Sunday, August 4, 2013

Mechanism that allows bacteria to infect plants may inspire cure for eye disease

Mechanism that allows bacteria to infect plants may inspire cure for eye disease [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 4-Aug-2013
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Contact: Dustin Hays
neinews@nei.nih.gov
301-496-5248
NIH/National Eye Institute

By borrowing a tool from bacteria that infect plants, scientists have developed a new approach to eliminate mutated DNA inside mitochondriathe energy factories within cells. Doctors might someday use the approach to treat a variety of mitochondrial diseases, including the degenerative eye disease Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON). The research, published online today in Nature Medicine, was funded by the National Eye Institute (NEI), a part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Mitochondria convert fuel from food into a form of energy that cells can use. They also make enzymes for a variety of cell functions, and in humans they are the only cell component other than the nucleus that houses genes. Mitochondrial gene mutations can lead to a variety of health problems including muscle weakness, heart disease, and blindness in the case of LHON. Most cells contain thousands of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) copies. People with mitochondrial disease often have both mutant and normal mtDNA within their cells. No cures exist for mitochondrial diseases and few effective treatments are available.

Searching for strategies to repair mitochondrial gene defects, a group of investigators at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine explored proteins called transcription activator-like (TAL) effectors. In nature, TAL effectors are found only in certain types of plant-infecting bacteria. They enable the bacteria to use plant DNA to multiply and spread infection.

Scientists recently began using TAL effectors to modify DNA in a variety of organisms. In the lab, TAL effectors can be fused with DNA-breaking proteins called nucleases. These TAL effector nucleases (TALENs) can be used to add or remove specific genes or correct gene mutationstechniques that fall under the broad category of genome editing. During the past few years, scientists have begun adapting TALENs and other genome-editing tools for gene therapy. Until now, scientists had only used TALENs to edit genes in the cell nucleus. Today's report marks the first time TALENs have been used to edit mitochondrial genes.

"Mitochondrial-targeted TALENS (mitoTALENs) represent the most promising hope for an effective treatment of diseases caused by mutations in mtDNA," said Carlos T. Moraes, Ph.D., a professor of neurology and cell biology at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine and principal investigator of the study. "Our research demonstrates that mitoTALENs can substantially decrease or eliminate mutant mtDNA without harming normal mtDNA."

Using cells in the lab, the investigators designed mitoTALENs to bind and cut mitochondrial DNA that had a specific mutation in the gene Complex I, which causes LHON. The scientists then tested whether the mitoTALENs eliminated the mutant mtDNA.

Analysis revealed a temporary drop in cells' total mtDNA, which was due to a reduction in mutant mtDNA. "Once the mitoTALENs bound and cut the DNA at the specified target, the mutant mtDNA was degraded," said Moraes. "The drop in total mtDNA stimulated the cells to increase their mtDNA by replicating the unaffected molecules. Two weeks later, mtDNA levels had returned to normal. But since the mutant mtDNA was destroyed, the cells had mostly normal mtDNA."

Reducing but not necessarily eliminating all mutant mtDNA from a person's cells would be sufficient to treat many mitochondrial diseases, Moraes said. Mutant mtDNA typically does not cause signs of disease until it makes up 80 percent or more of the total mtDNA in a cell, which helps explain why age of onset, the constellation of symptoms, and disease severity varies among individuals with the same mutation. "A modest reduction in mutant mtDNA is likely sufficient to effectively treat disease," he said.

"The science in this project advances an imaginative and very clever approach that may one day lead to a therapeutic strategy for mitochondrial diseases," said Houmam Araj, Ph.D., director of the lens/cataract and oculomotor/neuro-ophthalmology programs at the NEI.

Symptoms of LHON include an abrupt loss of central vision at about age 20 in one eye followed shortly thereafter by the other eye. Although a variety of gene mutations are linked to the disease, most cases involve Complex I mutations, which cause degeneration of the nerves in the back of the eye that transmit visual information to the brain. Neurological problems such as tremors may also occur.

Getting mitoTALENs into cells in tissues presents a formidable challenge, however. The scientists plan next to test the approach in animals.

###

Additional Miller School members of the research team included Sin L. Williams, Ph.D., Sandra R. Bacman, Ph.D., Milena Pinto, Ph.D., and Susana Peralta, Ph.D.

The research was supported in part by the National Eye Institute (EY010804), the National Institute on Aging (AG036871), and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NS079965).

Reference: Bacman SR, et al. Specific elimination of mutant mitochondrial genomes in patient-derived cells by mitoTALENs. Nature Medicine. Published online Aug. 4, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nm.3261.

The National Eye Institute, part of the National Institutes of Health, leads the federal government's research on the visual system and eye diseases. NEI supports basic and clinical science programs that result in the development of sight-saving treatments. For more information, visit http://www.nei.nih.gov.

About the National Institutes of Health (NIH): NIH, the nation's medical research agency, includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NIH is the primary federal agency conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical research, and is investigating the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit http://www.nih.gov.

NIH...Turning Discovery Into Health


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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.


Mechanism that allows bacteria to infect plants may inspire cure for eye disease [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 4-Aug-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Dustin Hays
neinews@nei.nih.gov
301-496-5248
NIH/National Eye Institute

By borrowing a tool from bacteria that infect plants, scientists have developed a new approach to eliminate mutated DNA inside mitochondriathe energy factories within cells. Doctors might someday use the approach to treat a variety of mitochondrial diseases, including the degenerative eye disease Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON). The research, published online today in Nature Medicine, was funded by the National Eye Institute (NEI), a part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Mitochondria convert fuel from food into a form of energy that cells can use. They also make enzymes for a variety of cell functions, and in humans they are the only cell component other than the nucleus that houses genes. Mitochondrial gene mutations can lead to a variety of health problems including muscle weakness, heart disease, and blindness in the case of LHON. Most cells contain thousands of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) copies. People with mitochondrial disease often have both mutant and normal mtDNA within their cells. No cures exist for mitochondrial diseases and few effective treatments are available.

Searching for strategies to repair mitochondrial gene defects, a group of investigators at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine explored proteins called transcription activator-like (TAL) effectors. In nature, TAL effectors are found only in certain types of plant-infecting bacteria. They enable the bacteria to use plant DNA to multiply and spread infection.

Scientists recently began using TAL effectors to modify DNA in a variety of organisms. In the lab, TAL effectors can be fused with DNA-breaking proteins called nucleases. These TAL effector nucleases (TALENs) can be used to add or remove specific genes or correct gene mutationstechniques that fall under the broad category of genome editing. During the past few years, scientists have begun adapting TALENs and other genome-editing tools for gene therapy. Until now, scientists had only used TALENs to edit genes in the cell nucleus. Today's report marks the first time TALENs have been used to edit mitochondrial genes.

"Mitochondrial-targeted TALENS (mitoTALENs) represent the most promising hope for an effective treatment of diseases caused by mutations in mtDNA," said Carlos T. Moraes, Ph.D., a professor of neurology and cell biology at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine and principal investigator of the study. "Our research demonstrates that mitoTALENs can substantially decrease or eliminate mutant mtDNA without harming normal mtDNA."

Using cells in the lab, the investigators designed mitoTALENs to bind and cut mitochondrial DNA that had a specific mutation in the gene Complex I, which causes LHON. The scientists then tested whether the mitoTALENs eliminated the mutant mtDNA.

Analysis revealed a temporary drop in cells' total mtDNA, which was due to a reduction in mutant mtDNA. "Once the mitoTALENs bound and cut the DNA at the specified target, the mutant mtDNA was degraded," said Moraes. "The drop in total mtDNA stimulated the cells to increase their mtDNA by replicating the unaffected molecules. Two weeks later, mtDNA levels had returned to normal. But since the mutant mtDNA was destroyed, the cells had mostly normal mtDNA."

Reducing but not necessarily eliminating all mutant mtDNA from a person's cells would be sufficient to treat many mitochondrial diseases, Moraes said. Mutant mtDNA typically does not cause signs of disease until it makes up 80 percent or more of the total mtDNA in a cell, which helps explain why age of onset, the constellation of symptoms, and disease severity varies among individuals with the same mutation. "A modest reduction in mutant mtDNA is likely sufficient to effectively treat disease," he said.

"The science in this project advances an imaginative and very clever approach that may one day lead to a therapeutic strategy for mitochondrial diseases," said Houmam Araj, Ph.D., director of the lens/cataract and oculomotor/neuro-ophthalmology programs at the NEI.

Symptoms of LHON include an abrupt loss of central vision at about age 20 in one eye followed shortly thereafter by the other eye. Although a variety of gene mutations are linked to the disease, most cases involve Complex I mutations, which cause degeneration of the nerves in the back of the eye that transmit visual information to the brain. Neurological problems such as tremors may also occur.

Getting mitoTALENs into cells in tissues presents a formidable challenge, however. The scientists plan next to test the approach in animals.

###

Additional Miller School members of the research team included Sin L. Williams, Ph.D., Sandra R. Bacman, Ph.D., Milena Pinto, Ph.D., and Susana Peralta, Ph.D.

The research was supported in part by the National Eye Institute (EY010804), the National Institute on Aging (AG036871), and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NS079965).

Reference: Bacman SR, et al. Specific elimination of mutant mitochondrial genomes in patient-derived cells by mitoTALENs. Nature Medicine. Published online Aug. 4, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nm.3261.

The National Eye Institute, part of the National Institutes of Health, leads the federal government's research on the visual system and eye diseases. NEI supports basic and clinical science programs that result in the development of sight-saving treatments. For more information, visit http://www.nei.nih.gov.

About the National Institutes of Health (NIH): NIH, the nation's medical research agency, includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NIH is the primary federal agency conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical research, and is investigating the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit http://www.nih.gov.

NIH...Turning Discovery Into Health


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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/2013-08/nei-mta080213.php

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Egypt ministry calls on protesters to depart

CAIRO (AP) ? An Egyptian police official says that if followers of ousted President Mohammed Morsi abandon their protest sit-ins, this will allow his Muslim Brotherhood group to have a normal role in the political process.

Saturday's televised remarks by Interior Ministry spokesman Hany Abdel-Latif came as authorities announced plans to break up the two main Cairo sit-ins by erecting cordons to prevent people from entering them.

Morsi's backers, including his Muslim Brotherhood group, have vowed to continue protesting until he's reinstated.

"If you believe you are bringing victory to the Brotherhood (by pursuing the sit-ins), it is your safe and secure departure that will allow the Brotherhood to go back to its role in the political process," Abdel-Latif said.

Morsi was overthrown in a July 3 coup after millions demonstrated demanding his overthrow.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egypt-ministry-calls-protesters-depart-112800919.html

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Chinese Hackers Have Been Caught Hijacking a Decoy US Water Plant

Chinese Hackers Have Been Caught Hijacking a Decoy US Water Plant

Chinese hackers have been harassing the US in a series of cyberattacks, but we've started trying to talk it out and cool this all down. But in the meantime, a security researcher has just revealed that he caught a team of Chinese hackers hijacking a fake water plant he set up. And aside from spotting the fake, they knew exactly what they were doing.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/sVUoaBwANyE/chinese-hackers-just-got-caught-hijacking-a-decoy-water-1012520726

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Wildlife Sound Archivist Remembered

Twenty years ago Saturday, Ted Parker, one of the world's greatest field biologists and sound archivists, died in a plane crash. He made nearly 11,000 wildlife recordings, and could identify some 4,000 different bird species by just the sound of their vocalizations. In this audio montage from Cornell Lab of Ornithology, director John Fitzpatrick offers a remembrance.

Copyright ? 2013 NPR. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

LINDA WERTHEIMER, HOST:

Twenty years ago today, Ted Parker, one of the world's great ornithologists and sound recordists died in a plane crash in Equator. He was only 40. Parker contributed nearly 11,000 wildlife recordings to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology's Macaulay library.

He could identify some 4,000 different bird species by sound alone. In this audio montage, the lab's director, John Fitzpatrick offers a remembrance.

JOHN FITZPATRICK: I've rarely met anybody as passionate about his love of nature and of birds than Ted Parker.

(SOUNDBITE OF BIRDS AND MAN SPEAKING)

TED PARKER: A great flock up here. I don't know if you can see all these things moving.

FITZPATRICK: He became extraordinary at being able to hear and pick out birds far away, much more acutely than most of us mere mortals can do.

PARKER: Must do about 18 species from this tree here above us right now.

FITZPATRICK: He began learning things about South American birds that nobody knew, and he could compare different species.

PARKER: Within the flock there's a small group of species, maybe half a dozen or so that spend all their lives together and move through an area maybe five or six acres in the forest. Another 20 or more species will follow them. There's obviously safety in numbers. The more eyes you have looking for predators, the greater your chances of surviving.

FITZPATRICK: He did not have an advanced degree. He didn't have time to go to school, basically is how he put it. He was out exploring, he was out learning, he was talking with people, actually getting meetings with government officials and even heads of state about the importance of considering the natural areas on the eastern slopes of the Andes.

Most importantly, he got into bird sound and he began recording birdcalls.

PARKER: Most of the experience for me has always been auditory. It's more than 50 percent of everything that's happening in a forest, and so I like to try to excite other people and turn other people on to all the sounds.

FITZPATRICK: The body of work that Ted accumulated, the collections of bird songs and calls from across the American tropics is a tremendous addition to the entire field of ornithology. And mourning his loss and celebrating his life made each one of us say to each other we're going to have to work twice as hard now to be able to accomplish what we think we can do in conservation because Ted's not there.

WERTHEIMER: John Fitzpatrick, director of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology remembering Ted Parker. You can find a link to download Parker's voices of the Peruvian Rainforest on our Facebook page, NPR Weekend. That audio montage was produced by Bill McQuay. This is NPR News.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

Copyright ? 2013 NPR. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to NPR. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.

Source: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=208543543&ft=1&f=1007

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Saturday, August 3, 2013

Ask Engadget: best retro gaming / homebrew machine?

Ask Engadget: best outdoor TV?

We know you've got questions, and if you're brave enough to ask the world for answers, then here's the outlet to do so. This week's Ask Engadget inquiry is from Brady, who just wants to play NBA Jam, dammit. If you're looking to ask one of your own, drop us a line at ask [at] engadget [dawt] com.

"Hey, I used to be really into the homebrew and homemade software communities, but times changed and I fell out of the scene. Now I'd like to get back into it, and would love a new device that'll let me play all of these old-school games without having to chop and change -- letting me swap between titles like Mario Kart 64 and NBA Jam without any effort. There are so many new options, from buying an OUYA through to snagging a new PC, so what's my best (and cheapest) bet? Plus, anything that can take a wireless controller is a big plus. Thanks!"

Well, we're thinking that if you're prepared to get your hands a little dirty, the OUYA can be turned into an Android-based emulator thanks to its hacking-friendly setup. If that's a bit too rich for your bones, however, you can set up EmulationStation on a Raspberry Pi which will let you run a wide variety of consoles from the same piece of hardware. Still, let's turn this question over to the Engadgeteers for them to share their experiences.

Filed under:

Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/08/03/ae-homebrew-console/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Friday, August 2, 2013

Festival will make London a "paradise for cycling" predicts Mayor http://ow.ly/n...

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.facebook.com/insidethegames/posts/10151643366739232

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Lloyds reports 1st H profits of 1.5 billion pounds

LONDON (AP) ? Lloyds Banking Group says it has strengthened its balance sheet as the part-nationalized lender reported first-half net profits of 1.5 billion pounds ($2.3 billion), versus a loss of 662 million pounds in the same period last year.

The bank on Thursday said its recovery was ahead of schedule and said that it won't need to raise additional capital to meet new requirements imposed by the Prudential Regulatory Authority.

That's in contrast to Barclays, which said earlier this week it would have to sell 5.8 billion pounds in new shares to strengthen its defenses against a repeat of the 2008 financial crisis.

Lloyds Chief Executive Antonio Horta-Osorio says the bank is profitable ? a fact that has enabled the government to begin the process of returning the group to private ownership.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lloyds-reports-1st-h-profits-1-5-billion-080949976.html

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Snowden finds 'a safe place' to live

MOSCOW ? National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden has a place to live in Russia after being granted temporary asylum, but he still hasn?t decided what he wants to do next, his lawyer said Friday. The big question may be how much choice he actually has.

Russia granted a year of asylum to Snowden on Thursday, allowing him to quietly slip out of the Moscow airport where he had been holed up for almost six weeks as he evades charges of espionage in the United States. Authorities have suggested he will have wide freedom to work, but Kremlin watchers believe his moves are likely being closely controlled by Russian intelligence.

Snowden ?is in a safe place,? but the location will remain secret out of concern for his security, his lawyer, Anatoly Kucherena, told Russian news agencies. The systems analyst who revealed himself as the source of reports in the Guardian newspaper of a vast U.S. Internet surveillance program needs time after his ordeal in airport limbo to figure out his next steps.

He was seen only once in his weeks in the transit zone of the Sheremetyevo airport. Despite troops of photographers and reporters camped out inside and outside the airport, no one apparently saw him leaving, except for someone who snapped a photo of Kucherena talking to blurry figures who the attorney later said were Snowden and Sarah Harrison, a WikiLeaks staffer who has been advising him.

Kucherena said he expects Snowden to speak to journalists soon.

?As soon as he decides what he will do, I hope he will announce it himself,? the ITAR-Tass news agency quoted the lawyer as saying.

The move to grant Snowden asylum infuriated the Obama administration, which said it was ?extremely disappointed? and warned that the decision could derail an upcoming summit between President Barack Obama and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The decision gives Russia cover to depict itself as a defender of human rights, pointing a finger to deflect criticism of its own poor record on rights including free speech. But the secrecy that surrounded Snowden?s time at the Moscow airport and his unwillingness so far to talk to the press indicates he is being controlled by Russian intelligence, Andrei Soldatov, a Russian journalist who co-authored a book on the Russian intelligence services said.

?Does he have independent sources of information and communication? My impression is that he has none, which means he?s not his own master,? Soldatov said.

He said Kucherena?s statements about concerns for Snowden?s safety do not hold water.

?We are all perfectly aware that Snowden, who has just received asylum, does not face any danger in Russia,? Soldatov said. ?American intelligence does not kidnap or assassinate people in Russia, that?s a fact. This is a just a pretext.?

One of the reasons for keeping Snowden isolated may be to prevent him from speaking about the people he met and what really happened to him during the 39 days he spent in the airport?s transit zone, Soldatov said. For the same reason, Soldatov said he expected Russian authorities to find a job for Snowden that will prevent him from having contacts with journalists.

Putin has denied that Russia?s security services have worked with Snowden, either before or after he arrived in Moscow on a flight from Hong Kong. But security experts have said that Russia?s intelligence agencies would not have passed up a chance to at least question a man who is believed to hold reams of classified U.S. documents and could shed light on how the U.S. intelligence agencies collect information.

Snowden?s temporary asylum allows him to work in Russia, with some restrictions, said immigration lawyer Bakhrom Ismailov.

?Snowden has the same rights for employment as a Russian citizen except that he is not allowed to work as a public servant or take a job in law enforcement agencies,? said Ismailov, a managing partner at Yurinvestholding. The founder of Russia?s Facebook-like social network site VKontakte, has already made what sounded like a job offer on Twitter.

The law on temporary asylum says a person with this status is entitled ?to receive assistance? in traveling out of Russia. Ismailov said that this assistance could mean issuing a travel document, but this is not normally done for people with temporary asylum.

Venezuela, Nicaragua and Bolivia had offered Snowden asylum and he told human rights figures during a meeting in mid-July that he wanted to visit all those countries. But Kucherena said Thursday that Snowden no longer has such plans.

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THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Lynn Berry in Moscow contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.lvrj.com/rd63650262.html

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Thursday, August 1, 2013

Lambert anxious to get football going in Charlotte

By STEVE REED
AP Sports Writer

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - Charlotte 49ers coach Brad Lambert says a lack of experience and depth are 2 of his biggest concerns as the school prepares for its inaugural football season.

So he isn't making any predictions on how the season-opener against Campbell on Aug. 31 will shake out.

He knows better.

Lambert, a former assistant at Wake Forest, has been around college football long enough to know just how tough it is to win with a startup program, even at the FCS level.

Lambert's team primarily consists of incoming freshmen with a couple handfuls of junior college transfers and graduate students sprinkled in.

He says more so than wins and losses, he'll judge his team's success this year by how hard they play and compete.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.wbtv.com/story/22981597/lambert-anxious-to-get-football-going-in-charlotte

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Christine Quinn looks to make history in her bid for NYC mayor

NEW YORK ? The same day the first details of Anthony Weiner's latest sexting escapades turned the city's mayoral race into a circus, another candidate, long considered the front-runner to replace outgoing Mayor Michael Bloomberg, was standing almost alone in an outermost section of Queens greeting voters she hopes will support her this fall.

Even as the race has turned into a tabloid frenzy and tawdry national spectacle involving photos of Weiner's private parts and speculation about his marriage, Christine Quinn has tried to avoid her rival's personal drama and seize the moment to raise awareness of her own campaign. Quinn, the city council speaker and decidedly less flashy campaigner than the attention-grabbing Weiner, is betting that the nuts and bolts of retail campaigning and making her pitch to voters will help her ultimately prevail.

It was barely 8 a.m. last week when Quinn walked up to the Far Rockaway subway station in Queens, the very last stop on the A subway line. From here, it can take almost 90 minutes to get to midtown Manhattan, and local residents, many of whom are still rebuilding after Superstorm Sandy last October, don't see politicians come around very often.

Despite polls showing her the front-runner to succeed Bloomberg as mayor of the nation's largest city, Quinn arrived at the station with almost no entourage other than a lone aide holding a campaign sign and a one-man NYPD security detail.

If elected, the 47-year-old Quinn would make history as not only the first female mayor, but also the first openly gay person to lead the fractious city of more than 8 million residents. But Quinn works hard to shift the subject from the potential breakthrough nature of her candidacy.

?What I am talking to New Yorkers about is their future, what they want,? Quinn said in an interview with Yahoo News. ?This race isn?t about me. It?s about them.?

And in the Rockaways, Quinn wasn?t talking history. With most polls showing her with a clear but narrow lead heading into the Sept. 10 primary, she was there to win votes. Armed with a stack of fliers, Quinn seemed intent on shaking everyone's hand ? even bleary-eyed commuters wary of overenthusiastic politicians.

?I?m Christine Quinn, running for mayor,? Quinn announced again and again in a raspy voice still heavily inflected with her native Long Island accent.

Almost immediately, she came across an older black woman who seemed stunned to see Quinn on her daily commute.

?What are you doing here?? the woman incredulously asked Quinn, who let out a boisterous laugh so loud it could be heard all the way back in Brooklyn.

?I?m running for mayor,? Quinn replied, affectionately squeezing the woman?s shoulder as she offered her a flier.

After a minute or so of the full Quinn treatment ? in which the mayoral candidate delivered her spiel on how she wants to make things better for middle class New Yorkers ? the woman began edging toward the subway. But Quinn, who has frequently described herself as a ?pushy broad,? didn?t let her get away without a hug ? a move that couldn?t be more different than the cold detachment of Bloomberg, a Quinn ally to whom she has been considered an heir apparent.

Not unlike voters? love-hate relationship with Bloomberg and his policies, it?s a connection that Quinn both covets but, in some aspects, also rejects.

One of her biggest perceived liabilities as a candidate has been her support of a 2008 effort that overturned a term-limits measure to allow Bloomberg to serve a third term at City Hall. Her complicity in that push has been trashed again and again by her rivals, including Weiner and Bill de Blasio, the city's public advocate. The two rivals have repeatedly attacked Quinn as a Bloomberg crony who has compromised with the mayor too much.

Quinn defends her support of the term limits measure, arguing she thought it was the best move for a city then under siege from the financial crisis and on the brink of a major recession. Quinn has also sought to cast her close relationship with Bloomberg as a model of good governing ? one that lawmakers in the nation's capital ought to emulate.

?There are governments out there where it?s all or nothing, and you are either in lockstep or agreement, and if you are not, you are the enemy. That government is called Washington, and it is not helping Americans or New Yorkers," Quinn told Yahoo News. "Nothing is happening. It?s complete gridlock. That?s not what New Yorkers want, and it?s not what they deserve, and I?m not going to let New York City government ever become that.?

But Quinn seems to have suffered more downsides of her relationship with the current mayor than she has benefited from the upsides. Last year, it seemed more a question of when than if Bloomberg would endorse her candidacy, but then came reports he had actively searched for another candidates to run, reaching out to Hillary Clinton and others in hopes of finding a big name candidate to replace him.

Quinn refuses to comment on the report. She?s tried in recent months to balance her relationship with Bloomberg by not only talking up their collaboration but also citing the moments when she stood up to him on things like his efforts to furlough public school teachers and change how the city handles homeless people.

Bloomberg still won't say which candidate he wants to succeed him, though many have noted he?s allowed Quinn to stand in for him at some city ceremonies in recent months ? a move that some have viewed as almost a quasi-endorsement. But the two have also avoided one another in some instances ? almost humorously.

A few weeks ago, Quinn was in the middle of a press conference on the steps of City Hall when Bloomberg marched out the front door and froze just steps away. Virtually every head in Quinn?s audience turned to stare at Bloomberg before he hustled off. With the cameras trained on her, Quinn sought to diffuse the potentially awkward moment with humor.

?Nothing to see over there,? she said, grinning, using her arms to wave the attention back her way.

Quinn dodged a question from Yahoo News about whether she'd sought Bloomberg's endorsement but pointedly rejected the idea that she?s his heir apparent.

?You have to earn every vote every day out there in New York City, as it should be,? Quinn said. ?They call this the second most important job in America, the second toughest job in America. You have to earn it.?

But Quinn is also careful to praise the ambitiousness of Bloomberg?s stewardship, which has included achievements like an aggressive smoking ban and miles of bike lanes along the city's traffic-choked streets.

?One of the things I think is really noteworthy about the mayor is he put big ideas out there. Now some of them I agreed with ? some of them I didn?t agree with,? Quinn said. ?But he wasn?t afraid to think big. And he wasn?t afraid to not always win if he thought it was the right thing (to do). And those are two qualities that I think are really important that I would want to keep moving forward.?

Quinn has also sounded a more empathetic tone on New York's future than Bloomberg, a multibillionaire often criticized for lacking a common touch. She?s made a push for more affordable housing and improved public transportation to appeal to those who have been marginalized by a growing gap between the city?s rich and poor.

?We need to make sure that New York City is always a place where people want to come, but we also need to make sure New York is a place where middle class folks can afford to live,? Quinn said.

Quinn has stressed her own middle-class roots as the daughter an electrical engineer father and a social-worker mother, whom she credits for encouraging her to use politics as a way of helping people.

Quinn?s mother was sick with breast cancer for much of her childhood and died when Quinn was just 16. In a recently published memoir, Quinn described her struggle to deal with her mother?s illness, admitting that she had suffered from bulimia and alcoholism during that period ? ultimately forcing her to briefly enter rehab when she was 26.

But by then Quinn was already a rising star in New York politics, getting her start as a tenants' rights advocate before working for Tom Duane, one of the city?s first openly gay city council members.

Quinn later headed up the New York City Anti-Violence Project, a group that sought to raise attention about anti-gay discrimination and crimes. In 1999, when Duane announced he would run for state Senate, Quinn ran for his council seat and won. In 2006, she was elected speaker.

In subsequent years, Quinn became one of the visible advocates of legalizing gay marriage in New York ? making a passionate plea for her aging father to be able to see her marry attorney Kim Catullo, the love of her life. After the state legalized same sex marriage in 2011, Quinn and Catullo married in a lavish ceremony in May 2012 that attracted major media coverage and was the subject of several chapters of Quinn?s memoir.

While no one doubts Quinn?s commitment to gay rights, she has not made her sexuality or the history she would make if elected mayor a focus of her campaign ? even though it would be a pivotal moment for the city and for supporters of gay rights.

?For the LGBT community, (Quinn?s election) would be analogous to the dynamic around Barack Obama being elected president of the United States,? says Ethan Geto, a longtime gay rights advocate in New York who has known Quinn for at least 20 years. ?It has far-reaching consequences. ? It has tremendous symbolic importance in reinforcing American society?s transition to not only acceptance of openly gay people in society but in important leadership positions.?

Geto said the reason Quinn doesn?t make her sexuality ?a centerpiece? of her campaign is because most people already know who she is and accepts it.

?Every voter in this town knows Chris Quinn is a lesbian,? Geto said.

But that awareness could also prove problematic for Quinn among some voters who could be wary of electing a woman or openly gay mayor.

While New York is heavily Democratic and its centerpiece, Manhattan, is progressive and cosmopolitan, the city is also home to a large population of blue collar and Catholic voters in the outer boroughs who tend to be more conservative. In June, Weiner was forced to apologize after he didn't strongly condemn a women he met while campaigning in Queens who used a homophobic slur to reference Quinn. Election insiders say the city has many voters who privately feel the same way, even if that sentiment doesn't show up in the polls.

Quinn says she's not worried about bias ? calling New York "a beacon of forward progress for human rights." But in recent weeks, she has stepped up campaigning in the outer boroughs ? suggesting she knows that she needs to win over supporters there, too, in addition to her base voters in Manhattan.

Campaigning in the Rockaways, Quinn was at one point approached by a young black mother who wanted to introduce her daughter to the mayoral candidate. ?This is the woman from TV! She might be mayor,? the woman told her daughter, as Quinn leaned down and shook the young girl?s hand.

The moment seemed to speak to the historic nature of Quinn's candidacy, but she demurred when asked about it by Yahoo News.

?I sometimes hear from moms. They will bring up their daughters and say, ?See this is the woman I told you about. She might be the first woman mayor.? And that is of course thrilling, thrilling and humbling all at the same time,? Quinn said. ?But this race is about that little girl?s future. That?s what I want to be focused on: how I can help her make history."

Just hours later, Quinn seemed to rethink that answer.

In an interview with CNN, Quinn criticized both Weiner and former Gov. Eliot Spitzer, who is running for comptroller and who is battling his own history of sexual transgressions and asking voters for a second chance.

Quinn said the race should be about first chances.

?Look, for me the question is, let's give us the first chance. If I?m elected mayor, when I'm elected mayor, I'll be the first woman and the first openly gay mayor of the city of New York,? Quinn said. ?Let's not have a conversation about second chances. Let's have a conversation about the potential of first chances and history and what that could mean for the greatest city in the world.?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/christine-quinn-looks-to-make-history-in-her-bid-for-nyc-mayor-142057918.html

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Long-sought method to efficiently make complex anticancer compound developed

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Scientists have achieved the first efficient chemical synthesis of ingenol, a highly complex, plant-derived compound that has long been of interest to drug developers for its anticancer potential. The achievement will enable scientists to synthesize a wide variety of ingenol derivatives and investigate their therapeutic properties. The achievement also sets the stage for the efficient commercial production of ingenol mebutate, a treatment for actinic keratosis (a common precursor to non-melanoma skin cancer), that at present must be extracted and refined inefficiently from plants.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/b9OWUjCMz0s/130801142242.htm

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What Is Strategic Planning And How Do I Get Started? - SteamFeed

Strategic planning is the all-important task of defining your business, brand or company?s strategy. How will you set, implement and meet your goals? What are your goals? Who is responsible for making these strategies real, tangible and credible?

According to nearly any business, strategic planning includes four, basic pillars:

  • Vision
  • Mission
  • Values
  • Strategy

Strategic Planning: Vision

Your vision embodies everything you inspire to be. For me, when vision planning for B Squared Media, LLC, I read many, many books. I thought about what I wanted the brand to be ? and even created a vision board.

I made a list of over 100 words that could represent me/my brand, and then narrowed it down to three specific words: Conversation, Connection and Strategic. These words eventually led me to our tagline, now trademarked, ?Think Conversation, Not Campaign.?

When your vision is starting to take shape, ask yourself these questions:

  1. Why do I what I do; what is my purpose?
  2. What problems do I solve? What value do I add? What are my customers saying (or what do you want them to say)?

Strategic Planning: Mission

When characterizing your mission, think about who you are. Coming from a family who has constantly fundraised and given back, I knew I wanted my business to do them same. We created a pro bono program where we made the commitment to give one charity an entirely free social media management program for an entire year.

This is critical to our mission. What is critical to your mission? Probe your thoughts and feelings to find out:

  1. Who you are.
  2. What?s your story?
  3. How do you give back?

Strategic Planning: Values

Once you have your vision and mission, values should be screaming at you. Values will set the tone for your brand, and will be the backbone of your company culture.

My advice is to involve everyone currently working with the company when deciding on values. Eventually these values will help you determine what you?re looking for in teamwork, new hires, and in communication with C-level executives and advisory boards.

Make a list and make sure it?s a living, breathing list that continually evolves.

Strategic Planning: Strategy

In this stage of strategic planning, you will want to connect daily operations to your long-term vision for your brand. Combining your vision, mission, and values can seem chaotic without a clear path.

My advice here is COMMUNICATION, and lots of it!

Be open with problems and obstacles you foresee. And instead of merely presenting problems, ask that they?re submitted along with solutions. This sparks ideas and innovation.

Other questions for formulating strategy:

  1. What are you looking to accomplish? Daily? Weekly? Monthly? Yearly?
  2. What do you identify as Key Performance Indicators (KPIs)
  3. Who will be responsible for different KPIs, and how will they be evaluated?

*This is also a place to perform your SWOT Analysis.

Putting Your Plan To Work

While your vision, mission and values may or may not change, your strategy most often will. Business, especially with the advent of online and social strategies, is going through a giant transformation. Some strategies will work, and some won?t. It?s your job to test, change, and test again.

It?s a constant, cyclical motion; being proactive vs. reactive will keep you stabilized in a constant-changing business climate.

And while?you?ll succeed the fastest by doing this planning from the beginning, it?s never too late to start utilizing strategic planning. You always need to be working on the business (not just in the business)!

Source: http://www.steamfeed.com/what-is-strategic-planning-and-how-do-i-get-started/

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Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Rutgers to retire LeGrand's No. 52

NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) ? Rutgers has not handed out No. 52 since Eric LeGrand last wore it ? the day he was injured during a game and left paralyzed.

Now, until LeGrand walks again, no one will wear that number for the Scarlet Knights.

Rutgers announced Tuesday that LeGrand's jersey will be the first retired by the program that played college football's first game in 1869.

"This is a dream come true," LeGrand said in a telephone interview Tuesday. "To be the first one to have his number retired is unreal."

LeGrand and his No. 52 will be honored in a ceremony Sept. 14 when Rutgers plays at home against Eastern Michigan.

"We're excited to be able to do that for him and his family," Scarlet Knight coach Kyle Flood said at American Athletic Conference media day. "It will be a great day, not just for Rutgers football, but for the LeGrand family and everybody that's associated with us."

LeGrand broke two vertebrae in October 2010 while making a tackle on a kickoff return against Army. He was left paralyzed from the shoulders down and has had to use a wheelchair since leaving the hospital, but has made enough progress in his rehabilitation to stand upright with the help of a metal frame. The 22-year-old said he now has gotten his left wrist to twitch and the strength in his back has returned to the point where he can more easily sit up by himself.

"This is a testament to what he went through and how he is changing lives of others," linebacker Kevin Snyder said. "He has handled the situation better than anyone could expect and is continuing to fight the good fight. Eric still continues to believe and this is a great honor for him."

LeGrand is going into his third season as an analyst for Rutgers radio broadcasts.

Flood said that when LeGrand walks again, the number will be unretired.

"I told him I know you're going to do that," Flood said. "And then that number will become a significant number in our program again to be worn only on special occasions and by certain people. There's no doubt in my mind that that day will come."

That plan sounded good to LeGrand.

LeGrand said: "I hope whoever wears it will wear it with dignity and pride."

___

Follow Ralph D. Russo at www.Twitter.com/ralphDrussoAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rutgers-retire-legrands-no-52-210930804.html

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Heavy Military Transport Aircraft Il 76 MD 90A

Heavy military transport aircraft Il-76MD-90A is a deeply modified version of the widely recognized aircraft Il-76MD that was made in Uzbekistan at the Tashkent air transport enterprise named after Chkalov. The enetrprise is currently in a complicated situation, it has no production and technological perspectives so the destiny of the development program of this aircraft with carrying capacity of 40-50 tons is under threat.

Some pictures of the aircraft are inside the post.

Links to explore:


See even more of English Russia:

Source: http://englishrussia.com/2013/07/30/heavy-military-transport-aircraft-il-76-md-90a/

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Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Shanmugam urges India to start work on aviation agreement with ASEAN

SINGAPORE: Singapore has called on India to start negotiations on a full air transport agreement with ASEAN that includes passenger services.

Foreign Affairs and Law Minister K Shanmugam said such an agreement would expand tourism and business opportunities for India and Southeast Asia.

More passenger flights, he said, would also help to deepen ties between Singapore and India.

Mr Shanmugam said: "The relationship is a very strong one. It has many facets. We have a good relationship on the military side. We have a good and growing relationship on the economic side."

He added: ?But if you look at it in terms of cross flow of people, nearly 700,000 Indians visit Singapore and a significant number of Singaporeans visit India. (In terms of) air connectivity, I'm told there are 400 flights and it's not enough. We are seeking to do more. In fact, if there is better air connectivity, a lot more can be done."

Mr Shanmugam on Tuesday returned from his three-day visit to India.

Source: http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/singapore/shanmugam-urges-india-to/761250.html

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Panel backs annual lung cancer screening for some smokers

For the first time, government advisers are recommending screening for lung cancer, saying certain current and former heavy smokers should get annual scans to cut their chances of dying of the disease.

If it becomes final as expected, the advice by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force would clear the way for insurers to cover CT scans, a type of X-ray, for those at greatest risk.

That would be people ages 55 through 79 who smoked a pack of cigarettes a day for 30 years or the equivalent, such as two packs a day for 15 years. Whether screening would help younger or lighter smokers isn't known, so scans are not advised for them. They also aren't for people who quit at least 15 years ago, or people too sick or frail to undergo cancer treatment.

"The evidence shows we can prevent a substantial number of lung cancer deaths by screening" ? about 20,000 of the 160,000 that occur each year in the United States, said Dr. Michael LeFevre, a task force leader and family physician at the University of Missouri.

Public comments will be taken until Aug. 26, then the panel will give its final advice. Reports on screening were published Monday in Annals of Internal Medicine.

The recommendation is a big deal for many reasons. The task force, an independent group of doctors appointed by the government, in recent years has urged less frequent screening for breast and cervical cancers, and no screening for prostate cancer, saying PSA blood tests do men more harm than good. There are no good ways to screen for ovarian cancer or other less common types.

But lung cancer is the top cancer killer worldwide. Nearly 90 percent of people who get it die from it, usually because it's found too late for treatment to succeed. About 85 percent of lung cancers in the U.S. are attributable to smoking, and about 37 percent of U.S. adults are current or former smokers. The task force estimates that 10 million Americans would fit the smoking and age criteria for screening.

The American Cancer Society used to recommend screening with ordinary chest X-rays but withdrew that advice in 1980 after studies showed they weren't saving lives. Since then, CT scans have come into wider use, and the society and other groups have endorsed their limited use for screening certain heavy smokers.

The scans cost $100 to as much as $400 and are not usually covered by Medicare or private insurers now. But under the new health care law, cancer screenings recommended by the task force are to be covered with no copays.

"It's generally going to be covered by all health plans" if the advice gets final task force approval, said Susan Pisano of the industry trade group America's Health Insurance Plans. She said her group may develop a response during the public comment period but has had "high regard" for the task force in the past "because they rely so heavily on the evidence" in crafting their recommendations.

The task force considered lung cancer screening in 2004 but said there was too little evidence to weigh risks and benefits. Since then, a major study found that screening the age group covered in the task force's recommendation could cut the chances of dying from lung cancer by up to 20 percent and from any cause by nearly 7 percent.

Screening "is absolutely not for everybody," not even all smokers, LeFevre stressed. That includes President Barack Obama, who said a couple years ago that he had quit smoking. Obama is too young (he will turn 52 in a few days) and too light a smoker (he reportedly smoked less than a pack a day), to be in the high-risk group advised to get screening.

The potential benefits of screening may not outweigh its possible harms for people not at high risk of developing lung cancer. A suspicious finding on a scan often leads to biopsies and other medical tests that have costs and complications of their own. The radiation from scans to look for cancer can raise the risk of developing the disease.

"These scans uncover things, often things that are not important. But you don't figure out that for a while," and only after entering "the medical vortex" of follow-up tests, said Dr. Peter Bach, a cancer screening expert at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York.

The best way to prevent lung cancer is to quit smoking or never start, and screening doesn't make smoking safer, doctors stress.

"That's everyone's public health concern: People will see this as a pass to continue smoking," Bach said of screening. "I don't think it's likely," because people know how harmful smoking is, he said.

Source: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/health/~3/SXaHI5OXrfI/

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Case-Shiller: Home prices jump in May

Home prices on the Case-Shiller 10-city Index rose 2.48 percent in May, and the 20-city index rose 2.44 percent over the same period.?The latest data is?continuing to?demonstrate?significant resiliency compared to past years.

By SoldAtTheTop,?Guest blogger / July 30, 2013

This chart shows the 10-City Case-Shiller Composite Index since 2000. Prices have recovered steadily since last year, but still remain well below peak 2006 levels.

SoldAtTheTop

Enlarge

Today's release of the S&P/Case-Shiller (CSI) home price?indices for May reported that the non-seasonally adjusted Composite-10 price index rose a notable 2.48% since April while the Composite-20 index also increased 2.44% over the same period.?

Skip to next paragraph SoldAtTheTop

Writer, The PaperEconomy Blog

'SoldAtTheTop' is not a pessimist by nature but a true skeptic and realist who prefers solid and sustained evidence of fundamental economic recovery to 'Goldilocks,' 'Green Shoots,' 'Mustard Seeds,' and wholesale speculation.

Recent posts

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The latest CSI data is?continuing to?demonstrate?significant resiliency compared to past years, as prices remained stable through the typically slow winter and early spring period and now appear to be rising notably through the more active late spring period.?

The 10-city composite index increased 11.82% as compared to May 2012 while the 20-city composite increased 12.17% over the same period.?

Both of the broad composite indices still show significant peak declines slumping -25.01% for the 10-city national index and -24.39% for the 20-city national index on a peak comparison basis.?

The Christian Science Monitor has assembled a diverse group of the best economy-related bloggers out there. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. To contact us about a blogger, click here.To add or view a comment on a guest blog, please go to the blogger's own site by clicking on paper-money.blogspot.com.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/i_6QluxAG-s/Case-Shiller-Home-prices-jump-in-May

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Monday, July 29, 2013

Newport Folk Festival wraps up another year

NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) ? Sailboats and song capped off another successful year for the Newport Folk Festival as the venerable and reinvigorated musical event refused to show its age.

Thousands of fans were treated to performances from Beck, the Lumineers and more than a dozen other bands on four stages Sunday at historic Fort Adams on Narragansett Bay. The festival began Friday afternoon and concluded just as the sun began to set Sunday as boats plied the blue waters offshore.

The festival, first held in 1959, is arguably enjoying its best years since the 1960s, when Joan Baez, Bob Seeger and Johnny Cash all played Newport and Bob Dylan angered folk fans and changed American music forever by going electric in 1965. The event now attracts a mix of music icons like Ramblin' Jack Elliott and younger bands from genres including folk, rock, blues and jazz.

"It's the setting, the people and the music," said Alex Kimball of New London, Conn., who attended his first festival Sunday with friend Meredith McCrave of Ledyard, Conn. "It's just a peaceful, mellow time. Why did it take us so long to come?"

Tickets for the Saturday and Sunday shows sold out five months ago ? the earliest tickets for the main two days of the festival have sold out in its history. Attendance for each day is capped at 10,000. Friday's performances attracted nearly 9,500.

Jess Doucette and her friend Dave Carpino, both of Worcester, Mass., bought tickets before this year's lineup was even announced. Doucette said she considered it a safe bet.

"With so many bands playing you know you're going to find at least five or six that you love," she said.

Elliott, 81, stayed around following his Sunday set to sample some New England oysters and pose for photos with fans before taking the stage to do a number with Beck. Elliott has played Newport 10 or 11 times, he said, going back to the 1963 festival.

"I'll be back," he said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/newport-folk-festival-wraps-another-000552157.html

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New IRIS telescope sends stunning images of sun to befuddled scientists

The IRIS solar observatory, launched last month, has sent back new pictures that show a key part of the sun's atmosphere in unprecedented detail. Some of the data are surprising.

By Pete Spotts,?Staff writer / July 25, 2013

These images show a comparison between the higher resolution provided by the new IRIS solar observatory (r.) and the SDO (Solar Dynamics Observatory) spacecraft. Scientists say IRIS, launched last month, will help shed light on the sun's impact on Earth.

Goddard Space Flight Center/NASA/AP

Enlarge

A new solar observatory, launched less than a month ago, is revealing remarkably fine details about a little-explored region of the sun's atmosphere, where temperatures leap from tens of thousands of degrees Fahrenheit at the sun's surface to to millions of degrees in its extended atmosphere.

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Dubbed the interface region by the observatory's science team, this first 2,000 to 3,000 miles of the sun's atmosphere is thought to play a key role in a range of processes, including those that power solar flares and even more potent coronal-mass ejections. These events can endanger satellites, disrupt radio communication and GPS navigation, as well as disrupt the power grid on Earth.

For all their excitement at seeing the first images from this new orbiting observatory, mission scientists aren't quite ready yet to hazard informed guesses about what the new observations mean.

"I'm not brash enough to tell you what new and exciting things there are, but there are enough hints that people are very excited," said Alan Title, a solar physicist with aerospace giant Lockheed Martin and the lead scientist for NASA's Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS), during a briefing Thursday.

In general, the team has been surprised "that there is so much structure in areas that are relatively quiet" on the sun's surface, Dr. Title said, referring to small-scale regions of varying temperatures and looping eruptions of hot gas. "We're seeing a lot more structure than we anticipated."

The 400-pound telescope, launched on June 27, taps ultraviolet light from the sun's interface region to take detailed images and spectra of features as small as 150 miles across.

That capability represents a 10-fold improvement in picking out fine details, compared with previous solar observatories operating at ultraviolet wavelengths, mission officials said. And the instrument gathers images and spectra 20 times faster than its predecessors, allowing researchers to capture events that would have been too fleeting to see before.

The interface region actually encompasses what typically has been thought to be two layers of the solar atmosphere ? the lowest layer, or chromosphere, capped by a region less than 200 miles thick dubbed the transition region.

Over the past decade, however, solar physicists have come to recognize that this onion-skin-like picture is less than tidy, explains Jeffrey Newmark, a solar physicist at NASA headquarters in Washington.

Today, theorists suggest that the interface region is characterized by constant eruptions throughout the chromosphere of hot gas in a random, geyser-like fashion on small scales all over the sun's surface.

"We think it's these smaller-scale jets and waves that propagate through these jets" that send the atmospheric heating process on the sun into overdrive, Dr. Newmark says. That rapid increase can occur with a change in altitude of less than 600 miles.

During the briefing, researchers unveiled images of a small sunspot and a small active region where hot gas erupted from the sun. In addition, the researchers presented some initial data from the observatory's spectrograph.

The spectra yield information on temperature, pressure, and the velocity of features moving across or erupting from the sun's surface. These allow researcher to unpack the physics behind the processes at work in the interface region.

The team also hopes to monitor long-term trends in solar activity, in coordination with observatories that can provide the big picture for events such as solar flares and prominences, even as IRIS captures what's happening on small scales.

The spectra the team released Thursday showed intense emissions from magnesium atoms forged in the sun's fusion furnace.

By tracking the intensity of those spectral lines over time, the team can track changes in the sun's brightness at ultraviolet wavelengths ? changes that have an impact on Earth's climate through their influence on temperatures and circulation in the stratosphere.

"We want to see how the brightness of the sun in these ultraviolet lines changes as a function of the solar cycle," said Bart DePontieu, also a solar physicist with Lockheed Martin.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/q6_PDREjIWc/New-IRIS-telescope-sends-stunning-images-of-sun-to-befuddled-scientists

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Along with Miss America, parade returns to AC

GEOFF MULVIHILL
Associated Press

The Miss America parade is getting a television-friendly makeover as the tradition returns to Atlantic City in September for the first time in nine years.

The Sept. 14 parade will be televised live for the first time, Miss America Organization CEO Sam Haskell told The Associated Press on Monday. It's scheduled to air live on WPVI-TV, the ABC affiliate in Philadelphia, and again the next day as part of the lead-in for the Sept. 15 pageant finals, which will be shown on ABC nationally.

"We're supersizing the parade," Haskell said. "We're supersizing the telecast."

Some local groups have complained about the cost of getting a float in the parade this year -- at least $2,000 compared with $200 in 2004, the last time it was held.

Haskell said higher fees will help pay for a more spectacular event designed to show off Atlantic City.

The parade on the boardwalk harks back to the roots of Miss America, when the pageant launched in 1921 as a way to drum up business for the shore resort after Labor Day.

The pageant is getting reacquainted with fans shouting "Show us your shoes!" to the contestants in convertibles, among other traditions, when it comes back to Atlantic City.

It's not clear exactly how long parade-goers have been shouting to the women. But Haskell said that since at least the early 1990s, the women have elaborately decorated their shoes -- Miss Maine's have often had lobsters on theirs, and you can count on Miss Texas wearing cowboy boots -- and obliging by displaying them proudly.

Miss America left its hometown for Las Vegas after 2004 and except for one year when there was a walking parade there, the show-us-your-shoes tradition disappeared.

Producer John Best, who puts on eight parades annually, including the National Independence Day Parade in Washington, was hired to run this year's edition.

Best said the route will run along the familiar boardwalk, but now starting at Revel Casino-Hotel, a shimmering glass structure that wasn't yet built the last time Miss America was in town.

He said the 4,000 participants will include two youth choirs; convertibles carrying the contestants; 15 elaborate floats, including one featuring veterans back from Iraq and Afghanistan; dancers and a performance area for TV purposes. Local Girl Scout troops and Red Cross chapters will be represented.

The first of the 22 marching bands will be -- as it has long been -- the one from Atlantic City High School.

But Best said another one will be an all-star marching band from high schools around Atlantic County. That's an element he said he hopes to become a tradition.


Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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This 4-month-old sweetheart needs a new home. Yours, maybe?

Source: http://www.wtop.com/541/3404390/Along-with-Miss-America-parade-returns-to-AC

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Sunday, July 28, 2013

MarkdownPad Renders Markdown in Real Time, Exports Clean HTML

MarkdownPad Renders Markdown in Real Time, Exports Clean HTML

Windows: Markdown is an awesome formatting language that lets you create rich documents using plain text syntax, and MarkdownPad puts it to great use Windows.

The app is a dual pane affair, with a preview panel on the right to show you exactly how your Markdown is formatting. You don't even need to click over to the panel to update it, since it updates live with every keystroke - a very nice touch. Once you're done writing, you can export your document as plain text, as a markdown file, or as HTML if you're building web pages. If you aren't happy with how some elements render within the app, you can even add custom CSS to the app to change how they display.

The free version of MarkdownPad is incredibly powerful, but a $14.95 upgrade to the pro version gets you a ton of extra options, including a horizontal panel arrangement, PDF exporting, and the ability to use a few different forks of Markdown if vanilla doesn't cut it for you. If you have any interest in Markdown, and you're a Windows user, this is definitely worth a download.

MarkdownPad (Free/$14.95)

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/Q7mMUdJGS0M/markdownpad-renders-markdown-in-real-time-exports-clea-929690264

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Come and take our jobs, Britain tells EU workers

Almost six in every 10 vacancies on a taxpayer-funded EU ?website are in the UK, raising questions about the Government?s approach to unemployment.

Germany, the economy of which is the EU?s largest, is second with 267,517 job advertisements, a third fewer.

The total number of vacancies on EURES, the European job mobility portal, as of yesterday was 1,450,490 ? so UK jobs up for grabs total more than those in other EU states put together.

Ukip Leader Nigel Farage described the situation as ?utterly reprehensible? when UK unemployment remains above 2.5 million.

He said: ?The fact that unemployed Britons are being pitted against 500 million people across the EU to get jobs in their own country is utterly reprehensible.

?With two-and-a-half million people unemployed in the UK, of which 958,000 are under 25, every job vacancy counts.

?Yet here we have the EU, which we already grossly overfund, advertising our jobs to people outside the UK and even giving them the upper hand by offering financial support to get ?interviews here and move here!

?We are essentially paying the EU to give away British jobs.?

The details emerged amid a fierce debate over whether more British jobs should be given to British workers.

Conservative Business Minister Matthew Hancock warned UK companies yesterday that they have a ?social duty? to employ young British workers rather than better-qualified immigrants.

He said firms have a responsibility to ensure young people in the com?munities where they are based are given the opportunity to get a job and get on in life.

Mr Hancock said employers should be prepared to invest in training British staff rather than simply looking for ?pure profit?.

He told BBC Radio 4?s Today show: ?As the amount of jobs in the economy grows ? we saw the good growth figures yesterday ? everybody should be given the chance to get on in life and get one.?

He added: ?I?m arguing that it is ?companies? social responsibility, it is their social duty, to look at employing locally first.?

His intervention comes amid fears among Tory MPs of a new influx of ?immigrant workers from Romania and Bulgaria when restrictions on their employment are lifted next year.

The Conservatives are under pressure from Mr Farage?s party, which has been pressing for tighter controls.

But Mr Farage said it was wrong to heap the blame on British firms.

He added: ?For the Minister to blame British businesses when he is taxing them in order to send the money to Brussels to fund foreign jobseekers to compete with British workers is so unfair as to be outrageous. We have said boldly from the start we simply cannot improve unemployment in the UK while being a member of the EU.?

The British jobs being advertised in Europe include managerial posts, finance and sales jobs, computing and clerking vacancies.

The huge disparity in job listings will fuel claims that the UK goes too far to go along with EU rules while other ?countries ignore them when they find them inconvenient.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/daily-express-uk-news/~3/oJK8rS3rKTg/Come-and-take-our-jobs-Britain-tells-EU-workers

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Man accused of tweet-stalking Ashanti in NYC

NEW YORK (AP) ? An Illinois man who served jail time for stalking R&B singer Ashanti has been indicted in New York for again stalking and harassing the Grammy Award-winner.

Prosecutors say Devar Hurd was indicted Friday in state Supreme Court in Manhattan. Prosecutors say he violated an order of protection when he sent more than 100 tweets to the singer's Twitter account between Sept. 2012 and last weekend.

His bail was set at $750,000. He is expected to be arraigned sometime next month.

In Feb. 2010 the 35-year-old was sentenced to two years in jail for sending a battery of text messages and photos to Ashanti's mother. Prosecutors said Friday some of his tweets were sexually explicit.

Hurd's attorney did not respond to a message seeking comment.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/man-accused-tweet-stalking-ashanti-nyc-002254614.html

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