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    Dec 15, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  1. Review: HTC Droid DNA's flaws overshadow super display [Video]

    The HTC Droid DNA has one of the most impressive displays of any smartphone, but even that doesn't make up for some bothersome problems the device has.
    The HTC Droid DNA has one of the most impressive displays of any smartphone, but even that doesn't make up for some bothersome problems the device has. The Droid DNA falls into the category of jumbo-sized phones, but its 5-inch screen is different...

    Tags: New Products, Biotechnology Industry, Netflix Inc., Apple iPad, Apple iPhone

  2. Dec 17, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  3. Coming in January, a Prohibition-inspired dinner at Theatre Project

    Check it out. Baltimore's DNA Theatre (Daydreams + Nightmares Aerial Theatre) is presenting 1920s Vintage Cabaret, a weekend-long fundraiser at the Theatre Project featuring live music, artisan cocktails and food. The cabaret benefits DNA Theatre's 2013 season of performances.
    Check it out. Baltimore's DNA Theatre (Daydreams + Nightmares Aerial Theatre) is presenting 1920s Vintage Cabaret, a weekend-long fundraiser at the Theatre Project featuring live music, artisan cocktails and food. The cabaret benefits DNA Theatre's 2013...

    Tags: Arts and Culture

  4. Dec 17, 2012 |Story| Daily American
  5. Huge DNA code of the Christmas tree being revealed

    AP Science Writer
    NEW YORK (AP) — To millions of people, the Christmas tree is a cheerful sight. To scientists who decipher the DNA codes of plants and animals, it's a monster. We're talking about the conifer, the umbrella term for cone-bearing trees like the...

    Tags: Rockefeller Center, Genetics, Religious Festivals, Norway, Science and Technology

  6. Dec 10, 2012 |Story| Daily American
  7. Fast-growing fish may never wind up on your plate

    Salmon that's been genetically modified to grow twice as fast as normal could soon show up on your dinner plate. That is, if the company that makes the fish can stay afloat.
    AP Health Writer
    Salmon that's been genetically modified to grow twice as fast as normal could soon show up on your dinner plate. That is, if the company that makes the fish can stay afloat. After weathering concerns about everything from the safety of humans eating...

    Tags: Seafood, Consumer Goods Industries, Science and Technology, Science, Genetic Engineering

  8. Dec 14, 2012 |Story| Aberdeen News
  9. Alleged 4-H cheating spurs DNA testing

    MITCHELL - South Dakota 4-H is implementing an animal DNA testing requirement for South Dakota State Fair livestock competitions in the wake of an alleged cheating scandal last year. DNA samples will be taken from 4-H members' animals during county...

    Tags: Biotechnology Industry, Trials, Animals, Court Preliminary, Chemical Industry

  10. Nov 30, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  11. Scientists build tiny structures using Lego-like DNA 'bricks'

    Debuting an invention that even the creative minds that design plain old plastic Lego bricks probably couldn’t have imagined, biologists announced this week that they had figured out a way to make Lego-like bricks from DNA — and to use the teeny-tiny modules to build a variety of different, often intricate, three-dimensional shapes.
    Debuting an invention that even the creative minds that design plain old plastic Lego bricks probably couldn’t have imagined, biologists announced this week that they had figured out a way to make Lego-like bricks from DNA — and to use the...

    Tags: LEGO Group, Biotechnology Industry, Los Angeles Times, Science and Technology, Instrument Engineering

  12. Dec 17, 2012 |Story| Daily American
  13. Holiday gifts for pets following high-tech trend

    Associated Press
    LOS ANGELES (AP) — A holiday present for Fido or Fluffy used to be an extra table scrap or a new squeeze toy. But as with gifts for their human counterparts, pet presents are becoming increasingly high-tech. Like presents for young children who...

    Tags: Pharmaceuticals, Vaccines, Science and Technology, Apple iPad, Santa Claus (fictional character)

  14. Dec 7, 2012 |Story| Aberdeen News
  15. Keeping the right replacement heifers

    For many dedicated cow-calf producers, replacement heifers are the most important part of each year's calf crop. Sorted to cull out any high-headed or other negative outliers, those that remain are the pride and future of the herd. But what do you...

    Tags: Marketing, Trials, Biotechnology Industry, Court Preliminary, Chemical Industry

  16. Dec 7, 2012 |Story| Aberdeen News
  17. South Dakota 4-H to require animal DNA tests

    MITCHELL (AP) - People who compete in 4-H livestock competitions at the South Dakota State Fair will have to submit DNA samples from their animals beginning next year. South Dakota 4-H Livestock Show Management Coordinator Rod Geppert says the rule is...
  18. Dec 5, 2012 |Story| Aberdeen News
  19. South Dakota 4-H to require animal DNA tests

    People who compete in 4-H livestock competitions at the South Dakota State Fair will have to submit DNA samples from their animals beginning next year.  South Dakota 4-H Livestock Show Management Coordinator Rod Geppert says the rule is aimed at...
  20. Dec 5, 2012 |Story| AM News
  21. Mercer man a suspect in attack of UK student

    LEXINGTON — A Mercer County man has been charged with attempted rape and assault stemming from a September attack on a University of Kentucky student.
    kpeek@amnews.com
    LEXINGTON — A Mercer County man has been charged with attempted rape and assault stemming from a September attack on a University of Kentucky student. Christopher Releford, 32, contacted Mercer County police on Sept. 7, claiming he had been...
  22. Nov 29, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  23. Genome of bread wheat laid bare for scientific gleaning

    Another day, another genome -- that&rsquo;s how easy large-scale DNA sequencing has gotten these days. Following fast on the tracks of the <a href="http://www.latimes.com/news/science/sciencenow/la-sci-sn-pig-genome-20121115,0,2488143.story">domestic Duroc pig</a> and the <a href="http://www.redorbit.com/news/science/1112736636/decode-watermelon-genome-provide-future-benefits-crop-improvement-112612/">watermelon</a>, bread wheat, <em>Triticum aestivum</em>,&nbsp; now has its genetic code laid bare.&nbsp;
    Another day, another genome -- that’s how easy large-scale DNA sequencing has gotten these days. Following fast on the tracks of the domestic Duroc pig and the watermelon, bread wheat, Triticum aestivum,  now has its genetic code laid bare.  It...

    Tags: Science and Technology, Breads

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DNA Photos
Researchers at Harvard's Wyss Institute for Biologicall...
(November 30, 2012)
Self-assembling DNA bricks
Science educator Ellen Luybli, of Hellertown (right) sh...
(November 24, 2012)
The Da Vinci Science Center's Thanksgiving 2012: Play with your food
A tech-looking Torah floats above the ocean in this sta...
(September 13, 2012)
<b>Spiritual DNA</b>