drugs, liquidised carbon, and a clearer picture of chagas disease. Greenhouse Gas Bubbling From Melting Permafrost Feeds Climate Warming A study co-authored by a Florida State University scientist in Tallahassee, Fla., and published in the Sept. 7 issue of the journal Nature, has found that as the permafrost melts in North Siberia due to climate change, carbon sequestered and buried there since the Pleistocene era is bubbling up to the surface of Siberian thaw lakes and into the atmosphere as methane, a greenhouse gas 20 times more potent than carbon dioxide. Spread Some Holiday Cheer With These Viral Sites Celebrity gingerbread, custom online greetings, Simon Sez Santa: These seasonal diversions are the internet's gift to you and all your friends. Ways To Teach Approved Drugs New Tricks: How To Combat Cancer Although all cancers are not alike, most share common causes, whether it is the result of a genetic mutation or faulty biochemical signaling pathway. For that reason, drugs developed specifically for one disease might have an impact on many others. Increasingly, researchers are discovering ways of combining new and existing drugs to fight cancer -- broadening the targets of already-approved targeted therapeutics. Rocket Pack Reinvented Often dismissed as a quirky pipe dream, it took a thrill-seeking mogul to energize one of mankind's oldest desires. By James Lee from Wired magazine. [Ironic] LONDON: A jailed cocaine dealer is working as Santa Claus on John Tams, who dons beard, boots and red suit to work in a cafe's Christmas grotto, said he wanted to give something back to the community...
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