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Science News December 17, 2005 Janet Raloff |
Breathing Easier with Vitamin D Physicians in New Zealand have now linked the vitamin to yet another apparent advantage: improved lung function.  |
Pharmaceutical Executive December 1, 2005 Alana Klein |
Thought Leader: A Q&A with Graham Allaway While researchers continue to hunt for new AIDS drugs, Graham Allaway, chief operating officer of Panacos Pharmaceuticals, is focusing on developing a treatment for patients failing therapy due to resistance.  |
Outside December 2005 Lolly Merrell |
Cave for the Cure Hazel Barton innovative research leads her to cave walls to find new antibiotics.  |
Scientific American November 28, 2005 Christine Soares |
Cold War Clues Atomic tests allow carbon dating of baby boomers and enable neuroscientists to track brain tissue regeneration.  |
Smithsonian December 2005 Frank J. Sulloway |
The Evolution of Charles Darwin A creationist when he visited the Galapagos Islands, the great naturalist grasped the full significance of the unique wildlife he found there only well after he had returned to London.  |
Smithsonian December 2005 Lawrence M. Small |
A Whale Called Phoenix A very large mammal will help tell an even weightier tale -- about the ocean in this crowded, challenging century.  |
Scientific American December 2005 Steve Mirsky |
The Trials of Life Because eternal vigilance is the price of liberty, we have to talk about intelligent design again.  |
BusinessWeek November 28, 2005 Kerry Capell |
High-Velocity Vaccines PowderMed says its DNA technology would let it react quickly to a flu pandemic. A DNA flu vaccine would have huge advantages over traditional ones. But first, the company must prove in upcoming large-scale clinical trials that its vaccine can protect people from flu generally.  |
National Defense December 2005 Sandra I. Erwin |
Medical Breakthrough Could Help `Repair' Wounded Soldiers Wounded troops returning from combat in Iraq and Afghanistan could, in time, benefit from potentially groundbreaking medical research in tissue repair.  |
Bio-IT World November 2005 Nancy Weil |
Dharmacon, Institutes Form siRNA Global Initiative The company has formed a global alliance with leading biomedical research centers aimed at speeding scientific and medical discoveries now that the first complete siRNA (small interfering RNA) library is available for targeting genes in the human genome.  |
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