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    Last update: December 22, 2009

    +Faster Computers Accelerate Pace of Discovery
      Sometime next year, developers will boot up the next generation of supercomputers, machines whose vast increases in processing power will accelerate the transformation of the scientific method, experts say.

    +SCIENCE NOTEBOOK
      An ancient flood that is likely to have inspired the biblical story of Noah's ark forced large numbers of the world's early farmers out of the Mediterranean and Black Sea regions and into Western Europe, where they displaced hunter-gatherers and established agriculture across the continent.

    +Study Finds Gaps Between Doctors' Standards and Actions
      Physicians are among the most trusted professionals in America, but a new survey shows that when it comes to dealing with colleagues' mistakes or incompetence, many doctors abandon the high standards they espouse.

    +The Device NASA Is Leaving Behind
      After years of delays, NASA hopes to launch this week a European-built laboratory that will greatly expand the research capability of the international space station. Although some call it a milestone, the launch has focused new attention on the space agency's earlier decision to back out of plans...

    +Experts 'Fail' Risk Analysis for Boston Bioterror Lab
      An expert panel of the nation's premier science advisory organization yesterday gave a failing grade to a federal risk analysis used to justify construction of a controversial high-security bioterror laboratory in inner-city Boston.

    +7 Decisions on Species Revised
      After concluding that a Bush administration appointee "may have improperly influenced" several rulings on whether to protect imperiled species under the Endangered Species Act, the Fish and Wildlife Service has revised seven decisions on protecting species across the country.

    +A Small Window on Big Science
      For those who find the vast array of high-tech hardware that fills the National Air and Space Museum overwhelming -- not to mention the constant hordes that fill the cavernous expanse -- a more serene and equally informative scientific experience is available less than a mile away at the largely...

    +With Power Comes a Selfish Point of View
      In the interest of promoting democracy, Pakistan's president, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, recently announced that he had to lock up most of his country's democracy activists. And because he wanted the Pakistani Supreme Court to independently rule on whether he could continue as president, Musharraf also...

    +Is Lincoln Earliest Recorded Case of Rare Disease?
      Abraham Lincoln was the rarest of men, and John G. Sotos believes that extended all the way to his chromosome 10.

    +Gene Therapy Study Is Allowed to Resume
      The Food and Drug Administration has given a Seattle company permission to resume its human tests of an experimental, gene-based arthritis treatment whose safety came into question this summer after a 36-year-old study participant died.

    +Clinton Favors Future Human Spaceflight
      The major presidential candidates pummel each other daily on issues ranging from the Iraq war to health care. But when it comes to President Bush's ambitious initiative to send humans back to the moon and on to Mars, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) is all but alone in staking out a formal...

    +States Assess Breakthrough On Stem Cells
      Tuesday's announcement that scientists had found a noncontroversial way to make cells equivalent to human embryonic stem cells did not just change the scientific and ethical landscape. It generated economic and geopolitical tremors through California, New York and about half a dozen other states...

    +A Scientific Advance, a Political Question Mark
      The discovery that it is possible to create equivalents to embryonic stem cells without destroying embryos has the potential to reshape -- and perhaps defuse -- the acrimonious political debate that has raged ever since human embryonic stem cells were discovered in 1998.

    +Advance May End Stem Cell Debate
      Researchers in Wisconsin and Japan said yesterday that they have turned ordinary human skin cells into what are effectively embryonic stem cells without using embryos or women's eggs -- the previously essential ingredients that have embroiled the medically promising field in a nearly decade-long ...

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