is dedicated to the acceptance, medical treatment, and legal protection of individuals correcting the misalignment of their brains and their anatomical sex, while supporting their transition into society.
Women's History Month
Insignia: Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP).

Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP) flew 60 million miles for America during World War II. Thirty-eight of the women were killed on duty.

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TS-Si supports
open access to
publicly funded research
Taking The State Out Of State Colleges
Christine Vestal
Thursday, 11 March 2010

Washington, DC, USA. In Michigan, where many enterprises are struggling to survive, the renowned University of Michigan is in the midst of a construction boom and hiring spree.

Michigan State University, on the other hand, plans to lay off faculty and cut programs, blaming state funding that is lower than it was a decade ago.

Flagship universities in other states, including Colorado, Virginia, Vermont and Wisconsin, are also prospering, while their lesser-known counterparts suffer from vanishing state appropriations.

So, why not change the arrangement and require big-name universities to responsibility for their own financing, leaving more state money to support the other state schools? As legislatures face their toughest budget year since the recession began, the idea of giving a few universities autonomy to control their own finances has some appeal.


Indiana Debates Bill Allowing Guns In Workplace
TS-Si News Service
Thursday, 11 March 2010

Washington, DC, USA. Indiana soon could join at least 11 other states and allow residents to bring their guns to work, as long as they are stored out of sight in their cars. But a shooting in Portage, Ind., last week — in which a state worker frustrated over a poor performance review retrieved a gun from his car and fired at coworkers — is causing opponents to ramp up their pressure on Governor Mitch Daniels to veto the bill.

“This is further evidence that guns and the workplace si

Finding Genetic Changes In The Blood Mine
TS-Si News Service
Wednesday, 10 March 2010

Stanford, CA, USA. Human blood is a trove of biological information, now accessible by a software algorithm that enables a common laboratory device to virtually separate a whole-blood sample into its different cell types.

This development has a near-term potential for adding a powerful tool to the toolset for biological investigations. The algorithm enables detection of medically important gene-activity changes that are specific to any one of the cell types present in the blood sample. T

Anti-Depressant Use Raises Cataract Risk
TS-Si News Service
Wednesday, 10 March 2010

Vancouver, BC, CAN. People undergoing severe stress can resort to the use of anti-depressant drugs, but some of the same medications are associated with an increased chance of developing cataracts, according to a new statistical study by researchers at the University of British Columbia (UBC), Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute and McGill University.

More than 200,000 Quebec residents aged 65 and older were in the database, with statistical relationships between a diagnosis of c

Smokers Beware, the Taxperson Cometh
Stateline Staff
Wednesday, 10 March 2010

Washington, DC, USA. Sixteen states raised their cigarette taxes last year to generate more revenue, and the trend shows few signs of slowing down in 2010. Georgia, Kansas, South Carolina and Utah are among the states that could force smokers to pay more as they try to balance their budgets.

Anti-tax activist Grover Norquist will lead a rally on the steps of the Georgia Capitol today (March 9) to protest a legislative plan to raise cigarette taxes by $1 per pack, to $1.37. The event is s

Chemical Competition Regulates Embryonic Development
TS-Si News Service
Wednesday, 10 March 2010

Princeton, NJ, USA. A research team discovered that protein competition over an important enzyme provides a mechanism to integrate different signals that direct early embryonic development. This suggests that signals are combined long before they interact with the organism's DNA, as previously believed, and also may inform new therapeutic strategies.

The mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) enzymes found in all complex organisms, from yeast to humans. MAPK signaling pathways (chemical

TS-Si News Service
Tuesday, 09 March 2010
John Gramlich
Tuesday, 09 March 2010
Science & Medicine
Living
Opinion
The Nation