Alabama Florida
Georgia Louisiana
North Carolina South Carolina
Tennessee Texas
Mississippi Arkansas
Friday, Jul 30, 2010
 
Shopping Cart : 0 items
 
 
 
View All » » »
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Opinion Poll
Should Dangerous Dogs Be Banned From Public Parks And Beaches?
Yes
No
Must Be On A Rope
Must Have Insurance
 
 
 
Weather Forecast
Cities / State °C °F
Clear Atlanta
(Georgia)
24.6 76.2
Clear Charleston
(South Carolina)
27.6 81.6
Partly Cloudy Charlotte
(North Carolina)
24.3 75.8
Clear Columbia
(South Carolina)
26.6 79.8
Scattered Clouds Dallas
(Texas)
26.1 79.0
Partly Cloudy Miami
(Florida)
27.4 81.3
Partly Cloudy Nashville
(Tennessee)
24.1 75.3
 
 
 
  
 

News » Home

1

Editorial

Restore the noble purpose of libraries
Restore the noble purpose of libraries Date: 20-07-2009
Restore the noble purpose of libraries

[View Detail]
40 Years After Moon Landing: Why Can't We Cure Cancer?
40 Years After Moon Landing: Why Can't We Cure Cancer? Date: 16-07-2009
Editor's Note: Forty years ago this month, humans landed on the moon for the first time. We asked Christopher Wanjek why, four decades later, we can't cure cancer. Will we ever win the war on cancer? Richard Nixon had every reason to be optimistic when, during his 1971 State of the Union address, he called for a concerted effort to find a cure for cancer. After all, it took only three years for the Manhattan Project to produce the world's first atomic bomb. Nixon's own presidency witnessed the 1969 moon landing, a goal set forth by John F. Kennedy in 1961. It seemed that given enough resources there was no job that Americans couldn't tackle quickly. But with $200 billion spent and tens of millions of cancer deaths accumulated since 1971, most would say we are losing the war on cancer. Cancer is the top killer worldwide, responsible for 7.4 million or 13 percent of all deaths annually. In America cancer will soon overtake heart disease as the top killer, claiming more than half million lives annually.

[View Detail]

1


 
Refer To Friend
 






Featured Products

Copyright © 2010 All rights reserved by THE REAL SOUTH.