
“We make men without chests and we expect of them virtue and enterprise. We laugh at honor and we are shocked to find traitors in our midst. We castrate and bid the geldings be fruitful."- C.S. Lewis in The Abolition of Man
It's the news drinkers have waited years to hear - alcohol consumption is good for your brain.
A pint of beer or a glass of wine triggers the growth of new brain cells and boosts memory, scientists say.
However, while moderate drinking can improve the mind, binge-drinking has the opposite effect.

It's clobberin' time! How else to explain yesterday's midday appearance, down in the Pentagon basement, of Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld (normal human strength, no known superpowers), wedged between Spider-Man and Captain America, trying his best to melt that icy glare of his into a boy-am-I-glad-you-guys-showed-up kind of smirk?
A man dressed in a Spider-Man costume gamely squatted and did that web-squirt thing with his hands dozens of times to pose for photographs, while the Captain America look-alike flexed his muscles and kept his expression deadly earnest. At some point Rumsfeld too did a little muscle flex for the cameras, only he couldn't keep a straight face.
President George W. Bush’s plan to privatize Social Security and his call to cut back on dependence on foreign oil, which the president talked about during a nationally televised press conference Thursday evening, were well received locally.
“I think the Social Security plan he put forward is very, very positive,” said Ugene Anderson of Sheboygan. “It’s a good plan, but like everything going on in Washington (D.C.) now, it is so highly politicized that it’s just hard to sort out.”
Bush is calling for the creation of private investment accounts to allow people to control part of their Social Security benefits.
Dick Toth Sr. of Sheboygan said Bush is on the right track with his Social Security plan.
“We’re going to be in bad shape because all the people putting their money in it now will get nailed at the other end,” said Toth, 74.
Betty Schudt of the Town of Sheboygan said Bush could have given more details on how the Social Security proposal will work.
“The Democrats keep scaring the senior citizens,” said Schudt, 73. “Well, that’s not going to affect the people who are getting Social Security now. It just upsets me that they’re doing that, but they do that all the time.”
Under the plan, panhandlers would have to register each year at a government center and have their picture taken. Anyone failing to wear an ID badge would be jailed for 30 days, and possibly fined.
BERLIN - Why are toads puffing up and spontaneously exploding in northern Europe? It began in a posh German neighborhood and has spread across the border into Denmark. It's left onlookers baffled, but one German scientist studying the splattered amphibian remains now has a theory: Hungry crows may be pecking out their livers.
LOS ANGELES - When the aliens finally arrive, Steven Spielberg expects them to be galactic good Samaritans like E.T. rather than the malevolent marauders of "War of the Worlds."
"I have to certainly believe what my heart tells me. That the first time there is a meeting of the minds between extraterrestrials and human beings, it's going to be friendly," Spielberg told The Associated Press in an interview looking ahead to his "War of the Worlds" saga, starring Tom Cruise.
...
So why does Hollywood tend toward first-contact stories of war and mayhem?
...it's more a reflection on human nature than extra-terrestrial nature.
"We tend to project our own human aggression into outer space," Spielberg said. "It doesn't necessarily mean there is aggression out there."
For his first appearance at a Star Wars convention in 17 years, (George) Lucas made a big splash. During a Q&A session, he announced that he is going to produce a 3-D animated action series expanding on the Cartoon Network's Emmy-winning Clone Wars. Then he dropped a bigger bomb, confirming a live-action Star Wars spinoff series is in the works.
Does that mean we'll get to see Darth Vader duking it out with the Donald on the next Apprentice?
Not quite.
According to Lucas, both shows will take place during the period between the end of Star Wars: Episode III--Revenge of the Sith and the original Star Wars (aka Episode IV--A New Hope), when the Emperor became all-powerful and started hunting the Jedi down.
At one point, Rodgers figured to make the earliest exit. But when the 49ers shifted their focus to Smith, Rodgers began a free fall the likes of which hadn't been seen for a highly rated quarterback since 1983, when a future Pro Football Hall-of-Famer named Dan Marino plummeted all the way to the 27th spot.
You want to get people excited about personal accounts? Tell them about the 1960 Supreme Court case Flemming v. Nestor, which explicitly says Americans have no ownership rights to the money they pay into Social Security.
BERLIN (AFP) - Hundreds of toads have met a bizarre and sinister end in Germany in recent days, it was reported: they exploded.
According to reports from animal welfare workers and veterinarians as many as a thousand of the amphibians have perished after their bodies swelled to bursting point and their entrails were propelled for up to a metre (three feet).

One picture is of the well known Eagle Nebula, also called the Pillars of Creation. It is a stellar nursery. Its energy creates a billowing tower of cold gas and dust that is 9.5 light-years high, about twice the distance from our Sun to the next nearest star.

The other picture is of the spiral galaxy M51, also known as the Whirlpool Galaxy. This sharpest image ever made of M51 illustrates a spiral galaxy's grand design, from its curving spiral arms, where young stars reside, to its yellowish central core, home to older stars.
'We thought about how meticulous those Civil War re-enactors are about having historically accurate uniforms and equipment,' says OTB President Hugh Lessjo. 'Then we thought, 'Who else is so obsessive about having the right props and costumes?'
The answer: Star Trek fans.
'We have Star Trek fan clubs in our area, and Sunday's battle re-enactment already includes a 'what-if' scenario featuring a Confederate counterattack,' says Lessjo. 'So we started thinking outside the box, and we thought, 'Why not have Trekkies join the battle?' They already have the equipment.'
"there are no stupid ideas," Lessjo says.
Overweight people have a lower risk of death than those of normal weight, according to a new US report.
The Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found that, for the most part, only the extremely obese had an increased risk of death.
The fate of a University of Wisconsin-Madison landmark is sealed.
The City Council Tuesday night approved a demolition permit for Ogg Hall, the two towers of concrete on West Dayton Street that have served as a student dormitory for four decades. Demolition is expected to begin in the summer of 2007.
The university plans to build a new 600-space residence hall on the same street and use the former Ogg site for recreational open space.
Scientists at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have found a way to insert healthy neural stem cells into diseased rats, and keep those cells alive.
The researchers did not work with human embryonic stem cells, which are controversial because they are developed by destroying a human embryo. Instead, they used specialized neural stem cells that grow during the first few weeks of brain development. They are only capable of developing into brain tissue, unlike human embryonic stem cells, which have much wider application.
The challenge now, the scientists said, is to see whether the stem cells can extend the life of a rat with ALS. If that is successful, the researchers would move directly to a small human trial.
Svendsen noted that the researchers only injected rats with small amounts of the stem cells to see if the cells could stay alive and emit the protective protein. They are now putting the stem cells in larger regions in the spinal cord, Svendsen said.
So far, he said, "we have encouraging results."
Mark Sabia, yellow-flagged microphone in tow, has been a regular in press boxes at Yankee Stadium, Shea and Madison Square Garden for years. He pushed his way to the front in post-game interviews, button-holed players for one-on-ones, and complained when he felt he wasn't being treated fairly. In other words, he was indistinguishable from the rest of the small-market television sports reporters in New York's locker rooms.
Except the outlet Sabia represents - Westchester Cable Services - doesn't exist, according to the Queens County District Attorney.
'Isn't that wild,' Yankees manager Joe Torre said.
Time may indeed be on your side. If you can just last another quarter century.
By then, people will start lives that could last 1,000 years or more.
The first part of the project is to get really impressive results in mice. The reason that's important is because mice are sufficiently furry and people can identify with them. If we get really impressive results in mice, then people will believe that it's possible to do it in humans, whereas if you double the lifespan of a fruit fly, people aren't going to be terribly interested.
The Japanese entertainment giant Sony has patented an idea for transmitting data directly into the brain, with the goal of enabling a person to see movies and play video games in which they smell, taste and perhaps even feel things, it was reported today.
STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - A Swedish woman who photographed a swan in the river outside the royal palace in Stockholm made a grim discovery when the film was developed: a hand sticking out of the ice.
Newspaper Aftonbladet said on its Web Site that Marita Larsson was walking around Stockholm's Old Town in early March and took a photo of a swan on the river as a spring thaw melted the ice.
'It was only when I came home and developed the film that I saw there was something particular about the picture. When I had it blown up I saw there was a hand sticking out of the ice,' she told the newspaper.
A spokesman for Stockholm police said the hand might be that of a man who committed suicide in late January and whose body has not yet been found.
Police last week also fished various body parts of a woman, including the head and hands, out of the river, and are still trying to identify her.
Fans are Daft Vaders
DIEHARD Star Wars fans queuing to see the new movie which does not even open for 43 days have discovered they are waiting outside the wrong cinema.
Enthusiasts are camped outside Hollywood's Chinese Theatre in a bid to be the first to see Episode III - Revenge of the Sith on May 19.
But 20th Century Fox chiefs say it will not be screened there and will instead be shown at a venue down the road.
However, crowds will not budge and say rumours about the last two films not being on there turned out to be fake.
Spokeswoman, Sarah Sprague, said: "This is still the epicentre for Star Wars fans. For the big iconic pictures of the 1970s, people lining up were here."
The fans have vowed to stay put on Hollywood Boulevard, according to Variety magazine, and hope to raise awareness for their charity Starlight Starbright.
...competitive elections result in more campaign spending, and a greater # of competitive races results in lots more campaign spending. This is especially true of outside, "special interest money."
His (Rep. John Linder, from Georgia) bill would abolish the IRS and the many billions of tax forms it sends out and receives. He would erase the federal income tax system -- personal and corporate income taxes, the regressive payroll tax and self-employment tax, capital gains, gift and estate taxes, the alternative minimum tax and the earned income tax credit -- and replace all that with a 23 percent national sales tax on personal consumption. That would not only sensitize consumers to the cost of government with every purchase, it would destroy K Street.
...forests are breaking out all over America. New England has more forests since the Civil War. In 1880, New York State was only 25 percent forested. Today it is more than 66 percent. In 1850, Vermont was only 35 percent forested. Now it's 76 percent forested and rising. In the South, more land is covered by forest than at any time in the last century. In 1936 a study found that 80 percent of piedmont Georgia was without trees. Today nearly 70 percent of the state is forested. In the last decade alone, America has added more than 10 million acres of forestland.