mind reading control News Archive

31-Oct-2006

 

  • 'Experts gather to talk erosion (Newport News-Times)
  • Buried in chapter three of the Lincoln City building codes is subsection 3.165: Education, and subordinate to that section is item 2: "The county, in cooperation with the City of Lincoln City and the Devils Lake Water Improvement District, shall participate in an annual workshop on erosion prevention and sediment control."

  • 'In Final Push to Unseat Lieberman, Lamont Shifts Back to the War in Iraq (New York Times)
  • Ned Lamont put the issue of Iraq back at the forefront of his campaign as polls show him lagging behind Senator Joseph I. Lieberman, who has focused on domestic issues.

  • 'Portsmouth 3 Reading 1: Kanu's mind games help to put the pomp back in Pompey (Independent)
  • For a player who has never knowingly broken sweat, Nwankwo Kanu can have a remarkable influence on games. Yesterday, as Portsmouth swept to a comfortable victory, Kanu was quite magnificent. It was a performance that left his manager, Harry Redknapp, spellbound.

  • 'Mark Jeffrey: The 'Global Warming' of the Internet (HuffingtonPost)
  • Right now, you're snug in your chair, reading the Huffington Post. Hope you're enjoying it -- because (much like global warming) if things keep going the way they are, that simple pleasure could all take a nasty turn south in a very short period of time. The free and open internet is about to change dramatically. If the telcos get their way in Congress this fall (I'm looking at you, AT&T,

  • 'I was trying to improve but I changed my mind (The Kentucky Standard)
  • In my constant quest to leave the world in a more acceptable shape than when I entered it, I have recently come to the realization that despite my faults, there are many more stupid and dangerous people out there than me.

  • 'My sheltered childhood (Cavalier Daily Online)
  • After reading my esteemed colleague Erin Gaetz's column last Monday ("Can you spare some karma?" Oct. 23), I realized that I could not relate to her dilemma. This saddened me, because the Life editors must assume that the general readership will be able to relate to a writer's column.

  • 'Remember This: Receptors Govern How Brain Cells Communicate (Science Daily)
  • An hour from now, will you remember reading this? It all depends on proteins in your brain called NMDA receptors, which allow your neurons to communicate with each other. University of Pittsburgh researchers have discovered how different types of NMDA receptors perform varied functions. Their findings are published in the current issue of the Journal of Neuroscience.

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