TORONTO STAR FILE
Maggie Fox  
Antibodies from survivors of the 1918 flu pandemic, the worst in human memory, still protect against the highly deadly virus, researchers reported yesterday.
Apple admits fire risk in older iPod Nanos Apple Inc. said yesterday batteries from a single supplier are to blame for the...
Missing: Turtle with two heads
Jennifer Lee  When Sean Casey called the police to report that a nameless two-headed turtle...
Google funds to search deep
Tyler Hamilton  Drill for heat, not oil.
Stem cells could allow "blood farms," company says
Maggie Fox  Embryonic stem cells can be used to grow vats of red blood cells, which could...
The mystery of lightning
Only one in 10 die, but most people hit are never quite the same.
 
Is sewage fertilizer safe?
Reporter Carola Vyhnak looks at the growing concern over the 'stew' of chemicals spread on farmland in her four-part series Soiled Land.
 
ROM lands flying dinosaur
It's been dead for millions of years, but it only took about four hours to put the Quetzalcoatlus back together.
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A guide to the latest in digital cameras and camcorders, as well as tips on taking good pictures - and how to save, share and display them.
Our special section presents the year's hot picks in computer games and gear, plus what you need to know about high-definition TV to get the full effect.
Once considered a disease of middle age, a diabetes 'epidemic' is sweeping Ontario, afflicting people of all age groups and costing the health-care system billions.
SPECIAL REPORT
Twenty days. Twenty thousand still images. A single message. Toronto Star photographer Lucas Oleniuk captures the issue of global warming in a video created entirely by using still images.
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