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WHAT'S COOL A pocket-size radio, the MyFi offers two listening options: you can tune in to a live XM satellite feed or store up to five hours of it for playback later...
...Broil (Don't Fry) the Tuna, Feed the Brain Is eating fish good for your brain? That may depend on how the fish is prepared. According to a 12-year study in the U.S. of nearly 5,000 men and women over 65, eating five or more servings each month of tuna or other baked or broiled fish decreases the risk of stroke 28%. But those protective benefits disappeared when the fish was fried. Eating at least one serving of fried fish or a fish burger each week led to a 37% increase in stroke risk, which grew with each...
While we disagree with the claim that the Quincy House dining hall has become overcrowded (“Quincy Refuses to Feed Frosh,” News, Feb. 7), we understand the Quincy residents’ point of view. We sympathize with the upheaval of one’s dining experience by an invading horde of Yard immigrants, uppity and dirty, who gobble up Bob’s Pasta and flood the grill with cheeseburger orders. The solution, though, is not freshman banishment from Quincy, because the problem is not solely with Quincy...
That image of entrepreneurialism in flower is very different from the conventional view of a destitute Hermit Kingdom. By most measures, North Korea remains one of the most isolated and desperate outposts on the planet. Most North Koreans earn barely enough to feed their families, and the country is plagued by chronic shortages of everything from food to fuel to electricity. But in recent years modest reforms aimed at liberalizing the economy have helped pry open the country just enough for its people to glimpse the possibilities of a better life. In many parts of the country, North Koreans were...
...House secretly dispatched two National Security Council (NSC) aides to Tokyo, Beijing and Seoul armed with evidence that North Korea may have supplied a uranium compound to Libya for its weapons labs. The gaseous compound, known as uranium hexafluoride (UF6), is a precursor to bomb-grade uranium, something bombmakers feed into centrifuges to harvest the highly fissionable isotope uranium-235 (U-235) that is at the heart of an atom bomb. Though UF6 is hard to make, it's possible to track: forensic tests focus on trace isotopes, such as U-234, whose prevalence differs from country to country...