
Science news roundup: meals, toys, and TV endanger kids
Here are some interesting science stories reported this week relating to both political and social affairs, and health news as well.

Green news roundup: Keystone XL, Arctic oil drilling get X'ed out
October and November have ushered in victories for environmentalists. Corporations have been soundly defeated or exposed on many fronts.

Austerity linked to increase in suicides: science news roundup
Links to some of the most interesting science stories reported this week relating to both political and social affairs.

Activists redecorate LNG pipeline office with clean water signs
Fossil fuel and pipeline corporations are trying to sell their plans to export fracked gas through communities, forests, and rivers.

Today in history: National Food Bank Week and World Food Day
This week is a great time to start thinking about helping others as the holiday season approaches.

Science round-up: Cancer, China, and climate change
China's manufacturing sector spews forth more CO2 by far than similar sectors in other countries.

Discrimination affects health for lifetime: Weekly science round up
Vitamin C, school start time, India's private hospitals, pre-diabetes, physical effects of discrimination.

Drought turning Golden State's redwoods brown
For the first time, there are signs of foliage die-back on sequoia seedlings, a rare and worrying prospect.

Navy jets, electronic warfare stir outrage
The noise and electronic radiation pose a dire threat to animals and plants in the wilderness regions of the Olympic Peninsula.

How Big Oil ate California’s future
The Earth is where all people live. If we are going to survive and thrive, the California economy must opt out of using all that oil.

