Killer flu swept through the world 3 times in the last century, and it almost happened again in 1997. Now experts say a killer virus strain my be making its way to our shores from Hong Kong again.

The Spanish flu of 1918 killed millions of people. Scientists managed to stop the spread of the virulent 1997 Hong Kong virus, but a new report show that a similar virus reappeared in Hong Kong in 2001, just in time to make it over here in 2002.
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In black and white noir films from the ?40s, every day seems gray and rainy. It turns out cities make their own weather and yes, it does rain more often in major cities.

NASA researchers used their Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) to study “urban heat-islands” and see if they create more summer rain than normal over major cities. The cities they studied included Atlanta, Dallas, San Antonio and Nashville.
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Until recently, the U.S. thought al-Qaeda was too unsophisticated to attack in cyberspace and figured they would continue trying to attack us with airplanes and dirty bombs. Now they?re changing their minds.

The FBI and the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory have been investigating a suspicious pattern of surveillance of computers that occurred in Silicon Valley last fall.The U.S. Defense Department found “multiple casings of sites” not only in California, but across the U.S.
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Gals: If you decide to go for hormone replacement therapy (HRT), the patch is better than the pill when it comes to your sex life. “HRT, when administered via a patch, allows a woman’s body to better utilize the androgens she already has, resulting in improved libido,” says researcher Subir Roy.

Many post-menopausal women report their interest in sex drops, as their testosterone levels decrease. HRT replaces some of the dwindling estrogen and progesterone, to combat hot flashes and the other physical side-effects of the menopause.
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