Loading...
RSS feeds allow Web site content to be gathered via feed reader software. Click the subscribe link to obtain the feed URL for this page. The feed will update when new content appears on this page.
Sort By: Relevancy | Date | Type
Displaying items 13-24 of 1812
» View wsbtradio.com items only
    Jun 10, 2007 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  1. Suddenly, the bees are simply vanishing

    Los Angeles Times Staff Writers
    The dead bees under Dennis vanEngelsdorp's microscope were like none he had ever seen. He had expected to see mites or amoebas, perennial pests of bees. Instead, he found internal organs swollen with debris and strangely blackened. The bees' intestinal...

    Tags: Montana, Los Angeles Times, Agricultural Research and Technology, Colleges and Universities, Agriculture

  2. Mar 31, 2011 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  3. Howard County's Women of Good Taste

    Working with food isn't a job for sissies. One must be innovative,  artistic, competitive, patient, flexible and competent. The hours are  long and the competition stiff. Sacrifice? Required. Taking risks? Also  required. How does one succeed against such odds? Four female standouts  in the industry share their stories on how they got in and why they  stay.
    Working with food isn't a job for sissies. One must be innovative, artistic, competitive, patient, flexible and competent. The hours are long and the competition stiff. Sacrifice? Required. Taking risks? Also required. How does one succeed against such...

    Tags: Hotel and Accommodation Industry, Weddings, Physical Conditions, Howard Community College, Colleges and Universities

  4. Apr 11, 2006 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  5. Brain's Darwin Machine

    Times Staff Writer
    LA JOLLA, Calif. — Alysson Muotri was looking for brain cells that glow in the dark. With growing frustration, the 31-year-old Brazilian cancer biologist stared through his microscope at slides of brain tissue for any evidence his experiment had...

    Tags: Children, Brain, Agricultural Research and Technology, Research, Colleges and Universities

  6. Dec 11, 2011 |Column| Hartford Courant
  7. Hard Journey Up From Childhood Sex Abuse

    How bad does a childhood have to be to disqualify someone from holding a job, maintaining intimate relationships or raising a child?
    The Hartford Courant
    How bad does a childhood have to be to disqualify someone from holding a job, maintaining intimate relationships or raising a child? I ask because the question arose recently in the unfolding disaster of the Glastonbury men who adopted nine sons, and...

    Tags: Sex Crimes, Jerry Sandusky, Social Sciences, Abusive Behavior, Culture

  8. May 16, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  9. Test offers red flag for autism at 6 months

    A simple “pull-to-sit” test on infants at six months old may help doctors predict autismand other delays, a new study has found. The study by Kennedy Krieger Institute researchers looked at infants at high genetic risk for autism and found...

    Tags: Learning Disability, Behavioral Conditions, Kennedy Krieger Institute, Parkinson's Disease, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

  10. Mar 25, 2012 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  11. First rule of work email: Don't email

    Sometimes I don't think we deserve e-mail.
    Sometimes I don't think we deserve e-mail. It's a tool of immeasurable importance in today's working world, yet we're wildly cavalier with it, firing off mistake-riddled missives as recklessly as a wound-up 5-year-old with a dart gun. For every...

    Tags: Facebook, Email, Apple iPhone

  12. Jun 9, 2011 |Story| WPMT-LTV
  13. E3 2011 Booth Spotlight: Atari

    One of gaming's most storied names, Atari came to E3 with some recognizable names of their own: new installments for both "Centipede" and "Dungeons & Dragons."
    One of gaming's most storied names, Atari came to E3 with some recognizable names of their own: new installments for both "Centipede" and "Dungeons & Dragons." The new Centipede seeks to channel the frantic nature of the arcade original, although updated...

    Tags: Gaming, Electronic Entertainment Expo, Wii, Nintendo Company Ltd., Nintendo DS

  14. Jun 18, 2008 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  15. Eco-friendly baby stores grow by 2

    Parents, it's your lucky day. Whether you merely dip your toes into the stream of environmentally friendly products or are ready to dive deep into the green lifestyle, two stores -- Green Genes and Little Green Baby -- recently opened in Chicago for...

    Tags: Candy, Flowers and Gifts, Services and Shopping, Baby Products, Candy

  16. Sep 30, 2010 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  17. 2011 Scion tC shifts into gender-neutral

    Like the Boy Scouts, the waiting line for a midnight release of Halo or tractor trailer-pulling contests, Scion's new 2011 tC is pretty much for the guys. Or so the company would have you think.
    Like the Boy Scouts, the waiting line for a midnight release of Halo or tractor trailer-pulling contests, Scion's new 2011 tC is pretty much for the guys. Or so the company would have you think. At the San Diego media launch for the second generation...

    Tags: Scion, San Diego (San Diego, California), Gaming, Entertainment, Xbox

  18. Feb 19, 2011 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  19. Dr. Charles Epstein dies at 77; geneticist survived attack by Unabomber

    Dr. Charles Epstein, a UC San Francisco medical geneticist who studied Down syndrome and pioneered genetic counseling for families with affected children, but whose career was temporarily interrupted by a vicious 1993 attack by the notorious Unabomber, died Feb. 15 at his home in Tiburon, Calif. He was 77 and had been battling pancreatic cancer.
    Dr. Charles Epstein, a UC San Francisco medical geneticist who studied Down syndrome and pioneered genetic counseling for families with affected children, but whose career was temporarily interrupted by a vicious 1993 attack by the notorious Unabomber,...

    Tags: Watertown, Yale University, Career and Workplace, Behavioral Conditions, Down Syndrome

  20. Jan 18, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  21. Paula Deen's diabetes: Blaming the victim?

    As Southern celebrity chef Paula Deen certainly knows by now, people with Type 2 diabetes are routinely blamed for causing their disease by eating junky food and making unhealthy lifestyle choices. Known for high fat recipes that raise the risk for...

    Tags: Weight, Physical Fitness and Exercise, Recipes, Insulin, Diabetes

  22. Nov 15, 2011 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  23. Pregnant? Here's more to worry about

    Pregnancy may be the mother of all guilt trips. But that anxiety doesn’t necessarily end with the birth of a healthy child. Researchers are finding that in utero exposures could be linked with behavioral or emotional problems in young children and...

    Tags: Morning Sickness, Yale University, Behavioral Conditions, Bipolar Disorder, Research

< Previous1  2  3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11-151Next >
Original site for Genes and Chromosomes topic gallery.
Loading...
 
 

Date:

Credit:

User-submitted

Tags:

Rate:
Sending...

E-mail this photo

Error: malformed email address(es)
Both "from" and "recipient" email fields are required.

Recipient E-mail Addresses

(up to 3, separated by commas) Send me a copy.

From:

e-mail | buy this photo | link to photo
Genes and Chromosomes Photos
On Thursday, a federal appeals court found that Myriad...
(August 17, 2012)
dna helix
A Dogue de Bordeaux chomps on a lamb chop before compet...
(August 15, 2012)
Dogs and genetics
A National Park Service photograph shows P-22 near Grif...
(August 9, 2012)
 P-22 near Griffith Park