Monday, May 9, 2016

That Deep, Masculine Voice Is Not For You, Ladies and other top stories.

  • That Deep, Masculine Voice Is Not For You, Ladies

    That Deep, Masculine Voice Is Not For You, Ladies
    Men's deep, resonant voices did not evolve to thrill the ladies, but rather are likely to scare off their rivals, researchers say. A study of how people respond to voices shows that men react far more strongly to a deeply pitched male voice than women do. And humans, it seems, have the biggest sex-based differences in voice pitch of any primate. Women's voices are far higher and men's far lower, the team at Penn State University found. "A lower pitch made men attractive to women. But it ..
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  • Chuck Schumer wants to get rid of your e-cigarettes

    Chuck Schumer wants to get rid of your e-cigarettes
    Sen. Charles Schumer called electronic cigarettes “ticking time bombs” on Sunday, as he urged the Food and Drug Administration to use its new authority to probe — and possibly recall — the devices. “We’ve all heard the old adage, where there’s smoke there may be fire — well here, where there’s smoke, there’s sometimes explosions,” Schumer said, citing a rash of incidents in recent weeks, including four New Yorkers being injured by exploding vaporizers. “It’s bad enough that e-cigarettes cause n..
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  • FDA regulations on 'vaping' industry causes some concern in NH

    FDA regulations on 'vaping' industry causes some concern in NH
    Elite Vapor employee Bobby Mead poses in front of the more than 120 flavors of e-liquid or juice used in electronic vaporizing devices at the store in Shaw's Plaza in Hooksett. The Federal Drug Administration is clamping down on the industry as a means of preventing young people from becoming addicted to nicotine. (PAT GROSSMITH/Union Leader) FDA regulations on 'vaping' industry causes some concern in NH By PAT GROSSMITHNew Hampshire Union Leader MANCHESTER — At least one owner of..
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  • Scores of Lane County applicants apply to grow commerical marijuana - The Register

    Scores of Lane County applicants apply to grow commerical marijuana - The Register
    It sounds like a Silicon Valley tale: Eugene brothers Paul and Brice Sherman and friend Adam Chase launch their startup with a year of 80-hour workweeks and nearly $200,000 in seed money. The Monroe Street warehouse where they lease 2,500 square feet was built a half-century ago and looks it from the outside. But the team is not producing the latest high-tech innovation. They’re focused on commercial production of recreational pot products. The cannabis-laced snacks and waxy hash oil they’re ..
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  • 50% of Teens Say They're 'Addicted' to Their Phones

    50% of Teens Say They're 'Addicted' to Their Phones
    Last week, the nonprofit Common Sense Media released the findings of a new poll on mobile device usage and family conflict. Of over 1,200 parents and teenagers surveyed, 50% of teens said they “feel addicted” to their mobile devices. Though these teens were self-diagnosing, cell phone addiction, like internet addiction before it, is a very real thing. Social media may be particularly entrancing, with notifications from apps like Facebook and Twitter providing jolts of pleasure in some ways simi..
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  • Stomach bug strikes hundreds aboard British cruise ship

    Stomach bug strikes hundreds aboard British cruise ship
    The CDC said 252 of 919 passengers -- 27% -- have gotten sick on the Balmoral, a ship operated by Fred Olsen Cruises and most recently docked in Maine. Eight of 520 crew members have come down with norovirus, the CDC said.CDC employees boarded the ship when it arrived in Baltimore April 30 to conduct an environmental health assessment, the agency reported on its website. Specimens obtained by the CDC confirmed the existence of norovirus.The CDC said the cruise line has increased disinfection pro..
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  • For mentally ill facing charges, growing recognition but elusive solutions - TwinCities.com

    For mentally ill facing charges, growing recognition but elusive solutions - TwinCities.com
    Tim Leslie still remembers the St. Paul house near Victoria Street and Selby Avenue where he’d regularly respond to calls as a patrol officer from a resident who was convinced there was something landing on the roof. There wasn’t, but police learned how to talk him down anyway. “The first couple calls, it was, ‘We do this, too?’ ” he said. Today he’s the Dakota County Sheriff, responsible for a jail where perhaps a third of the inmates have mental health needs. And like others with a hand in th..
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How to Make Cities Livable Again .How to Make Cities Livable Again .
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