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PAX 08: An Exciting Omegathon Reveal

With last year's PAX Omegathon tournament ending in the first reveal of Halo 3's multiplayer, this year's final round was highly anticipated.

Stem Cells Restore Muscle In Mice With Muscular Dystrophy

biomedical | biotechnology | muscular dystrophy | stem cells | technology

Researchers at the Joslin Diabetes Center have demonstrated for the first time that transplanted muscle stem cells can both improve muscle function in animals with a form of muscular dystrophy and replenish the stem cell population for use in the repair of future muscle injuries.

A new cellular pathway linked to cancer

biology | biotechnology | cancer | science

In the life of a cell, the response to DNA damage determines whether the cell is fated to pause and repair itself, commit suicide, or grow uncontrollably, a route leading to cancer. In a new study, pu

Prevailing theory of aging challenged in worm study

aging | anti-aging | bioengineering | biology | biotechnology | longevity | science

Age may not be rust after all. Specific genetic instructions drive aging in worms, report researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine. Their discovery contradicts the prevailing theory that aging is a buildup of tissue damage akin to rust, and implies science might eventually halt or even reverse the ravages of age.

3D Animation explaining basics of the human genome

animation | biology | dna | genome | rna | science | technology | video

A dynamic 3D computer animated video takes you “inside” for a close-up look at how we’re made.  3D modeling and animation created by Bill Baker, Bakedmedia, Inc. and Mike Fisher for the Nationa

Limiting fructose may boost weight loss

diet | fat | health | obesity | weight loss

One of the reasons people on low-carbohydrate diets may lose weight is that they reduce their intake of fructose, a type of sugar that can be made into body fat quickly, according to a researcher at UT Southwestern Medical Center.

Steve Toltz


Steve Toltz (born in Sydney) is an Australian novelist who has lived in Montreal, Vancouver, New York, Barcelona, and Paris, working as a cameraman, telemarketer, security guard, private investigator, English teacher, and screenwriter. A Fraction of the Whole, his first novel was released in 2008 to widespread critical acclaim. A Fraction of the Whole is a comic novel which tells the history of a family of Australian outcasts. The narration of the novel alternates between Martin Dean, an philosophical, idealistic inmate at a modern day Australian prison and his father, Jasper Dean, whose murder Martin is serving time for. The novel is set in Australia, Paris and Thailand. The novel has repeatedly been compared favourably to John Kennedy Toole`s Pulitzer Prize winning novel A Confederacy of Dunces. The Wall Street Journal review Ottawa Citizen review.

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Jim Rose (sports anchor)


Jim Rose is a sports anchor who currently works for WLS-TV, the ABC affiliate in Chicago.

Yumiko Tsuzuki

japanese volleyball players


cityofbirth = Okazaki, Aichi countryofbirth = Japan dateofdeath = residence = spike = 295cm block = 290cm height = weight = position = Wing Spiker currentclub = Toyota Auto Body Queenseis clubnumber = 1 nationalteam = }}

Yumiko Tsuzuki (都築有美子 Tsuzuki Yumiko born May 11, 1983 in Okazaki, Aichi) is a Japanese volleyball player who plays for Toyota Auto Body Queenseis. She serves as captain of the team from 2007.

Profiles

  • She became a volleyball player at 10 year old.

Max Gore


Maximillon Williom Gore VI (1864-1907) was one of America's most dangerous serial killers. He was born in a poor farming family near Nottingham, England to Maxmillon Gore V and Jennifer Jerome. Failing to cope with the lack of freedom in their own homeland, they decided to move to America.

They settled in a small Indiana town called Harrodsburg. Rumors have been told that mysterious people have came to town and would murder the people who lived in town. The McCree family who owned the hotel disguised as an angry man's face. Successfully scared off intruders. Unfortunately, the McCrees were facing a large amount of debt due to having little or no guests staying at their hotel. All this change, when the Gore family stayed in their hotel.

Spore Updated Impressions: An Evolving Interest

Maybe it's because I preferred astronomy class over biology. Maybe it's because the creature creator has been done to death already. Maybe it's because I just want to screw around with lasers more than larvae.

August 29: Walter de Coventre

Walter de Coventre was a 14th-century Scottish ecclesiastic. There is no direct evidence of his birthdate, his family, or his family's origin, although he may have come from the region around Abernethy, Scotland, where a family with the name de Coventre is known to have lived. Walter appeared in the records for the first time in the 1330s, as a student at the University of Paris. From there he went on to the University of Orléans, initially as a student before becoming a lecturer there. He studied the arts, civil law and canon law, and was awarded many university degrees, including two doctorates. His studies were paid for, at least partially, by his benefices in Scotland. Despite holding perhaps more than five at one stage, he did not return to Scotland until the late 1350s. Following his return to Scotland, Walter soon became involved, as Dean of Aberdeen Cathedral, in high-level ecclesiastical affairs with the Scottish church and political affairs with the Earl of Mar. Sometime before June 1361, the cathedral chapter of Dunblane elected him Bishop of Dunblane. He went to France to secure confirmation from the Pope at Avignon, who authorised his consecration. Walter was bishop for 10 years after returning home to Scotland. Records of his episcopate are thin, but there are enough to allow a modest reconstruction of his activities: he presided over legal disputes, issued a dispensation for an important irregular marriage, attended parliaments, and acted as an envoy of the Scottish crown in England. He died in either 1371 or 1372. (more...)

August 30: Local Government Commission for England

August 31: Dartmouth College

September 1: Leo Ornstein

Yasuhiro Sato

baseball players at the 1992 summer olympics | japanese baseball players | olympic baseball players of japan


Yasuhiro Sato
 Team Competition 

Yasuhiro Sato is a Japanese baseball player. He won a bronze medal at the 1992 Summer Olympics.

Jim Mills (rugby league)

welsh rugby league players


Jim Mills is a Welsh former rugby league footballer of the 1970s. Usually playing at prop, he played club football in England with Halifax, Widnes and Workington and also in Australia for North Sydney. "Big Jim" as he was known also played representative rugby league for Wales and Great Britain. His son, David Mills also became a prop forward for Widnes, playing in Super League.

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StarCraft 2 Impressions: My Life for Ire

Observing a Blizzard fan is a painful experience these days. It's like watching a dog being tortured with a bone that's held just out of reach--for years. They see screenshots. They watch movies.

Exposed (Kiss)

kiss dvds and videos


Exposed is the name of a 1987 long form music video released by the band Kiss. The video consists of short form music videos mostly from the band's "Unmasked" era, including " Lick It Up" and many others.