[55178] in SIPB IPv6
Breakthrough Science on Your Body Cells [AmazingVideo]
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Telovite)
Thu May 28 19:34:20 2015
Date: Thu, 28 May 2015 16:34:17 -0700
To: <sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu>
From: "Telovite" <Telovite@warmin.work>
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Science thru.
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until Monday.
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iStockBad science papers can have lasting effects. Consider the 1998 paper in
the journal the Lancet that linked autism to the MMR vaccine for
measles, mumps and rubella. That paper was fully retracted in 2010 upon
evidence that senior author Andrew Wakefield had manipulated data and breached several
proper ethical codes of conduct.Nevertheless the erroneous paper continues to undermine public
confidence in vaccines. After the Lancet article, MMR vaccination rates dipped sharply
and haven't fully rebounded. This decline in the MMR vaccine has been
tied to a rise in measles cases resulting in permanent injury and
death.Each year hundreds of peer-reviewed scientific articles are retracted. Most involve no
blatant malfeasance; the authors themselves often detect errors and retract the paper.
Some retractions, however, as documented on the blog Retraction Watch, entail plagiarism,
false authorship or cooked data.No journal is safe from retractions, from the
mighty "
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Former Disney star Demi Lovato. Demi Lovato attacked the Disney Channel on
Twitter last week for mocking eating disorders and using increasingly smaller stars
in their shows that cater to tweens. The network was quick to
offer an apology, but experts say Lovato opened the Pandoras Box about
the dangerous effects television shows can have on the negative body image
of young women.The producers and writers should have known that a comment
like this is ridiculous to be said on air by a character
on any program targeted at teens, nutritionist Rania Batayneh tells Fox411.com.Lovatos beef
was with a joke made about eating disorders on the show Shake
it Up. One of the shows characters joked: "I could just eat
you up, well, if I ate.""It is not a notable character trait
to not eat,'" Batayneh said. "We have seen time and time again
Disney actresses who struggle with their weight who are a bit obsessed
as adults with their physique or just lose control all together and
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tiple coronal mass ejection arrivals," the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Space
Weather Prediction Center wrote in an update Tuesday (Dec. 27). "R1 (Minor)
radio blackouts are expected until 31 December."Geomagnetic storms can also trigger dramatic
aurora displays, which are also known as the northern and southern lights.
So skywatchers at higher latitudes may want to look up after sunset
over the next few days.The sun's recent eruptions are part of a
pattern.After remaining surprisingly quiet from 2005 through 2010, our star has come
alive in 2011, spouting off numerous powerful flares and CMEs. An August
flare, for example, was the strongest one seen in more than four
years.Most experts expect such outbursts to continue over the next few years.
Solar activity waxes and wanes on an 11-year cycle, and scientists think
the current one known as Solar Cycle 24 will peak
in 2013.* The Sun's Wrath: Worst Solar Storms in History* Amazing New
Sun
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already nearly come to blows over oil fields in this disputed region.
In 2008, a 24-hour standoff developed between their respective security forces over
a section of an oil field in Kirkuk, an ethnically-mixed area the
Kurds want to annex.Baghad warns it could punish Exxon Mobil and that
the company's existing contracts could be in jeopardy. But so far it
has taken no punitive measures.Many analysts doubt that it will, considering Baghdad's
profound need for foreign investment.Outside the Kurdish zone, Exxon Mobil and Shell
are already developing one of Iraq's biggest oil fields, the 8.6 billion-barrel
West Qurna Stage 1 field in southern Basra province. Exxon Mobil is
also expected to lead a multibillion dollar project in Basra, a Shiite
stronghold, that will help make available the water needed for oil development.Baghdad's
oil policy is not a "long-term sustainable program that would attract foreign
capital into Iraq," said Fadel Gheit, chief economist with
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One Oregon police chief was killed when a man allegedly took the
officer's gun and shot him in the head. A policeman in Arizona
was fatally shot when he went to a suburban Phoenix apartment complex
to help a probation officer. And two South Dakota officers were killed
in a shootout after a traffic stop.The number of fatalities from departments
across the country caused by firearms made 2011 one of the deadliest
years in recent history for U.S. law enforcement.Across the nation, 173 officers
died in the line of duty, up 13 percent from 153 the
year before, according to numbers as of Wednesday compiled by the National
Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund.The nonprofit group that tracks police deaths also
reported that 68 federal, state and local officers were killed by gunfire
in 2011, a 15 percent jump from last year when 59 were
killed. It marks the first time in 14 years that firearms fatalities
were higher than traffic-related deaths. The data shows that 6
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