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- July posted on 04/19/2009
- July posted on 04/18/2009
- July posted on 04/17/2009
- July posted on 04/17/2009
- July posted on 04/17/2009
- July posted on 04/15/2009A Story Sad is the man who is asked for a story and can't come up with one. His five-year-old son waits in his lap. Not the same story, Baba. A new one. The man rubs his chin, scratches his ear. In a room full of books in a world of stories, he can recall not one, and soon, he thinks, the boy will give up on his father. Already the man lives far ahead, he sees the day this boy will go. Don't go! Hear the alligator story! The angel story once more! You love the spider story. You
- July posted on 04/15/2009
- July posted on 04/14/2009Dr. Meyer Friedman (July 13, 1910CApril 27, 2001) developed with colleague R.H. Rosenman the theory that the "Type A" behavior of chronically angry and impatient people raises their risk of heart attacks. The cardiologist and researcher worked until his death at 90 as director of a medical institute that bears his name. Friedman, who often characterized himself as a "recovering Type A," and colleague Dr. Ray Rosenman began to write about the link between behavior and heart disease in scientific papers
- July posted on 04/14/2009
- July posted on 04/14/2009
- July posted on 04/13/2009
- July posted on 04/13/2009
- July posted on 04/12/2009
- July posted on 04/12/2009
- July posted on 04/12/2009Genesis (Hardcover) by Bernard Beckett Amazon.com Review Amazon Best of the Month, April 2009: If robots began to self-evolve, learning to feel and create as we do, what traits would set humans apart--and help us survive? Beckett isn't the first to dramatize this question, and his Genesis pays subtle homage to his predecessors (including Isaac Asimov, Arthur C. Clarke, and Philip K. Dick). But his near-future tale feels unique, and oddly credible. As the young historian Anax endures an examination by
- July posted on 04/10/2009
- July posted on 04/10/2009Whole-grain pasta is now tastier and better for you than ever. Here are four boxes worth buying. I first heard about the importance of eating whole grains at an otherwise forgettable scientific conference nearly a decade ago. I was so blown away by the accumulating evidence of their protective effect against chronic disease that I made a beeline for the grocery store when I got home and purchased a box of the one brand of whole grain pasta I could find. Now, I love pasta (and truth be told, all manner
- July posted on 04/10/2009
- July posted on 04/10/2009
- July posted on 04/10/2009
- July posted on 04/09/2009Ҳɡ ⳡгϵԨĽڷ籩ԭڻֵĽڴIJƷCDSɣѾûʡ Tim Geithner Ϊ˵µĽڼߣ327дHouse Financial Services Committee ֤ż˵ Federal regulations would be expended for the first time to all trading in financial derivatives -- exotic financial instruments such as credit default swaps were blamed for much of the damage in the meltdown. (һζнĽƷм
- July posted on 04/08/2009
- July posted on 04/08/2009Focus of the discussions will be Tehran's disputed nuclear program TEHRAN, Iran - The Obama administration said Wednesday it will participate directly in group talks with Iran over its suspect nuclear program, marking another shift from former President George W. Bush's policies. State Department spokesman Robert Wood said Wednesday the United States would be at the table "from now on" when senior diplomats from the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council and Germany meet with Irania
- July posted on 04/08/2009LCD auto displays' role continues to grow and become more mainstream Over the decades of the Star Trek TV and movie franchise, the ships computer displays evolved from steam-age dials and switches to large 21st-century video displays that could be configured to perform seemingly any task. Most of todays cars retain those seemingly Victorian buttons, switches, knobs and analog gauges, though they are no longer made of brass. But an emerging generation of new models is making the move toward v
- July posted on 04/08/2009BEIJING C Just 126 years after his death, Karl Marxs moment may finally have arrived. The Peoples Press C the biggest publishing house for Chinas orthodox revolutionary books C reports that Marxs anti-capitalism opus "Das Kapital" has been selling about 4,000-5,000 copies nationwide a month since last November. Thats a big jump from before the economic crisis, when the book sold well under 1,000 copies per month on average. The "Selected Works by Mao Zedong," a book owned by almost e
- July posted on 04/08/2009Worshippers around the world pay homage to God with rare blessing JERUSALEM - Devout Jews around the world on Wednesday observed a ritual performed only once every 28 years, saying their morning prayers under the open sky in a ceremony called the "blessing of the sun." Tens of thousands of worshippers stood next to the Western Wall in Jerusalem's walled Old City, the holiest site where Jews can pray. Hundreds headed to the ancient desert fortress of Masada, while others prayed on the roof of a Tel
- July posted on 04/08/2009She is performancing with Chicago Symphony Orchestra this month: -------------------- Xian Zhang (simplified Chinese: ), born in 1973 in Dandong, China) is a Chinese American conductor. She was appointed Associate Conductor of the New York Philharmonic in July 2005 by Music Director Lorin Maazel. Xian Zhang received both bachelors and masters degrees in music from the Central Conservatory of Music in Beijing and began work on a doctorate at The University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory
- July posted on 04/08/2009The Chicago Symphony Orchestra joins the international music community in celebrating the 60th birthday of its longtime collaborator and friend Pinchas Zukerman with a weeklong mini-festival entitled "Bach to Bach" from April 1 to April 7. Two distinct programs of music by J. S. Bach will feature the multitalented Zukerman in roles as conductor and violinist, complemented by soloists drawn from the CSO. On Wednesday, April 1, Zukerman kicks off his 60th birthday celebration at Symphony Center with an
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