Sunday, March 31, 2013

New clues about how amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) develops

Mar. 31, 2013 ? Johns Hopkins scientists say they have evidence from animal studies that a type of central nervous system cell other than motor neurons plays a fundamental role in the development of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a fatal degenerative disease. The discovery holds promise, they say, for identifying new targets for interrupting the disease's progress.

In a study described online in Nature Neuroscience, the researchers found that, in mice bred with a gene mutation that causes human ALS, dramatic changes occurred in oligodendrocytes -- cells that create insulation for the nerves of the central nervous system -- long before the first physical symptoms of the disease appeared. Oligodendrocytes located near motor neurons -- cells that govern movement -- died off at very high rates, and new ones regenerated in their place were inferior and unhealthy.

The researchers also found, to their surprise, that suppressing an ALS-causing gene in oligodendrocytes of mice bred with the disease -- while still allowing the gene to remain in the motor neurons -- profoundly delayed the onset of ALS. It also prolonged survival of these mice by more than three months, a long time in the life span of a mouse. These observations suggest that oligodendrocytes play a very significant role in the early stage of the disease.

"The abnormalities in oligodendrocytes appear to be having a negative impact on the survival of motor neurons," says Dwight E. Bergles, Ph.D., a co-author and a professor of neuroscience at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. "The motor neurons seem to be dependent on healthy oligodendrocytes for survival, something we didn't appreciate before."

"These findings teach us that cells we never thought had a role in ALS not only are involved but also clearly contribute to the onset of the disease," says co-author Jeffrey D. Rothstein, M.D., Ph.D., a professor of neurology at Johns Hopkins and director of the Johns Hopkins Medicine Brain Science Institute.

Scientists have long believed that oligodendrocytes functioned only as structural elements of the central nervous system. They wrap around nerves, making up the myelin sheath that provides the "insulation" that allows nerve signals to be transmitted rapidly and efficiently. However, Rothstein and others recently discovered that oligodendrocytes also deliver essential nutrients to neurons, and that most neurons need this support to survive.

The Johns Hopkins team of Bergles and Rothstein published a paper in 2010 that described in mice with ALS an unexpected massive proliferation of oligodendrocyte progenitor cells in the spinal cord's motor neurons, and that these progenitors were being mobilized to make new oligodendrocytes. The researchers believed that these cells were multiplying because of an injury to oligodendrocytes, but they weren't sure what was happening. Using a genetic method of tracking the fate of oligodendrocytes, in the new study, the researchers found that cells present in young mice with ALS were dying off at an increasing rate in concert with advancing disease. Moreover, the development of the newly formed oligodendrocytes was stalled and they were not able to provide motor neurons with a needed source of cell nutrients.

To determine whether the changes to the oligodendrocytes were just a side effect of the death of motor neurons, the scientists used a poison to kill motor neurons in the ALS mice and found no response from the progenitors, suggesting, says Rothstein, that it is the mutant ALS gene that is damaging oligodendrocytes directly.

Meanwhile, in separate experiments, the researchers found similar changes in samples of tissues from the brains of 35 people who died of ALS. Rothstein says it may be possible to see those changes early on in the disease and use MRI technology to follow progression.

"If our research is confirmed, perhaps we can start looking at ALS patients in a different way, looking for damage to oligodendrocytes as a marker for disease progression," Rothstein says. "This could not only lead to new treatment targets but also help us to monitor whether the treatments we offer are actually working."

ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig's disease, named for the Yankee baseball great who died from it, affects nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord that control voluntary muscle movement. The nerve cells waste away or die, and can no longer send messages to muscles, eventually leading to muscle weakening, twitching and an inability to move the arms, legs and body. Onset is typically around age 50 and death often occurs within three to five years of diagnosis. Some 10 percent of cases are hereditary.

There is no cure for ALS and there is only one FDA-approved drug treatment, which has just a small effect in slowing disease progression and increasing survival.

Even though myelin loss has not previously been thought to occur in the gray matter, a region in the brain where neurons process information, the researchers in the new study found in ALS patients a significant loss of myelin in one of every three samples of human tissue taken from the brain's gray matter, suggesting that the oligodendrocytes were abnormal. It isn't clear if the oligodendrocytes that form this myelin in the gray matter play a different role than in white matter -- the region in the brain where signals are relayed.

The findings further suggest that clues to the treatment of other diseases long believed to be focused in the brain's gray matter -- such as Alzheimer's disease, Huntington's disease and Parkinson's disease -- may be informed by studies of diseases of the white matter, such as multiple sclerosis (MS). Bergles says ALS and MS researchers never really thought their diseases had much in common before.

Oligodendrocytes have been under intense scrutiny in MS, Bergles says. In MS, the disease over time can transform from a remitting-relapsing form -- in which myelin is attacked but then is regenerated when existing progenitors create new oligodendrocytes to re-form myelin -- to a more chronic stage in which oligodendrocytes are no longer regenerated. MS researchers are working to identify new ways to induce the creation of new oligodendrocytes and improve their survival. "It's possible that we may be able to dovetail with some of the same therapeutics to slow the progression of ALS," Bergles says.

Other Johns Hopkins researchers involved in the study include Shin H. Kang, Ph.D.; Ying Li, Ph.D.; Ileana Lorenzini, M.S.; and Lyle Ostrow, M.D., Ph.D.

This research was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health's National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NS 051509), the ALS Association, P2ALS, the Robert Packard Center for ALS Research at Johns Hopkins and the Brain Science Institute.

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Johns Hopkins Medicine, via Newswise.

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


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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/oRzxChOcUuo/130331165048.htm

colcannon dystonia tourettes rosie o donnell soda bread recipe vanderbilt evan mathis

Caroline Kennedy returns to poetry for 10th book

In this Tuesday, March 26, 2013 photo, Caroline Kennedy flips through her new book "Poems to Learn by Heart" during an interview with The Associated Press in New York. Kennedy's 10th and latest book extols the value of learning poems by heart. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

In this Tuesday, March 26, 2013 photo, Caroline Kennedy flips through her new book "Poems to Learn by Heart" during an interview with The Associated Press in New York. Kennedy's 10th and latest book extols the value of learning poems by heart. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

In this Tuesday, March 26, 2013 photo, Caroline Kennedy speaks during an interview with The Associated Press in New York. Kennedy's 10th and latest book extols the value of learning poems by heart. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

In this Tuesday, March 26, 2013 photo, copies of Caroline Kennedy's new book "Poems to Learn by Heart" sit on display during an interview with The Associated Press in New York. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

In this Tuesday, March 26, 2013 photo, Caroline Kennedy smiles during an interview with The Associated Press in New York. Kennedy's 10th and latest book extols the value of learning poems by heart. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

(AP) ? Beginning work a few years ago on her latest book, an anthology of poems for young people, Caroline Kennedy found herself looking through one of her mother's scrapbooks. She burst into laughter, she says, as she came across a poem that her brother John, as a youngster, had picked out and copied as a gift to their poetry-loving mom.

"Willie with a thirst for gore, Nailed his sister to the door," went the poem, by an unknown author. "Mother said with humor quaint, 'Careful, Willie, don't scratch the paint!'"

The poem "brought back memories of our relationship," Kennedy told a bookstore audience this week. "I laughed so hard."

But for Kennedy, now 55 and a mother of three grown children, there's a deeper meaning to that irreverent ditty. Poetry was a central part of her home life growing up. She and John regularly copied out and illustrated poems for their mother, Jackie, upon birthdays and Mother's Days. Sometimes, they'd recite them too, "if we were feeling competitive." And at family gatherings with their grandmother, there were frequent challenges to recite Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's famous (and famously lengthy) "Paul Revere's Ride." Only Uncle Ted, it seems, was able to recite it in its entirety.

Now, with her 10th book, Kennedy wants to share with young readers the love for the written word that she feels her poetry-filled childhood helped instill in her (even though her own son, she quips, hates reading and only likes two poems.) Hence the title: "Poems to Learn By Heart."

"It was a combination of remembering my own childhood and thinking about gifts I'd been given," she said in an interview last week at her husband's downtown Manhattan design firm, explaining the genesis of the latest book. "And working in schools and seeing the role that poetry can play in kids' lives."

It's also an effort to promote literacy, a cause Kennedy has supported in a number of ways. "Fourteen percent of American adults can't read," Kennedy says. "It's a slow-motion disaster." She believes poetry can help. "Kids need a way in," she says, "and reading needs to be fun. Poetry can give them that ? with the current emphasis on poetry slams, and these other open mic events. That's actually why I think poetry has a chance."

Kennedy's current book ? a collection of poems from various authors, with introductions by her to each section, and vivid illustrations by John J Muth ? is her fourth to focus on poetry. Her earlier books, especially "The Best Loved Poems of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis," have been huge sellers, pulling in numbers unheard of for poetry anthologies.

"She's committed to becoming an advocate for the written word and poetry in particular," says Gretchen Young, who edited all of Kennedy's poetry books at Hyperion, working with the author to cull down huge numbers of beloved poems. "And she knows she can do that."

As to what else Kennedy can do with her high profile ? and the unique and powerful celebrity status she's held since she was a little girl in the Kennedy White House ? that is a question that people never cease to ask. The latest rumor has her up for an ambassadorship, perhaps to Japan, perhaps to Canada. Asked about those rumors during a recent TV appearance, she responded with typical restraint: "I'd love to serve in any way." She added that she hadn't been asked yet, and her response is still "No comment."

But many expect Kennedy, who considered seeking an appointment to the Senate from New York in 2009 but then withdrew her name from contention amid a flurry of publicity, to take up some high-profile position in the near future. She was an important and avid supporter of President Barack Obama, both in the 2008 and the 2012 elections.

"I'm really glad he's president," she says now when asked how he's doing, giving him high marks particularly in the field of education. "He can't do all the things he'd like to. We have a lot of problems. That's why I want young people to get engaged."

For now, though, Kennedy is making her mark in different ways. She is president of the John F. Kennedy Library Association, and in May will present the Profile in Courage award to former Arizona congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords. She still participates in fundraising activities for the New York City public schools, and is joining Laura Bush and Lynda Bird Johnson Robb to help the Library of Congress promote literacy through a new awards program, along with other authors, publishers and scholars.

Another pet project: Libraries, which she says are still critical places for young people to learn analytical skills. She's the honorary chair of National Library Week next month. "I'm into things that are dying out," she quips, then adds that actually they're not: "My son goes to the library all the time (at college.) There's a lot more socializing at the library than you think."

And she hints that she'll be writing other books, though not on poetry. "I think I'm pretty much done with the poetry books," she says. "I haven't figured out the next thing yet."

In any case, her attention to poetry has been a boon for all poets, says Stephen Young, program director at the Poetry Foundation, based in Chicago. "Selling poetry is, for most poets, a challenge," Young says. "It certainly helps when someone like Caroline Kennedy, who has an earnest and genuine interest in poetry, puts together these anthologies."

And while many might think that in this world of tweets and texts, the art of poetry is slowly dying out, the truth is that it seems to be on the upswing among young people, Young says ? partly because of poetry slams and the like, but also due to the Internet. "People can read AND listen to poems on the Web," Young notes.

And clearly, kids like to recite out loud. Along with the National Endowment for the Arts, the poetry foundation sponsors Poetry Out Loud, a contest similar to the National Spelling Bee. In 2006, there were 40,000 participants. This year's contest, which will hold its finals in Washington, D.C., in April, has 375,000, Young says.

It all speaks, in his view, to the fact that "poems are meant to be shared." Kennedy says this too; In her book, along with more famous poems, she includes "Voices Rising," a collaborative poem by students on the "slam team" at DreamYard Prep, a Bronx school Kennedy became familiar with in her work with public schools. Those students contributed ideas to the book, and three of them recited their poem together at Kennedy's kickoff reading last week at Barnes & Noble in New York.

Speaking of young people, Kennedy asked each of her own three kids ? Rose and Tatiana, who have finished college, and Jack, who is still there ? to contribute a favorite poem to her new book. (Tatiana, the "bookworm" according to her mother, translated a poem from Ovid's Metamorphoses, from the original Latin.) But she herself has trouble picking her favorite.

Asked by an audience member at her book reading to do just that, though, she settled on "Don't Worry if Your Job is Small."

"Don't worry if your job is small, and your rewards are few," it says.

"Remember that the mighty oak, was once a nut like you."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-03-31-Caroline%20Kennedy-Book/id-3907e9b7e33c475d8edbc4577292c361

Saanvi Venna vikings Colin Powell Tyrann Mathieu noaa Jessica Ridgeway ipad mini

Easy Cooking Tips: Energy Drinks and Food Bars - Critical Information

By Kimrose Pianote

There are scads of incompatible information regarding energy drinks and food bars. One explanation for this is because there are hundreds of brands that put generic names to use for their merchandise. The term "energy drink" or "energy bar" can be used by any individual however this can have a variety of meanings. This means you need to vigilantly look over each product and determine what it's made out of. To aid you in finding your way through the energy drinks and food bars of today's marketplace, we'll be presenting you with some options for determining what is reality and what is hype.

Be aware of where the energy in these drinks really comes from, the caffeine content. This is, of course, the same stimulant that motivates people all over the world to drink coffee or tea in the morning and throughout the day. What you'll find in these energy drinks is an exacerbated amount of caffeine when compared with a cup of coffee. Drinking energy drinks to quench your thirst results in your consuming greater amounts of them in a shorter amount of time as you gulp them down quickly. This alone can have some severe side effects associated with too much caffeine such as anxiety, insomnia, headaches, and even heart troubles. So you may want to return to the old fashioned way of getting your caffeine and switch to plain water, or at least a caffeine-free beverage when you exercise.

Energy or food bars can be healthy, or they can be little more than sugar-filled candy bars given a healthier label. Although, the reality is, you can just as easily eat foods that are parallel to a healthy energy bar without purchasing these packaged products. The optimal food bars come packed with dense foods such as nuts, seeds and fruits, so if you get into a pattern of eating these foods for snacks, you can save money and get the same benefits. Healthy trail mixes are a great snack choice, as long as they're not chocked full of chocolate candy or additional junk foods that are now often slinked into trail mixes. The fitting food bars can be healthy, yet you can also seek out the equivalent without spending money on them.

If you're looking for a healthy energy drink that has a moderate amount of caffeine and no artificial ingredients, why not drink green or black tea? Besides having a reduced amount of caffeine in comparison to coffee or other energy drinks, tea has a lot of antioxidants and is a milder option for maintaining your alertness. You can consume tea at either a hot or cold temperature, although you should be aware of high sugar contents when buying bottled iced tea from a store. Even coffee, when you don't add a ton of mild or sweetener is better for you than most energy drinks. The most excellent way to drink coffee is black, and darker roasts, and if at all possible organic are higher in antioxidants and typically lower in caffeine. Coffee and tea are energy drinks where you are least know what it is you are drinking.

You don't want to cause dehydration by consuming energy drinks during exercise. Most energy drinks are high in calories and the sugar in them is a natural dehydrator so it's best to avoid them during exercise. Instead consider relying on water instead to keep you hydrated. You may find various thirst quenchers or waters with added sugars available on the market today but these are to be avoided as well. So stick to basic flat tasteless water for best energy drink out there. Energy drinks and food bars as you can see, require forethought and good judgment. Since most companies are not concerned with your wellbeing so much as their own deep pockets it's important that you be aware of those that are really good for you and not just listen to all the hyped up advertising. With so many energy drinks available you must find out which ones really are good and which are more of a junk food in a "healthy package".



About the Author:


Kimrose Pianote is a well-known author, She has been writing different blogs on different topics like health,nutrition,supplements etc . Checkout her article on mlm success and on network marketing success plans

By Kimrose Pianote

There are scads of incompatible information regarding energy drinks and food bars. One explanation for this is because there are hundreds of brands that put generic names to use for their merchandise. The term "energy drink" or "energy bar" can be used by any individual however this can have a variety of meanings. This means you need to vigilantly look over each product and determine what it's made out of. To aid you in finding your way through the energy drinks and food bars of today's marketplace, we'll be presenting you with some options for determining what is reality and what is hype.

Be aware of where the energy in these drinks really comes from, the caffeine content. This is, of course, the same stimulant that motivates people all over the world to drink coffee or tea in the morning and throughout the day. What you'll find in these energy drinks is an exacerbated amount of caffeine when compared with a cup of coffee. Drinking energy drinks to quench your thirst results in your consuming greater amounts of them in a shorter amount of time as you gulp them down quickly. This alone can have some severe side effects associated with too much caffeine such as anxiety, insomnia, headaches, and even heart troubles. So you may want to return to the old fashioned way of getting your caffeine and switch to plain water, or at least a caffeine-free beverage when you exercise.

Energy or food bars can be healthy, or they can be little more than sugar-filled candy bars given a healthier label. Although, the reality is, you can just as easily eat foods that are parallel to a healthy energy bar without purchasing these packaged products. The optimal food bars come packed with dense foods such as nuts, seeds and fruits, so if you get into a pattern of eating these foods for snacks, you can save money and get the same benefits. Healthy trail mixes are a great snack choice, as long as they're not chocked full of chocolate candy or additional junk foods that are now often slinked into trail mixes. The fitting food bars can be healthy, yet you can also seek out the equivalent without spending money on them.

If you're looking for a healthy energy drink that has a moderate amount of caffeine and no artificial ingredients, why not drink green or black tea? Besides having a reduced amount of caffeine in comparison to coffee or other energy drinks, tea has a lot of antioxidants and is a milder option for maintaining your alertness. You can consume tea at either a hot or cold temperature, although you should be aware of high sugar contents when buying bottled iced tea from a store. Even coffee, when you don't add a ton of mild or sweetener is better for you than most energy drinks. The most excellent way to drink coffee is black, and darker roasts, and if at all possible organic are higher in antioxidants and typically lower in caffeine. Coffee and tea are energy drinks where you are least know what it is you are drinking.

You don't want to cause dehydration by consuming energy drinks during exercise. Most energy drinks are high in calories and the sugar in them is a natural dehydrator so it's best to avoid them during exercise. Instead consider relying on water instead to keep you hydrated. You may find various thirst quenchers or waters with added sugars available on the market today but these are to be avoided as well. So stick to basic flat tasteless water for best energy drink out there. Energy drinks and food bars as you can see, require forethought and good judgment. Since most companies are not concerned with your wellbeing so much as their own deep pockets it's important that you be aware of those that are really good for you and not just listen to all the hyped up advertising. With so many energy drinks available you must find out which ones really are good and which are more of a junk food in a "healthy package".



About the Author:


Kimrose Pianote is a well-known author, She has been writing different blogs on different topics like health,nutrition,supplements etc . Checkout her article on mlm success and on network marketing success plans

Source: http://easycookingtips4u.blogspot.com/2013/03/energy-drinks-and-food-bars-critical.html

passover Florida Gulf Coast University Phil Spector Aaron Craft school closings powerball ariana grande

Airbnb founder wants you to open your doors to strangers ? and let them sleep over

By Meena Duerson, TODAY

Brian Chesky may not yet be a household name, but his home-away-from-home site is on the verge of becoming one.

The 30-year-old is the founder of Airbnb, a website that lets you turn your home into a pseudo-hotel, renting it out to business or vacation travelers on a budget?looking to find a couch, room, or even a whole house to stay in.

The idea, which may sound crazy to some, has taken off since Chesky started the company five years ago: 300,000 people have rented out their homes on the site, and 4?million travelers have used it to find a place to stay in locations around the world.

He is seen as one of the driving forces in the new and rapidly expanding "sharing economy," in which more and more businesses are popping up based on the idea that people can share their resources. There are now a litany of?startups?based on this notion, from ride-sharing to office-sharing, and even pet-sharing.

"The stuff that matters in life is no longer stuff," he told TODAY. "It's other people. It's relationships. It's experience."

Chesky came up with the idea for Airbnb when he was short on rent money. "I have $1000 in the bank. The rent for our apartment is $1150," he recalled, of the moment the light bulb went off five years ago. "I have a basic math problem."

He and his roommate came up with the solution to turn their home into a bed and breakfast, renting out the living room and three air mattresses to visitors attending a conference in town ? and Airbnb was born.

"My mom just thought it was crazy," Chesky said.

And while Chesky says his company's success did not come as quickly as he originally anticipated, Forbes now estimates AirBnb's net worth is between $1.5 and $2.5 billion dollars. Those worried about the risks of turning over their homes to strangers can find reassurance in the company's million dollar insurance policy against theft or damage.

The San Francisco-based Chesky now lives couch-to-couch, jumping from one Airbnb property to another to mimic the experience of his users, and to get their feedback.?

"The American dream, what we were taught was, grow up, own a car, own a house," he said. "I think that dream's completely changing. We were taught to keep up with the Joneses. Now we're sharing with the Joneses."

As someone "On the Verge," we asked Brian Chesky for his picks on the next big things: Here's what?he?thinks is on the verge:

Music:?"This is the hardest question. ?I think the next big thing in music, and it's kind of because I come from the tech industry, is actually, I think it's the platform...Spotify is incredibly interesting. I think the platform is becoming the star."

App:?"One app I?really like?is Summly.?It's this entrepreneur, I think he's, like, 18 years old...And what he basically developed was a technology where you could take a full article, and the technology condenses it to three sentences...So you can read an entire newspaper in five minutes."?(Editors note: Just days after this interview was conducted, 17-year-old Nick D'Aloisio sold Summly to Yahoo for millions of dollars,?and was featured on TODAY.)

TV:?"For the longest time, I didn't have a television, but thank God the iPad came, and I discovered amazing shows.? I just finished watching?House of Cards.? That was really cool. ?I actually think "House of Cards"?is super interesting, because it breaks down the format...I think what I really love is experimentation."

Food:?"I think the next big thing in food is already kind of happening in certain cities.? It's about being locally sourced. We say everything in Airbnb's gotta be local...and it's gotta be personal, and the same thing with food.? So you're starting to see farmer's markets. ?Right now, though, it's mostly for people that are kind of upper-middle class or upper class in cities that are able to eat locally sourced food, but that's where we used to eat...I think we'll go back to that."

What he'd bet on as 'the next big thing':?"A?much more democratized, cheaper way to fly...I would basically want that and invest in an alternative transportation system that can connect continents."

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653351/s/2a22431b/l/0Ltodaynews0Btoday0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A30C290C1750A93410Eairbnb0Efounder0Ewants0Eyou0Eto0Eopen0Eyour0Edoors0Eto0Estrangers0Eand0Elet0Ethem0Esleep0Eover0Dlite/story01.htm

dexter dexter ny times paul mccartney Sandy Hook Victims new york times columbine

Kenyan separatists deny behind deadly resort attack

By Joseph Akwiri

MOMBASA, Kenya (Reuters) - A Kenyan separatist movement denied on Friday accusations by the authorities that it was behind a raid in a coastal resort that killed eight people, although it said former members may have been involved.

Armed police officers shot dead six attackers and two policemen were killed in Thursday's early morning raid on a casino popular with tourists in Malindi. Officials blamed the banned Mombasa Republican Council (MRC).

A series of attacks blamed on the movement have damaged prospects for growth and investment along Kenya's coast, a major tourist draw, and in Mombasa, an economically vital port city.

"Police should stop using the MRC as a scapegoat for failing to protect Kenyans," senior MRC member Omar Bebo told Reuters. He said that criminal gangs "have taken advantage of our sour relationship with government to cause trouble".

"Some of these gangs are formed by splinter groups of youths who decamped from the MRC because we rejected their call to engage in violence. Those are the people police should be chasing," he said by telephone.

The MRC feeds off local discontent largely based on long-held grievances over land and frustration at the perceived economic marginalisation of the coast by the central government.

Police suspected the group targeted the Italian-owned casino in order to steal cash to fund their activities. Four suspects were arrested and dozens of others fled.

"We know we have some youth who decided to ignore our call for peace, and might also be involved in these attacks, but we told them they are on their own," Omar said. "MRC is not responsible for their actions, and we have disowned them."

On Thursday night police increased security around a police station in Kilifi, west of Mombasa, another MRC stronghold, saying they received reports that MRC youths planned a raid.

Beatrice Gachago, area police chief, told Reuters that she had ordered more night patrols after receiving the intelligence reports. "We are not taking anything for granted," she said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kenyan-separatists-deny-behind-deadly-resort-attack-122635403.html

cispa space shuttle new york courtney upshaw catch me if you can delmon young arrested the raven the raven

Saturday, March 30, 2013

New metabolite-based diagnostic test could help detect pancreatic cancer early

New metabolite-based diagnostic test could help detect pancreatic cancer early [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 29-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Jeremy Moore
jeremy.moore@aacr.org
215-446-7155
American Association for Cancer Research

PHILADELPHIA A new diagnostic test that uses a scientific technique known as metabolomic analysis may be a safe and easy screening method that could improve the prognosis of patients with pancreatic cancer through earlier detection.

Researchers examined the utility of metabolomic analysis as a diagnostic method for pancreatic cancer and then validated the new approach, according to study results published in Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research.

"Although surgical resection can be a curative treatment for pancreatic cancer, more than 80 percent of patients with pancreatic cancer have a locally advanced or metastatic tumor that is unresectable at the time of detection," said Masaru Yoshida, M.D., Ph.D., associate professor and chief of the Division of Metabolomics Research at Kobe University Graduate School of Medicine in Kobe, Japan. "Conventional examinations using blood, imaging and endoscopy are not appropriate for pancreatic cancer screening and early detection, so a novel screening and diagnostic method for pancreatic cancer is urgently required."

Using gas chromatography mass spectrometry, the researchers measured the levels of metabolites in the blood of patients with pancreatic cancer, patients with chronic pancreatitis and healthy volunteers. They randomly assigned 43 patients with pancreatic cancer and 42 healthy volunteers to a training set and 42 patients with pancreatic cancer and 41 healthy volunteers to a validation set. They included all 23 patients with chronic pancreatitis in the validation set.

Analysis of the metabolomic data generated from the training set indicated that levels of 18 metabolites were significantly different in the blood of patients with pancreatic cancer compared with the healthy volunteers. Further investigation led the researchers to develop a method to predict a pancreatic cancer diagnosis using assessment of the levels of just four metabolites. In the training set, the approach demonstrated 86 percent sensitivity and 88.1 percent specificity. When tested again in the validation set, which included patients with chronic pancreatitis, the method demonstrated 71.4 percent sensitivity and 78.1 percent specificity.

"Our diagnostic approach using serum metabolomics possessed higher accuracy than conventional tumor markers, especially at detecting the patients with pancreatic cancer in the cohort that included the patients with chronic pancreatitis," Yoshida said. "This novel diagnostic approach, which is safe and easy to apply as a screening method, is expected to improve the prognosis of patients with pancreatic cancer by detecting their cancers early, when still in a resectable and curable state."

###

Follow the AACR on Twitter: @aacr

Follow the AACR on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/aacr.org

About the American Association for Cancer Research

Founded in 1907, the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) is the world's first and largest professional organization dedicated to advancing cancer research and its mission to prevent and cure cancer. AACR membership includes more than 34,000 laboratory, translational and clinical researchers; population scientists; other health care professionals; and cancer advocates residing in more than 90 countries. The AACR marshals the full spectrum of expertise of the cancer community to accelerate progress in the prevention, biology, diagnosis and treatment of cancer by annually convening more than 20 conferences and educational workshops, the largest of which is the AACR Annual Meeting with more than 17,000 attendees. In addition, the AACR publishes eight peer-reviewed scientific journals and a magazine for cancer survivors, patients and their caregivers. The AACR funds meritorious research directly as well as in cooperation with numerous cancer organizations. As the scientific partner of Stand Up To Cancer, the AACR provides expert peer review, grants administration and scientific oversight of team science and individual grants in cancer research that have the potential for near-term patient benefit. The AACR actively communicates with legislators and policymakers about the value of cancer research and related biomedical science in saving lives from cancer. For more information about the AACR, visit http://www.AACR.org.


[ 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.


New metabolite-based diagnostic test could help detect pancreatic cancer early [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 29-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Jeremy Moore
jeremy.moore@aacr.org
215-446-7155
American Association for Cancer Research

PHILADELPHIA A new diagnostic test that uses a scientific technique known as metabolomic analysis may be a safe and easy screening method that could improve the prognosis of patients with pancreatic cancer through earlier detection.

Researchers examined the utility of metabolomic analysis as a diagnostic method for pancreatic cancer and then validated the new approach, according to study results published in Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research.

"Although surgical resection can be a curative treatment for pancreatic cancer, more than 80 percent of patients with pancreatic cancer have a locally advanced or metastatic tumor that is unresectable at the time of detection," said Masaru Yoshida, M.D., Ph.D., associate professor and chief of the Division of Metabolomics Research at Kobe University Graduate School of Medicine in Kobe, Japan. "Conventional examinations using blood, imaging and endoscopy are not appropriate for pancreatic cancer screening and early detection, so a novel screening and diagnostic method for pancreatic cancer is urgently required."

Using gas chromatography mass spectrometry, the researchers measured the levels of metabolites in the blood of patients with pancreatic cancer, patients with chronic pancreatitis and healthy volunteers. They randomly assigned 43 patients with pancreatic cancer and 42 healthy volunteers to a training set and 42 patients with pancreatic cancer and 41 healthy volunteers to a validation set. They included all 23 patients with chronic pancreatitis in the validation set.

Analysis of the metabolomic data generated from the training set indicated that levels of 18 metabolites were significantly different in the blood of patients with pancreatic cancer compared with the healthy volunteers. Further investigation led the researchers to develop a method to predict a pancreatic cancer diagnosis using assessment of the levels of just four metabolites. In the training set, the approach demonstrated 86 percent sensitivity and 88.1 percent specificity. When tested again in the validation set, which included patients with chronic pancreatitis, the method demonstrated 71.4 percent sensitivity and 78.1 percent specificity.

"Our diagnostic approach using serum metabolomics possessed higher accuracy than conventional tumor markers, especially at detecting the patients with pancreatic cancer in the cohort that included the patients with chronic pancreatitis," Yoshida said. "This novel diagnostic approach, which is safe and easy to apply as a screening method, is expected to improve the prognosis of patients with pancreatic cancer by detecting their cancers early, when still in a resectable and curable state."

###

Follow the AACR on Twitter: @aacr

Follow the AACR on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/aacr.org

About the American Association for Cancer Research

Founded in 1907, the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) is the world's first and largest professional organization dedicated to advancing cancer research and its mission to prevent and cure cancer. AACR membership includes more than 34,000 laboratory, translational and clinical researchers; population scientists; other health care professionals; and cancer advocates residing in more than 90 countries. The AACR marshals the full spectrum of expertise of the cancer community to accelerate progress in the prevention, biology, diagnosis and treatment of cancer by annually convening more than 20 conferences and educational workshops, the largest of which is the AACR Annual Meeting with more than 17,000 attendees. In addition, the AACR publishes eight peer-reviewed scientific journals and a magazine for cancer survivors, patients and their caregivers. The AACR funds meritorious research directly as well as in cooperation with numerous cancer organizations. As the scientific partner of Stand Up To Cancer, the AACR provides expert peer review, grants administration and scientific oversight of team science and individual grants in cancer research that have the potential for near-term patient benefit. The AACR actively communicates with legislators and policymakers about the value of cancer research and related biomedical science in saving lives from cancer. For more information about the AACR, visit http://www.AACR.org.


[ 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/aafc-nmd032513.php

Sanya Richards Ross decathlon Honey Boo Boo Child marilyn monroe Nathan Adrian London 2012 Synchronized Swimming London 2012 hurdles

Art 7 Entertainment: A To Z Of Well-Known Magicians


There are many well-known, skilled magicians that you might not know about because even though they're well known, they haven't reached magician cult status. Most people know about the magician David Copperfield, but there are many more magicians equally skilled. So, take a moment to learn about other wizards of magic and expand your knowledge about magicians.

Curtis Adams: A magician who appeared at the age of 16 in the Young Magicians Showcase featured on Fox Television. He was born on October 12, 1984 and was one of the youngest magicians to perform in Reno, Nevada casinos.

Criss Angel: The only three-time magician winner of the Merlin Award from the International Society of Magicians. Angel is a skilled magician who did stunts like lying on a bed of nails while a Hummer drove over him.

Ed Balducci: A street magician who died in 1988 at the age of 82. He is a magician known for his gimmick-free trick of visibly rising several inches from the ground with his back turned to his audience.

Derren Brown: A British magician who practiced traditional close-up magic in the 1990s. Brown's claim as a magician is his "mind-reading" act. Brown claims aliens abducted him.

Cardini: Richard "Cardini" Pitchford was a magician with almost 50 years of performing tricks and illusions. He's one of the world's most imitated magicians, but no one to date has ever been able to completely duplicate his tricks. He was a magician known for his sleight of hand. Items were forever appearing and disappearing from his hands. He died in 1973.

Tommy Cooper: A magician and comedian known who was a member of the Magic Circle until his death in 1984. He collapsed while doing a live magician act that became his last.

Paul Daniels: A currently retired British magician who in 1983 became the first magician to ever receive the prestigious Magician of the Year Award by the Hollywood Academy of Magical Arts.

S.W. Erndase: A magician and author whose real identity has never been figured out. Erndase is a magician who wrote a book in 1902 about card playing tricks.

Ching Ling Foo: The first Asian magician to achieve fame. He was a magician who did tricks like breathing fire and pulling a fifteen-foot pole from his mouth. He died in 1922.

Lennart Green: A magician known for his close-up card tricks. In 1991 this magician became the world champion of in close-up card magic.

Paul Harris: A magician known for pulling coins from mirrors. Many claim he is a magician with skills like a combination of Copperfield and Henning.

Scott Interrante: An American magician specializing in escape-artist tricks. He won awards from the International Brotherhood of Magicians.

Ricky Jay: A magician listed in the Guinness Book of Records as throwing a playing card 190 feet at 90 miles per hour.

Fred Kaps: A Dutch magician who died in 1980. He is a magician known for making a saltshaker create an endless supply of salt.

Juan Tamariz: A Spanish magician who in 1971 founded a school that has trained generations of Spanish magicians.

Dia Vernon: This Canadian magician was born in 1894 as David Frederick Wingfield Verner. This magician, who died in 1992, is known for fooling Houdini with one of his card tricks.

Paul Zenon: A British street magician who also performed in the bars and pubs in the U.K. This magician has written three books about magic, the most recent published in 2005.


Source: http://art7entertainment.blogspot.com/2013/03/a-to-z-of-well-known-magicians.html

brooklyn nets may day protests tony nominations 2012 facebook organ donor jessica simpson gives birth carrie underwood blown away chk

Friday, March 29, 2013

Americans oppose paying for storm-ravaged beaches

WASHINGTON (AP) ? More than 4 out of 5 Americans want to prepare now for rising seas and stronger storms from climate change, a new national survey says. But most are unwilling to keep spending money to restore and protect stricken beaches.

The poll by Stanford University released Thursday found that only 1 in 3 people favored the government spending millions to construct big sea walls, replenish beaches or pay people to leave the coast.

This was the first time a large national poll looked at how Americans feel about adapting to the changes brought on by global warming, said survey director Jon Krosnick, a professor of political science and psychology at Stanford.

The more indirect options the majority preferred were making sure new buildings were stronger and reducing future coastal development. New building codes rated the highest with 62 percent of those surveyed favoring it.

Three in 5 people want those who are directly affected by rising seas to pay for protection, rather than all taxpayers.

Krosnick said the low favorability of sea walls and sand replenishment "reflect the public's fatalistic sense that it's more realistic to just give up the beach than to try to save it when other storms in the future will just wash it away again."

The nationally representative survey of 1,174 Americans conducted online by GfK Custom Research has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.9 percentage points.

University of Miami geology professor Harold Wanless, who wasn't involved in the survey, said he was at a Miami Beach meeting on Thursday with business and political leaders on how to try to keep from losing their "hugely expensive" land. But they are afraid of spending money in vain attempts that won't work.

There are three ways the public can deal with the effects of rising seas on beaches, said coastal geology professor S. Jeffress Williams of the University of Hawaii. He is an expert on sea level rise and methods of adapting to it. You can "hold the line" with expensive sea walls, retreat and leave the beach, or compromise with sand dunes and beach replenishing.

Sand dunes helped protect the New Jersey town of Seaside Park more than its dune-less neighbor Seaside Heights when Superstorm Sandy hit last fall, said Laurie Mcgilvray, a government coastline science expert.

Williams said the public's attitude about not doing much to protect current beach development would be fine if it were 100 years ago. "But we've got tremendous trillions of dollars of a tourist economy that depends on the coast.

"You should expect that if you are going to use the coast, you need to put some money in to maintain it," he said.

But people surveyed said money is an issue.

When it came to the general question of who should pay to protect the coast, 60 percent of the public said it should be paid for by local property owners and businesses, not the general taxpayers. And when it comes to specific solutions, about 80 percent of those surveyed said the money should come from local property taxes, not federal or state income taxes.

Nearly half, 47 percent, said the government should prohibit people from rebuilding structures damaged by storms.

The survey also found that 82 percent of the public believes global warming is already happening. About 3 out of 4 people said rising sea levels caused by global warming is a serious problem.

___

Online:

Stanford study: http://stanford.io/16kTvKo

___

Seth Borenstein can be followed at http://twitter.com/borenbears

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/americans-oppose-paying-storm-ravaged-beaches-223109477.html

trayvon martin obama care miss universe canada don draper gallagher madmen james cameron

50 companies apply to explore for oil in Lebanon

BEIRUT (AP) ? Lebanon's Energy Ministry says 50 companies have participated in a pre-qualification process to win licenses for oil and gas work off the Lebanese coast.

The ministry says the companies include Chevron and Exxon Mobil Corp. from the United States and Royal Dutch Shell PLC.

Lebanon is a resource-poor nation and any finds could help it pay off what is one of the highest debt rates in the world.

The names of winning companies will be announced on April. 18.

Recent Israeli discoveries of oil and gas have raised tensions between Lebanon and neighboring Israel, which are in a state of war. Both countries claim a small maritime area of 850 square kilometers (328 square miles) in the Mediterranean.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/50-companies-apply-explore-oil-lebanon-152222471--finance.html

george washington russell westbrook horsetail falls ice t president day new york knicks lin

Thursday, March 28, 2013

Who's Afraid Of the Reaper? Death on American TV | GlobalComment

Posted on Wednesday, March 27th, 2013 at 10:11 am

Author: s.e. smith

One of the most critically acclaimed episodes of Joss Whedon?s Buffy the Vampire Slayer was season five?s ?The Body,? about the death of Buffy and Dawn?s mother Joyce. In a television show where death, mysterious happenings, and horror were weekly events, the characters were incapacitated by the very prosaic, natural, and commonplace death of Joyce; it was jarring, startling, and unlike seemingly everything else in the series, totally natural and utterly irreversible.

The episode was shot in a very distinctive style that marked a radical departure from most Buffy episodes; lots of long single takes, no incidental music, and the use of disorienting, awkward framing, dialogue, and effects to remind viewers of the profound sense of displacement and peculiarity that can accompany death. Even as someone lies dead, life is going on around the body, and beyond the bubble of acute grief lie the lives of those who are totally unaffected by it.

In a scene with Anya, a vengeance demon with hundreds of years of experience to rely upon, the character expresses angry confusion at not knowing what to do in the face of a death involving a woman she liked, whom she was close to. Anya grieves for Joyce and for Buffy, knowing that the loss of Joyce marks a profound change in Buffy?s life and wondering how Buffy will cope with it.

It is a quietly stunning, stark, profound episode that critics often agree was one of the best in the series, and one of the best television episodes ever broadcast. While Buffy was often dismissed because of its fantasy bent, ?The Body? demonstrated that the show had the capacity to touch upon very real-world issues, and to do so very well.

And this was not an issue that went away. Joyce?s death had profound repercussions for all the characters on Buffy as they tried to cope with her loss in different ways, from Dawn trying to resurrect her mother to Buffy struggling as the head of the household and suddenly understanding how much Joyce had done for her. Joyce, in her absence, became an important theme, rather than an issue dealt with once and then discarded, never to be addressed again. Revisiting Joyce and acknowledging the hole she left in the lives of the characters became a hallmark of the series, just as the equally ordinary, if shocking, death of Tara became an important catalyst for Willow.

Death on television is not usually dealt with in this manner. For the scores of procedural dramas that revolve around death, where one might imagine that death and an exploration of its aftermath would be an important part of the plot, death is merely another interesting body on the slab, a case for people to solve and move on from. Characters are rarely haunted by deaths, and old cases don?t come up again; the ?murder of the week? model actively shies away from the human side of death, focusing on death-as-entertainment and dehumanising the deceased.

On other shows, death rarely appears at all, and when it does, it typically experiences a short shelf life in terms of being dealt with and discussed on any given episode. A character is briefly remembered and noted, and then other characters move on, and the issue doesn?t come up again. Shows like Grey?s Anatomy, which revel in soapy drama and manage to rack up a body count, still manage to put death firmly in the past: how often do characters think of George, who died in season five, for example?

One of the few programmes to face down the Reaper and talk about it in an unflinching manner was, of course, Six Feet Under, which aired to critical acclaim on HBO. While each episode featured a death of the week and the stories of the dead were typically incidental to the larger story of the series, which was about the human drama of the Fisher family and the people who interacted with them, death was an ever-present ghost in the series right from the first episode, when Nathaniel Fisher died in a traffic accident.

Nathaniel appeared again and again over the course of the series, haunting the characters and living alongside them, marking one of the few cases in which a dead person becomes a character in his own right. Meanwhile, his son Nate fought his own battles with death in the form of the ticking timebomb in his head and the mysterious disappearance and death of his wife Lisa. Death was not an abstract notion in the world of Six Feet Under, and the show?s probing of death dealt not just with the mechanics of death, but with the human aftermath.

This made it, like ?The Body,? rather a standout in the world of US television, where death is very much a taboo topic. While dead bodies are par for the course, death as a more complex emotional and philosophical concept is not something often depicted, and when it is, television often seems to hide from its complexity and reality. Characters tiptoe around the subject, and there?s an intense sense of pressure to wrap it up as quickly as possible rather than allowing the natural progression of grief and the experience of death and dying to occur.

The idea of devoting an entire episode to the death of a character and ripple effect of the death on the characters around that person is almost unknown, and it seems to make viewers deeply unsettled and uncomfortable. Whether they don?t like being reminded of the reality of death, or don?t want to be told that death is a subject that does not lend itself to neat boxes, they attempt to distance themselves from the depiction of death on television, and creators take note of this when developing storylines.

On Dead Like Me, another programme that integrated deaths of the week and a long-term exploration of death, George Lass? struggle with her own death was a constant theme in the series, and one that undoubtedly made viewers uncomfortable. As a dark comedy, Dead Like Me was brilliantly successful, but it also cut close to the bone sometimes as George watched her family move on without her. Pushing Daisies, meanwhile, got around this problem by allowing Charlotte to interact with her aunts again, and both shows were deliberately bright, oversaturated, and funny: when they started to get too scary or sad, they shifted gears and moved away from death as a serious subject.

This short shrift for death reflects a rather dysfunctional attitude towards the topic in the US; death is something that happens to other people, and when it does occur, it?s quickly dealt with and swept up. Few deaths are ambiguous, cause of death is always found, murderers are always tracked down, and people recover quickly from the death of loved ones and family members; on procedural dramas, people never really have a chance to see the long-term effects of death, and on other shows, death is such a fleeting event that the drama creates an unrealistic version of what death, dying, and mourning are like.

Why are creators in the United States so terrified of the reaper? Death, crafted and done well, can be a very powerful and compelling part of a narrative; look at the recurring presence of Lily on Veronica Mars as an example of how death can be artfully woven throughout a series as an everpresent subject that haunts the characters, drives them, and plays a key role in their lives. All of us are going to deal with death at some point in our lives; why the reticence when it comes to admitting that?

Photo licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license.
Attribution: Trish Steel

Source: http://globalcomment.com/whos-afraid-of-the-reaper-death-on-american-tv/

petrino arkansas roy williams matt lauer divine mercy chaplet albert pujols the shining mariano rivera

14 Good Reminders about This Writing Life | Linda Taylor's Blog

One thing about being a graduate student in my 50s is being able to step back into a world that I left behind three decades ago?a world where learning flows around you like the snowflakes that circled around my house this morning. Just circling, spinning, delighting me even though it is March and high time for them to be on their way.

But I digress.

The In Print Festival?A Rousing Success

Being part of the university community means getting to take advantage of learning experiences there for the taking! Ball State InPrint writersjust held its annual In Print Festival?a festival of first books. The writers who come to speak and read are newly published. Fresh off that first experience, they?re eager to go on the road and talk about writing and publishing. They visit in classes. They stand around and talk after the readings. They happily sign books. Sure, maybe other schools bring in the big guns, but I love the fact that BSU supports these folks. And if the two times I?ve attended are any indication, these authors have so much to offer. Coming from a variety of backgrounds with different journeys to that first publication, they are quite an encouragement to up-and-coming writers. The writers this year were Eugene Cross, Marcus Wicker, Elena Passarello, and Sarah Wells.

And 14 Things the Students Learned

Cathy asked the students in her literary citizenship class to?blog about what they learned about writing and publishing from these In Print authors. I?ve been around publishing for?30 years, so I was excited to?see what the 14 students in the class?discovered. I thought some of their insights might be helpful to you, so here follow?14 interesting things?they learned (with accompanying links to their blogs should you want to read more?and you should):

(1) John writes that he wants to open his reading horizons more?to read other people?s work that interests and intrigues him because that will inform his writing and help him find his niche. Good advice for us all.

(2) Michael discovered (beyond some great writing and revising tips) that the writing community is like a family. It is. What a great thing for a new literary citizen to discover!

(3) Jackson brilliantly included book titles in his blog as part of the copy and described his experience, ?Their answers to questions showed me something vital: That Abyss between us and Published Writers is not so vast, is a matter of words.? Deep. And good to know. Before we?re published, that goal seems like the other side of a huge abyss. It?s not.

(4) Austin likes to write in all lower case (saves time I?m sure) and describes?his opportunity to speak with Eugene Cross, having also crossed paths with him at AWP. His take? ?that?s what this is all about, as far as i?m concerned. writing good stories, smiling big, and, every once in a while, covering the tab.? That?s also good advice.

books(5) Rachael described inspiration from Eugene Cross?s book because it is a collection of stories. That can make a book, too! That?s encouraging to those of us who write more short form.

(6) Sarah discovered that ?if you?re always drawn to the same topic, stop fighting it.? Just start writing. Eugene didn?t want to write about his hometown of Erie, PA. But when he stopped fighting it and realized that Erie was what he knew . . . well . . . you know what happened. Elena never thought she?d be writing about the human voice . . . but as a theater major with a great speaking and singing voice . . . well . . . it was a natural.

(7) Marv was involved in advertising this festival and, as part of the invitation, reminded people that going to such festivals is important for being literary citizens. We all need to support one another. I know I?m glad I attended!

(8) Kiley learned to bust out the red pen. ?Marcus Wicker said that revision is all about time, distance, and being ruthless with your work. I feel like revision is the broken hammer in my writing toolbox, so I soak up any tips on it like a sponge.? Ah, a woman after my own heart.

(9) Lenny was inspired by the night of readings and writes that it ?was a breath of fresh air to see three young writers from three different sections of literature that I can keep on my radar and follow their careers as they grow as writers.? Good way to be a literary citizen, Lenny!

(10) Lindsey had some insightful advice for me as an editor: ?Editors should not just edit but also write while they edit. Editors who forget to take the time to write their own work aren?t going to be able to relate to authors or keep up with their story-telling skills. In this world, we have to be able to wear multiple hats at once.? She?s so right. I spent too many years editing and not writing. I need to up my game. Thanks for the encouragement, Lindsey. Editors out there, take note!

(11) Jay is the media/video guy in our class. He?s on a different track and he offers us a new perspective. He helps us writers think beyond advertising by posters to this newfangled thing called video . . . he?s good! We would do well to think about promotion in new ways.

(12) Mo reminds us to read a lot?especially literary journals. Find the ones we like and then submit to them. That?s how we figure out where to submit.

(13) Kayla encourages us to not be afraid of rejection. ?Without rejection there can be no progress. And if that one publishing company or literary magazine rejects you, they?re probably not right for you. Go back, edit, revise, reread, resubmit.? Words we all need to hear because we all face rejection.

(14) Stephanie mentions how contests can be a good way to get our work published. This was a new world for me?discovered since grad school. You can check out some of the lit mag contests here.

There you have it . . . 14 good reminders for all of us.

Like this:

Like Loading...

Source: http://lindaktaylor.wordpress.com/2013/03/27/14-good-reminders-about-this-writing-life/

Christian Bale Sherman Hemsley Olympics Opening Ceremony Katherine Jackson Olympics Opening Ceremony Time paris jackson paris jackson

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

No US male in quarterfinals at Key Biscayne

Tomas Berdych, of the Czech Republic, returns to Sam Querrey during the Sony Open tennis tournament, Tuesday, March 26, 2013, in Key Biscayne, Fla. Berdych won 6-1, 6-1. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

Tomas Berdych, of the Czech Republic, returns to Sam Querrey during the Sony Open tennis tournament, Tuesday, March 26, 2013, in Key Biscayne, Fla. Berdych won 6-1, 6-1. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

Sam Querrey returns to Tomas Berdych, of the Czech Republic, during the Sony Open tennis tournament, Tuesday, March 26, 2013, in Key Biscayne, Fla. Berdych won 6-1, 6-1. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

Sam Querrey wipes his face during a match against Tomas Berdych, of the Czech Republic, at the Sony Open tennis tournament, Tuesday, March 26, 2013, in Key Biscayne, Fla. Berdych won 6-1, 6-1. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

Serena Williams celebrates her 6-3, 7-6(5) win against Li Na, of China, during the Sony Open tennis tournament in Key Biscayne, Fla., Tuesday, March 26, 2013. (AP Photo/Alan Diaz)

Tomas Berdych, of the Czech Republic, reacts after defeating Sam Querrey during the Sony Open tennis tournament, Tuesday, March 26, 2013, in Key Biscayne, Fla. Berdych won 6-1, 6-1. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

(AP) ? As Sam Querrey left the court Tuesday, two youngsters cradling huge stuffed tennis balls leaned over a first-row railing, hoping for an autograph from the highest-ranked American in men's tennis.

Querrey, head down, kept walking. He was gone in a hurry at the Sony Open.

Playing his first tournament as the No. 1 American on the ATP Tour, Querrey lasted only 50 minutes in the fourth round and lost to Tomas Berdych, 6-1, 6-1. His elimination means that for the first time, the 28-year-old tournament will have no American in the men's quarterfinals.

The shutout is the latest sign of declining fortunes for U.S. tennis.

"I guess you could say it's been somewhat of the norm the last couple of years," Querrey said. "It's not like we had guys in the quarters week in, week out."

American results on the women's side have been better lately, thanks mostly to No. 1-ranked Serena Williams. The five-time Key Biscayne champion advanced to Thursday's semifinals and tied the women's record for career victories in the tournament by beating No. 5-seeded Li Na 6-3, 7-6 (5).

While Williams continues to dominate the WTA Tour, last year no American man reached a Grand Slam quarterfinal. The outlook wasn't helped by the retirement of Andy Roddick, whose 2003 U.S. Open championship is the most recent major title by a U.S. male.

Querrey was playing his first tournament as the top American, and he managed his best showing in eight appearances at Key Biscayne, aided by a walkover in the third round. His serve and forehand let him down against Berdych, however. The 6-foot-6 Querrey came into tournament second on the tour in aces this year, but he had only four against Berdych, and made only 39 percent of his first serves.

"Just one of those awful days," Querrey said. "The more you miss, the harder it gets to get the ball in. It just kept getting worse."

No. 2 Andy Murray, the champion in 2009 and runner-up last year, returned to the quarterfinals by beating No. 16 Andreas Seppi 6-2, 6-4. No. 8 Richard Gasquet hit 17 aces, including three in the final tiebreaker, and advanced to his first Key Biscayne quarterfinal by beating No. 10 Nicolas Almagro 6-7 (3), 7-5, 7-6 (3).

No. 3 David Ferrer beat No. 13 Kei Nishikori 6-4, 6-2. Ferrer's next opponent will be unseeded Jurgen Melzer, who rallied past Albert Ramos 2-6, 6-3, 6-3.

Querrey will remain No. 1 in the United States next week and stay close to his current ranking of 20th. Last week he overtook fellow American John Isner, who is ranked 23rd and lost in the third round Monday.

But Querrey, 25, wants more. He has yet to reach a Grand Slam quarterfinal in 24 tries, he's 11-37 against top-10 players, and he has reached only one final since 2010.

He realizes some might see his U.S. ranking as tainted, given the nation's rich tradition of tennis achievement.

"The goal is not to be the No. 1 American," Querrey said. "I want to be one of the best players in the world.

"With this No. 1, I'd feel better if I was ranked higher. If you look at the previous No. 1 Americans, they have all, for the most part, hit the top 10. But I feel like I'm just going to keep getting better and hopefully improving, and hopefully I can hit the top 10 while being the No. 1 American."

Querrey is part of the Davis Cup team that will face Serbia and top-ranked Novak Djokovic in the quarterfinals April 5-7 in Boise, Idaho.

"I know the U.S.," Querrey said. "We get ripped a lot for not having a lot of guys in the top 20. If we were to win a Davis Cup, I think that would silence some people even if we didn't have guys in the top 10 or even a few guys in the top 20."

Or in the quarterfinals.

Williams was the lone U.S. woman to reach the final eight. When she smacked a winner on match point to seal the victory over Li, she jumped for joy cannonball-style, knees high and fist raised.

"I don't usually leap like that in the quarterfinal," Williams said. "But it was just a good shot."

She improved to 59-7 in the tournament. Steffi Graf, another five-time champion, went 59-6.

"I hope to get more," Williams said.

Assured of remaining No. 1 next week, Williams will play Thursday against the winner of the quarterfinal Tuesday night between defending champion Agnieszka Radwanska and No. 30-seeded Kirsten Flipkens.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-03-26-TEN-Key-Biscayne/id-a6fa6e6d69e445fcaed463cc44d9ebdb

HMS Bounty dominion power Heather Clem Con Edison LaGuardia Airport weather radar the weather channel

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Group to support government achieve its renewable energy policy

You Are Here: Home ? General News ? Group to support government achieve its renewable energy policy

Page last updated at Tuesday, March 26, 2013 4:04 AM //

CookstoveThe Ghana Alliance for Clean Cookstoves, had been launched in Accra to support government to achieve its renewable energy policy and climate change programmes.

The Alliance is made up of representatives of civil society (CSO), non-governmental organisations (NGOs), financial institutions, researchers, marketers and donor agencies.

It is aimed at bringing stakeholders together to promote coordination, information sharing, capacity building and develop a thriving local market for the cook stoves sector as well as improving fuel usage.

It is also to increase international awareness and recognition of the positive work achieved in the Ghanaian cook stove sector.

Mr Amagoin Keita, Country Director of the Netherlands Development Organisation (SNV), addressing the members, said it is important for stakeholders to come together to create synergies, reduce multiplication of efforts and enhance improvement in quality and capacity of the sector.

He encouraged the stakeholders to work together towards the development of the clean cook stoves sector and called on them to strengthen national, regional and local alliances to ensure that the programme reaches all the people in Ghana.

Mr Keita noted that to improve the energy efficiency of cooking by reducing exposure to wood and charcoal smoke, the SNV Ghana promotes the use of efficient and clean cook stoves.

Mr Kwabena Otu Danquah of the Energy Commission presented an overview of the cook stoves sector in Ghana and said wood-fuel accounts for over 70 percent of total primary energy supply.

He said the development of the improved cook stoves has the potential to reverse the depletion of the country?s forest resources by minimising the use of wood-fuel which causes diseases while generating employment and enhance technology transfer.

He stated that inadequate access to sufficient and efficient energy had several negative effects on livelihoods and deepens the poverty and climate change situation of the country.

Mrs Gifty Tetteh of the Ministry of Energy gave the assurance that government would collaborate with the Alliance to develop a database to reach out to all the stakeholders to reduce carbon emissions from open fires that affects the health of women.

Mr Lovans Owusu-Takyi, Coordinating Secretary of the Alliance expressed his appreciation to SNV Ghana, Trees for the Future, an NGO and youth volunteers for the environment for their support in organsing the Alliance.

Source: GNA

Comments

Source: http://www.ghanabusinessnews.com/2013/03/26/group-to-support-government-achieve-its-renewable-energy-policy/

Paul Harvey ihop Sasquatch 2013 super bowl commercials wheres my refund Fast And Furious 6 superbowl ads

Research provides clues to alcohol addiction vulnerability

Mar. 25, 2013 ? A Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center team studying alcohol addiction has new research that might shed light on why some drinkers are more susceptible to addiction than others.

Jeff Weiner, Ph.D., professor of physiology and pharmacology at Wake Forest Baptist, and colleagues used an animal model to look at the early stages of the addiction process and focused on how individual animals responded to alcohol. Their findings may lead not only to a better understanding of addiction, but to the development of better drugs to treat the disease as well, Weiner said.

"We know that some people are much more vulnerable to alcoholism than others, just like some people have a vulnerability to cancer or heart disease," Weiner said. "We don't have a good understanding of what causes this vulnerability, and that's a big question. But if we can figure it out, we may be able to better identify people at risk, as well as gain important clues to help develop better drugs to treat the disease."

The findings are published in the March 13 issue of the Journal of Neuroscience. Weiner, who directs the Translational Studies on Early-Life Stress and Vulnerability to Alcohol Addiction project at Wake Forest Baptist, said the study protocol was developed by the first author of the paper, Karina Abrahao, a graduate student visiting from the collaborative lab of Sougza-Formigoni, Ph.D, of the Department of Psychobiology at the Federal University of Sao Paulo, Brazil.

Weiner said the study model focused on how individual animals responded to alcohol. Typically, when a drug like alcohol is given to a mouse every day, the way the animals respond increases -- they become more stimulated and run around more. "In high doses, alcohol is a depressant, but in low doses, it can have a mellowing effect that results in greater activity," he said. "Those low dose effects tend to increase over time and this increase in activity in response to repeated alcohol exposure is called locomotor sensitization."

Prior studies with other drugs, such as cocaine and amphetamine, have suggested that animals that show the greatest increases in locomotor sensitization are also the animals most likely to seek out or consume these drugs. However, the relationship between locomotor sensitization and vulnerability to high levels of alcohol drinking is not as well established, Weiner said.

Usually when researchers are studying a drug, they give it to one test group while the other group gets a control solution, and then they look for behavioral differences between the two, Weiner said. But in this study, the researchers focused on individual differences in how each animal responded to the alcohol. A control group received a saline injection while another was injected with the same amount of alcohol every day for three weeks. Weiner said they used mice bred to be genetically variable like humans to make the research more relevant.

"We found large variations in the development of locomotor sensitization to alcohol in these mice, with some showing robust sensitization and others showing no more of a change in locomotor activity than control mice given daily saline injections," Weiner said. "Surprisingly, when all of the alcohol-exposed mice were given an opportunity to voluntarily drink alcohol, those that had developed sensitization drank more than those that did not. In fact, the alcohol-treated mice that failed to develop sensitization drank no more alcohol than the saline-treated control group."

The authors also conducted a series of neurobiological studies and discovered that mice that showed robust locomotor sensitization had deficits in a form of brain neuroplasticity -- how experiences reorganize neural pathways in the brain -- that has been linked with cocaine addiction in other animal models.

"We found that this loss of the ability of brain cells to change the way that they communicate with each other only occurred in the animals that showed the behavioral response to alcohol," he said. "What this suggests for the first time in the alcohol addiction field is that this particular deficit may represent an important brain correlate of vulnerability to alcoholism. It's a testable hypothesis. That's why I think it's an important finding."

Funding support for the research came from the National Institutes of Health (AA 21099, AA 17531, AA 10422 and AA 14445), Coordenadoria de Aperfeic?oamento de Pessoal de N?vel Superior (CAPES; Grant 0321-10-9), Fundac?a?o de Amparo a` Pesquisa do Estado de Sa?o Paulo (FAPESP; Grant 2008/01819-5), and Associac?a?o Fundo de Incentivo a`Pesquisa (AFIP).

The Translational Studies on Early-Life Stress and Vulnerability to Alcohol Addiction project is an NIH-funded collaborative grant which supports rodent, non-human primate and human studies investigating neurobiological mechanisms associated with vulnerability and resilience to alcohol addiction.

Co-authors include: Olusegun Ariwodola, Tracy Butler, Andrew Rau, Mary Jane Skelly, Eugenia Carter, Nancy Alexander and Brian McCool, all of Wake Forest Baptist, and Maria Lucia Formigoni of the Universidade de Sao Paulo.

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. K. P. Abrahao, O. J. Ariwodola, T. R. Butler, A. R. Rau, M. J. Skelly, E. Carter, N. P. Alexander, B. A. McCool, M. L. O. Souza-Formigoni, J. L. Weiner. Locomotor Sensitization to Ethanol Impairs NMDA Receptor-Dependent Synaptic Plasticity in the Nucleus Accumbens and Increases Ethanol Self-Administration. Journal of Neuroscience, 2013; 33 (11): 4834 DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5839-11.2013

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/_N2uCTtYlAI/130325183810.htm

Mens Gymnastics Allison Schmitt Olympic Schedule Kyla Ross Ryan Lochte Montenegro Olympic Games

Best Buy founder Schulze rejoins as chairman emeritus

By Dhanya Skariachan

(Reuters) - Best Buy Co Inc founder Richard Schulze, who left the board last year and later failed in his effort to take the company private, will rejoin the retailer as chairman emeritus and add two of his former colleagues to the board.

The news helped dispel rumors the largest investor in the world's largest consumer electronics chain was contemplating selling his stake in the company he founded in 1966. Best Buy shares rose more than 2 percent on Monday.

"We view today's announcement as a clear positive for Best Buy, as it suggests that Mr. Schulze is unlikely to sell his 20 percent stake in the company at any point in the near future," Barclays analyst Alan Rifkin said.

Rifkin said Schulze's return was likely to be "a huge morale boost," citing his popularity among the company's employees.

One former investor, who sold his shares recently after a run that saw the stock nearly double in the first quarter, said it was only good news as long as Schulze did not meddle in the company's operations.

"It's Richard's way of saying I am still involved in the business," said Frank Lombardi, a portfolio manager at Boston-based Cubic Asset Management. "I don't think it's useful. Hopefully it's not detrimental to the business. But I think they will sort of stay somewhat passive for now and allow the business to be run by Joly."

Schulze, who had a prior agreement with Best Buy that let him nominate two directors, resigned as chairman last June after an internal probe found he did not inform the board of allegations former Chief Executive Brian Dunn was having an inappropriate relationship with a female employee.

Schulze then tried to take Best Buy private, an effort that fell apart earlier this year.

NO MARGIN FOR ERROR

"This is a better idea, and better for shareholders this way than if Schulze took the company private," said Morningstar analyst R.J. Hottovy. "In a leveraged buyout transaction you would sell the company for a lot of debt and at this time the company does not have a lot of margin for error."

Best Buy's shares rose 2.2 percent to $23.27 on Monday. The stock is up 92 percent in 2013, as investors have grown more confident in Chief Executive Hubert Joly's turnaround plans.

Lombardi said he did not expect Schulze or his board nominees, former Chief Executive Brad Anderson and former Chief Operating Officer Al Lenzmeier, to bring much to the table.

Even Schulze's original plan to bring these executives back to run the company had drawn some skepticism last August, especially since they ran the retailer before online shopping became popular.

Best Buy will give Schulze up to $2.125 million in connection with his "preparation and ongoing consultation" over the next year in connection with a business plan for the company, a regulatory filing showed.

Schulze will also get an annual base salary of $150,000 as chairman emeritus, according to a letter to him from Joly that was made public in the filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

In his role as chairman emeritus, Schulze could be tapped to mentor up to two "high-potential" officers, speak at company events and participate in training, all subject to approval by CEO Joly. Schulze won't be entitled to an annual bonus.

As chairman emeritus and until Schulze reaches age 75, he will be entitled to nominate two directors to Best Buy's board.

(Reporting by Dhanya Skariachan in New York and Nivedita Bhattacharjee and Jessica Wohl in Chicago; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick, Maureen Bavdek, Andrew Hay and Bernard Orr)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/best-buy-founder-returns-chairman-emeritus-132234019--sector.html

OJ Murdock Olympics Live Mens Gymnastics Allison Schmitt Olympic Schedule Kyla Ross Ryan Lochte