Thursday, January 31, 2013

BlackBerry Z10 gets clip-on speakerphone, charger bundle and cases galore

BlackBerry Z10 gets clipon speakerphone, charger bundle and cases galore

No launch of a new flagship is complete without a few new accessories to go along with it. While RIM is still banking big on the NFC-powered Music Gateway, it wasn't about to let the Z10 sit around with no new friends to keep it company. Obviously, a BlackBerry isn't a BlackBerry with out few leather holsters to keep it strapped to your hip. The fancy leather cases (both the "Holster" and the "Pocket") even have a magnet inside them that automatically turns off the display on your Z10 when it's slipped inside. The rotating holster will set customers back $40, while the Pocket, with its fewer moving parts, will cost only $30. There are other cases on the horizon too, the Transform Shell and Flip Shell, which feature build in kickstands and basic protection in standard black or bright red. Both shells will retail for $35 when they hit shelves.

A bit more intriguing is the BlackBerry Mini Stereo Speaker, a tiny speaker phone that pairs using Bluetooth and has a unique "U" shape that allows you to clip it on to a seatbelt or (shudder) a lapel. The little white speaker will launch alongside the Z10 for $99. The charging bundle is pretty simple at first glance -- it contains a spare battery and a separate charging cradle for $50. But, upon closer inspection, you'll realize the charger has a microUSB out, for pushing power to any device with a compatible adapter. We're sure more fun accessories are in the pipeline too, once third parties start updating there product lines.

Filed under: , , ,

Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/30/blackberry-z10-gets-clip-on-speakerphone-charger-bundle/

sag aftra merger dj am bully bohemian rhapsody bohemian rhapsody spike lee carson daly

Canada?s abortion matter still not settled

Published: January 30, 2013 3:00 PM
Updated: January 30, 2013 3:44 PM

Jan. 28 marked the 25th anniversary of the Supreme Court of Canada decision, R. v. Morgentaler which struck down this country?s abortion laws, allowing abortion on demand for any reason through all nine months of pregnancy.

This gives us good reason to reflect on the status quo that has been now for a quarter-century.

Looking at the past decades of political discourse it?s clear that even after 25 years, Canadians are nowhere near settled on the matter of pre-born human rights ? and for good reason. Statistics Canada reports that in 2009 there were over 11,000 abortions after 13 weeks gestation.

Interestingly, other Western nations, some of which are more secular than ours, recognize in law the rights of pre-born children at 12 weeks gestation.

The issue of legal protection for children in the womb is difficult, but it does not justify inaction. It?s time for Canada to start setting things right.

Yes, the politics are complicated and difficult. But that should never excuse a First World nation from doing everything it can to protect the weakest members of society.

?

Mike Schouten, campaign director, WeNeedaLAW.ca

Surrey

'; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } google_ad_client = 'pub-9774721429222771'; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_ad_channel ='3389691084'; google_max_num_ads = '4'; google_feedback = 'on'; google_ad_type = 'text'; google_adtest = 'on'; google_image_size = '300x250'; google_skip = '3'; // -->

Source: http://www.bclocalnews.com/opinion/letters/189105511.html

tami roman jetblue captain los angeles dodgers christie brinkley seattle mariners geraldo rivera supreme court health care

Nature Communications ? Nanoparticles Digging the World's ...

Graphite consists of layered carbon atoms. A metal particle bores into the graphite sample from the edges of these layers. Image: KIT

Graphite consists of layered carbon atoms. A metal particle bores into the graphite sample from the edges of these layers. Image: KIT

The world?s smallest tunnels have a width of a few nanometers only. Researchers from Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) and Rice University, USA, have dug such tunnels into graphite samples. This will allow structuring of the interior of materials through self-organization in the nanometer range and tailoring of nanoporous graphite for applications in medicine and battery technology. Results are now presented in the scientific journal Nature Communications. (DOI: 10.1038/ncomms2399)

The tunnels are manufactured applying nickel nanoparticles to graphite which then is heated in the presence of hydrogen gas. The surface of the metal particles, that measure a few nanometers only, serves as a catalyst removing the carbon atoms of the graphite and converting them by means of hydrogen into the gas methane. Through capillary forces, the nickel particle is drawn into the ?hole? that forms and bores through the material. The size of the tunnels obtained in the experiments was in the range of 1 to 50 nanometers, which about corresponds to one thousandth of the diameter of a human hair.

To furnish proof of the real existence of these graphite tunnels, the researchers have made use of scanning electron and scanning tunneling microscopy. ?Microscopes, in fact, image only the upper layers of the sample,? the principal authors of the study, Maya Lukas and Velimir Meded from KIT?s Institute of Nanotechnology, explain. ?The tunnels below these upper layers, however, leave atomic structures on the surface whose courses can be traced and which can be assigned to the nanotunnels by means of the very detailed scanning tunneling microscopy images and based on computerized simulations.? In addition, the depth of the tunnels was determined precisely by means of a series of images taken by a scanning electron microscope from different perspectives.

Porous graphite is used, for example, in the electrodes of lithium ion batteries. The charge time could be reduced using materials with appropriate pore sizes. In medicine, porous graphite could serve as a carrier of drugs to be released over longer periods of time. Replacing graphite by nonconductive materials, e.g. boron nitride,? with atomic structures similar to that of graphite,? the tunnels could serve as basic structures for nanoelectronic components such as novel sensors or solar cells.

The graphite tunnel study was carried out by the study groups headed by Pulickel M. Ajayan from Rice University, USA, and Ralph Krupke and Wolfgang Wenzel from Karlsruhe Institute of Technology.

For further information on research by the KIT study groups, please refer to www.int.kit.edu.

Source: http://www.zeitnews.org/natural-sciences/nanotechnology/nature-communications-nanoparticles-digging-world-s-smallest-tunnels

the walking dead the walking dead Walking Dead Season 3 vampire diaries derek jeter Red Bull Stratos Redbull Stratos

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Murdoch apologies for 'offensive' cartoon on Israel

LONDON (Reuters) - Rupert Murdoch apologised on Monday for a "grotesque" cartoon in his London-based Sunday Times newspaper depicting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu building a bloody wall trapping the bodies of Palestinians, after complaints from Jewish groups.

The image, which shows Netanyahu holding a trowel dripping blood, was published on Holocaust Memorial Day and carried the caption "Israeli elections. Will cementing peace continue?"

The Board of Deputies of British Jews said the cartoon was "shockingly reminiscent of the blood libel imagery more usually found in parts of the virulently anti-Semitic Arab press".

The so-called "blood libel" - accusations that Jewish peoples murder children and use their blood in rituals - go back centuries and have led to persecution and attacks.

The wall image by the weekly paper's cartoonist Gerald Scarfe was a reference to the barrier that Israel has been building for a decade on West Bank territory.

The project was launched at the height of a Palestinian uprising and was billed as a way to stop suicide bombers from penetrating the country.

The Sunday Times's acting editor was due to meet Jewish community leaders in Britain on Tuesday to express his regrets over the cartoon, said a spokesman for Murdoch's News International, the paper's publisher.

Murdoch said Scarfe had never reflected the opinions of the Sunday Times. "Nevertheless, we owe major apology for grotesque, offensive cartoon," he said in a Twitter message.

The Board of Deputies, representing Jewish communities in Britain, said it had lodged a complaint over the image with the Press Complaints Commission, an industry-run watchdog.

"Its use is all the more disgusting on Holocaust Memorial Day, given the similar tropes levelled against Jews by the Nazis," the board added.

The paper denied the cartoon was anti-Semitic, saying it was aimed at Netanyahu and not the Israeli people. It said the timing of its publication was linked to the victory of Netanyahu's party in last week's Israeli elections.

"The last thing I or anyone connected with the Sunday Times would countenance would be insulting the memory of the Shoah (the Holocaust) or invoking the blood libel," said Martin Ivens, who was appointed as the paper's acting editor earlier this month.

"We are however reminded of the sensitivities in this area by the reaction to the cartoon and I will of course bear them very carefully in mind in future," he added.

Ivens was expected to tell Jewish leaders that the cartoon was a case of "bad taste and extremely bad timing", the News International spokesman said.

Scarfe told Britain's Jewish Chronicle he had been unaware it was Holocaust Memorial Day on Sunday and regretted the timing of the cartoon's publication.

(Editing by Jon Hemming)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/murdoch-apologies-offensive-netanyahu-cartoon-075747154--finance.html

the five year engagement chris kreider correspondents dinner 2012 white house correspondents dinner 2012 whcd 2012 nfl draft kevin durant

Mayor Jones shifting perspective to building the "best" Richmond

RICHMOND, VA (WWBT)- The state of Richmond is strong and growing stronger -??that's the message from Mayor Dwight Jones in his annual "State of the City" address Tuesday night.

Jones spoke to about a hundred people downtown at CenterStage. No huge groundbreaking proposals were announced, but Jones is shifting his perspective from "building a better Richmond," as we've heard him say over the last four years, to "building the best Richmond," in the year to come.

"We are building the best Richmond, because that is what you deserve, that is what I deserve, that is what our children deserve," said Jones.

How to get to that "best" Richmond is the focus,?building on the successes Mayor?Jones believes he's accomplished in the last four years. He is the first mayor under this form of government to have a second term in office, and he's set some lofty goals.

"It's time for us to redefine what 'possible' means. I want you to join me tonight in reinventing 'possible,'" said Jones.

Jones says the city can't reinvent "possible" without addressing the needs of its poorest citizens. He discussed poverty mitigation efforts, like improving transportation, revamping city housing projects, revitalizing neighborhoods, bringing more companies and jobs to the city and closing a funding gap for education.

"Richmond schools need to receive funding based on the city's poverty level. It compromises the very future of our city when we are measured as though we are as affluent as Chesterfield and Henrico," said Jones.

One topic that was not widely covered, despite the presence of the city's police chief and officers, is a decrease in crime statistics for the city.

"I think it's always important to point those things out," said City Council President Charles Samuels.?"I'm not a speech writer, so I can't really say what he should or shouldn't have touched on more, but I'll tell you what, it is on the minds of all of us on City Council."

The mayor hit on another hot button topic: baseball. He said the city is committed to building a new ballpark and keeping the Squirrels in the city. He did not, however, commit to a location, saying that decision will be based on financial analysis.

Copyright 2013 WWBT NBC12.? All rights reserved.

Source: http://thefan.nbc12.com/news/news/91034-mayor-jones-shifting-perspective-building-best-richmond

michelle williams the descendants the descendants packers giants game golden globe winners 2012 ricky gervais golden globes epidermolysis bullosa

Bill Gates: Finance tax should aid world's poor - The Local

Bill Gates was the star attraction at a German Social Democratic Party (SPD) meeting in Potsdam on Monday, calling for world hunger to be fought with taxes raised on financial transactions.

SPD lead Sigmar Gabriel said at the meeting he stood behind the European Union plan to invest 0.7 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in development policies.

Microsoft founder Gates, one of the world's richest men, has long focused his efforts on the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation which funds health and education projects around the world.

He was invited to the Potsdam meeting of the centre-left SPD leadership meeting to talk with them about the foundation. He called for Germany and Europe not to abandon their contributions, despite the financial crisis.

Speaking ahead of the meeting Gates said the world was on the brink of great victories in the fight against illness and global poverty. "Germany plays a decisive role in enabling us to bank on success," he told the SPD paper Vorw?rts (Forwards).

"Development aid only counts for a fraction of public spending in most donor countries. Cuts in this area will not solve our budgetary problems," he said.

He said that great strides had been made in public health matters over the past 20 years - with the number of children dying before the age of five shrinking from 20 million in 1960 to less than 6.9 million in 2011.

But enormous differences remained. "We still have a long way ahead of us to ensure that every child that is born has the same chance of a healthy life regardless of whether it is born in a rich or a poor country," said Gates.

DPA/The Local/hc

Source: http://www.thelocal.de/money/20130129-47605.html

oakland pinnacle airlines kansas vs kentucky joe posnanski michael kidd gilchrist national championship calipari

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Stock futures point to gains after data and Caterpillar

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Stock index futures pointed to a modestly higher open on Monday following strong data and results from Caterpillar, though gains were slight after a rally that took the S&P 500 above 1,500 for the first time in more than five years.

A strong start to the earnings season has boosted equities, with major averages rising for four straight weeks. The S&P has gained for eight straight days, its longest winning streak in eight years.

Caterpillar Inc rose 2.5 percent to $98 in premarket trading after the Dow component reported adjusted fourth-quarter earnings that beat expectations, though revenue was slightly below forecasts. The heavy machinery maker also said it remained cautious on the economy despite recent improvements.

"You can't find more of a global bellwhether than Cat, and people are pleased with the number, which suggests there could be less concern about slowing growth in China after this," said Wayne Kaufman, chief market analyst at John Thomas Financial in New York.

Thomson Reuters data through Friday showed that of the 147 S&P 500 companies that have reported earnings so far, 68 percent exceeded expectations. Since 1994, 62 percent of companies have topped expectations, while the average over the past four quarters stands at 65 percent.

Yahoo Inc reports after the closing bell, and could face heightened expectations following strong results at Google Inc last week.

S&P 500 futures rose 2 points and were about even with fair value, a formula that evaluates pricing by taking into account interest rates, dividends and time to expiration on the contract. Dow Jones industrial average futures added 22 points and Nasdaq 100 futures rose 2 points.

The S&P 500 closed at its highest since December 10, 2007, and the Dow ended at its highest since October 31, 2007. Over the past four weeks, the S&P has jumped 7.2 percent, suggesting markets may be vulnerable to a pullback if news disappoints.

Durable goods jumped 4.6 percent in December, a pace that far outstripped expectations for a rise of 1.8 percent.

"We continue to have a parade of better-than-expected economic reports. All-in-all it's a good picture. I think there's a good chance we've reached a point of recognition where people don't think the economy will crater," Kaufman said.

In addition to earnings, equities have also risen on an agreement in Washington to extend the government's borrowing power. On Monday, Fitch Ratings said that agreement removed the near-term risk to the country's 'AAA' rating.

Previously, the agency said the lack of an agreement would prompt a review of the sovereign rating.

In company news, Keryx Biopharmaceuticals Inc said a late-stage trial of its experimental kidney disease drug met the main study goal of reducing phosphate levels in blood, sending shares up 41 percent to $4.84 in premarket trading.

Bargain hunters may look to Apple Inc in the first session after the tech giant lost its coveted title as the largest U.S. company by market capitalization to Exxon Mobil Corp . On Friday, Apple's market cap fell to $413 billion, down roughly $250 billion from its September peak. Apple's fall is about equal to the entire value of Google Inc .

"Apple is pretty attractive right now, so you may see an opportunity here," said Chris Bertelsen, who helps oversee $1.5 billion as chief investment officer of Global Financial Private Capital in Sarasota, Florida. "Those who think the stock is dead have made a big mistake."

U.S. stocks rose on Friday, lifted by strong results from such companies as Procter & Gamble . The rise put the S&P 500 about 4.1 percent away from its all-time closing high of 1,565.15 on October 9, 2007.

(Editing by W Simon and Kenneth Barry)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/stock-index-futures-signal-slight-gains-104646069--finance.html

twin towers gizmodo cnet iPhone 5 9-11 Chris Brown Tattoo Innocence of Muslims

PFT: Flacco expected to aim for Brees money

350x-2Getty Images

As the NFL and the NFLPA continue to stare at each other like the boys and girls pressed against opposite walls of a middle-school dance on the issue of HGH testing, Congress is getting closer to pushing the walls together, Star Wars Episode IV-style.? (I thought twice about making that reference because of the nerdish connotation.? But I?ve learned to embrace my nerdishness.)

For now, the wall that?s moving is the one behind the players.

?We are disappointed with the NFLPA?s remarkable recalcitrance, which has prevented meaningful progress on this issue,? Representatives Darrell Issa (R-Cal.) and Elijah Cummings (D-Md.) said in a letter to the NFL Players Association.? ?We intend to take a more active role to determine whether the position you have taken ? that HGH is not a serious concern and that the test for HGH is unreliable ? is consistent with the beliefs of rank and file NFL players.?

The NFL and NFLPA agreed in August 2011 to commence HGH testing.

?Despite being the first of the major professional sports leagues to agree to test for HGH, the NFL has now fallen far behind its counterparts in implementing the agreement,? the letter continues. ?While NFLPA management may not believe that HGH is a problem in the NFL, the words of your athletes suggest otherwise.? We hope the facts collected by the Committee will provide you and the NFL with the information necessary to resolve this matter.?

The letter also asks the NFLPA to produce a variety of documents and other information, including the NFLPA?s most recent proposal for HGH testing and information regarding any proposals exchanged between the NFL and the NFLPA during meetings that were planned for the week of January 21.? (It?s unclear whether any meetings actually happened.)

Congressional involvement in the form of a hearing at which players would testify is something about which both the NFL and the NFLPA should be deeply concerned.? If players are using HGH and they tell the truth to Congress, it makes the league and the union look very bad.? If players are using it and they lie, the players expose themselves to potential criminal prosecutions.

There?s no reason for the impasse to continue.? The NFLPA has said that it will accept HGH testing under the standards and procedures implemented by major-league baseball.? The NFL has indicated that would be sufficient.? So why not get together ? this week in New Orleans ? to hash out the details?

If not, players could be getting together in Washington to do something far less pleasant for everyone.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/01/28/flacco-expected-to-aim-for-drew-brees-money/related/

cyber monday lupus iCarly banana republic gap Victoria Secret Bath And Body Works

Woman eats cat fur on 'My Strange Addiction'

TLC

By Ree Hines, TODAY contributor

Clingy cat fur -- it's the bane of many cat lovers' lives. It gets on clothes, sticks to upholstery and gathers in corners. But there's one feline enthusiast who has no problem with those wispy strands. In fact, Lisa -- the subject of the next episode of "My Strange Addiction" -- just can't get enough of the fluff her cat leaves behind.

In a clip from the upcoming season-four premiere of the show, Lisa explained the appeal of eating cat hair.

"Just chewing it is relaxing," she assured. "It's a comforting feeling. (My cat's) fur is such an interesting texture. It's so soft and puffy and like cotton candy ... almost."

But not quite. Still, the 43-year-old finds it so soothing, she's compelled to ingest some every two hours.

As for how it tastes, she said the "relatively clean" fur packs "much less of a flavor than even human hair."

Lisa harvests much of the hair she eats off the floor or furnishings in her home, but sometimes, she goes straight to the source.

"I groom my cat with my tongue, like a momma cat would do with her kitten," she said. "I don't get as involved as another cat would. I'm not licking her butt."

There's that.

See if Lisa is able to kick the cat fur addiction when "My Strange Addiction" returns to TLC on Feb. 13.

Related content:

More in The Clicker:

Source: http://theclicker.today.com/_news/2013/01/28/16740588-woman-eats-cat-fur-on-my-strange-addiction?lite

tesla model s act Black Ops 2 Secede ben roethlisberger Diwali elmo

Monday, January 28, 2013

Safeguards needed for tissue donors

Safeguards needed for tissue donors [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-Jan-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Andy McGlashen
andy.mcglashen@cabs.msu.edu
517-355-5158
Michigan State University

Donors to biobanks vast collections of human tissue samples that scientists hope will lead to new treatments for diseases have a right to basic information about how their donations may be used, a Michigan State University ethicist argues in a new paper.

The idea behind biobanks is that a repository with hundreds of thousands of samples, each linked to medical records and other health information, can yield discoveries smaller data sets can't match. Once samples are collected, researchers in many fields can use the data repeatedly.

"More and larger biobanks are in many ways the future of health research," said Tom Tomlinson, director of MSU's Center for Ethics and Humanities in the Life Sciences. "Their rise as a research tool means that sooner or later probably sooner all of us will be participating in research that we know nothing whatsoever about."

Ethicists have typically viewed biobank donations through the lens of risk: Once someone has given a tissue sample and all identifying information is removed, later research risks no harm to them. Since they no longer need protection, donors usually sign blanket consent forms and receive no updates about how the tissue is used.

But people make donations in the hope of doing good, giving them an ongoing moral stake in what happens to their tissue samples, Tomlinson writes in the Hastings Center Report, a leading bioethics journal.

"Donors should have the information they need to decide if there are moral risks involved that might not be worth taking," he said.

For instance, surveys have found that some people may not donate to publicly funded biobanks if the research would lead to private commercial gain. Others may not want to be involved in research on controversial issues like cloning, or studies that reinforce negative racial stereotypes.

"It's hard to tell a person exactly how their donation will be used," Tomlinson said, "but what you can tell them is the range of uses to which it might be put."

Tomlinson offers specific steps biobanks should take to protect donors' rights. Among them:

  • Donors should get ongoing summaries of research projects, written in plain language.
  • Biobanks should inform donors when their tissue might be used in potentially controversial research.
  • Data-management systems should be in place to let donors withdraw their samples at any time if they take issue with the kinds of research the biobank supports.

###

Tomlinson's work was supported by the National Human Genome Research Institute, a branch of the National Institutes of Health.


[ 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.


Safeguards needed for tissue donors [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-Jan-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Andy McGlashen
andy.mcglashen@cabs.msu.edu
517-355-5158
Michigan State University

Donors to biobanks vast collections of human tissue samples that scientists hope will lead to new treatments for diseases have a right to basic information about how their donations may be used, a Michigan State University ethicist argues in a new paper.

The idea behind biobanks is that a repository with hundreds of thousands of samples, each linked to medical records and other health information, can yield discoveries smaller data sets can't match. Once samples are collected, researchers in many fields can use the data repeatedly.

"More and larger biobanks are in many ways the future of health research," said Tom Tomlinson, director of MSU's Center for Ethics and Humanities in the Life Sciences. "Their rise as a research tool means that sooner or later probably sooner all of us will be participating in research that we know nothing whatsoever about."

Ethicists have typically viewed biobank donations through the lens of risk: Once someone has given a tissue sample and all identifying information is removed, later research risks no harm to them. Since they no longer need protection, donors usually sign blanket consent forms and receive no updates about how the tissue is used.

But people make donations in the hope of doing good, giving them an ongoing moral stake in what happens to their tissue samples, Tomlinson writes in the Hastings Center Report, a leading bioethics journal.

"Donors should have the information they need to decide if there are moral risks involved that might not be worth taking," he said.

For instance, surveys have found that some people may not donate to publicly funded biobanks if the research would lead to private commercial gain. Others may not want to be involved in research on controversial issues like cloning, or studies that reinforce negative racial stereotypes.

"It's hard to tell a person exactly how their donation will be used," Tomlinson said, "but what you can tell them is the range of uses to which it might be put."

Tomlinson offers specific steps biobanks should take to protect donors' rights. Among them:

  • Donors should get ongoing summaries of research projects, written in plain language.
  • Biobanks should inform donors when their tissue might be used in potentially controversial research.
  • Data-management systems should be in place to let donors withdraw their samples at any time if they take issue with the kinds of research the biobank supports.

###

Tomlinson's work was supported by the National Human Genome Research Institute, a branch of the National Institutes of Health.


[ 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/2013-01/msu-snf012813.php

reggie wayne taylor allderdice vincent jackson vicki gunvalson pierre garcon brown recluse spider wiz khalifa taylor allderdice

Surprise, Surprise: Prince Harry's Crazy TV Interview Angered Army ...

Prince Harry has been accused of ingratitude and immaturity by senior military figures after an interview in Afghanistan in which he spoke of his life as a helicopter pilot.

The Prince has angered officers at the upper echelons for suggesting he would rather be on the ground in Helmand than flying his Apache attack helicopter, and comparing his role to playing computer games.

One senior officer, speaking to The Sunday Telegraph anonymously, said the tone of the interview was wrong and that the Prince, who is Captain Harry Wales when in uniform, had adopted the language of a ?spoilt, truculent teenager?.

He said Capt Wales sounded more like a ?disgruntled soldier than an Army officer?, after complaining that life in the Army was ?as normal as it was going to get? and speaking of being stared at by other soldiers in Camp Bastion.

There is particular concern at his attitude towards being an Apache pilot, one of the most difficult roles in the Army. The officer said that while there was no question that the Prince was hard-working, he should have had more respect for the role, and particularly the way in which his deployment to Afghanistan had come about.

The Prince served in Afghanistan in 2008 as a cavalry lieutenant, working as a forward air controller, but had to leave earlier than expected when his presence there was disclosed by foreign media.

The senior officer said: ?When Harry was hauled home from Afghanistan last time, he threw his toys out of the pram and more or less said that if couldn?t return to Helmand, he would leave the Army.

?No one wanted Harry to leave in a huff so, with his approval, a career path was mapped out which would allow him to return to Helmand. A lot of people worked with Harry in helping him get into the Army Air Corps, where he has proved a great success.

?Now he seems to be saying that he only became a pilot so he could return to Afghanistan. He should think a little bit less about himself and perhaps a bit more about those who have helped him. He needs to wise up and accept that he is not a soldier but an Army officer ? he is not ?one of the boys? and never will be.?

The Prince also expressed the wish that he had not been in the air.

?My choice would have been back out on the ground with my regiment,? he said.

?For me it?s not that normal because I go into the cookhouse and everyone has a good old gawp, and that?s one thing that I dislike about being here. Which is probably another reason why I?d love to be out in the PBs [patrol bases], away from it all.?

The Sunday Telegraph is aware that concerns over the interview have also been expressed by other high-ranking officers.

The 28-year-old captain spent five months in Camp Bastion as a co-pilot gunner with the Army Air Corps? Apache helicopters ? a unit with reportedly the highest kill rate in Helmand. He described his job as a ?joy?.

He upset elements of the top brass when he said: ?I?m one of those people who loves playing PlayStation and Xbox, so with my thumbs, I like to think I?m probably quite useful?.

During one interview, Harry said that Apache pilots were often called upon to ?take a life to save a life?.

His remarks were described as an ?unnecessary own goal?.

The senior officer, said: ?No one in the Army, especially an officer, should be so dismissive about taking life. I saw the interviews and thought 'why did you say that??. He clearly has not learnt to engage brain before mouth.?

After the interviews were broadcast, Zabihullah Mujahid, the Taliban?s spokesman, said Prince Harry was a ?coward? for only speaking only after he was out of harm?s way.

?To describe the war in Afghanistan as a game demeans anyone, especially a prince, who is supposed to be made of better things,? he said.

However, many in senior ranks believe that he had performed well as a pilot, and other officers praised the future king?s brother for his courage and professionalism.

British Apaches regularly attack ground fire from insurgents and crews face a demanding workload .

One officer described the criticism of Harry voiced by others of similar high rank as ?po-faced and pompous?. The officer said: ?He risked his life every day to make sure that the soldiers on the ground had the air support they needed. As far as the majority of the Army are concerned, he did his job and that is all that matters.

?You?ve got to give the guy a break ? he?s young, his language may have been a bit loose but so what? What other officer, of any rank, has to put up with what he has to? Unfortunately he wants to be an ?average nobody? but it?s one thing he will never be.?

A former commander of Harry?s said: ?Harry is great guy and a natural soldier ? he gets on very well with all ranks. I think he should be applauded.?

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/surprise-surprise-prince-harrys-crazy-tv-interview-angered-army-leadership-2013-1

mountain lion hanley ramirez Christian Bale visits victims Perez Hilton national weather service kristen stewart Christian Bale

Health Plus Fitness: Womens Issues Article Category | Traffic ...

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

Source: http://iskander1988.blogspot.com/2013/01/health-plus-fitness-womens-issues.html

Inauguration Schedule Super Bowl Winners barack obama ray lewis dear abby WRAL John Harbaugh

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Will 401k Gold Certainly Safeguard Your Investment | Culture

Investors must look into several issues prior to jumping into gold IRA investing. Many financial experts do not believe using gold in the Individual Retirement Account will not maximize tax advantages. For the owners to generate money, they should sell off such metals with a higher cost. Another issue associated with IRA investments is that the IRS requires that an Individual Retirement Account be kept by a bank, brokerage firm or trust company. Not all trustees are able to negotiate with gold. If an account holder?s Individual Retirement Account program does not support investments in gold, the plan owner should start a trust account with a provider that allows gold investments.

There are various Individual Retirement Accounts for different account owners. Prior to undertaking IRA gold investing, one should check with the manager of the IRA. The handler of the Individual Retirement Account would be the bank that provides for the account. For a person to make an investment in gold, he must own a plan which is self directed that allows gold investment.

Individual Retirement Account owners should contribute money to their retirement accounts. The contributions may be up to 5000 dollars per year to a single retirement account. If an individual deposits 5000 dollars, the amount will increase to 6000 dollars on reaching 50. Account holders can also rollover funds from a preexisting Individual Retirement Account to a different one. Nevertheless, the Internal Revenue Service is quite rigorous regarding Individual Retirement Account transfers. A person must cautiously observe the rules of the trustee when it comes to Individual Retirement Account rollovers.

There are more information you will need regarding retirement gold plans. There are information online which will help you in this regard. For more info, check out Here

This entry was posted in Business. Bookmark the permalink.

Source: http://oldenasty.com/business/will-401k-gold-certainly-safeguard-your-investment/

super bowl tickets superbowl birmingham news lee evans lee evans 49ers vs giants giants vs 49ers

IRL: HTC 8X, Google Now and the iPod shuffle

Welcome to IRL, an ongoing feature where we talk about the gadgets, apps and toys we're using in real life and take a second look at products that already got the formal review treatment.

We swear we didn't plan it this way, but it looks like we've got a little trifecta this week, with write-ups pertaining to Apple, Google and, last but not least, Microsoft. On the pessimistic end of the spectrum, Dana would rather have the third-generation iPod shuffle than the model she's using. Terrence is hooked on Google Now and Jon likes the HTC 8X -- just not as much as the Lumia 920.

HTC 8X

IRL HTC 8X, Google Now and the iPod shuffle What's this? Another Windows Phone 8 test? Yes, while I was trying the Lumia 920 and before I reviewed the ATIV S, I felt it was only fair to give the third flagship of the platform, HTC's Windows Phone 8X, a proper shakedown. I spent a few weeks with one to gauge the differences and came back with the impression that HTC has a worthy flagship -- but not necessarily the one I'd choose for myself.

If you talk solely about ergonomics, the 8X is undoubtedly my first pick. It's much lighter and grippier than the Lumia 920, and the smaller screen makes it easier to reach every corner with one hand than the ATIV S. About the only reservations I have are that hard-to-press power button and the relatively sharp edges. The stand-out appearance can't help but sway me, too. If you get the phone in one of the bolder colors (read: not black), it's simply iconic. No one will mistake an 8X for another phone, while both the ATIV S and Lumia 920 have familiar-looking peers.

Yet there are a few ingredients missing that make it hard to call HTC's creation my perfect Windows Phone 8 device. Simply speaking, the camera just isn't as good as it needs to be in early 2013. While the 8X is sometimes a better pick for up-close photography than the Lumia 920, it falls apart in low-light situations where the Lumia is a champ. Apps matter, as well. Nokia Drive and Nokia Maps aren't vital, but I missed their navigation when I switched devices. And I'll have to admit that being Canadian skews my preferences towards the Nokia phone's glove-friendly screen: it's great to avoid the binary choice of making a phone call versus preserving my fingers. While I'd be inclined to choose the 8X over the ATIV S as long as storage wasn't a priority, I would still give Nokia the ultimate nod as the most relevant to real-world use.

-- Jon Fingas

Google Now

IRL HTC 8X, Google Now and the iPod shuffle Pretty much from the moment I first launched Google Now it changed the way I interacted with my phone. I've used Siri and toyed with S Voice, but Now is the only virtual assistant that seems like more than an occasionally useful gimmick. Truth is, at this point I unlock directly into it almost as often as I go to the home screen. Sure, in the early days its functionality was fairly limited (and still is), but there was enough information presented by default to keep me coming back. When Gmail was added to its repository of information, the app became a true game-changer for me. While other "assistant" apps are little more than voice commands with personality, Now actually helps track information for you and presents it at valuable times. I don't have to ask what the weather is like or how long it'll take me to get to my next appointment -- it just tells me without prompting.

Of course, things aren't perfect. Now still has a lot of rough edges to work out. For one, the mobile boarding pass feature has yet to work as advertised for me, though, its flight tracking feature turns out to be quicker and more accurate than United's own app. It also stumbles a bit on tracking packages. I like that it recognizes tracking numbers and presents them to me with a quick link, but Now doesn't actually do any tracking itself. Instead it simply shows the card to you for a predetermined amount of time. That's fine if you're enjoying free two-day shipping thanks to Amazon Prime, but if your delivery takes more than a couple of days the card disappears before the box hits your doorstep. It also has an unfortunate habit of presenting me directions to a "new place" almost any time I perform a web search. Oh, and some higher-res icons for the sports score cards would be greatly appreciated.

None of that is enough to ruin the experience, however. If I need to know when my bus is coming, what the temperature is, if my flight is on time or even how many steps I took this month I simply swipe up on my Nexus lock screen and let Google do the work for me. What's more, things can only get better as the company improves its algorithms, opens up new sources of data and, hopefully, develops an API to let other apps tap into the power of Now.

-- Terrence O'Brien

iPod shuffle (fourth generation)

IRL HTC 8X, Google Now and the iPod shuffle We runners are a superstitious bunch. In my training group, "Nothing new on race day" is our mantra, and it's one to which I've adhered earnestly. It goes without saying that new shoes, running shorts and Snozberry-flavored energy gels are out of the question, but I even get antsy about wearing my Spibelt around my waist instead of my hips. Yeah, I'm neurotic, but running 26.2 miles is scary, yo.

So I was none too pleased when I had a gadget emergency the week before the 2011 New York City Marathon. I'd been training with the Sansa Clip Zip for two months when it abruptly began having mood swings. It started repeating songs, even when I had set my library to shuffle. Sometimes, if it encountered a song it didn't like, it just froze. On a good day, I could side-step the issue by selecting a different artist or song. At its worst, the only way to revive it was to perform a hard reset.

Obviously, that wasn't going to cut it for my epic run, so I did what any desperate person would do: I went to Best Buy and spent $50 on an iPod shuffle. Truly, I would have preferred something like the nano, which would have let me choose specific songs, but I wasn't about to drop $149 on what was essentially an impulse buy. Fifty bucks was about as much as I was willing to spend without having had the opportunity to hem and haw over my purchase.

So I used it. And it was okay. The clip doesn't feel as strong as on the third-generation model. Also, it came with regular headphones (i.e., ones without inline controls), which meant I had to press the player on the device to pause the music and skip tracks. To this day, I find the keys a bit too small, and I often hit the wrong one, mistaking pause for fast-forward, etc. Fortunately, I've since subbed in a pair with an inline remote, which means I barely have to touch the device anymore (except, perhaps, to reposition it in a place where the clip will stay put). Battery life was initially awesome -- I got through that nearly six-hour marathon (oof) with plenty of juice to spare. It's since seen better days, though, to the point where I now have to recharge it several times a week. Faint praise, if ever you've heard it, but at least it doesn't force me to listen to the same Madonna song over and over. That would just be cruel.

-- Dana Wollman

Filed under: , , ,

Comments

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/OgdAIHqtN2o/

oosthuizen great expectations jake owen oosthuizen louis double eagle bubba masters winner

NIH should retire most chimpanzees from medical research, panel says (+video)

Hundreds of chimpanzees at NIH facilities should no longer be used as test subjects, the panel said, but 50 should be kept as a contingency, adding that all the chimps should be housed more comfortably.

By Pete Spotts,?Staff writer / January 23, 2013

Ron, featured in the film 'Chimpanzees: An Unnatural History', was born in a research lab and spent most of his life in isolation. Subsequently, he went to live at the Save the Chimps sanctuary in Ft. Pierce, Florida.

Courtesy of Save the Chimps /PBS

Enlarge

A senior scientific advisory panel at the National Institutes of Health, in a step toward phasing out the use of chimpanzees in federally funded medical research,?has found "no compelling evidence" to support keeping hundreds of chimpanzees at NIH facilities and recommends that all but about 50 chimps be retired.

Skip to next paragraph

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // -->

This small group would remain available as a contingency should some unforeseen disease emerge for which chimps would be the best stand-ins for humans. But they, along with the retirees, would be housed in facilities designed to more adequately accommodate the full range of normal chimp physical and social activities ? from climbing, foraging, and daily nest-building to hanging out in sizable groups on branches high off the ground, according to the panel.

The panel also recommends ending 16 of 30 research projects involving chimpanzees that the NIH currently is funding. The largest proportional hit falls on biomedical research, one of three categories of projects. Six out of nine current biomedical projects would end.

The ultimate driver behind the recommendations: concerns about the value and ethics of using chimpanzees, biologically the nearest relative to humans, for physically painful and intrusive infectious-disease research.

If the 28 recommendations are implemented, the effort would represent "an historic step forward" in moving chimps out of the lab and into sanctuaries, says Kathleen Conlee, vice-president for animal-research issues at the Humane Society of the United States, based in Washington.

Even foes of federal legislation to greatly restrict the use of chimps and other "great apes" in biomedical research see merit in the new recommendations.

As a stand-in for humans, "the chimpanzee has played a very important role in the evolution of biomedical research," notes Frankie Trull, president of the National Association for Biomedical Research (NABR) in Washington, which fought against the Great Apes Protection and Cost Reduction Act of 2011, which died in December with the end of the 113th Congress.

But biomedical science has advanced, Ms. Trull continues. And keeping chimpanzees is expensive; chimps are not euthanized but must be cared for until they die naturally. Researchers have found alternative animal models for some of the kinds of studies that once centered on chimps.

Although NABR opposed the Great Ape Protection and Cost Reduction Act, the group is comfortable with the recommendations the NIH is now considering, Trull says.

The case for change and the steps to take came from the scientific community, she observes, adding, "scientists should determine what animal models should be used, not Congress."

Chimpanzees represent a tiny proportion of animals used in biomedical research. The overwhelming majority of animals used are either rodents or zebra fish.

The recommendations represent the outcome of a process that began at the end of 2010, when three US senators asked the US National Academies to examine the issue, as did the NIH. A year later, the National Academies' Institute of Medicine released its report.

The 86-page report released for comment on Jan. 22 was pulled together by a senior working group that the NIH gathered to turn the Institute of Medicine's report into specific recommendations.

If adopted, the recommendations would apply only to NIH-owned chimps and those used in the course of NIH-funded research. Of 670 chimps the NIH owns or supports, 219 have been retired. Some 282 are research-ready. Another 169 have been labeled "research inactive," a kind of bridge category between the first two.

By some estimates, another 350 chimps would fall outside the purview of these recommendations because they are owned either by private pharmaceutical companies or by universities.

Indeed, the Human Society's Ms. Conlee suggests the Great Ape Protection Act is likely to be reintroduced this year to broaden restrictions to chimps not covered by the new recommendations.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/17RvnU6kQnY/NIH-should-retire-most-chimpanzees-from-medical-research-panel-says-video

steven tyler national anthem paterno newt gingrich joe pa joe pa joe paterno dead marist

Saturday, January 26, 2013

China-Hollywood Connection Changes Movie Business (Voice Of America)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/279629337?client_source=feed&format=rss

Espn College Football Eddie Murphy died Suzanne Barr Clint Eastwood speech Maria Montessori clint eastwood Julian Castro

Kim & Kanye Are Expecting! See Their Cutest Moments

Kim Kardashian is pregnant! Check out the sweetest photos of the mom-to-be and her doting beau

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/kim-kardashian-kanye-west-cute-couple-photos/1-b-491841?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Akim-kardashian-kanye-west-cute-couple-photos-491841

news 12 world series Natina Reed giants Sandy Hurricane flight tracker Marina Krim

Moviehole.Net :: Movie, TV & Entertainment News | Film, DVD & Blu ...

A few weeks ago we rostered some of the finest, funkiest and most flippin? hilarious songs of that household-item staple, the?80s movie soundtrack.

This week, we count down 15 songs from ?90s movies. But, what I thought we?d do is, rather than simply slap a list of say, 60 or 70 songs together ? thus, covering all bases but also exhausting my poor typing fingers ? we?d simply serve up a list of unappreciated, mostly forgotten songs from the movies.

These are all good ?90s movie songs? that just didn?t get the love of, say, Whitney?s ?I Will Always Love You? or Wet Wet Wet?s ?Love is All Around?.

Enjoy!

Almost Unreal ? Roxette (?Super Mario Bros?)

It didn?t help that the movie was a dog, but pity a song with such bite had to lose out as a result. Roxette?s ode to fantastical love played during the end credits of the Bob Hoskins/John Leguizamo ?dud?.

The One and Only ? Chesney Hawkes (?Doc Hollywood?)

Director Michael Caton-Jones snagged a fine-ass song to open up Michael J.Fox?s 1992 romantic comedy. The track was later used, and to great effect, in Duncan Jones? ?Moon?.

I Wanna Be With You ? Mandy Moore (?Center Stage?)

The popular ballet flick, starring [largely] real-life professional dancers, was padded with a wad of great music, most notably this bit of sweet pop from Mandy Moore. The film itself was released in 2000, but the track two years earlier.

Every You Every Me ? Placebo (?Cruel Intentions?)

The late ?90s teen thriller, starring ?Buffy? alum Sarah Michelle-Gellar and Ryan Phillippe, opened with a really wicked song from the still-rockin? Placebo.

The Animal Song ? Savage Garden (?The Other Sister?)

Very crafty track from ?90s hit-makers Savage Garden. Song appeared in a sweet but forgettable Garry Marshall rom-com called ?The Other Sister?.

Sway ? Bic Runga (?American Pie?)

Wow, some good signs were lifted from the soundtrack of the racy 1999 comedy. This track appeared in one of the film?s more sweeter songs.

Til I Hear It From You ? Gin Blossoms (?Empire Records?)

One of my personal favourite soundtrack albums, ?Empire Records?, included this brilliant ditty from the amazing Gin Blossoms.

How Do You Talk to An Angel ? The Heights (?The Heights?)

Not so much from a movie, but a TV series. Still, though it was a big hit at the time, it?s seemingly gone the way of Harold Holt since.

Fake Plastic Trees ? Radiohead (?Clueless?)

A movie that featured the likes of Coolio, Jill Sobule and World Party, all encompassed one cool-ass acoustic by Radiohead.

All I Want Is You ? U2 (?Reality Bites?)

While most likely think of ?My Sharona? when they think back to the music in the Winona Ryder hit, U2?s moment of mush deserves mention.

Jane Sibbery ? It Can?t Rain All The Time (?The Crow?)

I think considering the way Brandon Lee died, and how emotional the movie is to watch, this song hits the heart-strings that tad bit more.

How Do I Deal ? Jennifer Love Hewitt (?I Still Know What You Did Last Summer?)

No Explanation ? Peter Cetera (?Pretty Woman?)

1990?s ?Pretty Woman? boasted a really impressive soundtrack, and you?ve likely heard all the hits from it? but do you remember this one?

Blue Eyes Blue ? Eric Clapton (?Pretty Woman?)

The Julia Roberts-Richard Gere reunion movie is a mostly forgettable affair, so you?re not expected to remember the songs from it.

I?ll Remember ? Madonna (?With Honors?)

?With Honors?. A really underrated movie. Remember going to see it when it came out. Had some great music in it? like this!

Source: http://moviehole.net/201361454moviesongsnineties

Walking Dead Season 3 vampire diaries derek jeter Red Bull Stratos Redbull Stratos steve mcnair vice presidential debate

The Note's Must-Reads for Friday, January 25, 2013

The Note's Must-Reads are a round-up of today's political headlines and stories from ABC News and the top U.S. newspapers. Posted Monday through Friday right here at www.abcnews.com

Compiled by ABC News' Jayce Henderson, Amanda VanAllen and Jordan Mazza

PRESIDENT OBAMA ABC News' Zunaira Zaki: "Obama SEC Pick Pleases Wall Street Critics" After four years of disappointing many of Wall Street's toughest critics, President Obama seems to have done something to please them. His decision to nominate former U.S. attorney and NASDAQ director Mary Jo White to lead the SEC is getting some pretty good reviews from those who favor tighter rules for financial firms. LINK The New York Times' Ben Protess and Benjamin Weiser: " A Signal to Wall Street In Obama's Pick For Regulators" The White House delivered a strong message to Wall Street on Thursday, taking the unusual step of choosing two former prosecutors as top financial regulators. But translating that message into action will not be easy, given the complexities of the market and Wall Street's aggressive nature. At a short White House ceremony, President Obama named Mary Jo White, the first female United States attorney in Manhattan, to run the Securities and Exchange Commission. LINK

The Washington Times' Dave Boyer: " Obama short of judges for his liberal agenda" President Obama already has sketched out a left-leaning legal agenda for his second term on issues such as gun control, climate change and gay rights, but he is falling far short in nominating the judges to help him uphold it. During Mr. Obama's first term, judicial vacancies rose about 50 percent. LINK

The New York Daily News' James Warren: " Obama taps former New York City prosecutor Mary Jo White to lead the SEC" President Obama on Thursday nominated former New York prosecutor Mary Jo White as chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, declaring, "You don't want to mess with Mary Jo." The move signals Obama's desire to more tightly regulate Wall Street, especially given new financial rules set to soon take effect. LINK

SENATE The Hills' Peter Schroeder: " Obama pushes Senate to confirm Wall Street 'cops on the beat'" President Obama hailed his nominee to head the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) as a fierce watchdog tough enough to stand up to Wall Street. The president highlighted Mary Jo White's previous work as a federal prosecutor to bolster her nomination to head the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), noting she pursued cases against mob bosses and terrorists. LINK

The Los Angeles Times' Lisa Mascaro: " Senate approves modest filibuster changes" The Senate approved changes to the filibuster Thursday night, adopting modest limits on the partisan obstruction that has ground action in the chamber to a near standstill. But the deal reached between the Senate's two leaders -Harry Reid (D-Nev.) and Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) - fell far short of sweeping reforms sought by liberal senators and their allies. LINK

GOP The Washington Post's Nia-Malika Henderson and Errin Haines: " Republicans in Virginia, other states seeking electoral college changes" Republicans in Virginia and a handful of other battleground states are pushing for far-reaching changes to the electoral college in an attempt to counter recent success by Democrats. In the vast majority of states, the presidential candidate who wins receives all of that state's electoral votes. LINK

The Wall Street Journal's Neil King Jr.: "Republican Leaders Search for New, Winning Strategy" Republican Party leaders, gathering for the first time since their stinging election losses in November, have many explanations for what ails the GOP, but so far no clear consensus on how to fix it. LINK

JOHN KERRY Politico's Darren Samuelsohn and Jonathan Allen: " John Kerry: Mr. Climate" President Barack Obama's chief global climate cop won't be stationed at EPA or on the White House staff. He'll be at the State Department. Obama's choice of John Kerry as the nation's top diplomat is the strongest signal to the international community - and the smart set in Washington's political class - that the president is truly committed to striking deals designed to save the world. Add that to his mention of climate change in his inaugural address, and it's giving hope to greens that Kerry will make climate change a key part of his portfolio at Foggy Bottom. LINK

The Boston Globe's Bryan Bender and David Uberti: "Kerry vows to combat climate change" In a confirmation hearing unusual for its bipartisan comity, Secretary of State-designate John F. Kerry pledged Thursday to pursue a different brand of foreign policy - one rooted in greater cultural understanding of the developing world - while leading a global fight to combat climate change, which he described as a direct threat to American security. LINK ABC NEWS VIDEO "Kerry Questioned About Vietnam vs. Current U.S. Policy" LINK

BOOKMARKS The Note: LINK The Must-Reads Online: LINK Top Line Webcast (12noon EST M-F): LINK ABC News Politics: LINK George's Bottom Line (George Stephanopoulos): LINK Follow ABC News on Twitter: LINK ABC News Mobile: LINK ABC News app on your iPhone/iPod Touch/iPad: LINK

Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/notes-must-reads-friday-january-25-2013-105324075--abc-news-politics.html

ncaa basketball tournament 2012 megamillions winning numbers lotto winner michael oher jerry lee lewis cesar chavez winning lotto numbers

Friday, January 25, 2013

Video: Get Back in Stocks?

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

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/50577411/

nyc.gov SAT Notre Dame Football Schedule detroit tigers Tsunami Lil Reese Hurricane Sandy Nyc

County Track and Field Championships | Anne Arundel Sports ...

http://annearundel.patch.com/events/county-track-and-field-championships/media_attachments/edit?upload_started=1359155476

asset[new_asset_attachment_attributes][to_id]

2084994

asset[new_asset_attachment_attributes][to_type]

Event

event[new_asset_attachment_attributes][user_id]

new_asset_attachment_attributes

Source: http://annearundel.patch.com/events/county-track-and-field-championships

davy jones dead monkees last train to clarksville tim tebow taylor swift post grad arpaio carol burnett

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Showhomes Home Staging Launches New Franchise Development ...

January 24, 2013 // Franchising.com // Nashville, TN - Showhomes Home Staging announced today a completely new and enhanced website. The leading home staging services company in the U.S., redesigned its franchise development website to provide more information, staging examples, and other resources to those wishing to start a franchise focused on helping Realtors, Home Owners, Banks and investors sell vacant homes faster and for a higher price. The new website, http://www.showhomesfranchise.com, also includes videos about the services offered by Showhomes and home buying and selling tips for consumers. The site boasts a wealth of information including available territories throughout the US. The website was created to convey the company?s message of a strong brand and continued business growth. The website is a valuable resource for those interested in starting a new home staging business or converting their existing one to a Showhomes franchise office.

About?Showhomes

Showhomes Home Staging provides staging services for home owners, realtors, financial establishments, home builders and investors looking to sell vacant properties. Showhomes? creative marketing strategy has aided over 25,000 customers sell vacant homes valued at over $8 billion. For franchise opportunities and more information, please visit www.showhomesfranchise.com or call 888-481-6742.

SOURCE?Showhomes

###

Social Reach:

Viewer Response:

Source: http://www.franchising.com/news/20130124_showhomes_home_staging_launches_new_franchise_deve.html

kola boof burmese python national signing day ferris bueller god bless america earned income credit super bowl commercials

Forecasting brain tumors like a storm

Jan. 23, 2013 ? The critical question shortly after a brain cancer patient starts treatment: how well is it working? But there hasn't been a good way to gauge that.

Now Northwestern Medicine researchers have developed a new method -- similar to forecasting storms with computer models -- to predict an individual patient's brain tumor growth. This growth forecast will enable physicians to rapidly identify how well the tumor is responding to a particular therapy. The approach allows a quick pivot to a new therapy in a critical time window if the current one isn't effective.

The study is based on 33 patients with glioblastoma, the most common and aggressive form of brain cancer. The paper will be published Jan. 23 in the journal PLOS ONE.

"When a hurricane is approaching, weather models tell us where it's going," said senior author Kristin Swanson, professor and vice chair of research for neurological surgery at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. "Our brain tumor model does the same thing. We know how much and where the tumor will grow. Then we can know how much the treatment deflected that growth and directly relate that to impact on patient survival."

Swanson also is a member of the Northwestern Brain Tumor Institute and the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University. Maxwell Neal, lead author, is a post-doctoral researcher in bioengineering at the University of Washington.

The method will advance brain tumor treatment, Swanson said, by helping distinguish effective treatments from ineffective ones and enabling clinicians to optimize treatment plans on a patient-by-patient basis.

Muddy Zone Right After Treatment

"There is this muddy zone right after the first round of treatments when it's hard for the clinician to know whether to change therapy because she doesn't have the metrics that correlate to outcome," Swanson said. "The doctor can't yet gauge how much it helped."

If the doctor determines the treatment isn't effective, she can try a different type of treatment or help the patient enroll in a clinical trial with a new drug being tested. The information also is helpful to the patient.

"The patient wants to know the therapy is doing something for them," Swanson said. "On the flip side, if the therapy isn't helping, then it may not be worth the side affects he is enduring."

Not All Brain Tumors are the Same

Brain cancer patients are in great need of an approach to find optimal personalized treatments.

Brain tumors vary in their growth rate, shape and density but existing methods for measuring a treatment's impact ignore this variation. The methods (and thus physicians) cannot distinguish between a patient with a fast-growing tumor that responds well to treatment and a patient with a slow-growing tumor that responds poorly.

By using a personalized, patient-specific approach that accounts for tumor features such as 3-dimensional shape, density and growth rate, the new Northwestern method can make this distinction.

Is it Working? How the Model Forecasts Growth and Measures Effectiveness

To measure a treatment's effectiveness, the scientists performing the study created a unique computer model of each patient's tumor and predicted how it would grow in the absence of treatment, explained Neal.

The prediction model was based on the MRI scans that the patient received on the day of diagnosis and on the day of surgery. The difference between these two scans enabled researchers to estimate how fast the tumor was growing along with the density of tumor cells throughout the brain.

Researchers then scored the effectiveness of the patient's treatment by comparing the size of the patient's tumor after treatment to the model-predicted size if untreated.

"The study demonstrated that higher-scoring patients survived significantly longer than lower-scoring patients and their tumors took significantly longer to recur," Neal said. "The score can guide clinicians in determining the effectiveness of the therapy."

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 Northwestern University, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Maxwell Lewis Neal, Andrew D. Trister, Tyler Cloke, Rita Sodt, Sunyoung Ahn, Anne L. Baldock, Carly A. Bridge, Albert Lai, Timothy F. Cloughesy, Maciej M. Mrugala, Jason K. Rockhill, Russell C. Rockne, Kristin R. Swanson. Discriminating Survival Outcomes in Patients with Glioblastoma Using a Simulation-Based, Patient-Specific Response Metric. PLoS ONE, 2013; 8 (1): e51951 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0051951

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/top_health/~3/VXjCDI9IVQk/130123195254.htm

lucky numbers odds of winning mega millions mary mary sag aftra merger dj am bully bohemian rhapsody