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Sunday, January 2, 2011

“Do New Year's resolutions set you up for failure? - msnbc.com” plus 6 more

“Do New Year's resolutions set you up for failure? - msnbc.com” plus 6 more


Do New Year's resolutions set you up for failure? - msnbc.com

Posted: 02 Jan 2011 04:10 AM PST

HEALTH Your success in keeping a resolution depends on your attitude, not the time of year it's made, experts say. Bucks County resident Stephanie Sides doesn't make New Year's resolutions. She sets goals, realistic ones. Sometimes they even stick, she ...

Tibetan monks studying science at Emory in Atlanta - Indiana Gazette

Posted: 01 Jan 2011 10:26 PM PST

ATLANTA -- Munching on pizza. Posting on Facebook. Hanging out with friends on weekends. Some of the newest students at Emory University's student body may act like typical college kids, but there's a key difference: They're Tibetan monks sent by the Dalai ...

Ending Bullying In Schools Is An Inexact Science, Research Shows - Huffingtonpost.com

Posted: 02 Jan 2011 02:18 PM PST

Fixing school bullying isn't simple. That's what research is revealing about anti-bullying school programs, according to The Boston Globe . "antibullying programs have shown, at best, mixed results, and what has worked in one school has not always worked ...

The weirdest of 2010's Weird Science - Ars Technica

Posted: 02 Jan 2011 12:02 PM PST

Each week, the science staff here at Ars goes through a flood of press releases and journal papers, looking for the most compelling science to cover. Each week, we also end up scratching our heads over some of the work that gets done, mystified by the ...

Science powers good economy - The Spokesman-Review

Posted: 01 Jan 2011 11:59 PM PST

Here are two facts that might seem unrelated: (1) Most Americans cannot name a living scientist. (2) Over the last two years, by far the most pressing problems in the country have been the economy and the cost of health care (a chief concern of President ...

A big experiment in big science - Boston Globe

Posted: 02 Jan 2011 06:47 AM PST

CAMBRIDGE — This is biology, super-sized. Every hour of every day, hundreds of humming machines inside the Broad Institute decipher coils of DNA, screen thousands of chemicals for potential new drugs, and mine reams of raw data for insights into human ...

Science needs support, not cuts - Boston Herald

Posted: 01 Jan 2011 09:00 PM PST

N ew Republican legislators should be given some reading matter. One is William Rosen's book "The Most Powerful Idea in the World," a study of the culture of invention. Another is the National Academy of Sciences report "Rising Above the Gathering ...

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