- Burma: A plight we can ignore no longer - Independent Online Edition > Asia
- Burma: Forgotten and locked in the shadow of the past - Independent
- Pregnancy Depression May Affect Baby
'"Anxiety and depression don't predict [a baby's] total sleep, but do predict sleep problems and disruptive sleep," says researcher Thomas O'Connor, PhD, associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Rochester Medical Center in New York. "The babies may sleep just as long, but they wake up more often and they have trouble falling asleep."' - Sew,Mama,Sew! Blog » » Interfacing Guide from Amy Butler
- Wheat-Free Baking Recipes
- BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Orangutans use 'charades' to talk
"Researchers from St Andrews University have shown that the animals intentionally modify or repeat their signals to get their messages across.
"The scientists said they believed all great apes could have this capability, suggesting that the skill may have evolved millions of years ago." - Soft Drinks Linked To Increase In Heart Disease | Scientific Blogging
"Drinking more than one soft drink daily — whether it's regular or diet — may be associated with an increase in the risk factors for heart disease." - Magnetic Capsules Protect Insulin Cell Transplants in Type I Diabetes | Scientific Blogging
- Green Toys Brand Toys - Platsic Toys Made From Corn!!
- Soaker pattern - Just Jussi: New free pattern
- Scientists issue warning about chemical in plastic - Los Angeles Times
"In an unusual effort targeting a single chemical, several dozen scientists on Thursday issued a strongly worded consensus statement warning that an estrogen-like compound in plastic is likely causing an array of serious reproductive disorders in people.
"The compound, bisphenol A or BPA, is one of the highest-volume chemicals in the world and has found its way into the bodies of most human beings." - CorePsychBlog: Who Cares about Estrogen Dominance?
Showing posts with label currentaffairs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label currentaffairs. Show all posts
Monday, 6 August 2007
Links for 2007-07-31 through 2007-08-05 [del.icio.us]
Labels:
baking,
cloth diapering,
currentaffairs,
diabetes,
environment,
health,
knitting,
links,
pregnancy,
projectideas,
recipe,
sewing,
toys,
wheat-free recipe.,
worldnews
Wednesday, 11 July 2007
Links for 2007-07-10 [del.icio.us]
- Fish oil may save preemies' vision
After a study in mice discovered that the omega-3 fatty acids found in fish and other oils may protect against blindness in premature babies, researchers at Children's Hospital Boston are ready to test the results in a clinical trial.
- Do Sunscreens Have You Covered? - New York Times
'"Most sunscreens are deceptively and misleadingly labeled, most perniciously to give consumers a false sense of security," Mr. Blumenthal said last week. "In my view, the F.D.A.'s failure to act is unconscionable and unjustifiable in any public sense.”
- Williams syndrome - Social Inhibition - Personality - Developmental Disorders - Brain Disorders - David Dobbs - New York Times
"If a person suffers the small genetic accident that creates Williams syndrome, he'll live with not only some fairly conventional cognitive deficits, like trouble with space and numbers, but also a strange set of traits that researchers call the Williams social phenotype or, less formally, the “Williams personality”: a love of company and conversation combined, often awkwardly, with a poor understanding of social dynamics and a lack of social inhibition. The combination creates some memorable encounters."
- Crazy Kiwis « BitterSweet
Fun blog post with a pattern for a knitted kiwi bird!
- DollQuiltFront on Flickr - Photo Sharing!
Cute little quilt with appliqué.
- BBC NEWS | Europe | Vatican text angers Protestants
"Pope Benedict has approved a new text asserting that Christian denominations outside Roman Catholicism are not true Churches in the full sense of the word."
Labels:
articles,
currentaffairs,
food,
foodforthought,
health,
interview,
knitting,
links,
projectideas.,
quilting/patchwork,
religion
Sunday, 8 July 2007
Links for 2007-07-07 [del.icio.us]
- The Big Question: As Bush spares Libby, what is the history of presidential pardons? - Independent Online
- BBC NEWS | Technology | Warning of data ticking time bomb
"Unless more work is done to ensure legacy file formats can be read and edited in the future, we face a digital dark hole." - Unpartisan campaigner: Alan Bennett, the rebel with a lot of causes - Independent Online
- In his own words: Alan Johnston on his release - Independent Online
'You have to have been a prisoner to know how good freedom is' - Robert Fisk: The forgotten art of handwriting - Independent Online
"I find something painfully human about reading the letters of long-dead heroes" - Piece of cake | Food and drink | Life and Health
"British summer fruit is so damned tasty, it's easy to end up buying far more than you can ever hope to eat fresh. But there's no need to turn all those berries, cherries and currants into jam or, worse, let them go to waste..." - Get a cutting edge | Homes and gardens | Life and Health
"Many gardeners, even experienced ones, are intimidated by the idea of taking cuttings. Yet it's such fun, as well as a great way to save money." - A shocking act of disrespect - Independent Online
Another article about Bush pardoning Libby -- this one is (angry) opinion on this case rather than looking at presidential pardons in general like the first link in this post. - Baking Dish and Pan Size Conversion
- Vegan Low-Fat Chocolate Applesauce Cake Recipe - Vegan Chocolate Cake Recipe
I'm making this for my daughters first birthday party. - Jemima Lewis: The lessons of George Melly's final years - Independent Online
Wonderful thought provoking, challenging article about ageing, caring, family, duty and death.
"At the age of 80, and despite creeping deafness and dementia, [George Melly] had not succumbed to the clichés of old age: he was sociable, funny, energetic and still much in demand. ...
It takes luck and a certain kind of temperament to navigate your way through old age so successfully. You need to be open-minded enough to keep enjoying the world without resenting the young who have inherited it; physically mobile (and fearless) enough to keep going out into that world; financially secure enough to live at home, or at least in a comfortable spot of your own choosing; and sufficiently lovable that your friends and family want to keep you company."
Labels:
articles,
cooking,
currentaffairs,
death,
food,
foodforthought,
gardening,
history,
life,
links,
politics,
recipe,
society,
technology
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