From today's UK papers
FINANCIAL TIMES Scientists at Cambridge University have come up with the technology and funding to make ultra-cheap microchips from plastic, hastening the day when even the most humble items can be...
FINANCIAL TIMES Scientists at Cambridge University have come up with the technology and funding to make ultra-cheap microchips from plastic, hastening the day when even the most humble items can be...
The 14th conference of Commonwealth education ministers , and the parallel symposium and trade fair, are being held in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada from -30 November 2000. ...
Composer of the Week (9.00 am R3 and rest of week) is Heinrich von Biber. Book of the Week (9.45 am R4 and rest of week) is The Letters of Oscar Wilde read by Simon Callow. Work in Progress (10.00 am...
5 Live Report (12 noon R5). “Degrees of Uncertainty”. Investigating the growth of “virtual” universities. Music Matters (12.15 R3). Reports from China, including a piano factory and a potential new...
The Century Speaks (2.30 R4). “What’s Next.” Last in compilation series from BBC’s oral-history archive speculates about the future. Refugee Tales (4.00 C4). The stories of four refugee families who...
Richard Fisher looks back over more than a decade of the Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought. Plato's Republic is the first great work of western political philosophy, and has...
In the summer of 1984, I was trying to decide what subject to read at university, searching for something a little further off the beaten track than my sixth-form language and literature courses....
Graduate students in politics, economics, IT and the social sciences all turn to the same man. Martin Ince meets Manuel Castells Manuel Castells may go one better in his analysis of the information...
Nicky Hayes examines how to measure the impact of science exhibitions. The first World Congress of Science Centres, held in Finland in 1996, was an exhilarating affair. Large-scale demonstrations,...
Each of these publications has a catchy French title (almost de rigueur these days?) and makes extensive use of recorded audio material - of good quality in all cases. Otherwise they differ quite...
The cooking of food is one of the most significant sources of indoor air pollution, and frying foods, as for stir-frys and fry-ups, is one of the biggest culprits. John Cherrie at the Institute of...
A healthy diet may offer some protection against the possible health impact of air pollution. Preliminary results of a study by Frank Kelly, professor of respiratory biochemistry at King's College...
The size of PM10 particles may be the key to their impact on human health. William MacNee, professor of respiratory and environmental medicine, and colleagues at Edinburgh University are learning how...
A country home may suffer less indoor pollution than one in town, but the air is certainly not clean, says researchers at Cardiff University. Gypsum, salt and allergens such as pollen dominated...
Chemical pollutants can be released from many sources in the home, where typical pollutant levels are about 20 times higher than outside. Derrick Crump, who leads work on indoor air pollutants at the...