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- 4From:Science (Vol. 301, Issue 5629) Peer-ReviewedThe satellite photos showed unmistakable signs of fortified underground bunkers. U.S. intelligence officials warned that workers would soon be churning out weapons of mass destruction within the maze of tunnels. The...
- 5From:Science (Vol. 281, Issue 5374) Peer-ReviewedScientists have traced the origins of a vast hypoxic region in the gulf to inland fertilizer use; now officials must decide what to do LAFITTE, LOUISIANA--Albert Darda, captain of the shrimp trawler Misty Morn, has...
- 6From:Science (Vol. 283, Issue 5402) Peer-ReviewedANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA--The field of computing is chock-full of acronyms, from RAM to Y2K. Last weekend the Clinton Administration coined another one: [IT.sup.2], to describe its plan to boost basic research in information...
- 7From:Science (Vol. 305, Issue 5688) Peer-ReviewedTake shelter, a political nuclear war is about to resume. An increasingly fiery debate over proposed new funding for U.S. nuclear weapons research and testing is expected to heat up again next month when members of...
- 8From:Science (Vol. 305, Issue 5686) Peer-ReviewedThe National Institutes of Health (NIH) has rejected a controversial plea to use its legal muscle to rein in the spiraling cost of a widely used AIDS drug. NIH Director Elias Zerhouni last week said his agency would not...
- 9From:Science (Vol. 292, Issue 5525) Peer-ReviewedAdd science policy wonks to the list of those hoping to bring extinct species back from the dead. Academics, science lobbyists, and government officials gathered in Washington last week to hash out ideas for reviving...
- 10From:Science (Vol. 287, Issue 5454) Peer-ReviewedResearchers who plumbed the depths of the Antarctic ozone hole, helped show that modern cells are assembled from once-independent life-forms, and created reading machines for the blind were among those awarded National...
- 11From:Science (Vol. 300, Issue 5621) Peer-ReviewedSpurred by the SARS threat, Hong Kong hopes to harness horse racing revenues to fight infectious diseases. Chief Executive Tung Chee Hwa last week said the Hong Kong Jockey Club--which manages the region's tracks--has...
- 12From:Science (Vol. 290, Issue 5496) Peer-ReviewedMoore's Law now applies to philanthropy as well as computing power. Last week, computer industry titan Gordon Moore and his wife, Betty, announced that they are creating a $5-billion-plus foundation to support...
- 13From:Science (Vol. 284, Issue 5412) Peer-ReviewedA National Academy of Sciences (NAS) panel has concluded that biomedical researchers should produce most types of monoclonal antibodies using methods that don't require killing mice. But it argues that the use of mice...
- 14From:Science (Vol. 286, Issue 5442) Peer-ReviewedIf you don't like the way an institution is run, go after its budget. Congress has just applied that logic to a special fund controlled by the directors of the Department of Energy's (DOE's) national laboratories,...
- 15From:Science (Vol. 283, Issue 5409) Peer-ReviewedWASHINGTON, D.C.--For months, NASA has been weighing the possibility of losing its most productive science instrument, the Hubble Space Telescope, against the certainty of disrupting a carefully choreographed launch...
- 16From:Science (Vol. 297, Issue 5578) Peer-ReviewedThe U.S. science community has begun putting proposals to create the new Department of Homeland Security (DHS) under the microscope. In a string of hearings last week, research leaders told Congress there were serious...
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- 18From:Science (Vol. 303, Issue 5656) Peer-ReviewedSAN JUAN, PUERTO RICO--After a decade spent standing at the dock, U.S. marine scientists are getting ready to launch a network of ocean observatories. Drawing on 5 days of talks at a meeting here attended by more than...
- 19From:Science (Vol. 280, Issue 5361) Peer-ReviewedIn early March, tens of thousand of U.S. scientists received a bulk-mailed letter from Frederick Seitz, a former president of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) and of Rockefeller University in New York City. It...
- 20From:Science (Vol. 285, Issue 5427) Peer-ReviewedThe U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) is reconsidering a grant that critics say will fund "cold fusion" experiments. DOE officials this week announced that a special review panel will take a fresh look at the science...