Sunday, March 31, 2013

284,000 College Graduates Had Minimum-Wage Jobs Last Year

A college degree doesn?t guarantee anyone a big paycheck anymore.

About 284,000 Americans with college degrees were working minimum wage jobs last year, according to the Wall Street Journal. That?s 70 percent more college grads working for the minimum wage than 10 years ago. Still, the number is down from its 2010 high of 327,000.

As unemployment skyrocketed during the economic downturn, job opportunities for everyone -- including college graduates -- narrowed and low-wage work began to replace steady middle-class jobs. Three-fifths of the jobs lost during the recession paid middle-income wages, while the same share of the jobs created during the recovery are low-wage work, according to an August study from the National Employment Law Project.

The result: Nearly half of the college graduates in the class of 2010 are working in jobs that don?t require a bachelor?s degree and 38 percent have jobs that don?t even require a high school diploma, according to a January report from the Center for College Affordability and Productivity. The report called into question whether too much public money is being spent on providing students with degrees that make them overqualified for the only jobs that are available.

But it?s not only the government shouldering the cost of a college degree. Household student loan debt soared to a record in 2010, with nearly one in five American households burdened with college debt. And with the weak job market, recent graduates are going to have an increasingly tough time paying that debt off. The median wage for those with a bachelor?s degree is down from a decade ago, according to the Associated Press.

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/31/college-graduates-minimum-wage-jobs_n_2989540.html

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Multi-toxin biotech crops not silver bullets, scientists warn

Mar. 29, 2013 ? The popular new strategy of planting genetically engineered crops that make two or more toxins to fend off insect pests rests on assumptions that don't always apply, UA researchers have discovered. Their study helps explain why one major pest is evolving resistance much faster than predicted and offers ideas for more sustainable pest control.

A strategy widely used to prevent pests from quickly adapting to crop-protecting toxins may fail in some cases unless better preventive actions are taken, suggests new research by University of Arizona entomologists published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Corn and cotton have been genetically modified to produce pest-killing proteins from the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis, or Bt for short. Compared with typical insecticide sprays, the Bt toxins produced by genetically engineered crops are much safer for people and the environment, explained Yves Carri?re, a professor of entomology in the UA College of Agriculture and Life Sciences who led the study.

Although Bt crops have helped to reduce insecticide sprays, boost crop yields and increase farmer profits, their benefits will be short-lived if pests adapt rapidly, said Bruce Tabashnik, a co-author of the study and head of the UA department of entomology. "Our goal is to understand how insects evolve resistance so we can develop and implement more sustainable, environmentally friendly pest management," he said. Tabashnik and Carri?re are both members of the UA's BIO5 Institute.

Bt crops were first grown widely in 1996, and several pests have already become resistant to plants that produce a single Bt toxin. To thwart further evolution of pest resistance to Bt crops, farmers have recently shifted to the "pyramid" strategy: each plant produces two or more toxins that kill the same pest. As reported in the study, the pyramid strategy has been adopted extensively, with two-toxin Bt cotton completely replacing one-toxin Bt cotton since 2011 in the U.S.

Most scientists agree that two-toxin plants will be more durable than one-toxin plants. The extent of the advantage of the pyramid strategy, however, rests on assumptions that are not always met, the study reports. Using lab experiments, computer simulations and analysis of published experimental data, the new results help explain why one major pest has started to become resistant faster than anticipated.

"The pyramid strategy has been touted mostly on the basis of simulation models," said Carri?re. "We tested the underlying assumptions of the models in lab experiments with a major pest of corn and cotton. The results provide empirical data that can help to improve the models and make the crops more durable."

One critical assumption of the pyramid strategy is that the crops provide redundant killing, Carri?re explained. "Redundant killing can be achieved by plants producing two toxins that act in different ways to kill the same pest," he said, "so, if an individual pest has resistance to one toxin, the other toxin will kill it."

In the real world, things are a bit more complicated, Carri?re's team found out. Thierry Br?vault, a visiting scientist from France, led the lab experiments at the UA. His home institution, the Center for Agricultural Research for Development, or CIRAD, is keenly interested in factors that could affect pest resistance to Bt crops in Africa.

"We obviously can't release resistant insects into the field, so we breed them in the lab and bring in the crop plants to do feeding experiments," Carri?re said. For their experiments, the group collected cotton bollworm -- also known as corn earworm or Helicoverpa zea -, a species of moth that is a major agricultural pest, and selected it for resistance against one of the Bt toxins, Cry1Ac.

As expected, the resistant caterpillars survived after munching on cotton plants producing only that toxin. The surprise came when Carri?re's team put them on pyramided Bt cotton containing Cry2Ab in addition to Cry1Ac.

If the assumption of redundant killing is correct, caterpillars resistant to the first toxin should survive on one-toxin plants, but not on two-toxin plants, because the second toxin should kill them, Carri?re explained.

"But on the two-toxin plants, the caterpillars selected for resistance to one toxin survived significantly better than caterpillars from a susceptible strain."

These findings show that the crucial assumption of redundant killing does not apply in this case and may also explain the reports indicating some field populations of cotton bollworm rapidly evolved resistance to both toxins.

Moreover, the team's analysis of published data from eight species of pests reveals that some degree of cross-resistance between Cry1 and Cry2 toxins occurred in 19 of 21 experiments. Contradicting the concept of redundant killing, cross-resistance means that selection with one toxin increases resistance to the other toxin.

According to the study's authors, even low levels of cross-resistance can reduce redundant killing and undermine the pyramid strategy. Carri?re explained that this is especially problematic with cotton bollworm and some other pests that are not highly susceptible to Bt toxins to begin with.

The team found violations of other assumptions required for optimal success of the pyramid strategy. In particular, inheritance of resistance to plants producing only Bt toxin Cry1Ac was dominant, which is expected to reduce the ability of refuges to delay resistance.

Refuges consist of standard plants that do not make Bt toxins and thus allow survival of susceptible pests. Under ideal conditions, inheritance of resistance is not dominant and the susceptible pests emerging from refuges greatly outnumber the resistant pests. If so, the matings between two resistant pests needed to produce resistant offspring are unlikely. But if inheritance of resistance is dominant, as seen with cotton bollworm, matings between a resistant moth and a susceptible moth can produce resistant offspring, which hastens resistance.

According to Tabashnik, overly optimistic assumptions have led the EPA to greatly reduce requirements for planting refuges to slow evolution of pest resistance to two-toxin Bt crops.

The new results should come as a wakeup call to consider larger refuges to push resistance further into the future, Carri?re pointed out. "Our simulations tell us that with 10 percent of acreage set aside for refuges, resistance evolves quite fast, but if you put 30 or 40 percent aside, you can substantially delay it."

"Our main message is to be more cautious, especially with a pest like the cotton bollworm," Carri?re said. "We need more empirical data to refine our simulation models, optimize our strategies and really know how much refuge area is required. Meanwhile, let's not assume that the pyramid strategy is a silver bullet."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Arizona. The original article was written by Daniel Stolte.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. T. Brevault, S. Heuberger, M. Zhang, C. Ellers-Kirk, X. Ni, L. Masson, X. Li, B. E. Tabashnik, Y. Carriere. Potential shortfall of pyramided transgenic cotton for insect resistance management. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2013; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1216719110

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/wYWT6YRzi0Y/130330130838.htm

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USA science education standards now to include climate change ...

climate-changeTeach Your Children Well ? About Climate Change?http://www.enn.com/climate/article/45772??JENNIFER LUDDEN,?NPR?
March 27, 2013 ?By the time today?s K-12 students grow up, the challenges posed by climate change are expected to be severe and sweeping. Now, for the first time, new federal science standards due out this month will recommend that U.S. public school students learn about this climatic shift taking place.

?Only 1 in 5 [students] feel like they?ve got a good handle on climate change from what they?ve learned in school,? he says, adding that surveys show two-thirds of students say they?re not learning much at all about it. ?So the state of climate change education in the U.S. is abysmal.?

We all learn the water cycle. But how many can draw a picture of the carbon cycle? It would include plants taking in carbon to grow, then dying, and eventually turning into fossil fuels like coal and oil, which then put carbon back into the atmosphere when burned.

Even when this is taught, McCaffrey says, climate is often sidelined. Why take Earth science, when what you need to get into college is biology and chemistry? A recent report on climate literacy recommends sweeping changes to address such issues.

On top of this, there?s the political battle over how climate change is taught. Last month, Colorado became the 18th state in recent years ? including seven this year ? to consider an ?Academic Freedom Act.?

Climate change blackboard image?via Shutterstock.

Read more at?NPR.

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Source: http://nuclear-news.net/2013/03/30/usa-science-education-standards-now-include-climate-change/

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Saturday, March 30, 2013

5 Handy Tools to Boost Productivity in Business - Small Businesses ...


HandHarsh economic times and general demands have many businesses working in overdrive. With meetings to organize, staff to accommodate, and customers to please, there just doesn?t seem to be enough time to get it all done. It can make for a frustrating environment, but thanks to technology, there are solutions.

The internet has brought us an abundance of tools that offer the ability to keep production moving. These five tools have the potential to come in handy in both the office and home setting.

1. Remember the Milk

Remember the Milk has a lot to offer business pros and homebodies alike. This app comes with several interesting perks, including the ability to:

  • ?Share tasks
  • ?Manage tasks offline
  • ?Integrate with Google Calendar
  • ?Receive notifications via email, IM, or text

At the basic level, Remember the Milk is great at creating lists that you can easily manage in a variety of unique ways. It?s all cloud-based, so you can pretty much access it at any time, on any device.

2. Google Drive

Although DropBox has been on top of the online file storage game for a while, Google Drive has proven to be a worthy alternative. Available for web use, Android, and even iOS, the service that started out as a glorified version of Google Docs has matured into a nice little tool all its own. In addition to storage, it serves up real-time updates, the ability to download documents, and full-on editing capabilities. Google Drive is also cloud driven, so you can access your data any time on a multitude of devices.

3. Objectiveli

Objectiveli is another utility that comes in handy for task management. This web-based tool provides you with a streamlined interface that allows you to track tasks, goals, and objectives in real-time. It helps teams and organizations stay focused by providing a centralized view of everything that has been assigned, thus minimizing the need for handwritten notes, spreadsheets, and internal email communications. Objectiveli is highly recommended for team orientated businesses, and individuals who want to see what?s ahead of them in big picture form.?

4. Rapportive

What we have here is a tool that enhances the power of your Gmail account. Rapportive delivers rich data about your contacts directly to your inbox. It pulls data about these contacts from a number of different sources, including Facebok, LinkedIn, Twitter, and Quora. So if it?s someone from LinkedIn, you would be able to see updates and other activity without actually visiting the site. ?Hence the name, this tool is all about getting to better know your contacts so you can form a ?rapport?.

Rapportive is a free tool available as a browser extension for Chrome, Firefox, Mailplane, and Safari. This one can be extremely handy for marketers scouting the web for leads, or the consumer who simply wants to know more about a company before doing business with them.

5. Pomio

Sales people, managers, programmers, and people all over the world are practicing the Pomodoro Technique, the time management method developed by Francisco Cirillo many years ago. Some say its overblown hogwash. Others swear by it. Lost? This five-step overview sums it up:

  • ?Outline a specific task
  • ?Set your timer to 25 minutes
  • ?Work on the task for 25 minutes straight through?
  • ?Break briefly for about three to five minutes
  • Take a longer break of 15 to 30 minutes between each set (every four 25-minute periods)

The concept is simple enough, but getting the most from it has proven challenging. That?s where tools like Pomio come in. Pomio is an iOS app that acts as a Pomodoro timer, but it does so much more. It fully supports task management by allowing you to enter specific objectives and properly time them to make sure you are doing the method correctly. With access to detailed analytics, you can find out where you?re excelling, and where you need improvements. This is a fun little tool that can actually help you get more done if you play fair.

Conclusion
Steady productivity is one of those intangible assets with value that simply can?t be measured. But as you know, keeping it a high level is a task in and of itself. With everything from social networks to reality shows in the mix, the potential for distraction is greater than ever. On the bright side, there are plenty of good productivity tools at your disposal. All you gotta do is find the right ones and use them.

Chiko Noguchi is a best practices activist and advocate for a leading provider of event marketing services.
Image courtesy John-Morgan

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Source: http://smallbusinessesdoitbetter.com/2013/03/5-handy-tools-to-boost-productivity-in-business/

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Stress Management - Say Hello Indonesia

Stress Management
Stress is really bad for your body and for your life. It can waste your energy, and your time. There are many reasons why people may get stress. Problem with the workplace, family, financial, loss someone, guilty, or even feared could be the factors of stress. Stress can cause restlessness, unhappiness, impatience and anger. It can harm your life, relationships and health.

It does, you cannot control your life and your condition as what you want. Controlling and eliminating the reasons of stress is not an easy thing to do, but it is very helpful if you can act and behave to reduce or alleviate your stress. Don?t ever let you down and internally affected too much. There are a number of stress relief methods that can and must be tried out that will help you to reduce stress:

1. Take a nice bath.
You may soak in the warm water for fifteen minutes, close your eyes and breath consistently. It?s useful for your body circulation and help you to feel relax.

2. Listen to music.
Play some soft music, light a candle, and drink a glass of milk, tea or hot chocolate can warm you. Maybe you can do a little dance, follow the music and rest your mind. Forget all your problems for at least one hour. These can make you feel calm.

3. Watch comedy or funny films.
Laugh is the best method to reduce stress. Ask your friends to find the references of funny film or television programs. Enjoy it with consuming your favorite snacks, and you?ll feel relax.

4. Go picnic with your family or friends
Vacation or even just walking in a park, feel the fresh air, enjoying the view, and having fun with your family or friends also a great method for reducing stress. They can make you feel happy and relax.

5. Massage
Massage is useful to stretch your nerves. Go to the salon or spa, or maybe you can share it with your wife or husband.

6. Take a short walk and deep breath
Take a short walk in park or garden can help you to relief stress. Feel the fresh air and take a deep breath.

7. Do what you like to do
Take a time to do ?just me time?. Do what you really like to do, do your hobbies, eat your favorite food, listen to your favorite music, go to your favorite place, etc.

8. Meditation
It exerts a calming effect on the body, nerves and blood pressure, reduces restlessness, and brings peace of mind, detachment and equanimity.

9. Motivate your self
Whatever your problem, however hard it is, always be positive thinking. Talk to yourself that you can do that. Say you can, so you will. Believe it. Listen to motivator, or read an inspiring story book. It really helps to make you motivated.

10. Pray to your God
This is the most importing to do. Communicate all your problems and feelings to God. Believe, nothing is impossible if you give it to God.

How success you can manage your stress depend to yourself. It requires some effort and time. Be patient, be happy, and believe in God. That?s the key.

Source: http://sayhelloindonesia.blogspot.com/2013/03/stress-management.html

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'Harry Potter' actor Richard Griffiths dies at 65

LONDON (AP) ? Richard Griffiths, a versatile British actor who won a Tony Award for "The History Boys" and played the boy wizard's unsympathetic Uncle Vernon Dursley in the "Harry Potter" movies, has died. He was 65.

Agent Simon Beresford announced Friday that Griffiths died a day earlier of complications following heart surgery at University Hospital in Coventry, central England.

He paid tribute to Griffiths as "a remarkable man and one of our greatest and best-loved actors."

Griffiths appeared in dozens of movies and TV shows, but will be most widely remembered as a pair of contrasting uncles ? flamboyant Uncle Monty in 1980s cult classic "Withnail and I" and the hero's grudging Muggle guardian in the "Harry Potter" series.

Griffiths once said he liked playing Uncle Vernon "because that gives me a license to be horrible to kids."

But "Harry Potter" star Daniel Radcliffe paid tribute to the actor, saying "I was proud to say I knew him."

A large man and a huge stage presence, Griffiths was one of Britain's leading theater actors, creating roles including the charismatic teacher Hector at the emotional heart of Alan Bennett's school drama "The History Boys" ? a part he took to Broadway, winning a Tony, and repeated for the film adaptation.

National Theatre artistic director Nicholas Hytner, who directed "The History Boys," called Griffiths' performance in that play "a masterpiece of wit, delicacy, mischief and desolation, often simultaneously."

Griffiths also played poet W.H. Auden in Bennett's "The Habit of Art," a hugely persuasive performance despite the lack of physical resemblance between the two men.

Griffiths was born in northeast England's Thormaby-on-Tees in 1947 to parents who were deaf and mute ? an experience he felt contributed to his exceptional ability to listen and to communicate physically.

He left school at 15 but later studied drama and spent a decade with the Royal Shakespeare Company, making a specialty of comic parts such as the buffoonish knight Falstaff.

On television, he played a crime-solving chef in 1990s' British TV series "Pie in the Sky," and he had parts in movies ranging from "Chariots of Fire" and "Gandhi" to "The Naked Gun 2 ?."

Known for his sense of humor, large store of rambling theatrical anecdotes and occasional bursts of temper, Griffiths was renowned for shaming audience members whose cell phones rang during plays by stopping the performance and ordering the offender to leave.

Griffiths' last major stage role was in a West End production of Neil Simon's comedy "The Sunshine Boys" last year opposite Danny DeVito. The pair had been due to reprise their roles in Los Angeles later this year.

In 2007 he appeared in a London and Broadway production of "Equus" alongside the then 17-year-old Radcliffe.

"Richard was by my side during two of the most important moments of my career," Radcliffe said Friday.

"In August 2000, before official production had even begun on Potter, we filmed a shot outside the Dursleys', which was my first ever shot as Harry. I was nervous and he made me feel at ease.

?"Seven years later, we embarked on 'Equus' together. It was my first time doing a play but, terrified as I was, his encouragement, tutelage and humor made it a joy.

"In fact, any room he walked into was made twice as funny and twice as clever just by his presence."

Griffiths is survived by his wife, Heather Gibson.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/harry-potter-actor-richard-griffiths-dies-65-102210345.html

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Scientists create robo-ant colony

On its own, each robot would 'just get lost' but as a colony they can navigate

Scientists in the US have built and tested robotic ants that they say behave just like a real ant colony.

The robots do not resemble their insect counterparts; they are tiny cubes equipped with two watch motors to power the wheels that enable them to move.

But their collective behaviour is remarkably ant-like.

By being programmed simply to move forward toward a target and avoid obstacles, the robot colony finds the fastest way through a network or maze.

The secret, the researchers report in the open access journal Plos Computational Biology, is in their ability to take cues from one another - just like an insect swarm.

"Each individual robot is pretty dumb," said Simon Garnier from the New Jersey Institute of Technology, lead researcher on the study. "They have very limited memory and limited processing power."

"By themselves, each robot would just move around randomly and get lost... but [they] are able to work together and communicate."

This is because, like ants, the robots leave a trail that the others follow; while ants leave a trail of chemicals - or pheromones - that their nest mates are able to sniff out, the robots leave a trail of light.

Continue reading the main story

?Start Quote

You don't need something as complex as choice to get some of the behaviour you see in ants?

End Quote Dr Paul Graham University of Sussex

To achieve this, the researchers set up a camera to track the path of each robot. A projector connected to the camera then produced a spot of light at regular intervals along their route, leaving a "breadcrumb trail" of light that got brighter every time another robot tracked over the same path.

Dr Garnier explained: "[The robots each] have two antennae on top, which are light sensors. If more light falls on their left sensor they turn left, and if more light falls on the right sensor, they turn right."

"It's exactly the same mechanism as ants."

The researcher explained how both the robots and ants worked together, describing their navigation skills as a "positive feedback loop".

"If there are two possible paths from A to B and one is twice as long as [the other], at the beginning, the ants [or] robots start using each path equally.

"Because ants taking the shorter path travel faster, the amount of pheromone (or light) deposited on that path grows faster, so more ants use that path."

Learning from nature Continue reading the main story

Superorganisms

  • There are an estimated 20,000 species of ants in the world
  • Ant colonies have structured social system, with different castes - worker, soldier, queen and drone - all of which carry out specific tasks for the colony
  • Ant colonies are sometimes referred to as "superorganisms" because ants appear to operate as a single entity

There are many other research and engineering projects that take inspiration from nature to solve problems or design robots, as Dr Paul Graham, a biologist from the University of Sussex, explained.

"The classic example," he said, "is the way in which we design information networks to move packets of data around.

"Ants don't have someone in charge telling them where to go, so you can [mimic this].

For instance - in a complex network, there may be a junction with different possible routes that packets [of data] could take. Packets would leave messages for each other at the junction to give information about which routes were quick."

This, he explained, is the basis of an algorithm called ant colony optimisation which has already been used in telecoms networks.

And although Dr Graham doesn't see an immediate practical use for these particular robotic insects he says the study demonstrates an important and interesting piece of biology.

"Lots of animal behaviour gets described using words like 'choice'.

"This shows that you don't need something as complex as choice to get some of the behaviour you see in ants.

"And these things look pretty cool, too."

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/21956795#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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Friday, March 29, 2013

Which of These Apple Patents Will Ever See the Light of Day?

Which of These Apple Patents Will Ever See the Light of Day?
The patent office publishes oodles of Apple patent applications each week. It also grants a ton of them, allowing Apple to protect its IP against competitors. Whether it actually uses any of that IP in its products is another matter ...

Source: http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2013/03/apple-patents-realistically/

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Selena Gomez Will 'Come & Get It' At MTV Movie Awards

FROM MTV NEWS The nominee list alone assures that some of Hollywood's biggest stars will take the stage on April 14 at the 2013 MTV Movie Awards, but a new announcement has confirmed which musical star will be entertaining all of us on that special night. "Spring Breakers" star Selena Gomez will make her triumphant [...]

Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2013/03/27/selena-gomez-mtv-movie-awards/

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Thursday, March 28, 2013

The Edge: McConnell Has a Fight On His Hands

The Edge is National Journal's daily look at today in Washington -- and what's coming next. The email features analysis from NJ's top correspondents, the biggest stories of the day -- and always a few surprises. To subscribe, click here.

McConnell Has a Fight On His Hands

Leading the charge against President Obama?s health care reform, a law that is deeply unpopular among Republicans, will likely burnish Sen. Mitch McConnell?s conservative credentials.

Creating a platform to campaign against Obamacare as it comes online, and people start to feel its effects, is smart politics, too?especially in deeply conservative Kentucky.

But it also underscores how hard McConnell is working to defend his seat.?

Despite the aura of inevitability his campaign is trying to create ? including a huge campaign war chest and the assimilation of leading Tea Partiers into his camp -- McConnell is vulnerable.

A recent Courier-Journal Bluegrass Poll showed that 34 percent plan to vote against McConnell while just 17 percent are supporting him.

So then it?s no surprise that McConnell and his team are aggressively working almost two years before the election to tell their story through ads, the media and grassroots messaging. After all, as Obamacare shows, McConnell?s never been known to shy away from a good political fight.

Chris Frates
cfrates@nationaljournal.com

TOP NEWS

BLOOMBERG GROUP FEATURES NEWTOWN FAMILIES IN ADS. Mayors Against Illegal Guns, the group founded by New York City?s Michael Bloomberg, is out with new ads featuring the families of victims of the Newtown, Conn., shooting, The Washington Post reports. The ads will run in Connecticut while the Legislature takes up gun-control legislation. ?Don?t let the memory of Newtown fade without doing something real,? says the mother of Lauren Rousseau, a teacher who died in the December shooting. Meanwhile, President Obama today said ?shame on us,? if America has forgotten about Newtown?s victims. Organizing for Action, the Obama campaign group, is holding a petition drive on gun control tonight. Read more

  • Two top Democratic donors have come forward to say they?ll never contribute to any Democrats who don?t support expanded background checks. (Washington Post)

BOEHNER HAILS ?TACTICAL PLAN? AGAINST OBAMA. In a memo he put out to his caucus today, House Speaker John Boehner said the GOP has enjoyed success in Obama?s second term, The Hill reported. He said the ?new tactical plan? to battle Democrats on spending had, in general, worked. ?Republicans may be the minority party in Washington?but because we forged a plan together and have stuck to it, our actions as a team over the past couple of months have made a difference for all Americans,? Boehner wrote. As an example he cited a maneuver that forced Democrats in the Senate to produce a budget for the first time in four years. Read more

OBAMA TO DELIVER BUDGET ON APRIL 10. Better late than never. The White House will release its budget, which was due in early February, on April 10, Politico reports. Read more

DEFENSE REDUCES CIVILIAN FURLOUGHS. The Defense Department has reduced the number of days its 700,000 civilian workers will be furloughed between now and the end of September from 22 to 14, The Washington Post reports. The reduction is permitted by the recently passed continuing resolution, which gives the Pentagon more flexibility in making sequester cuts. Read more

CANTOR: IMMIGRATION REFORM POSSIBLE, BUT A ?TALL ORDER.? House Majority Leader Eric Cantor told Fox News today that immigration reform is possible, but will be a ?tall order,? Politico reports. There was one area in which Cantor was more optimistic about getting a deal done: ?We?ve got an opportunity to come together on one point, and that is the kids,? he said. ?If a kid was brought here by his parents or her parents, unbeknownst to them, and knows no other place ? than America as home, why wouldn?t we want to give them a path to citizenship? And I think we should.? Read more

BOSTON MAYOR WILL NOT SEEK SIXTH TERM. Longtime Boston Mayor Thomas Menino will not seek reelection for a sixth term, The Boston Globe reported. Menino, who was first elected in 1993, had suffered a series of health setbacks in recent months. ?I know I could win but not on my terms,? Menino told tearful staffers, while reassuring them that the move would be ?good for Boston.? Read more

U.S. SENDS STEALTH BOMBERS OVER SOUTH KOREA. As the rhetoric from North Korea grows more bellicose, the U.S. Air Force has sent two B-2 stealth bombers on a practice bombing run over South Korea, The New York Times reports. The bombers flew nonstop from Missouri?s Whiteman Air Force Base in a move that signals the continuing U.S. commitment to protecting South Korea. Read more

MARION BARRY SORRY FOR 'MOFO' TWEET AIMED AT PARK SERVICE. Councilman and former D.C. MayorMarion Barry said a staff member with access to his Twitter account wrote that the National Park Service should be a nominee for ?DC Mofo of the Month,? The Washington Post reports. Barry has been critical of the National Park Service for a plan to kill deer that overpopulate Rock Creek Park, calling for a more humane solution. Barry reportedly told the staffer that the language used was inappropriate. Read more

  • ?The thrust of it was right, the thing that went too far was the MoFo.? ?Marion Barry, explaining the tweet.

TOMORROW

OBAMA TO VISIT MIAMI TO TALK ECONOMY. Obama will be at the Port of Miami on Friday to talk up the economy, but the visit is giving Republican Gov. Rick Scott an opening to blast the president and the federal government for not providing funding for ports. ?We could not wait for the federal government to come to the table with their share of the project,? Scott said today in a conference call with reporters, according to The Palm Beach Post. Read more

QUOTABLE

?There's two kinds of marriage, there's full marriage and then there's sort of skim-milk marriage? ?Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, during Wednesday's oral arguments on the Defense of Marriage Act (Huffington Post).

BEDTIME READING

FORMER KING OF RWANDA LIVES ON FOOD STAMPS IN D.C. BURBS. The last king of Rwanda lives on food stamps in a low-income Virginia housing complex outside the nation?s capital. It was in 1961 that a coup pushed out Kigeli V Ndahindurwa. ?Back then, the fate of an entire country and the future of a centuries-old dynasty hung in the balance,? writes Ariel Sabar in Washingtonian magazine. Five decades of exile later, Kigeli V (as in the Fifth) ?gets by on food stamps, a Section 8 housing subsidy, Medicaid, and private donations of cash and clothing, as well as the occasional sale of Rwandan knighthoods to jet-set strangers in search of novelty status symbols.? The children in his apartment complex see him as the friendly, 7-foot-2 ?King of Africa,? who hands out candy on their birthdays. But Kigeli V still sees himself as the once and future king of Rwanda. Read more

PLAY OF THE DAY

THE MANY VIEWS OF MARRIAGE. Marriage and relationships was a theme for comedians Wednesday evening. In a California speech this week, David Petraeus apologized for his extramarital affairs that ended his time as CIA Director, and NBC late-night hosts Jimmy Fallon and Jay Leno had jokes about his troubles. In Washington, the Supreme Court listened to arguments on the constitutionality of the Defense of Marriage Act. Conan O?Brien found low-hanging fruit in Bill Clinton?s recent comments on the subject, while Leno hit Texas Gov. Rick Perry and Jimmy Kimmel wants to see gay divorce court on TV. Fallon also had some news about George W. Bush?s presidential library and Obama?s appointment of Julia Pierson to head the Secret Service. Watch it here

OVERLOOKED

HOUSE GOP SILENT ON MARRIAGE LAW THEY PAY TO DEFEND. As attorney Paul Clement took to the Supreme Court to defend the Defense of Marriage Act on behalf of House Republicans, the lawmakers who hired him to do so stood by silently. It was the right thing to do, many Republican strategists say, to avoid distracting from the GOP?s core economic message. But some members of the House Republican Conference thought their leaders should have done more to publicly stand behind an effort that is important to social conservatives, National Journal?s Rebecca Kaplan reports. Read more

TWEETS

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/edge-mcconnell-fight-hands-163349832--politics.html

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Newtown gunman had access to huge weapons cache

NEWTOWN, Conn. (AP) ? When Adam Lanza walked out of his house for the last time, he left behind firearms and knives and more than 1,600 rounds of ammunition ? taking only four guns. They would suffice.

He loaded the weapons into his car, drove to Sandy Hook Elementary School, blasted his way into the building and within five minutes fired off 154 shots with a Bushmaster .223-caliber rifle. Having murdered 20 first-graders and six educators, he killed himself with a final, single shot from a Glock handgun. He still had more than 100 rifle bullets at hand.

Warrants released Thursday provide the most insight to date into the world of the 20-year-old gunman, a recluse who played violent video games in a house packed with weaponry that was all too real. The inventory of items taken from the spacious, colonial-style home included books on autism, a vast array of weapon paraphernalia, and images of what appears to be a dead person covered with plastic and blood.

The weapons used in the shooting had all apparently been purchased by Lanza's mother, Nancy, with whom he lived, said prosecutor Stephen J. Sedensky III, in a statement accompanying the warrants.

She was found dead in her bed; Adam Lanza had shot her the morning of the massacre, Dec. 14. Authorities also found a holiday card from Nancy Lanza containing a check made out to her son for the purchase of yet another firearm.

Connecticut Gov. Dannel P. Malloy expressed incredulity over the access that the troubled young man had to a cache of weapons.

"There are parts of this story that are unfathomable," he said. "How anyone would have maintained that household that way is difficult to understand."

Mark Barden, whose 7-year-old son Daniel was killed at Sandy Hook, said he was not surprised by anything revealed Thursday.

"Most of this is pretty high level stuff that we were aware of already and it just reminds me of what happened, that a gunman stormed his way into an elementary school and shot to death 26 people, 20 of which were first-grade boys and girls," Barden said.

The shooting elevated gun safety to the top of President Barack Obama's agenda; at an event in Washington on Thursday, joined by the families of four children killed at Sandy Hook, he urged lawmakers not to get "squishy" in the face of opposition to gun control.

"Shame on us if we've forgotten," Obama said. "I haven't forgotten those kids."

The debate has extended to Newtown, a rural community of 27,000 people in western Connecticut which is also home to the National Shooting Sports Foundation. A protest and counter-protest were scheduled outside the foundation's offices Thursday.

If it's possible to determine a motive for the massacre, there may be clues in Adam Lanza's journals, which state police seized from the house and turned over to the FBI for analysis. But authorities say that so far no conclusions have been reached. Sedensky estimated the investigation will be finished this summer.

At the Lanza house, investigators found books about autism and Asperger's syndrome, as well as one with tabbed pages entitled: "Train Your Brain to Get Happy." Adam Lanza was said to have been diagnosed with Asperger's.

But the warrants also reveal an intense interest in weaponry and violence.

A gun locker in Lanza's bedroom was open when police arrived at the house in the aftermath of the shootings, and there was no sign it had been broken into.

Investigators found a 7-foot pole with a blade on one side and a spear on another, a metal bayonet, three samurai swords, a .323-caliber bolt-action rifle, a .22-caliber Savage Mark II rifle and a .22-caliber Volcanic starter pistol. There was a military-style uniform in Lanza's bedroom; literature seized from the house included a news article on a 2008 shooting at Northern Illinois University and a National Rifle Association guide to pistol shooting.

In a duffel bag, investigators found ear and eye protection, binoculars, numerous paper targets and an NRA certificate that belonged to Adam Lanza. The NRA said Lanza was not a member.

An unnamed person told investigators that Lanza was an avid gamer who played "Call of Duty" and rarely left his home. The affidavit, which is partially blacked out, also has that person saying that Sandy Hook, the school Lanza attended as a child, was his "life."

On the day of the massacre, Lanza took two loaded handguns to the school along with the Bushmaster rifle. A fourth gun, a loaded 12-gauge Saiga shotgun, was found in the passenger compartment of his Honda Civic, along with 70 shotgun rounds.

Lanza went through six 30-round magazines for the Bushmaster, although half of them were not completely empty, and police said he had three other 30-round magazines in addition to one that was in the rifle.

A judge's order to seal the warrants expired on Wednesday, and a Danbury Superior Court judge granted a request by Sedensky to withhold some details. Sedensky asked to redact the name of a witness, saying the person's safety might be jeopardized if the name were disclosed. He also asked that the release not include other information such as telephone numbers, serial numbers on items found and a few paragraphs of an affidavit.

Malloy, a Democrat in his first term as governor, said the fact that Lanza left smaller magazines at the house should boost support for a state ban on high-capacity ammunition magazines.

"That somebody could get 154 shots off in less than five minutes, kill 20 children and six adults, is disturbing," Malloy said.

Connecticut House Minority Leader Lawrence Cafero Jr., a Republican, said he expects the General Assembly will be ready to vote next week, possibly Wednesday, on a package addressing gun control and other issues raised by the shooting.

___

Associated Press writers John Christoffersen, Dave Collins and Susan Haigh in Hartford and John Christoffersen in New Haven contributed to this report. Melia reported from Hartford.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/newtown-gunman-had-access-huge-weapons-cache-201407746.html

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"Criminal Minds" star Vangsness tops with church-going Americans

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - "Criminal Minds" star Kirsten Vangsness topped a list on Thursday of the most appealing TV actors among faith-based audiences, while Sandra Bullock was the most popular movie star among that group.

Vangsness, 40, who plays fun-loving FBI technical analyst Penelope Garcia on the CBS show "Criminal Minds, is openly gay and announced her engagement to her longtime girlfriend in 2009.

Actors on the popular crime shows "NCIS" and "CSI" also fared well in the 2013 rankings of the most appealing celebrities by survey respondents who said they attend regular services at their house of worship.

The findings, released by E-Poll Market Research, were based on surveys of 1,100 Americans aged 13 and older who were asked to rank more than 40 attributes as well as their awareness of celebrities.

James Earl Jones, Sean Connery and Morgan Freeman, who has played God or God-like figures several times, rounded out the top four movie stars.

"NCIS" actress Cote de Pablo ranked second among TV actors, followed by 91-year-old "Hot in Cleveland" actress Betty White and "NCIS" stars Sean Murray and Pauley Perrette.

Connery, Taraji P. Henson, Amy Adams, Dwayne Johnson and Jim Caviezel, who played Jesus Christ in the 2004 film "The Passion of the Christ," are all more popular with faith-based audiences than among the general U.S. population, the poll found.

Gerry Philpott, CEO of E-Poll Market Research, said it was no surprise that actors on CBS shows appealed to people who value their religious faith highly.

"For years, CBS was known as the conservative network. ... So I think people who might be more faith-based or religious may have a habit of watching CBS more often," Philpott said.

"These are very entertaining shows, but they don't push the envelope when it comes to content. They are not trying to be controversial," Philpott added.

More importantly, he said, the top 20 movie and TV actors do not have much dirty laundry.

"I don't think you could pull a scandal out of any of these film or TV actors, and I think that may be more telling than anything else," Philpott said.

CBS is a unit of CBS Corp.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Stacey Joyce)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/criminal-minds-star-vangsness-tops-church-going-americans-123546091--finance.html

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Certified stroke centers more likely to give clot-busting drugs

Mar. 26, 2013 ? Stroke patients are three times more likely to receive clot-busting medication if treated at a certified stroke center, according to a study in the Journal of the American Heart Association.

Intravenous tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) is the only drug approved by the Food and Drug Administration for emergency treatment for people who have ischemic (clot-caused) stroke. The durg can reduce stroke disability.

"The stroke center concept has rapidly taken off, and this data demonstrates one way that certified centers are doing better than non-certified centers," said Michael T. Mullen, M.D., the study's lead author and an assistant professor of neurology at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.

The researchers examined hospital discharge data on 323,228 ischemic stroke patients from 26 states in 2004-09.

The clot-buster was administered to:

  • 3.1 percent of patients overall;
  • 6.7 percent of patients at primary stroke centers certified by the Joint Commission; and
  • 2.2 percent of patients at other facilities.

After researchers adjusted for patient and facility characteristics, they found the likelihood of receiving tPA was still almost twice as high in certified stroke centers.

Over time, tPA use increased from 6 percent to 7.6 percent at certified primary stroke centers and 1.4 percent to 3.3 percent at non-certified hospitals.

During a stroke, blood flow must be restored quickly and tPA can only be administered in the first few hours after symptoms start.

"Between 10 percent to 15 percent of patients arriving at the hospital with ischemic strokes are eligible to receive tPA," said Eric Smith, M.D., chair of the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association's Get With The Guidelines?-Stroke quality improvement program and an associate professor of neurology at the University of Calgary. "This research shows that the certification program seems to be working, and that treatment is improving over time. Unlike the improvement in the percentage of patients receiving tPA, we haven't seen comparable improvements in the speed at which patients are evaluated and treated, and that is a major factor in determining outcome."

The American Heart Association/American Stroke Association's Target: Stroke program helps hospitals treat 50 percent or more of patients within the first hour after they arrive.

In conjunction with The Joint Commission, the association also offers certification to facilities that meet criteria as Comprehensive Stroke Centers.

"We need more complete systems of care to make sure patients are getting to the best facility to treat their stroke -- and getting there as quickly as possible," Smith said.

At the first sign of a stroke, call 9-1-1 to get to the facility that provides appropriate treatment. The American Stroke Association has more information and tools, including a new mobile app, that can help you recognize and respond to stroke symptoms.

Co-authors are Scott Kasner, M.D.; Michael Kallan, M.S.; Dawn Kleindorfer, M.D.; Karen Albright, D.O., M.P.H.; and Brendan Carr, M.D., M.S. Author disclosures are on the manuscript.

The Agency for Health Care Research and Quality, National Institutes of Health, funded the research.

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Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/health_medicine/heart_disease/~3/mQGKCN8ctAY/130326162326.htm

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Wednesday, March 27, 2013

?DOMA is in trouble? (quick read of Supreme Court arguments today) (Americablog)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/294986904?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Virtual games help the blind navigate unknown territory

Virtual games help the blind navigate unknown territory [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 27-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Rachel Greene
press@jove.com
617-250-8451
The Journal of Visualized Experiments

On March 27thJoVE (Journal of Visualized Experiments) will publish a new video article by Dr. Lotfi Merabet showing how researchers in the Department of Ophthalmology at Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary and Harvard Medical School have developed a virtual gaming environment to help blind individuals improve navigation skills and develop a cognitive spatial map of unfamiliar buildings and public locations.

For the blind, finding your way or navigating in a place that is unfamiliar presents a real challenge, Dr. Merabet explains. "As people with sight, we can capture sensory information through our eyes about our surroundings. For the blind that is a real challenge the blind will typically use auditory and tactile cues."

The technique utilizes computer generated layouts of public buildings and spatial sensory feedback to synthesize a virtual world that mimics a real world navigation task. In the game, participants must find jewels and carry them out of the building, without being intercepted by roaming monsters that steal the jewels and hide them elsewhere. Participants interface with the virtual building by using a keyboard and wearing headphones that play auditory cues that help spatially orient them to the world around them. This interaction helps users generate an accurate mental layout of the mimicked building. Dr. Merabet and his colleagues are also exploring applications of this technology with other user interfaces, like a Wii Remote or joystick.

"We have developed software called ABES, the Audio Based Environment Simulator that represents the actual physical environment of the Carol Center for the Blind in Newton Massachusetts. The participants will use the game metaphor to get a sense of the whole building through open discovery, allowing people to learn room layouts more naturally than if they were just following directions."

The technology will invariably be useful for the 285 million blind people world-wide, 6 million of which live in the United States. It will also have applications beyond the blind community for individuals with other visual impairments, cognitive deficits, or those recovering from brain injuries.

Dr. Merabet considers publication in JoVE's video format especially helpful. "It is conceptually difficult for a sighted person to understand 'a video game for blind people.' What JoVE allows us to do is break down layouts of the game and strategy, show how the auditory cues can be used and how we quantify performance going from the virtual game to the physical world."

###

Merabet et. al.; http://www.jove.com/video/50272/development-an-audio-based-virtual-gaming-environment-to-assist-with

About JoVE, the Journal of Visualized Experiments:

JoVE, the Journal of Visualized Experiments, is the first and only PubMed/MEDLINE-indexed, peer-reviewed journal devoted to publishing scientific research in a video format. Using an international network of videographers, JoVE films and edits videos of researchers performing new experimental techniques at top universities, allowing students and scientists to learn them much more quickly. As of March 2013, JoVE has published video-protocols from an international community of nearly 6,000 authors in the fields of biology, medicine, chemistry, and physics.

URL: http://www.jove.com

To link to this release, please use this link: http://www.jove.com/about/press-releases/55/new-early-warning-system-for-brain-development-babies-published-video

Contact:
Rachel Greene
Marketing Director
The Journal of Visualized Experiments
p. 617-250-8451
e. press@jove.com

Press Access

We offer complimentary access to verified press contacts. If you are interested in being on our press list, please create an account and send an email request to press@jove.com.

Please make sure to follow our Twitter account. If you have any questions or requests, contact us at press@jove.com.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Virtual games help the blind navigate unknown territory [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 27-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Rachel Greene
press@jove.com
617-250-8451
The Journal of Visualized Experiments

On March 27thJoVE (Journal of Visualized Experiments) will publish a new video article by Dr. Lotfi Merabet showing how researchers in the Department of Ophthalmology at Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary and Harvard Medical School have developed a virtual gaming environment to help blind individuals improve navigation skills and develop a cognitive spatial map of unfamiliar buildings and public locations.

For the blind, finding your way or navigating in a place that is unfamiliar presents a real challenge, Dr. Merabet explains. "As people with sight, we can capture sensory information through our eyes about our surroundings. For the blind that is a real challenge the blind will typically use auditory and tactile cues."

The technique utilizes computer generated layouts of public buildings and spatial sensory feedback to synthesize a virtual world that mimics a real world navigation task. In the game, participants must find jewels and carry them out of the building, without being intercepted by roaming monsters that steal the jewels and hide them elsewhere. Participants interface with the virtual building by using a keyboard and wearing headphones that play auditory cues that help spatially orient them to the world around them. This interaction helps users generate an accurate mental layout of the mimicked building. Dr. Merabet and his colleagues are also exploring applications of this technology with other user interfaces, like a Wii Remote or joystick.

"We have developed software called ABES, the Audio Based Environment Simulator that represents the actual physical environment of the Carol Center for the Blind in Newton Massachusetts. The participants will use the game metaphor to get a sense of the whole building through open discovery, allowing people to learn room layouts more naturally than if they were just following directions."

The technology will invariably be useful for the 285 million blind people world-wide, 6 million of which live in the United States. It will also have applications beyond the blind community for individuals with other visual impairments, cognitive deficits, or those recovering from brain injuries.

Dr. Merabet considers publication in JoVE's video format especially helpful. "It is conceptually difficult for a sighted person to understand 'a video game for blind people.' What JoVE allows us to do is break down layouts of the game and strategy, show how the auditory cues can be used and how we quantify performance going from the virtual game to the physical world."

###

Merabet et. al.; http://www.jove.com/video/50272/development-an-audio-based-virtual-gaming-environment-to-assist-with

About JoVE, the Journal of Visualized Experiments:

JoVE, the Journal of Visualized Experiments, is the first and only PubMed/MEDLINE-indexed, peer-reviewed journal devoted to publishing scientific research in a video format. Using an international network of videographers, JoVE films and edits videos of researchers performing new experimental techniques at top universities, allowing students and scientists to learn them much more quickly. As of March 2013, JoVE has published video-protocols from an international community of nearly 6,000 authors in the fields of biology, medicine, chemistry, and physics.

URL: http://www.jove.com

To link to this release, please use this link: http://www.jove.com/about/press-releases/55/new-early-warning-system-for-brain-development-babies-published-video

Contact:
Rachel Greene
Marketing Director
The Journal of Visualized Experiments
p. 617-250-8451
e. press@jove.com

Press Access

We offer complimentary access to verified press contacts. If you are interested in being on our press list, please create an account and send an email request to press@jove.com.

Please make sure to follow our Twitter account. If you have any questions or requests, contact us at press@jove.com.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-03/tjov-vgh032513.php

Adrienne Maloof

HTC plans successor to 5-inch 'Butterfly'

Droid DNA

The HTC Butterfly (a.k.a. J Butterfly in Japan, Droid DNA in the U.S.) was one of the most compelling Android devices of 2012, with its 5-inch 1080p display and speedy internals. Now, according to comments attributed to the company's marketing chief, it seems HTC may be keen to keep the Butterfly line alive alongside its soon-to-be-launched HTC One.

Spurred by strong interest in the device from Asia, Taiwan Focus reports that CMO Benjamin Ho said the manufacturer plans to launch a "successor" to the Butterfly under the same brand name "to meet consumer demand." Speaking at a media briefing, Ho apparently didn't mention when (or where) this new Butterfly might appear, but we'd guess this model would be aimed at countries or carriers that aren't getting the HTC One.

We'll have to wait and see what form the second Butterfly might take, but given the design similarities between the original and the HTC One, we don't imagine it'll be radically different from the phones we're already familiar with.

Any crazy theories? Shout out in the comments!

Source: Taiwan Focus



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/v2Wwv0mZTdY/story01.htm

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Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Professional Business Marketing ? Research and Markets: 2013 ...

DUBLIN?(BUSINESS WIRE)?Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/bwjjwz/2013_global)
has announced the addition of the ?2013
Global Hepatitis Diagnostics Market: Growth Opportunities and Business
Expansion Strategies? report to their offering.

?2013
Global Hepatitis Diagnostics Market: Growth Opportunities and Business
Expansion Strategies?

This new 320-page report from Venture Planning Group presents a detailed
analysis of the Hepatitis diagnostics market in the US, Europe, (France,
Germany, Italy, Spain, UK) and Japan. Current scientific views on the
Hepatitis definition, epidemiology and etiology are reviewed.

The report provides the 5- and 10-year test volume and sales forecasts
by country for HAV NAT, HBV NAT, HBs Ag, HCV, Anti-HBc, Anti-HBs,
Anti-HAV, Hepatitis Delta, HBc Ag, HBe Ag, and ALT/SGPT tests performed
in the following markets:

? Hospitals

? Commercial/Private Labs

? Blood Banks

? Physician Offices

? Public Health Labs

For each country, in addition to test volume and sales projections, the
report presents sales and market share estimates for major suppliers of
Hepatitis tests.

Also, the report examines the market applications of DNA Probes,
Monoclonal Antibodies, Immunoassays, IT and other technologies; reviews
features and operating characteristics of automated analyzers; profiles
leading suppliers and recent market entrants developing innovative
technologies and products; and identifies emerging business expansion
opportunities, alternative market penetration strategies, market entry
barriers and risks, and strategic planning issues and concerns.

Contains 320 pages and 93 tables

For more information visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/bwjjwz/2013_global

Source: http://lowbrowse.org/research-and-markets-2013-global-hepatitis-diagnostics-market-growth-opportunities-and-business-expansion-strategies.html

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Italian court overturns Amanda Knox acquittal

ROME (AP) ? Italy's highest criminal court has overturned the acquittal of Amanda Knox in the slaying of her British roommate and ordered a new trial.

The Court of Cassation ruled Tuesday that an appeals court in Florence must re-hear the case against the American and her Italian-ex-boyfriend for the murder of 21-year-old Meredith Kercher.

Kercher's body was found in November 2007 in her bedroom of the house she shared with Knox and other roommates in Perugia, an Italian university town where the two women were exchange students. Her throat had been slashed.

Prosecutors alleged Kercher was the victim of a drug-fueled sex game gone awry. Knox and Raffaele Sollecito denied wrongdoing. An Ivory Coast man, Rudy Guede, was convicted of the slaying in a separate proceeding and is serving a 16-year sentence.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/italy-high-court-overturns-knox-acquittal-091054681.html

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Russian tycoon's mysterious death: Home to be sealed off for days

Exiled Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky, a prominent Russian opposition figure, was found dead at his home near London on Saturday. NBC's Lester Holt reports.

By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News

LONDON - A cordon will surround the U.K. home of exiled Russian tycoon Boris Berezovsky until at least Wednesday, while detectives await the initial results of autopsy into his unexplained death.

The area will remained sealed off "until Wednesday or Thursday in order to protect the scene,? a spokesman for Thames Valley Police said Monday. An earlier search for evidence of radiation or chemicals returned a negative result.

Government pathologists were due to begin a post-mortem Monday afternoon on the 67-year-old, whose body was found in the locked bathroom of his large house in rural Berkshire, about 25 miles west of London. It was not clear when the initial results would be available to police.

"It would be wrong to speculate on the cause of death until the post-mortem has been carried out," Detective Chief Inspector Kevin Brown?said in a statement late Sunday. "We do not have any evidence at this stage to suggest third-party involvement."

However, his death has raised suspicion in Britain where memories linger of the murder of Berezovsky's friend, Alexander Litvinenko, a former Russian spy poisoned with radioactive material in London in 2006.

Like Litvinenko, Berezovsky had become an enemy of Russia?s president, Vladimir Putin and his suspicious death caused a major diplomatic rift between London and Moscow.

'Many enemies'
His death on Saturday makes him the latest in a line of former Soviet residents to have met an untimely end in Britain.

Litvinenko?s wife, Marina, told the U.K.?s Daily Telegraph that her friend Berezovsky had "many enemies" and that it was "not likely" he that he had committed suicide.

Her lawyer last month accused Britain and Russia of colluding to try to shut down an inquiry into his death for the sake of lucrative trade deals.

Matthew Lloyd / Getty Images

The home of Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky in Sunningdale, England.

Berezovsky accumulated his wealth in the early 1990s, when Russia's privatization of state assets turned chaotic. He orchestrated the re-election of Boris Yeltsin in 1996 and played a role in Putin's rise to prominence, but he fell out of favor with the latter after Putin became president of Russia in 2000.?

He suffered a huge financial blow in 2011 after agreeing one of Britain's biggest-ever divorce settlements ? reportedly as much as $100m - with his former wife, Galina.

Reuters reported that Berezovsky was also under pressure after losing a $6 billion court case to Chelsea Football Club owner Roman Abramovich, a former business partner he sued in one of the most expensive cases in British legal history.

"He had no money, he had lost it all. He was unbelievably depressed," Tim Bell, a public relations executive who was one of his closest British advisers, told the Sunday Times newspaper. "It's all very sad."

Meanwhile, Putin's spokesman said Berezovsky, seen by Moscow as a criminal who should stand trial for fraud and tax evasion, had written to Putin asking for forgiveness - a suggestion dismissed by one of the oligarch's friends, Reuters said.

"Berezovsky sent Vladimir Putin a letter he wrote personally, in which he acknowledged that he had made many mistakes, asked Putin's forgiveness for these mistakes and appealed to Putin to help him return to his homeland," said Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov.

A friend of Berezovsky's in London, Andrei Sidelnikov, told Reuters the idea that the businessman would write a letter to Putin was "complete nonsense".

"He was a sane person and he understood that he would never be able to return under Putin's regime, for political reasons," Sidelnikov said.

Related:

Full Russia coverage from NBC News

This story was originally published on

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653387/s/29f6270b/l/0Lworldnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A30C250C174533980Erussian0Etycoons0Emysterious0Edeath0Ehome0Eto0Ebe0Esealed0Eoff0Efor0Edays0Dlite/story01.htm

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