Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Researchers create map of 'shortcuts' between all human genes

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Some diseases are caused by single gene mutations. Current techniques for identifying the disease-causing gene in a patient produce hundreds of potential gene candidates, making it difficult for scientists to pinpoint the single causative gene. Now, a team of researchers led by Rockefeller University scientists have created a map of gene "shortcuts" to simplify the hunt for disease-causing genes.

The investigation, spearheaded by Yuval Itan, a postdoctoral fellow in the St. Giles Laboratory of Human Genetics of Infectious Diseases, has led to the creation of what he calls the human gene connectome, the full set of distances, routes (the genes on the way), and degrees of separation, between any two human genes. Itan, a computational biologist, says the computer program he developed to generate the connectome uses the same principles that GPS navigation devices use to plan a trip between two locations. The research is reported in the online early edition of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"High throughput genome sequencing technologies generate a plethora of data, which can take months to search through," says Itan. "We believe the human gene connectome will provide a shortcut in the search for disease-causing mutations in monogenic diseases."

Itan and his colleagues, including researchers from the Necker Hospital for Sick Children, the Pasteur Institute in Paris, and Ben-Gurion University in Israel, designed applications for the use of the human gene connectome. They began with a gene called TLR3, which is important for resistance to herpes simplex encephalitis, a life-threatening infection from the herpes virus that can cause significant brain damage in genetically susceptible children. Researchers in the St. Giles lab, headed by Jean-Laurent Casanova, previously showed that children with HSE have mutations in TLR3 or in genes that are closely functionally related to TLR3. In other words, these genes are located at a short biological distance from TLR3. As a result, novel herpes simplex encephalitis-causing genes are also expected to have a short biological distance from TLR3.

To test how well the human gene connectome could predict a disease-causing gene, the researchers sequenced exomes ? all DNA of the genome that is coding for proteins ? of two patients recently shown to carry mutations of a separate gene, TBK1.

"Each patient's exome contained hundreds of genes with potentially morbid mutations," says Itan. "The challenge was to detect the single disease-causing gene." After sorting the genes by their predicted biological proximity to TLR3, Itan and his colleagues found TBK1 at the top of the list of genes in both patients. The researchers also used the TLR3 connectome ? the set of all human genes sorted by their predicted distance from TLR3 ? to successfully predict two other genes, EFGR and SRC, as part of the TLR3 pathway before they were experimentally validated, and applied other gene connectomes to detect Ehlers-Danlos syndrome and sensorineural hearing loss disease causing genes.

"The human gene connectome is, to the best of our knowledge, the only currently available prediction of the specific route and distance between any two human genes of interest, making it ideal to solve the needle in the haystack problem of detecting the single disease causing gene in a large set of potentially fatal genes," says Itan. "This can now be performed by prioritizing any number of genes by their biological distance from genes that are already known to cause the disease.

"Approaches based on the human gene connectome have the potential to significantly increase the discovery of disease-causing genes for diseases that are genetically understood in some patients as well as for those that are not well studied. The human gene connectome should also progress the general field of human genetics by predicting the nature of unknown genetic mechanisms."

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Rockefeller University: http://www.rockefeller.edu

Thanks to Rockefeller University for this article.

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Delicate diplomacy: Pope meets Argentine president

In this Dec. 12, 2008 photo, Argentina's President Cristina Fernandez, left, shakes hands with Buenos Aires' Archbishop Jorge Bergoglio in Lujan, Argentina. Bergoglio, who chose the name of Pope Francis, was chosen as the 266th pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church on March 13, 2013. (AP Photo/DyN)

In this Dec. 12, 2008 photo, Argentina's President Cristina Fernandez, left, shakes hands with Buenos Aires' Archbishop Jorge Bergoglio in Lujan, Argentina. Bergoglio, who chose the name of Pope Francis, was chosen as the 266th pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church on March 13, 2013. (AP Photo/DyN)

Pope Francis delivers his Angelus prayer from the window of his studio overlooking St. Peter's Square, at the Vatican, Sunday, March 17, 2013. Breaking with tradition, Pope Francis delivered off-the-cuff remarks about God's power to forgive instead of reading from a written speech for the first Sunday window appearance of his papacy. He also spoke only in Italian, beginning with "buon giorno" (Good day) and ending with "buon pranzo" (Have a good lunch), instead of greeting the faithful in several languages as his last few predecessors had done. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)

Argentine President Cristina Fernandez shows a mate gourd, during a news conference in Rome, Monday, March 18, 2013. Pope Francis' diplomatic skills were put to the test Monday as he had lunch with Argentine President Cristina Fernandez: As leader of Argentina's Catholics, he had accused her populist government of demagoguery while she called his position on gay adoptions reminiscent of the Middle Ages and the Inquisition. That was then. On Monday, Fernandez gave the new pope a mate gourd and straw, to hold the traditional Argentine tea that Francis loves, and he gave her a kiss. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)

Priests and a nun take cover from the rain in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican, Monday, March 18, 2013 the day ahead of the inaugural Mass of Pope Francis. The Vatican released details of the pope's installation Mass on Tuesday as well images of his coat of arms and fisherman's ring. In addition to more than 132 government delegations, the Vatican said 33 Christian delegations will be present, as well as representatives from Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, Sikh and Jain communities. (AP Photo/Oded Balilty)

Security guards patrol in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican, Monday, March 18, 2013. a day before the inaugural Mass of Pope Francis. The Vatican released details of the pope's installation Mass on Tuesday as well images of his coat of arms and fisherman's ring. In addition to more than 132 government delegations, the Vatican said 33 Christian delegations will be present, as well as representatives from Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, Sikh and Jain communities. (AP Photo/Oded Balilty)

VATICAN CITY (AP) ? Pope Francis' diplomatic skills were put to the test Monday as his political nemesis, Argentine President Cristina Fernandez, asked him to intervene in the dispute with Britain over the Falkland Islands.

There was no immediate comment from the Vatican as to whether the Argentine-born Francis would accept her request, which was made during his inaugural audience with a visiting head of state on the eve of his installation as pope.

Francis and Fernandez are longtime rivals: As leader of Argentina's Catholics, he had accused her populist government of demagoguery, while she called his position on gay adoptions reminiscent of the Middle Ages and the Inquisition.

But where the Falklands are concerned, Francis has been quoted as saying that Britain "usurped" the remote islands, which Argentina claims and calls the Malvinas.

Argentina and Britain fought a 1982 war over the islands. Earlier this month, the islanders voted overwhelmingly to remain a British Overseas Territory.

Fernandez told journalists Monday after having lunch with the pope that she had asked for Francis' intercession to "facilitate dialogue" with Britain over the islands.

Just last week, British Prime Minister David Cameron said he didn't agree with Francis' views on the Falklands.

In asking Francis to intervene, Fernandez said she recalled how Pope John Paul II averted war in 1978 between Argentina and Chile over three tiny islands in the Beagle Channel at the southern tip of South America.

With military governments on both sides poised for battle, he sent his personal envoy to mediate the crisis through shuttle diplomacy between Santiago and Buenos Aires, and eventually brought both governments to the Vatican to consider his compromise.

The conflict wasn't entirely resolved until after democracy returned to Argentina, and both sides signed a "treaty of peace and friendship" at the Vatican in 1984, giving the islands to Chile but maritime rights to Argentina.

On Monday, Fernandez gave Francis a picture of a marble monument honoring the 30th anniversary of John Paul II's negotiations, and then used the opportunity to bring up the issue of sovereignty over the Falklands.

They also seemed to have patched up their relationship.

Fernandez gave the new pope a mate gourd and straw, to hold the traditional Argentine tea that Francis loves, and he gave her a kiss.

"Never in my life has a pope kissed me!" Fernandez said afterward.

Fernandez called on the former Archbishop of Buenos Aires at his temporary home, the Vatican hotel on the edge of the Vatican gardens, and the two later had lunch together, a day before she and other world leaders attend his installation Mass in St. Peter's Square that some estimates say could bring 1 million people to Rome.

The Vatican on Monday released details of the Mass, saying it would be a simplified version of the 2005 installation Mass that brought Pope Benedict XVI to the papacy, with many gestures to Eastern rite Catholics and Orthodox Christians in a sign of church unity.

The Vatican also released details of Francis' coat of arms and official ring, both of which are in keeping with his simple style and harking back to popes past: The coat of arms is the same Jesuit-inspired one he used as archbishop of Buenos Aires, while the ring was once offered to Pope Paul VI, who presided over the second half of the Second Vatican Council, the church meetings that modernized the church.

Francis will officially receive the ring and the pallium, a wool stole, during Tuesday's installation Mass, which is drawing six sovereign rulers, 31 heads of state, three princes and 11 heads of government to the Vatican. Fernandez leads the largest delegation with 19 members.

She and her predecessor and late husband, Nestor Kirchner, defied church teaching to push through a series of measures with popular backing in Argentina, including mandatory sex education in schools, free distribution of contraceptives in public hospitals, and the right for transsexuals to change their official identities on demand. Argentina in 2010 became the first Latin American country to legalize same-sex marriages.

According to Francis' authorized biographer, Sergio Rubin, the former Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio was politically wise enough to know the church couldn't win a straight-on fight against gay marriage, so he urged his bishops to lobby for gay civil unions instead. It wasn't until his proposal was shot down by the bishops' conference that he declared what gay activists called a "war of God" on the measure ? and the church lost the issue altogether.

Fernandez issued a perfunctory message of congratulations when Francis was elected last week, calling the election of the first Latin American pope "historic" and saying she hoped that given his namesake, St. Francis of Assisi, the new pope would inspire world leaders to pay greater attention to the poor and pursue dialogue rather than force to resolve disputes.

She has, however, remained unusually silent about the election on her otherwise prolifically active Twitter account, posting a single tweet on his election day: "To your Holiness Francis I" with a link to her letter of congratulations, which wasn't even signed.

Their chilly relations became crystal clear after the Kirchners several years ago stopped attending the church's annual "Te Deum" address challenging society to do better, which is delivered each May 25.

In last year's address, Bergoglio said Argentina was being harmed by demagoguery, totalitarianism, corruption and efforts to secure unlimited power: a strong message in a country whose president has ruled by decree and left scandals unpunished.

The Fernandez meeting isn't the only diplomatic dance Francis will be conducting this week as more than 132 government delegations descend on Rome for the Mass formally installing Francis as the 266th leader of the 1.2-billion strong Catholic Church.

Italian media say Rome civil protection authorities are planning for upward of 1 million people to attend the Mass, numbers not seen since the beatification of Pope John Paul II in 2011, which drew 1.5 million to St. Peter's and the surrounding streets.

One significant VIP is the spiritual leader of the world's Orthodox Christians, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I. His presence at the installation is the first from the Istanbul-based Patriarchate in nearly 1,000 years since the Great Schism divided the church in 1054.

The Mass will make several gestures toward Eastern rite and Orthodox Christians, with the Gospel being chanted in Greek as opposed to Latin and eastern rite Catholic prelates joining Francis at an initial prayer at the tomb of St. Peter under the basilica's main altar, the Vatican said Monday.

In all, some 33 Christian delegations will be present, as well as representatives of Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, Sikh and Jain communities. They will see a simplified Mass compared to the 2005 installation of Pope Benedict XVI, with for example fewer cardinals pledging obedience to the new pope.

Also arriving in Rome on Monday was Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou, a rare European foray for the head of the diplomatically isolated island that underscores the tricky nature of its relations with China and the Vatican.

"We want to have much better relations with the Vatican and I think we will, thank you," Ma said as he arrived. He said Francis was a "wonderful person. I think he'll do a very good job."

Taiwan has full diplomatic relations with only 23 countries, most of them in Latin America, Africa, and the south Pacific. Its only diplomatic ally in Europe is the Vatican, though even that tie remains tenuous.

___

Michael Warren in Buenos Aires contributed.

___

Follow Nicole Winfield at www.twitter.com/nwinfield

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-03-18-Vatican-Pope/id-1698c005abfd43ed8deb618e9d1d391a

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Are Sports Star Dieing for Ultimate Glory? | Industry Tap


Dimentia Pugilistica (DP) is a neurodgenerative?dementia?that affects those who have experienced brain injury; athletes include Jack Demsey, Sugar Ray Robinson, Rocky Graziano, Owen Thomas, Muhammad Ali, and Junior Seau to name just a few; similar injuries occur in the military.

Technology and medicine have advanced to the point where identifying Traumatic Brain Injuries (TBI)?and other sports injuries are laying bare sobering facts that make every sports franchise owner, athlete, and fan think more deeply about the purpose and meaning of sports. Can we really live with and feel good about sports in which our ?heroes? are seriously permanently injured?

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A Look at the?Bullfight?and Sports Psychology

If we look at the psychology of sports through the eye of the bullfight in which the bull was traditionally killed the event is like a classic tragedy where adversaries are matched and skill, awareness and strength determine the victor. We know that the Matador has an advantage because of his sword but Matadors have been injured and killed; the bull has a chance. Usually though, the bull is sacrificed at the end of the bullfight so that there is resolution to the conflict; humans would be unsatisfied were this not the case. It would be like the story of Romeo and Juliet ending before the suicide.?Sports psychologists believe fan psychology is rooted in our primitive experience when we lived in small tribes and our best warriors helped protect us for other tribes.

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The NFL?s Response to Concerns Over Traumatic Brain Injuries (TBI)

The NFL and General Electric have just announced a $60 million research project into brain injuries with a purpose of developing new technologies to help protect brains from traumatic injury in sports, the military and the general public. According to GE?s CEO Jeff Immelt the program will bring together the best minds in the world to improve identification, prevention and management of brain injuries.

FB Brain Injury

The NFL is facing a lawsuit by 4,000 former professional football players and their families many of whom have been living with life-altering brain injuries. According to US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) 173,000 brain injuries related to sports or recreation are treated in US emergency rooms each year.In the Army there have been 250,000 brain injuries among members since 2000.

Research will seek to answer the question of why some athletes experience brain injury while others don?t. One example is Mohammed Ali whose Parkinson?s disease is said to be related to his being ?punchdrunk?; George Foreman on the other hand has aged more normally. This brings up the possibility that some people may have genetic markers that make them more susceptible to brain injuries.

Future Articles on Sports Injuries and Brain Trauma

In future IndustryTap articles we will delve more deeply into technologies being considered to make sports equipment safer, check up on medical and treatment programs and progress for people with TBIs, and breakdown the worldwide sports industry with a focus on new engineering and technology advances from equipment changes to stadium design and architecture.

Source: http://www.industrytap.com/are-sports-star-dieing-for-ultimate-glory/2590

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Deadly blast near Somalia's presidential palace

GRAPHIC WARNING: Contains images which some viewers may find disturbing.?

Mohamed Abdiwahab / AFP - Getty Images

A member of the Somali security forces flees the site of a car bomb in central Mogadishu, Somalia, on March 18, 2013.

Mohamed Abdiwahab / AFP - Getty Images

A woman reacts near the site of a car bomb in central Mogadishu on March 18, 2013.

Reuters reports ??A car bomb exploded near the presidential palace in the Somali capital Mogadishu on Monday, killing at least 10 people in a blast that appeared to target senior government officials, police said.

The suicide attacker detonated explosives while driving along a boulevard that runs between the palace and the national theatre, a route lined by tearooms that were engulfed in fire moments after the blast, senior police officer Abdiqadir Mohamud said. A public minibus driving along the road burst into flames.

"The suicide car bomber targeted a senior national security officer whose car was passing near the theatre," Mohamud told Reuters. "Most of the people who died were on board the minibus - civilians. This public vehicle coincidentally came between the government car and the car bomb when it was hit."?Read the full story.

Feisal Omar / Reuters

An injured man sits on the road near the presidential palace in Mogadishu on March 18, 2013.

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Source: http://photoblog.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/18/17356990-car-bomb-in-somalia-kills-at-least-10?lite

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USC starts a web hub for DIY, open source virtual reality projects

USC starts a web hub for DIY, open source virtual reality projects

For the sheer variety of virtual reality headsets available, there's been few resources available for those who want to craft their own devices. USC wants to save us the effort of searching around. Its MxR Lab has just launched a showcase of creations and modifications that DIY enthusiasts can build, including open source code for both the devices and integrating full-body motion control through Kinect for Windows or OpenNI. The most ambitious is Socket HMD, a complete 1,280 x 800 headset that involves a 3D-printed shell and custom-assembled electronics. If your own ambitions don't stretch that far, you can still build the VR2GO viewer, which uses iPhones and iPod touch players as the eyepieces, as well as mods for the Oculus Rift developer kit that add stereo cameras or increase the field of view. Yes, you'll need a 3D printer and a knack for programming to get most of these projects going, but you won't have to wait for someone to make them for you -- a big help when many ready-made VR displays are either in development or priced out of reach for the average person.

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Self Improvement Tips ? How to Succeed ? Achieving Success | Self ...

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Monday, March 18, 2013

Bills seek end to farm animal abuse videos

FILE - In this April 22, 2010 image from video provided by the United States Humane Society, a Hallmark Meat Packing slaughter plant worker is shown attempting to force a "downed" cow onto its feet by ramming it with the blades of a forklift in Chino, Calif. State legislators across the country are introducing laws making it harder for animal welfare advocates to investigate cruelty and food safety cases. Bills pending in California, Nebraska and Tennessee require that anyone collecting evidence of abuse turn it over to law enforcement within 24 to 48 hours - which advocates say does not allow enough time to document illegal activity under federal humane handling and food safety laws. Critics say the bills are an effort to deny consumers the ability to know how their food is produced. (AP Photo/Humane Society of the United States, file)

FILE - In this April 22, 2010 image from video provided by the United States Humane Society, a Hallmark Meat Packing slaughter plant worker is shown attempting to force a "downed" cow onto its feet by ramming it with the blades of a forklift in Chino, Calif. State legislators across the country are introducing laws making it harder for animal welfare advocates to investigate cruelty and food safety cases. Bills pending in California, Nebraska and Tennessee require that anyone collecting evidence of abuse turn it over to law enforcement within 24 to 48 hours - which advocates say does not allow enough time to document illegal activity under federal humane handling and food safety laws. Critics say the bills are an effort to deny consumers the ability to know how their food is produced. (AP Photo/Humane Society of the United States, file)

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) ? An undercover video that showed California cows struggling to stand as they were prodded to slaughter by forklifts led to the largest meat recall in U.S. history. In Vermont, a video of veal calves skinned alive and tossed like sacks of potatoes ended with the plant's closure and criminal convictions.

Now in a pushback led by the meat and poultry industries, state legislators across the country are introducing laws making it harder for animal welfare advocates to investigate cruelty and food safety cases.

Some bills make it illegal to take photographs at a farming operation. Others make it a crime for someone such as an animal welfare advocate to lie on an application to get a job at a plant.

Bills pending in California, Nebraska and Tennessee require that anyone collecting evidence of abuse turn it over to law enforcement within 24 to 48 hours ? which advocates say does not allow enough time to document illegal activity under federal humane handling and food safety laws.

"We believe that folks in the agriculture community and folks from some of the humane organizations share the same concerns about animal cruelty," said Mike Zimmerman, chief of staff for Assembly Member Jim Patterson, R-Fresno, whose bill was unveiled this week. "If there's abuse taking place, there is no sense in letting it continue so you can make a video."

Patterson's bill, sponsored by the California Cattlemen's Association, would make failing to turn over video of abuse to law enforcement within 48 hours an infraction punishable by a fine.

Critics say the bills are an effort to deny consumers the ability to know how their food is produced.

"The meat industry's mantra is always that these are isolated cases, but the purpose of these bills is to prevent any pattern of abuse from being documented," said Paul Shapiro, vice president of farm animal protection for the Humane Society of the United States, which conducted the California and Vermont investigations.

In Indiana, Arkansas and Pennsylvania it would be a crime to make videos at agricultural operations.

The goal of the proposed California law, industry representatives say, is to halt any abuses quickly and get video evidence to government regulators within two days, not to impede undercover investigations by animal welfare groups.

"The people doing this aren't cops so I wouldn't think it's their job to build a case. The goal for all of us is to reduce instances of animal abuse," said David Daley, a Cattlemen vice president and professor of agricultural science at California State University-Chico.

Formal opposition to the California bill comes from the ASPCA, the Teamsters, the HSUS and dozens of others. They say these attempts by the agriculture industry to stop investigations are a part of a nationwide agenda set by the American Legislative Exchange Council, a conservative think tank backed by business interests.

ALEC has labeled those who interfere with animal operations "terrorists," though a spokesman said he wishes now that the organization had called its legislation the "Freedom to Farm Act" rather than the "Animal and Ecological Terrorism Act."

"At the end of the day it's about personal property rights or the individual right to privacy," said spokesman Bill Meierling. "You wouldn't want me coming into your home with a hidden camera."

Animal welfare advocates say all of the focus on secrecy is energy misspent.

"I wish the cattlemen actually wanted to stop cruelty, not the documenting of cruelty," said HSUS California director Jennifer Fearing. "One could think of a thousand ways for them to actually stop cruelty rather than waiting for people to make videos and turn them over."

Animal welfare advocates say law enforcement agencies do not have the time or inclination to work complex animal abuse and food safety cases, and that federal USDA inspectors in slaughter plants have turned a blind eye to abuse.

When a USDA inspector at the Vermont plant was heard in 2009 coaching a plant worker on how to avoid being shut down, U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack weighed in, calling the conduct "inexcusable."

In reaction to concerns, the USDA has been working to improve enforcement of its humane handling regulations over the past two years, including establishing an ombudsman position that accepts reports of violations. Last year 24 new positions in the Food Safety Inspection Service were dedicated to humane handling, said a high-ranking food safety official not authorized to speak publicly.

That hasn't slowed investigations or the bills designed to stop them. The Arkansas bill goes further than the others and would prohibit anyone other than law enforcement from investigating animal cases.

Last year Iowa, a major egg-producing state, passed a bill making it illegal to deny being a member of an animal welfare organization on a farm job application. Utah passed one that outlaws photography.

Most of the sensational videos of abuse in recent years are shot by undercover operatives who surreptitiously apply and are hired by the meat processors for jobs within the facilities. One recorded last year by Compassion over Killing at Central Valley Meats in Hanford, Calif. showed a worker standing on a downed dairy cow's nostrils to suffocate it and others repeatedly shot in the head, prompting several fast-food hamburger to cancel contracts, at least temporarily.

Animal welfare groups say investigations take weeks because the operatives nose around only when they aren't performing the duties for which they were hired.

An HSUS investigator was in the Hallmark plant in Southern California for six weeks between October and November 2007, when the nonprofit turned over to the local district attorney evidence that included fraud in the federal school lunch program because animals too sick to walk were being slaughtered. In January 2008, HSUS released the video to force the DA to act. Two employees were convicted of cruelty charges.

Late last year, nine workers at a Wyoming pork processing facility were charged with animal cruelty after an HSUS video showed them kicking and tossing piglets and failing to euthanize a sow gravely injured by a worker while giving birth.

In 2009, HSUS spent 21 days in the Vermont slaughterhouse where male calves born to dairy cows were killed for veal.

"Believe me our investigators would like to be out of there as soon as possible. They're stoic, they're courageous, but they are not enjoying their work at all," said Mary Beth Sweetland, director of investigations for HSUS.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/apdefault/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-03-17-Undercover%20Video%20Bills/id-f152efe1abdc45bea01c631c40196187

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Sunday, March 17, 2013

Who's Afraid Of Google Glass?

insect"First you see video. Then you wear video. Then you eat video. Then you be video." -- Pat Cadigan, Pretty Boy Crossover Sheesh. A whole lot of people who presumably have never actually seen Google Glass in action appear to be really upset. "People who wear Google Glass in public are assholes," says Gawker's Adrian Chen. "You won?t know if you?re being recorded or not; and even if you do, you?ll have no way to stop it," doom-cries Mark Hurst. Seriously, people? Seriously?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/BUyxysvNffc/

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George Osborne says UK will compensate any troops and government workers whose bank accounts in Cyprus may be affected by ?10bn EU bailout levy

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Saturday, March 16, 2013

FCC Introduces ?Experimental Authorization? Program To Give Commercial Space Companies Access To Spectrum

spaceThe FCC has introduced a plan to give commercial space companies like SpaceX access to the spectrum they need to perform missions. The plan will allow companies to apply for spectrum on a temporary basis so they can safely operate their missions, as scheduled. As it stands now, companies like SpaceX (with its Dragon resupply missions to the ISS and Falcon9 rocket launches), andXCOR Aerospace and Space Expedition Corporation (who have introduced the LINX for quick trips to space and back) must request spectrum on an as-needed basis. And there are no insurances that they'll get what they need, when they need it, to facilitate communication with these space crafts.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/jhlExl29E5c/

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A Visual Breakdown of How Iran Censors the Internet

What does a hierarchy of online censorship look like? In Iran, a lot like this. Design studio Hyperakt worked with the Iran Media Program to make this graphic of all the ways Iran suppresses information on the internet. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/BBgMqUe_ZKU/a-visual-breakdown-of-how-iran-censors-the-internet

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Friday, March 15, 2013

Musical Toronto | Issues: How do you describe music to people who ...

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I had a shock of recognition as I read British music critic Jessica Duchen?s post today on U.K. site CultureKicks on the difficulties of writing or speaking about music if your audience doesn?t know the basics.

Duchen writes about the self-censorship of the critic who wonders whether it might sound pompous to use ?crescendo? in a review.

It made me think of all the times I?ve stared at my computer keyboard while writing a review for the Star. Do I use the correct plural for tempo, or do I leave it colloquial? If I write about a cadence, will the reader confuse it with rhythm or tempo? Is there any point in mentioning a transition from major to minor?

How many musical terms is an average reader familiar with? Anyone who has seen even one episode of American Idol has heard the term ?pitchy,? and I?ve even started hearing it used in (pop) musical circles. So if I write flat or sharp instead of pitchy, or describe problems with intonation, does this make me sound like a snob, or, worse yet, incomprehensible?

Duchen writes:

Perhaps due to the near-abolition of music lessons in school during the 1980s, a lack of discourse in the media, or the lingering misery of compulsory Grade V Theory exams for those of us who were musical kids, traditional musical vocabulary is vanishing from all but the most academic publications. Even Howard Goodall?s The Story of Music on BBC TV found the doughty presenter having to explain something as basic as an octave. This really is equivalent to identifying the letters of the musical alphabet. One term we do need to lose is ?dumbing down? ? because the truth is closer to ?de-skilling?.

She suggests we need a new language to describe music. But that?s a lot like reinventing the wheel.

But for anyone who has to communicate about music, it is a very important issue.

You can read the full post here.

John Terauds

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Source: http://www.musicaltoronto.org/2013/03/14/issues-how-do-you-describe-music-to-people-who-may-have-no-idea-what-youre-talking-about/

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Space Station Crew's Landing Delayed by 'Horrible' Earth Weather

An American astronaut and two Russian cosmonauts are stuck in space for one more day after freezing rain and fog on Earth prevented them from landing in Central Asia on Thursday (March 14), NASA officials say.

The foul weather, which one Russian space agency official described simply as "horrible," means NASA astronaut Kevin Ford and cosmonauts Oleg Novitskiy and Evgeny Tarelkin had to delay their return from the International Space Station for at least 24 hours. The three men have been living in space for 141 days and were preparing to enter their Soyuz spacecraft for a landing on the frigid steppes of Kazakhstan tonight.

"We are waving off landing," NASA spokesperson Rob Navias said during live mission commentary. "No Soyuz landing tonight."

The rain and fog in Kazakhstan is not a threat to the Soyuz spacecraft and crew, Navias said. But the recovery helicopters essential for retrieving the astronauts after landing would not be able to make it to their staging grounds for the landing because of bad weather conditions. [See photos of the Expedition 34 space station mission]

"I talked to our colleagues in Kazakhstan last night and the weather is really horrible, and a decision was made not to risk, and we suggest that we delay the landing." chief Russian flight director Vlademir Solovyev said through a translator on NASA TV.?

Ford, Novitskiy and Tarelkin were originally scheduled to undock their Russian-built Soyuz TMA-06M spacecraft at the?International Space Station?tonight at 8:30 p.m. EDT (0030 GMT), with an expected landing of 11:56 p.m. EDT (0356 GMT).

Landing is now scheduled to occur on Friday (March 15) at 11:06 p.m. EDT (0206 March 16 GMT), NASA officials said.

This is not the first time weather has affected a Soyuz spacecraft's landing. In 2009, another Soyuz craft had its return to Earth delayed by a day because snowy conditions on the ground made the landing potentially unsafe.

Ford, Novitskiy and Tarelkin have spent nearly five months on board the station. The mission is Ford's second spaceflight and the first trip to space for Novitskiy and Tarelkin.

When Ford and his two crewmates depart the station, three other spaceflyers ? Canadian astronaut?Chris Hadfield, Russian Roman Romanenko and American Tom Marshburn ? will remain aboard orbiting lab to await a new set of crewmembers.

That new crew will launch on March 28 to ferry cosmonauts Pavel Vinogradov, Alexander Misurkin and NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy to the space station.

NASA has relied on Russia's Soyuz crafts ferry astronauts between the Earth's surface and orbit since the retirement of the agency's shuttle program in 2011. Officials with the space agency hope to instead depend on privately built unmanned and crewed spacecraft to bring people and cargo to and from the space station.

Follow Miriam Kramer?@mirikramer?and?Google+. Follow us?@Spacedotcom,?Facebookand?Google+. Original article on SPACE.com.

Copyright 2013 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/space-station-crews-landing-delayed-horrible-earth-weather-224537206.html

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Australia gets first Aboriginal government leader

CANBERRA, Australia (AP) ? Australia has its first Aboriginal leader of a provincial government, a development welcomed by the prime minister as a historic moment for the nation's impoverished indigenous population.

Adam Giles was sworn in Thursday as government head of the Northern Territory, one of two Australian mainland territories largely treated as equals to the six states.

The 40-year-old former civil servant became leader Wednesday in an internal coup within the ruling conservative Country Liberal Party while the former chief minister, Terry Mills, was in Japan on a business trip.

Giles described himself as an example for parents to use to inspire their children.

"Moms and dads can say: 'You can do it. You can do anything. Look at Giles. If he can do it, you can do it'," he told reporters after he and his cabinet were sworn in.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard, who leads a center-left Labor Party government, told Federal Parliament that Giles' promotion deserved national recognition.

"This is a moment in history for indigenous Australians and it's appropriate that we mark it in this chamber," she said.

Aborigines are a minority of only 600,000 in Australia's 23 million population. They are the poorest ethnic group in Australia, suffer poor health and lag behind in education. They die years younger than other Australians on average and are more likely to be imprisoned.

Aborigines account for 30 percent of the Northern Territory's population, by far the highest proportion of any state or territory. Giles is a member of a parliament in which one in four lawmakers is indigenous.

In the Federal Parliament, there is just one Aborigine, Ken Wyatt, among 226 lawmakers, and he is among just three Aborigines to ever serve in that body. The major parties are embarrassed by the lack of indigenous legislators and have made some effort in recent years to recruit Aboriginal candidates.

Gillard, Australia's first female prime minister, has used her influence to ensure that the first Aboriginal woman will be elected to the Federal Parliament at elections on Sept. 14.

Gillard intervened in January to make Nova Peris, an Aborigine and Olympic gold medalist hockey player, her party's first choice for senator representing the Northern Territory. Being listed as Labor's first choice on the ballot paper places Peris in an unbeatable position.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/australia-gets-first-aboriginal-government-leader-040008716.html

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Eureka! We've Found the God Particle - We Think

Nothing is official yet, but it looks like the new particle detected in July in experiments conducted at the CERN Large Hadron Collider may indeed be the Higgs boson or so-called "God particle," scientists announced Thursday at a physics conference in Geneva. The scientists have analyzed two-and-a-half times more data on their discovery than what was available last summer.

Source: http://ectnews.com.feedsportal.com/c/34520/f/632000/s/299b0366/l/0L0Stechnewsworld0N0Crsstory0C77540A0Bhtml/story01.htm

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Online war erupts in Kenya after peaceful vote

FILE - In this Wednesday, March 6, 2013 file photo, a man standing near to pro-peace graffiti checks his mobile phone in Kibera, Africa's largest slum, in Nairobi, Kenya. Tribal lines are being drawn over who won Kenya's presidential election and unlike the bloody violence that scarred the country five years ago, this time the only fighting is online. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay, File)

FILE - In this Wednesday, March 6, 2013 file photo, a man standing near to pro-peace graffiti checks his mobile phone in Kibera, Africa's largest slum, in Nairobi, Kenya. Tribal lines are being drawn over who won Kenya's presidential election and unlike the bloody violence that scarred the country five years ago, this time the only fighting is online. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay, File)

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) ? Tribal lines are being drawn over who won Kenya's presidential election. But unlike the bloody violence that scarred the country five years ago, this time the only fighting is online.

Machete strikes and bows and arrows are being replaced by bitter Tweets and angry status updates.

The exchange of barbs between supporters of Deputy Prime Minister Uhuru Kenyatta ? who was named the winner of the March 4 election with 50.07 percent of the vote ? and his closest competitor, Prime Minister Raila Odinga, has degenerated into expletive-filled fights in social media that have the government worried.

The Ministry of Information and Communications said this week that it has been unable to contain "the ugly messages of hate and negative ethnicity" online. It said many of the messages qualify as hate speech.

Some officials worry that the virtual feuding could trigger real-life fighting.

"The outrage is becoming wider and the tension is palpable. It's going to erode all our efforts of building national cohesion," Milly Lwanga, vice chair of the government-funded National Cohesion and Integration Commission, told The Associated Press Thursday. "The buildup of tension, it's like a room where gas is leaking slowly and then eventually there will be something small to ignite it and people will wonder where the explosion came from."

After Kenya's disputed presidential vote in late 2007, Odinga's supporters took to the streets. Tribal violence erupted, resulting in the deaths of more than 1,000 people.

Odinga's camp on Thursday said the prime minister will file a petition with the Supreme Court on Friday to overturn the election results. Odinga alleges the election was rigged.

"We are dealing with criminals who should not be in State House but in prison," said Odinga on Thursday of his opponents. But, significantly, he is urging his supporters to stay calm as his case is heard in court.

No major violence has been reported, but the interactions are ugly online. Ethnic allegiances are exposed and ridiculed. Kenyatta's tribe ? the Kikuyus ? and Odinga's tribe ? the Luos ? clashed violently five years ago, now they insult each other via the internet.

"Mmm! Kikuyus r thieves by default. There is nowhere on the planet earth, where a kikuyu works without stealing. Its embedded in their DNA. Kill all of them n Kenya will be a pleasant country to live in," a post on Facebook by a Phil Miser read.

A Facebook user named Susan Karanja replied to the tribal taunt from Miser: "We may be thieves but we are also enterprising. No wonder we employ u to use (your) brains in our jobs coz u dont use (yours) to better (your) lives n that's the way it is. We run u not vice versa so swallow it."

One popular online forum in Kenya, mashada.com, was taken offline before the election, presumably because of the hate-filled postings on the site. A Facebook group called Stop Raila Odinga Now has more than 20,000 members. One recent comment was addressed to Luos and Kambas, another ethnic group: "All your provinces do is give this nation violence, war, thieves, mad people and whores."

Gordon Mutugi, a 31-year-old public relations specialist, said that many people have stopped following him on Twitter because of his support for Kenyatta. Mutugi said many of his followers have branded him a tribalist.

The hate messages are being exchanged mainly between members of three communities, said Lwanga. The Kikuyus, the Luos and the Kalenjins, the tribe of William Ruto, Kenyatta's running mate. The National Cohesion and Integration Commission has bloggers monitoring the discussions who interject with "sober" comments to try to calm the exchanges down, Lwanga said.

In 2007, Kenyans sent out hateful phone text messages but it was before social media, such as Twitter, had really taken hold, she said.

Though Kenyan leaders appear to have prevented a repeat of the 2007-08 violence this election ? at least so far ? the way voters cast ballots remained largely the same: Kenyatta won overwhelming support from Kikuyus and practically none from Luos. It was the same ? in reverse ? for Odinga.

"It is a reflection of the way campaigns were conducted to galvanize the support around one tribal affiliation," Lwanga said.

Lwanga said the national cohesion commission is trying to trace people who post hate messages so that they are prosecuted. Hate speech carries a fine of around $12,000 or imprisonment for up to three years, or both. Recently the government has made all Kenyans register their phone numbers with the Communication Commission of Kenya, which should make it easier to track perpetrators. She said her group also tried working with the National Police Service's Cyber Crime Unit to block sites filled with hate speech but realized it was not working because the perpetrators would set up another site almost immediately.

The commission is asking Twitter and Facebook to remove hate-filled comments, she said. It defines hate speech as the use of threatening, abusive or insulting words or behavior that stirs up hatred or is likely to stir up ethnic hatred.

The 2007-08 postelection violence following a disputed election and the declaration that President Mwai Kibaki ? a Kikuyu ? had won a second term exposed deep tribal animosity that had built up for generations. Problems between the Luo and Kikuyu community started soon after independence from Britain in 1963, when Odinga's father ? the first vice president of the country ? had a falling out with Jomo Kenyatta, Uhuru Kenyatta's father and the country's first president.

That set off decades of bad blood between the Kikuyus and Luos. Inter-tribal marriage became taboo.

Bitango Ndemo, the permanent secretary at the Ministry of Information and Communications, said on Twitter on Thursday that the ministry has noted the concerns regarding hate speech on social media, "and we are working overdrive to control it."

Research published last year by Kenya-based Portland Communications and Tweetminster found that Kenyans use Twitter more than any country on the continent except for South Africa.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-03-14-Kenya-Election/id-3e623fab216344b5843f263245a80ed6

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Thursday, March 14, 2013

This Immersion Blender Is Your Chunky-Then-Smooth Deal of the Day

While there are a plethora of almost-pointless, single use kitchen gadgets that would make Alton Brown shudder, the humble immersion blender is not one of them. It's genuinely useful. There are a lot of dishes that need to have a consistent texture — like soups, hummus, and salad dressings — that don't totally work in a conventional blender or food processor. So if you want to make, for instance, whipped cream (or meringue!) without whisking your forearms sore, you need an immersion blender. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/QeC9fT953JQ/this-immersion-blender-is-your-chunky+then+smooth-deal-of-the-day

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Violence returns to the streets of Northern Ireland

Violence returns to the streets of Northern Ireland [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 13-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Matt Swayne
mls29@psu.edu
814-865-9481
Penn State

In 1998, the Real Irish Republican Army, an IRA splinter group, detonated a car bomb in a shopping area of Omagh, Northern Ireland, that killed 29 people. Since then, violent Irish Republican groups have re-emerged as a major security threat to Northern Ireland, according to a Penn State terrorism expert.

"Dissident Irish Republican groups go by many names, but they are united in their refusal to accept the will of the majority of people in Ireland," said John Horgan, director of the International Center for the Study of Terrorism and associate professor of psychology at Penn State. "No negotiated settlement, consensus solution or peace deal can convince them to lay down their arms." In his book "Divided We Stand: The Strategy and Psychology of Ireland's Dissident Terrorists" (Oxford University Press, 2013), Horgan examines the activities, histories, motivations and strategies of these rapidly evolving splinter groups, including the Real IRA, Continuity IRA and glaigh na hireann.

Horgan's research is drawn from the Violent Dissident Republican Database that he and other researchers developed at the International Center for the Study of Terrorism at Penn State. The VDR Database covers 17 years of analysis between 1994 and 2011. It includes information on 1,244 Republican activities as well as profiles of 662 individuals involved in dissident activity.

"We found that there has been a steady stream of violent events since 1997, with rapidly increasing levels of violence between 2008 and 2010," explained Horgan. "In total, over 700 people were injured and an additional 59 were killed by VDR groups between 1997 and 2011."

Today's VDR groups operate in a different environment than their predecessors active during the period known as "The Troubles," which spanned the late 1960s and ended with the signing of the Good Friday Peace Agreement in 1998, according to Horgan. Despite some setbacks, the Northern Irish peace process has been judged a success, and thus current VDR groups enjoy little to no public support for their continued violent activities. Nevertheless, these groups claim to speak for the communities they supposedly represent by asserting their right to a united, independent Ireland.

"While all of the splinter groups reject the Good Friday Peace Agreement, they lack any kind of unified strategy," said Horgan. "A dissident group like the 32 County Sovereignty Movement has set itself up as type of a political pressure group, while other VDR groups have adopted a vigilante role in their communities, with the goal of taking over local 'policing' from the legitimate Police Service of Northern Ireland."

Equally disturbing are the increasing numbers of young people involved in violent dissident Republicanism, many of whom have little to no adult experience of The Troubles and thus may not be as ideologically devoted to the cause of Republicanism, or the people, as previous activists.

"We see two distinct groups: the older, more experienced Republicans and a younger generation active for the first time," said Horgan. "There is evidence that VDR groups are deliberately recruiting younger members into their organizations, thus ensuring continuity to a next generation of Irish Republicans."

Questions remain as to the VDRs' long-term viability, but Horgan says that in the short-term, they remain a legitimate threat to the region.

"Developing a counter-VDR strategy is urgent," he explained. "These groups shun popular support, claiming they don't need it. Some analysts believe this makes the dissidents pose a very low threat. To me, it's what defines them. It makes them unpredictable, and that is what makes them even more dangerous. The forthcoming 100th anniversary of the 1916 Easter Rising may well serve to unite the dissident factions in a way we haven't seen before, and I strongly predict an increase in the extent and lethality of their violent activities. The time for counter-terrorism initiatives to take hold is now."

###


[ 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.


Violence returns to the streets of Northern Ireland [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 13-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Matt Swayne
mls29@psu.edu
814-865-9481
Penn State

In 1998, the Real Irish Republican Army, an IRA splinter group, detonated a car bomb in a shopping area of Omagh, Northern Ireland, that killed 29 people. Since then, violent Irish Republican groups have re-emerged as a major security threat to Northern Ireland, according to a Penn State terrorism expert.

"Dissident Irish Republican groups go by many names, but they are united in their refusal to accept the will of the majority of people in Ireland," said John Horgan, director of the International Center for the Study of Terrorism and associate professor of psychology at Penn State. "No negotiated settlement, consensus solution or peace deal can convince them to lay down their arms." In his book "Divided We Stand: The Strategy and Psychology of Ireland's Dissident Terrorists" (Oxford University Press, 2013), Horgan examines the activities, histories, motivations and strategies of these rapidly evolving splinter groups, including the Real IRA, Continuity IRA and glaigh na hireann.

Horgan's research is drawn from the Violent Dissident Republican Database that he and other researchers developed at the International Center for the Study of Terrorism at Penn State. The VDR Database covers 17 years of analysis between 1994 and 2011. It includes information on 1,244 Republican activities as well as profiles of 662 individuals involved in dissident activity.

"We found that there has been a steady stream of violent events since 1997, with rapidly increasing levels of violence between 2008 and 2010," explained Horgan. "In total, over 700 people were injured and an additional 59 were killed by VDR groups between 1997 and 2011."

Today's VDR groups operate in a different environment than their predecessors active during the period known as "The Troubles," which spanned the late 1960s and ended with the signing of the Good Friday Peace Agreement in 1998, according to Horgan. Despite some setbacks, the Northern Irish peace process has been judged a success, and thus current VDR groups enjoy little to no public support for their continued violent activities. Nevertheless, these groups claim to speak for the communities they supposedly represent by asserting their right to a united, independent Ireland.

"While all of the splinter groups reject the Good Friday Peace Agreement, they lack any kind of unified strategy," said Horgan. "A dissident group like the 32 County Sovereignty Movement has set itself up as type of a political pressure group, while other VDR groups have adopted a vigilante role in their communities, with the goal of taking over local 'policing' from the legitimate Police Service of Northern Ireland."

Equally disturbing are the increasing numbers of young people involved in violent dissident Republicanism, many of whom have little to no adult experience of The Troubles and thus may not be as ideologically devoted to the cause of Republicanism, or the people, as previous activists.

"We see two distinct groups: the older, more experienced Republicans and a younger generation active for the first time," said Horgan. "There is evidence that VDR groups are deliberately recruiting younger members into their organizations, thus ensuring continuity to a next generation of Irish Republicans."

Questions remain as to the VDRs' long-term viability, but Horgan says that in the short-term, they remain a legitimate threat to the region.

"Developing a counter-VDR strategy is urgent," he explained. "These groups shun popular support, claiming they don't need it. Some analysts believe this makes the dissidents pose a very low threat. To me, it's what defines them. It makes them unpredictable, and that is what makes them even more dangerous. The forthcoming 100th anniversary of the 1916 Easter Rising may well serve to unite the dissident factions in a way we haven't seen before, and I strongly predict an increase in the extent and lethality of their violent activities. The time for counter-terrorism initiatives to take hold is now."

###


[ 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/ps-vrt031313.php

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Drop in US jobless claims fuels market momentum

LONDON (AP) ? Another drop in weekly U.S. jobless claims helped sustain the optimism in markets Thursday, particularly on Wall Street where the Dow Jones index was eyeing up its tenth straight day of gains.

The Dow has recorded a series of record closing highs after rising for nine straight sessions, its longest winning run since 1996. Many stock indexes around the world have risen in the slipstream of the Dow's advance to multi-year highs, too.

"Not since the halcyon days of 1996 have we enjoyed such a long winning streak for the Dow," said Chris Beauchamp, market analyst at IG. "Even the most bullish of analysts could now be forgiven for feeling a little nervous, with expectations of a pullback still widespread."

However, figures showing that weekly U.S. jobless claims fell by a greater-than-anticipated 10,000 to 332,000 helped sustain hopes over the U.S. labor market and provided stocks with further momentum. Also helping sentiment were lower than anticipated producer price inflation figures and an unexpected narrowing in the country's current account deficit.

In Europe, the FTSE 100 index of leading British shares closed up 0.74 percent at 6,529 while Germany's DAX ended the day 1.1 percent to 8,058. The CAC-40 in France closed 0.9 percent higher at 3,8671.

In the U.S., the Dow Jones industrial average was 0.4 percent higher at 14,508 while the broader S&P 500 index rose 0.3 percent to 1,560.

Much of the focus in the markets is on the S&P, which is a few points short of its 2007 all-time closing high of 1,565. The rally in stock markets has been largely predicated on the assumption that the U.S. Federal Reserve will for the foreseeable future keep interest rates at record lows and continue to pump money into the economy, so-called quantitative easing, or QE.

"It does seem that so long as the Fed is committed to QE, the markets may struggle to find a reason to start heading south," said Fawad Razaqzada, market strategist at GFT Markets.

Earlier in Asia, Japan's Nikkei 225 index rose 1.2 percent to finish at 12,381.19 ? its highest close in more than four years ? as investors anticipated parliament's approval of Haruhiko Kuroda as chief of the Bank of Japan. Kuroda has been critical of the central bank's policies in the past and is thought to back Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's strategies for seeking to revive Japan's economy by fighting deflation through monetary easing and hefty government spending.

South Korea's Kospi added 0.1 percent to 2,002.13 but stocks in Hong Kong rose 0.3 percent to 22,619.18.

Trading in the currency markets was fairly light, with the euro up 0.4 percent at $1.3007 and the dollar 0.2 percent lower at 95.89 yen.

Oil markets were subdued too, with the price of benchmark New York crude up 28 cents at $92.80 a barrel.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/drop-us-jobless-claims-fuels-market-momentum-140014382--finance.html

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Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Justin Timberlake Brings "SexyBack" ... Ragtime Style With Jimmy Fallon!

Source:

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Protected areas successfully prevent deforestation in Amazon rainforest

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Strictly protected areas such as national parks and biological reserves have been more effective at reducing deforestation in the Amazon rainforest than so-called sustainable-use areas that allow for controlled resource extraction, two University of Michigan researchers and their colleagues have found.

In addition, protected areas established primarily to safeguard the rights and livelihoods of indigenous people performed especially well in places where deforestation pressures are high. The U-M-led study, which found that all forms of protection successfully limit deforestation, is scheduled for online publication March 11 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The lead author is Christoph Nolte, a doctoral candidate at the U-M School of Natural Resources and Environment. Co-authors include Arun Agrawal, a professor of natural resources at SNRE.

"Perhaps the biggest surprise is the finding that indigenous lands perform the best when it comes to lower deforestation in contexts of high deforestation pressure," Agrawal said. "Many observers have suggested that granting substantial autonomy and land rights to indigenous people over vast tracts of land in the Amazon will lead to high levels of deforestation because indigenous groups would want to take advantage of the resources at their disposal.

"This study shows that ? based on current evidence ? such fears are misplaced," he said.

Preventing deforestation of rainforests is a goal for conserving biodiversity and, more recently, for reducing carbon emissions in the Brazilian Amazon, which covers an area of nearly 2 million square miles.

After making international headlines for historically high Amazon deforestation rates between 2000 and 2005, Brazil achieved radical reductions in deforestation rates in the second half of the past decade. Although part of those reductions were attributed to price declines of agricultural commodities, recent analyses also show that regulatory government policies ? including a drastic increase in enforcement activities and the expansion and strengthening of protected-area networks ? all contributed significantly to the observed reductions.

In their study, the U-M researchers and their colleagues used new remote-sensing-based datasets from 292 protected areas in the Brazilian Amazon, along with a sophisticated statistical analysis, to assess the effectiveness of different types of protected areas. They looked at three categories of protected areas: strictly protected areas, sustainable use areas and indigenous lands.

Strictly protected areas ? state and national biological stations, biological reserves, and national and state parks ? consistently avoided more deforestation than sustainable-use areas, regardless of the level of deforestation pressure. Sustainable-use areas allow for controlled resource extraction, land use change and, in many instances, human settlements.

"Earlier analyses suggested that strict protection, because it allows no resource use, is so controversial that it is less likely to be implemented where deforestation pressures are high ? close to cities or areas of high agricultural value, for example," Nolte said.

"But we observed that recent designations of the Brazilian government placed new strictly protected areas in very high-pressure areas, attenuating this earlier argument," he said.

Hundreds of millions of people in the tropics depend on forests for their subsistence. Forest products that households rely on include firewood, fodder for livestock and timber for housing.

###

University of Michigan: http://www.umich.edu/

Thanks to University of Michigan for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127251/Protected_areas_successfully_prevent_deforestation_in_Amazon_rainforest

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