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Scientific American August 2009 Peter Brown |
Night Stalker: White-Nose Fungus in Bats -- Why It's Our Problem, Too No end in sight for the bat-killing white-nose syndrome |
National Gardening Karen Dardick |
Going Batty! Gardeners are discovering that attracting bats is a smart way to control pests |
Bio-IT World May 9, 2003 Kevin Davies |
Coalition Forces and the Fog of War Coalition forces take on the microbe menace. No sooner had the SARS threat been identified than forces from the bio-IT coalition came together to repel the enemy. |
Science News July 26, 2003 Janet Raloff |
Sweet Treatment for SARS In the future, people with the intense flu- and pneumonia-like symptoms of SARS could find relief in a therapy derived from licorice. |
IEEE Spectrum July 2012 Jean Kumagai |
Fixing Wind Power's Bat Problem Turbines kill hundreds of thousands of bats each year, but new technology could drastically cut the toll |
Science News July 6, 2002 |
TimeLine: July 2, 1932 Our friend the bat... 600 miles per hour is limit of speed for present planes... Old age may be postponed by calcium and phosphorus... |
Smithsonian May 2004 Douglas Chadwick |
A Mine of Its Own Where miners used to dig, an endangered bat now flourishes, highlighting a new use for abandoned mineral sites. |
Chemistry World June 12, 2015 Christopher Barnard |
Drawing order from disorder to unravel Ebola's lethality The virulence of Ebola virus strains appears to be innately linked to the degree of disorder in proteins that form their nucleocapsids. |
Chemistry World September 1, 2014 Maria Burke |
Experimental Ebola drug 'impressive' in animal trials In the hunt for a treatment for Ebola, a new study has shown that monkeys given the experimental drug ZMapp all survived infection with the virus. |
Reason August 2003 Declan McCullagh |
Something's in the Air Liberties in the face of SARS and other infectious diseases |
Reactive Reports Issue 33 David Bradley |
Liquorice versus SARS An extract of liquorice root already used to treat HIV could become the first line of defence against a future outbreak of SARS, according to German researchers. |
Chemistry World April 23, 2015 Tim Wogan |
SiRNA treatment cures Ebola in monkeys The first laboratory trial demonstrating the effectiveness of an experimental drug against the strain of Ebola currently ravaging West Africa has been performed in rhesus monkeys. |
Chemistry World December 3, 2014 Maria Burke |
Ebola vaccine passes first safety hurdle The vaccine was developed collaboratively by scientists at the NIH's National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and at Okairos, a biotechnology company acquired by GlaxoSmithKline. |
BusinessWeek October 27, 2003 Shari & Balfour |
SARS: The Sequel? Across Asia, governments and companies are getting ready. |
Popular Mechanics September 5, 2008 Chris Ladd |
With Makeshift Bat Cave, MLB to Scan Broken Wood for Fan Safety As the crack of the bat grows increasingly dangerous, instant replay isn't the only high-tech rethink in the works for Major League Baseball. Scientists are hard at work developing new designs for bats to keep stadiums safe. |
The Motley Fool December 18, 2003 Alyce Lomax |
Glaxo to Tackle SARS The drug giant readies to confront what is either a high-profile threat, or so last year. |
Chemistry World October 23, 2014 Rebecca Trager |
US agency fast-tracks Ebola vaccine development The US Department of Health and Human Services is fast-tracking tests on an Ebola vaccine by providing $5.8 million under a one-year contract with the Maryland-based biotech company Profectus BioSciences |
CIO August 15, 2003 Lafe Low |
SARS Hits IT Spending While the World Health Organization declared on July 5 that the epidemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, had been contained, the world economy will continue to feel the effects of the deadly disease for some time. |
Scientific American December 2008 Biello et al. |
News Scan Briefs: Sounds Like Thunder Seeing on faith, climate and dynasties, blank-stare politics, and other science research updates. |
Aviation History March 9, 2005 C.V. Glines |
Top Secret WWII Bat and Bird Bomber Program At the outset of World War II, innovative plans were laid to send some talented fliers to the front lines. |
BusinessWeek July 31, 2006 Michael Orey |
Family Diary: Preventive Care Gone Batty The kids were asleep. A bat may have entered the room. Time for rabies shots? |