Saturday, April 29, 2006

MUSLIM GIRL CONDEMNED TO DEATH FOR KILLING HER RAPIST DURING ATTACK

I came accross a news that a "MUSLIM GIRL CONDEMNED TO DEATH FOR KILLING HER RAPIST DURING ATTACK" in Iran. Pl. visit the following link for the news and give your opinion.
http://www.care2.com/c2c/share/detail/83704

Newa courtesy: www.care2.com

Ginger causes ovarian cancer cells to die

Ginger causes ovarian cancer cells to die, U-M researchers find
Cell studies show promise for ginger as potential ovarian cancer treatmentANN ARBOR, MI – Ginger is known to ease nausea and control inflammation. But researchers at the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center are investigating a new use for this age-old remedy: treating ovarian cancer.
In laboratory studies, researchers found ginger caused ovarian cancer cells to die. Further, the way in which the cells died suggests ginger may avoid the problem common in ovarian cancer of cells becoming resistant to standard treatments.

News courtesy: www.care2.com

Healing Plants Found in Threatened Borneo Forest,
WWF SaysApril 27, 2006 — By Reuters

GENEVA — Plants thought to help treat or cure cancer, AIDS and malaria have been found in the rainforests of Borneo, a report from the Swiss-based global conservation group WWF said on Thursday. But the rapid destruction of trees, much of it by illegal logging to meet growing world demand for timber, could wreck any chance of using these discoveries in the fight against disease, the WWF declared. A promising anti-cancer substance has been found in a Borneo shrub by researchers for an Australian pharmaceutical firm, while a chemical found in latex produced by a tree appears to be effective against the replication of HIV, the report said. In the bark of another species of tree, the researchers discovered a previously unknown substance which in laboratory tests appeared to kill the human malaria parasite, it added. In all, it said, 422 new plant species had been discovered in Borneo -- shared by Malaysia, Indonesia and Brunei -- in the last 25 years and many others were believed to be there which could have medicinal applications. But "all these promising discoveries could eventually be lost if the disappearing rainforests of the heart of Borneo are not adequately protected," the WWF said.

"More forest destruction could well deny science the opportunity to discover and develop further potential sources of life-saving medication," it quoted Murray Tait, vice president of Drug Delivery at Cerylid Biosciences, the Australian company that identified the anti-cancer compound, as saying. Borneo's forest cover has shrunk to 50 percent of its territory today from 75 percent in the mid-1980s, the report said. Source: Reuters

Tuesday, April 18, 2006

Information Courtesy:
http://www.care2.com/news/

BOSTON
Tracking the trees that keep pollution out of our lungs
By Christine MacDonald April 16, 2006
Your health? Priceless. The savings from neighborhood trees on things such as hospital visits related to air pollution? Some $16 million if you live in East Boston, Roslindale, the South End, or Jamaica Plain, according to a study by the Urban Forest Coalition.
That estimate is based on the field work conducted last summer by volunteers in East Boston, Roslindale, and the South End, plus data gathered two summers ago in Jamaica Plain, before the coalition was formed.
Trees store tons of air pollution, so that what is belched into the atmosphere by automobiles, factories, air conditioners, and other sources does not end up in our lungs.
To calculate trees' pollution-fighting value, the coalition used a computer program developed by the US Department of Agriculture's Forest Service that assigns a dollar value to each tree based on, among other things, removal from the air of harmful pollutants.
Now the coalition, formed a year ago to nurture Boston's so-called urban forest, is looking for volunteers to expand the study into at least a dozen other neighborhoods starting next month.
''By the end of the season, we should have about 80 percent of the city's street trees inventoried," said Sherri Brokopp, director of the Community Forest Partnership of the Urban Ecology Institute, one of the neighborhood groups that formed the coalition.
On May 6, organizers will hold the first of three workshops to train volunteers to identify trees and assess their health. Volunteers will then spend about 10 hours each between May and October to inventory every tree in sight and enter the data into handheld computers, Brokopp said.
To volunteer, call Brokopp at the Urban Ecology Institute at 617-552-0672 or send e-mail to brokopp@bc.edu. CHRISTINE MacDONALD

Friday, April 07, 2006

Wednesday, April 05, 2006




















I like Raja Ravi Varma's paintings, which are true to life images. I am placing it for the benefit of the viewers. Picture is courtesy www.cberkerala.com