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Updated Thu, February 2, 2012.
401.micro.magnet.fsu.edu99800
402.www.ra.no99300
403.www.wissenschaft.de99100
404.www.nrel.gov98500
405.www.seti.nl98200
406.www.revues.org97600
407.www.netfugl.dk97400
408.www.skyandtelescope.com96800
409.www.tendencias21.net96300
410.www.ethbib.ethz.ch95800
411.biodidac.bio.uottawa.ca95200
412.www.dfki.de95100
413.www.igd.fhg.de94900
414.www.desertusa.com94700
415.www.chem.uu.nl94600
416.www.physik.uni-muenchen.de93400
417.www.dwd.de93300
418.www.actualicese.com93000
419.www.aip.org92900
420.www.knaw.nl92900
421.www.randi.org92600
422.www.enssib.fr92400
423.www.fmi.uni-passau.de92300
424.aggie-horticulture.tamu.edu91800
425.www.akihabaranews.com91700
426.www.zin.ru91500
427.www.liu.edu90900
428.www.globalgeografia.com90800
429.www.agr.gc.ca90600
430.www.lirmm.fr90300
431.www.dge.de90100
432.www.vdi-nachrichten.com89900
433.www.mathematik.uni-stuttgart.de89300
434.www.inei.gob.pe89000
435.www.scientific.ru88100
436.album.revues.org87900
437.www.space-screensavers.com87600
438.www.seo.org87500
439.www.genome.ad.jp87100
440.qualitative-research.net87100
441.www.u-szeged.hu86900
442.www.beyars.com86600
443.www.edpsciences.org86100
444.www.ptb.de86100
445.www.uic.com.au85900
446.www.isas.ac.jp85800
447.www.forskningsdatabasen.dk85800
448.aa.usno.navy.mil85600
449.www.awi-bremerhaven.de85500
450.www.unister.de85200
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403. www.wissenschaft.de

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Study: Flamboyant male dancing attracts women best
By MARIA CHENG 2010-09-09T15:52:15ZLONDON (AP) -- John Travolta was onto something. Women are most attracted to male dancers who have big, flamboyant moves similar to the actor's trademark style, British scientists say in a new study....
hosted.ap.org
Physique? C'est tout le Français à moi | Herbi Dreiner
Herbi Dreiner on translating his award-winning physics show into French, and preparing to deliver it at CernIn Bonn, we have been putting on a physics show for kids aged 10 and older for 8 years. It is a show full of exciting live experiments. The shows have typically covered most of classical physics and are supposed to be entertaining and of course also educational. The novelty is that it is prepared and put on by the physics students themselves, not me or another professor. Furthermore it is a new group of students and a new show every year. Thus we have trained a large group of physics students in outreach activity and can now tackle more challenging projects. In the autumn of 2008 the German science ministry (BMBF) organized a special exhibit in Berlin for the initial start of the LHC and called it "Weltmaschine", world machine. Another one of these marvellous long German words. The exhibit was in a brand new tube station inbetween the Bundeskanzleramt, where Angela Merkel works, and the Reichstag, the German parliament. The station was built specifically with exhibitions and shows in mind ... in May 2008 the Magic Flute was performed on the platform.The organising committee asked us to put on a particle physics show as a special event at the exhibition, covering most topics relevant to the LHC. We set up a replica stage in Bonn and rehearsed on several weekends in a row, since this was during term time. In November 2008, we travelled with 18 students to the heart of Berlin and put on four shows to a packed audience. It was a huge success and great fun for all of us. Since then we have put on the show at the great science museum in Munich, the Deutsche Museum (Mar 09), to the particle physics lab DESY in Hamburg (Sept 09), and to Heidelberg University (Dec 2009). I then went on sabbatical with my family for six months to California to recover. During this time we were stunned and honoured to receive an invitation from Cern to perform our show in Geneva, in September 2010. The only difficulty: it should be in French. This made sense, since they want to reach the local school kids. But frightening all the same. When I put the proposal to the Bonn students in an email, I was overwhelmed with a barrage of French emails. Alors: pas de problem ... or so we thought.The past two weeks we have been rehearsing in Bonn. On Friday we packed our four vans, two full of equipment, and two for the 15 students and us three old guys. Due to special regulations for weakly radioactive sources used in school experiments, the two equipment vans had to travel through the EU and thus the two-hour longer route through France. (You wouldn't believe the paperwork!) They departed yesterday at 5.30am; the rest of us left at 7.30am for an eight-hour drive. By 3.30pm, we were all here. The Mont Blanc was out in full force towelcome us. And then, Wow! The Globe at Cern. We were totally overwhelmed. It is, as the name suggests, a huge hollow sphere all made of recycled wood. The auditorium is in the upper half and has a skylight about 15 metres above the floor and a dramatic ramp wrapped around the stage. What a phantastic place for a physics show.Meanwhile, we have been frantically rehearsing all day today. For the two MCs we have set up a teleprompter, since they are not comfortable enough in French to learn the entire text by heart. The rest of us are trying to learn the words connected to the experiments we demonstrate, so that we don't miss our cues. The students are in great spirits. The sun is shining and hopefully we are all set for the first performance tomorrow morning. Let the show begin!Jon Butterworthguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Flesh-eating plant among life found in Mekong
A fish with curving vampire fangs, a gecko that looks as if it is wearing lipstick and a carnivorous plant more than seven metres high may sound like creatures from a nightmare, but they are real.
abc.net.au
Video | How to make a chimp from a man
Pauline Fowler gives a masterclass on modelling a prosthetic chimpanzee face for ape actor Peter Elliott
guardian.co.uk
Senate passes legislation to split Telstra
The Federal Government has secured passage through the Senate of its legislation to split Telstra's wholesale and retail operations.
abc.net.au