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Thai protesters refuse to leave, push new demands

Reuters - Mon, 2010-05-10 15:20
BANGKOK (Reuters) - Thai anti-government protesters refused on Monday to end a crippling two-month demonstration until the nation's deputy prime minister faces criminal charges over a clash with troops in April that killed 25 people.


Categories: Science News

The Start-Up Pains of a Smarter Electricity Grid

Scientific American Online - Mon, 2010-05-10 15:00

Only one thing is worse than the lights not coming on when the switch is flicked--and that's the lights going out right afterward. The fact that the problem is most often a burned-out lightbulb is testimony to the reliability of what's sometimes called the world's largest machine--the U.S. transmission and distribution grid for electricity . [More]

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Philippine polls deliver decisive win for Aquino

Reuters - Mon, 2010-05-10 14:50
MANILA (Reuters) - Presidential frontrunner Senator Benigno "Noynoy" Aquino was poised for a decisive victory in Monday's elections in the Philippines despite technical problems that caused long delays but did not derail the polls as feared.


Categories: Science News

Attacks kill over 100 in Iraq, al Qaeda blamed

Reuters - Mon, 2010-05-10 14:02
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Bombers and gunmen with suspected links to a battered but still lethal al Qaeda killed more than 100 people on Monday in a wave of attacks on markets, a textile factory, checkpoints and other sites across Iraq.


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Astronomers Could Soon Find Moons Outside the Solar System--Even Habitable Ones

Scientific American Online - Mon, 2010-05-10 14:00

In the past two decades, the roster of known planets in the galaxy has mushroomed. Astronomers have added to the handful in our own solar system roughly 450 so-called exoplanets orbiting other stars. Most of those planets are more massive than Saturn, which makes them unpromising from a habitability standpoint--such giants tend to be gaseous bodies without a surface to walk on. [More]

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She's Hooked: Allure of Vices Tied to a Woman's Monthly Cycle

Scientific American Online - Mon, 2010-05-10 14:00

Addiction has long been considered a man’s disease. Men are far more likely to use illicit substances, and partly for that reason, research on addiction for decades included only male users. Thus, far more is known about drug dependence in men than in women, and treatment programs and centers have been based on the needs of men.

But there are signs that the gender gap is closing, as drug and alcohol use have become more socially acceptable for girls and women. Indeed, drinking and alcohol dependence have grown increasingly prevalent among women in recent decades, but not among men, reported psychiatrist Richard A. Grucza of Washington University in St. Louis in a 2008 study.

[More]
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Fannie Mae seeks $8.4 billion from govt after loss

Reuters - Mon, 2010-05-10 13:56
WASHINGTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Fannie Mae, the largest U.S. residential mortgage funds provider, on Monday asked the government for an additional $8.4 billion after the company lost $13.1 billion in the first quarter.


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NYSE, Nasdaq halt bickering, pledge co-operation

Reuters - Mon, 2010-05-10 13:33
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The two largest U.S. stock exchange operators, NYSE Euronext and Nasdaq OMX Group, called a truce and issued a joint statement on Sunday, pledging to co-operate with each other and regulators to get to the bottom of last week's dramatic stock market plunge.


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Pakistani soldiers clash with Taliban, 40 dead

Reuters - Mon, 2010-05-10 13:25
KALAYA, Pakistan (Reuters) - Ten soldiers and 30 Taliban militants were killed in a clash on Monday after militants ambushed a military search team in Pakistan's Orakzai region, a government official said.


Categories: Science News

Breeding Cassava to Feed the Poor (preview)

Scientific American Online - Mon, 2010-05-10 13:00

The diet of more than 800 million people revolves around neither wheat, nor corn, nor rice. Instead in many countries the main staple consists of the starchy roots of a plant variously called cassava, tapioca, manioc or yuca (not to be confused with the succulent plant yucca). Indeed, cassava contributes more to the world’s calorie budget than any other food except rice and wheat, which makes it a virtually irreplaceable resource against hunger. Throughout the tropics, families typically cultivate it for their own consumption on small parcels of land, although in Asia and in parts of Latin America the plant is also grown commercially for use in animal feed and starch-based products. The root’s nutritional value, however, is poor: it contains little protein, vitamins or other nutrients such as iron. Better varieties of cassava could thus effectively alleviate malnutrition in much of the developing world.

Because of that promise, the two of us and our colleagues at the University of Brasilia and others are devoted to creating hardier, more productive and more nutritious varieties and making them widely available to farmers in developing countries. Our team focuses largely on applying traditional breeding techniques to form hybrids between cassava and its wild relatives, taking advantage of traits that have evolved in the wild plants over millions of years. This approach is less costly than genetic engineering and does not raise the safety concerns that make some people wary of genetically modified crops. Meanwhile researchers and nonprofit organizations in the developed world have begun to take an interest and have produced genetically modified cassava varieties for the same purposes. The recent completion of a draft genome sequencing of cassava may open the way to further improvements.

[More]
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No end in sight to spill as BP costs mount

Scientific American Online - Mon, 2010-05-10 12:51

By Erwin Seba

ROBERT, Louisiana (Reuters) - BP Plc said on Monday it had incurred $350 million in costs so far from the huge oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico as fears mounted of a prolonged and growing environmental and economic disaster.

[More]
Categories: Science News

Iran over decade away from anti-U.S. missile: study

Reuters - Mon, 2010-05-10 10:34
LONDON (Reuters) - Iran is unlikely to be able to make a missile capable of hitting the U.S. east coast for more than a decade, according to a study by a London-based thinktank released on Monday.


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U.S. sees no quick fix in Doha trade round

Reuters - Mon, 2010-05-10 10:27
GENEVA (Reuters) - There can be no quick fix to end the deadlock in the World Trade Organisation's long-running Doha Round talks, the new U.S. ambassador to the WTO said on Monday.


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Gordon Brown to quit in bid to keep Labour in power

Reuters - Mon, 2010-05-10 07:16
LONDON (Reuters) - British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said on Monday he would step down this year, sacrificing himself to give his Labour Party a chance of forming a government with the smaller Liberal Democrats.


Categories: Science News

HIV non-progressors have super-charged T cells

Science A GoGo - Mon, 2010-05-10 06:10
A new study shows that individuals with the HLA B57 gene produce larger numbers of T cells that are cross-reactive, meaning they can attack HIV mutations that arise to escape activated killer T cells...
Categories: Science News

Karzai, Obama seek to mend caustic ties in visit

Reuters - Mon, 2010-05-10 05:26
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Afghan President Hamid Karzai arrives in Washington Monday on a trip aimed at mending recent public spats during a pivotal time in the nine-year war.


Categories: Science News

Japan government denies dropping U.S. base deadline

Reuters - Mon, 2010-05-10 04:53
TOKYO (Reuters) - A top aide to Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama denied a report on Monday that the government had dropped an end-of-May deadline for resolving a row over a U.S. Marine base, though there was still no solution in sight.


Categories: Science News

BP tries a new Gulf spill fix, as slick spreads

Reuters - Mon, 2010-05-10 03:13
ROBERT, Louisiana (Reuters) - BP Plc said on Monday it will again attempt to contain oil gushing deep in the Gulf of Mexico, this time with a far smaller funnel than it tried before, as a massive slick threatened Louisiana shores.


Categories: Science News
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