Sunday, 31 March 2013

Pope makes Easter pleas for Mideast peace

VATICAN CITY (AP) ?

Pope Francis is making an Easter Sunday peace plea, saying conflicts have lasted too long in Syria, and between Israelis and Palestinians.

Francis also urges reconciliation on the Korean peninsula, where North Korea says it has entered "a state of war" with South Korea.

Before a crowd of 250,000 in St. Peter's Square he also denounced warfare and terrorism in Africa, and decried a greedy affluent world looking for "easy gain."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pope-makes-easter-pleas-mideast-peace-101523086.html

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Saturday, 30 March 2013

It Is Important To Report Any Accidents To Your Insurance Company ...

Auto insurance is not only meant to protect your vehicle. It?s goal is to make sure that other cars, and any people that are on the road, are safe. Carefully check the actual coverages in a policy before you buy. Your financial security can be threatened by inadequate coverage in case of an accident. This advice is meant to assist you in getting the best car insurance.

When you purchase a new auto insurance policy, it is important to remember that in most states, insurance carriers have a window of time to change their minds about insuring you. If you have a stable driving and financial history, this is unlikely, but keep your research into other carriers handy in case you need to purchase another policy.

Many insurance companies provide large discounts to people who do not drive 7500 miles in a single year. If you are looking to cut back on your car insurance costs, this is a great place to begin.

The cheapest quote may not necessarily be the best policy. It could be the bargain of the year, or it may not be adequate insurance for you at all. Research the company first and examine the policy closely for any hidden details, before purchasing a policy.

There are optional protections past legal protections that can further protect you. You will have more coverage, but your premium may be more. If you get in a hit-and-run accident or one where the other party has no insurance, you will be out of luck unless you have uninsured motorist coverage.

If you keep a clean driving record, it will reduce the cost of an auto insurance policy. You can be awarded good driver discounts if you don?t get into accidents or receive tickets. A bad driving record can cost you a significant amount of money. If you are a safe driver, your premiums will be much lower.

Those who do not drive a lot, or who drive short distances, can sometimes get low mileage discounts on their policy. Generally, you have to drive under 7,500 miles a year to qualify for this discount. If you take the bus or train instead of a car you may get a commuter discount.

Think about the kind of vehicle you have when considering insurance coverage. Older vehicles that are fully paid for do not require as much insurance, as a new vehicle that is still being paid for. How often your particular type of vehicle is involved in auto theft is another important factor in determining your coverage needs. If your vehicle model is popular, regardless of age, seriously think about getting comprehensive coverage.

In addition to using the advice this article has given you, look over your policy. It is possible that your policy lacks some coverages you need, and has some that you don?t.

Professiona-InfoProfessional-Info

Introducing Mozy Stash-Backup and Sync

Source: http://insuranceauto.professional-info.com/2013/03/29/it-is-important-to-report-any-accidents-to-your-insurance-company/

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Friday, 29 March 2013

SALT can spice up your financial aid experience! | Pure Learning ...

Salt_final_logo

Butler Community College has teamed up with American Student Assistance on a movement to address the college affordability issue by revolutionizing how students and alumni finance and repay their higher education. Through a free game-changing educational membership program called ?SALT,? Butler and ASA are equipping students and alumni with money skills for life so they reduce their student loan debt, improve student loan repayment outcomes, and increase their overall financial empowerment.

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While a college degree has never been more valuable than in today?s global economy, many students and families are unsure of how to successfully pay for higher education. Approximately 12 million students borrow for college each year but many make uninformed decisions, either borrowing more than they need or failing to take advantage of loans that offer the lowest rates and flexible payment options. Additionally, 37 million Americans already have existing college debt, with about one-quarter of these borrowers owing more than $28,000 and about 10 percent owing more than $54,000. More than 5 million Americans are behind on their student loan payments, with dire consequences on the U.S. economy as struggling student loan borrowers delay purchasing homes, cars and other consumer goods.

Activating your SALT membership allows you take advantage of members-only features, like:

  • Interactive money management tools that show you how to take control of your finances.
  • A personal dashboard that tracks all of your federal student loans from Saint Anselm in one place.
  • Loan advice from SALT?s expert counselors.
  • My Money 101?a self-paced, online resource that teaches you practical money management strategies for budgeting, credit cards, banking and more.
  • Access to thousands of jobs and internships to jumpstart your career.
  • Exclusive benefits that help you save and spend smart.

Butler and ASA are taking steps to address this higher education and economic crisis with SALT, a dynamic, multichannel educational program that combines online and offline interactions to deliver decision support, engaging content, and one-on-one loan repayment guidance in a simple, useful, and motivating experience.

SALT uses a variety of channels to meaningfully engage student and alumni members and positively influence behavior. Members receive proactive communication about student loan repayment options; one-on-one repayment counseling with student loan experts; a personalized online dashboard to track all their federal and private student loans in one place and compare payment options; a highly interactive Web financial education curriculum and other educational content; multiple ?self-serve? web tools and calculators to assist with budgeting; in-person group financial education training at their higher education institution; advocacy and assistance with resolving complex student loan related problems; and meaningful benefits and incentives relevant to either the higher education experience or to the financial needs they face after completing college, such as assistance with job/internship and scholarship searches.

Butler joins a growing number of higher education institutions nationwide, from four-year private institutions to public institutions to community colleges, that have already signed on to the SALT movement. SALT schools? students and alumni automatically become SALT members and gain full access to the program?s services. Multiple administrative offices on campus, from financial aid and the bursar to student affairs, alumni and development, will actively partner with ASA on a year-long ?Get on the Money? campaign to drive SALT awareness and engagement among on-campus students and alumni.

As a public purpose nonprofit organization, ASA is committed to offering SALT services free of charge to student and alumni members whose higher education institutions participate in the program. In order to do so, ASA has established a contribution-based model whereby ASA seeks to engage multiple stakeholders interested in student success, including federal or state government entities, colleges and universities, foundations or other non-profit organizations and corporate sponsors, to contribute to the overall cost of delivering service.

?Butler is excited to join the SALT movement because we believe in the program?s principles of financial education and empowerment to help address the issues of college affordability and student debt,? said Butler Director of Financial Aid Susie Edwards. ?Students and alumni deserve the proper support network to help them finance their education and manage any resulting debt. We are committed to playing our role in ensuring that students and alumni have access to these critical education debt management and financial education services.?

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Source: http://butlergrizzlies.wordpress.com/2013/03/27/salt-can-spice-up-your-financial-aid-experience/

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FBI UFO memo is bureau's most viewed public record

FBI UFO memo: The Federal Bureau of Investigation says that its Hottel memo, which reports on an alleged flying saucer sighting, has been viewed nearly a million times since 2011.

By Megan Gannon,?LiveScience.com / March 27, 2013

A single-page March 22, 1950, memo by Guy Hottel, special agent in charge of the Washington Field Office, regarding UFOs is the most viewed document in the FBI Vault, an online repository of public records.

FBI

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The FBI says its most viewed public record is a memo from 1950 recounting a strange story someone told an agent about three "flying saucers" that were allegedly recovered in New Mexico.

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The so-called?Hottel memo?was first released in the late 1970s under the Freedom of Information Act, but it's been viewed nearly a million times since 2011, when the FBI launched an online database of public records called the Vault.

Dated March 22, 1950, the memo was addressed to FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover and written by Guy Hottel, then head of the Bureau's field office in Washington, D.C. Hottel was reporting what an Air Force investigator said that someone else told him about the crashed saucers.

The following details of the report have perhaps fueled the hopes of those who want to believe: "They [the saucers] were described as being circular in shape with raised centers, approximately 50 feet in diameter. Each one was occupied by three bodies of human shape but only three feet tall, dressed in metallic cloth of a very fine texture. Each body was bandaged in a manner similar to the blackout suits used by speed fliers and test pilots."

For the record, FBI officials said in a statement on Monday (March 25) that the Hottel memo "does not prove the?existence of UFOs; it is simply a second- or third-hand claim that we never investigated."

Bureau officials also say there is no reason to believe that the story has anything to do with the infamous?1947 Roswell crash?in New Mexico.?Hoover did actually order his agents?to verify any?UFO sightings?after the?Roswell incident and until?July 1950. That?the Hottel report was never investigated suggests "our Washington Field Office didn't think enough of that flying saucer story to look into it," the FBI statement says.

Follow Megan Gannon on?Twitter?and?Google+.?Follow us?@livescience,?Facebook?&?Google+.

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

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/ODxFGvGpbzQ/FBI-UFO-memo-is-bureau-s-most-viewed-public-record

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Wednesday, 27 March 2013

Berkshire amends warrant deal with Goldman Sachs

(AP) ? Warren Buffett's company says it's changed its warrant agreement with Goldman Sachs Group Inc. to allow it to be settled with stock, cementing its place as a long-term investor.

Berkshire Hathaway Inc. received the right to buy 43.5 million Goldman shares as part of a $5 billion deal it made to bolster the New York-based investment bank during the financial crisis.

Originally, Berkshire could buy Goldman stock for $115 per share until this Oct. 1.

Now instead of Berkshire paying cash for all 43.5 million shares, Goldman will compensate Berkshire with stock for the difference between its stock price this fall and the exercise price.

The deal will likely make Berkshire one of Goldman's top 10 biggest shareholders. Goldman shares are currently 27 percent higher than the exercise price.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-03-26-US-Berkshire-Hathaway-Goldman-Sachs/id-5760ab3a743d42e8868f2f090a8f7108

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T-Mobile's Sonic 2.0 mobile hotspot revealed, brings LTE-powered WiFi to the masses

TMobile's Sonic 20 mifi revealed, brings LTEpowered WiFi to the magenta loving massesT-Mobile's UnCarrier announcement event is taking place a little later today, but some bits of news have started to leak out ahead of time. First was the BlackBerry Z10, and now comes an LTE mobile hotspot, the Sonic 2.0. It's T-mo's first LTE mifi and can feed data to up to eight devices at a time. Not only that, it's compatible with both Mac OSX 10.8 and Windows 8, plus Microsofties get the added benefit of compatibility with the Win8 Carrier application so users can easily access real-time data usage info for every connected gadget. As for the hardware, the Sonic 2.0 has a 1.77-inch color LCD on the front, a 3,000 mAh battery, 802.11 b/g/n WiFi and quadband LTE and 3G radios on board. There's also a MicroSD card slot for simple file sharing of up to 32GB cards. It'll be available by the end of the month, though we don't yet know how much it'll cost. Guess you'll have to tune into our liveblog to find out.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/0gRL3Jx9L6c/

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Young, hot and blue: Stars in the cluster NGC 2547

Mar. 27, 2013 ? The Universe is an old neighbourhood -- roughly 13.8 billion years old. Our galaxy, the Milky Way, is also ancient -- some of its stars are more than 13 billion years old. Nevertheless, there is still a lot of action: new objects form and others are destroyed. In this image, you can see some of the newcomers, the young stars forming the cluster NGC 2547.

But, how young are these cosmic youngsters really? Although their exact ages remain uncertain, astronomers estimate that NGC 2547's stars range from 20 to 35 million years old. That doesn't sound all that young, after all. However, our Sun is 4600 million years old and has not yet reached middle age. That means that if you imagine that the Sun as a 40 year-old person, the bright stars in the picture are three-month-old babies.

Most stars do not form in isolation, but in rich clusters with sizes ranging from several tens to several thousands of stars. While NGC 2547 contains many hot stars that glow bright blue, a telltale sign of their youth, you can also find one or two yellow or red stars which have already evolved to become red giants. Open star clusters like this usually only have comparatively short lives, of the order of several hundred million years, before they disintegrate as their component stars drift apart.

Clusters are key objects for astronomers studying how stars evolve through their lives. The members of a cluster were all born from the same material at about the same time, making it easier to determine the effects of other stellar properties.

The star cluster NGC 2547 lies in the southern constellation of Vela (The Sail), about 1500 light-years from Earth, and is bright enough to be easily seen using binoculars. It was discovered in 1751 by the French astronomer Nicolas-Louis de Lacaille during an astronomical expedition to the Cape of Good Hope in South Africa, using a tiny telescope of less than two centimetres aperture.

Between the bright stars in this picture you can see plenty of other objects, especially when zooming in. Many are fainter or more distant stars in the Milky Way, but some, appearing as fuzzy extended objects, are galaxies, located millions of light-years beyond the stars in the field of view.

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Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/03/130327092751.htm

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Before they were bigtime Superstars

All WWE programming, talent names, images, likenesses, slogans, wrestling moves, trademarks, logos and copyrights are the exclusive property of WWE, Inc. and its subsidiaries. All other trademarks, logos and copyrights are the property of their respective owners. ? 2013 WWE, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This website is based in the United States. By submitting personal information to this website you consent to your information being maintained in the U.S., subject to applicable U.S. laws. U.S. law may be different than the law of your home country. WrestleMania XXIX (NY/NJ) logo TM & ? 2013 WWE. All Rights Reserved. The Empire State Building design is a registered trademark and used with permission by ESBC.

Source: http://www.wwe.com/classics/classic-lists/before-they-were-bigtime-superstars

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Tuesday, 26 March 2013

Cop who toured with band charged with disability fraud

By Barbara Goldberg

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A New York police officer was charged on Tuesday with mail fraud for allegedly claiming disability benefits for two years while at the same time performing and touring with his heavy metal band, "Cousin Sleaze," according to court documents.

Christopher Inserra, an officer with the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, was the lead singer with the Brooklyn band, whose "Sick Maniacs" album features such songs as "Infection" and "Walk of Shame," according to an affidavit filed in U.S. District Court in Brooklyn.

Inserra, 31, of Brooklyn was charged with mail fraud in connection with a scheme to defraud the American Family Life Assurance Company of New York (AFLAC) out of $30,416 (20,064 pounds) in disability payments.

He claimed he was out sick with a work-related injury from June 2010 until March 2012, filing for disability while continuing to collect his $90,000 annual salary, according to court documents.

The officer claimed he hurt his right arm, causing excruciating pain and loss of mobility, while transporting a Port Authority contractor to a hospital, according to the documents.

Those two years were filled with visits to doctors as well as performance dates for his band "Cousin Sleaze" in northeast bars and on a "Miles of Mayhem" tour through the mid-Atlantic and Southeast, said U.S. Postal Inspector John McDermott in a signed affidavit filed in court.

Video footage of "Cousin Sleaze" performances posted to Facebook, Youtube and other websites show the muscular lead singer in a tank top showing off well-toned arms gripping a microphone and slashing the air, McDermott said.

The inspector saw Inserra on stage "flailing both of his arms in a rapid back and forth fashion," pumping away to the beat, and also "repeatedly and violently flailing his right arm in an up and down fashion from above his head to slightly above the ground level."

He said the "flailing of his right arm ... would be inconsistent with the degree of pain and discomfort that he complained of."

Inserra, who had served with the Port Authority for five years, was most recently assigned to the World Trade Centre Command in Manhattan, the complaint said.

After his initial court appearance, during which he did not enter a plea, he was released on a $25,000 personal recognizance bond, said U.S. Attorney Robert Nardoza.

Inserra's attorney, Jan Rostal, declined to comment.

Inserra was suspended without pay pending resolution of his case, said Michael Nestor, director of the Office of Investigations overseeing the Port Authority.

(Editing by Ellen Wulfhorst; Editing by David Brunnstrom)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/york-cop-toured-band-charged-disability-fraud-214820596.html

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Prostate Cancer Symptoms | Cancer Society of Ghana

Prostate Cancer Symptoms

We all know that Prostate Cancer can come about to any male and it is a highly normal form of cancer. The commonest type of cancer in the United States presently is skin cancer but, to a wide range of consumers?s surprise, Prostate Cancer is the second loads of often noticed sort of cancer and outcomes in some 30,000 deaths every year. According to the Prostate Cancer Foundation, this kind of cancer is the a great number of normal non-skin cancer in the United States.

A prostate seed implant might be the only sort of radiation treatment required by a man with low-danger Prostate Cancer or it will probably be prescribed in addition to external beam radiation treatment in males with intermediate- and high- danger Prostate Cancer. If caught in its early stages Prostate Cancer can be effectively treated either by surgery or radiation treatment (radiotherapy) and, even though such therapy can frequently leave its mark in terms of ongoing troubles with urination or a degradation or loss of sexual function, the cancer will regularly not return. Curing Prostate Cancer is doable, and the therapy is even more effective if cancer is detected in the early stages.

Curing Prostate Cancer is doable, but the situation has to be detected in the early stages. Given that Prostate Cancer is a highly slow-increasing illness and simple and easy to handle if it is detected early adequate, the regular screenings are encouraged for obese folks experiencing the above symptoms. Even though the aforementioned prostate statistics never look to be high-quality, the truth of the matter is that if Prostate Cancer is detected early, therapies are regularly fairly helpful and probabilities of surviving are tremendously high.

Even though the identical researchers had been simple and easy to point out that every year fewer and fewer males are dying of Prostate Cancer, due to awareness, far better therapies and early detection by means of new and additional offered screening tactics. In order to catch Prostate Cancer in its early stages, it is advised that males with no threat variables get an annual screening each and every year starting at age 50. In addition, starting at age 50, an annual PSA test is needed Simply because it is substantially way more sensitive for males wellness than DRE although it comes to detecting early, tiny, or even microscopic cancers that are confined to the prostate gland.

In addition, a different confusing aspect is that countless of the doable warning indicators, if they look, are also the identical indicators for other prostate overall health concerns that are non-cancerous in nature, such as BPH, which is named an enlarged prostate gland. I am confident that we?ve all heard at some point or a different the notion that much more sex is the option to prostate concerns, citing as proof the high incidence of Prostate Cancer in celibate priests. This might be the initially time an proof is developed that a virus is connected to Prostate Cancer improvement.

Almost certainly, the conclusion that drugs lowering cholesterol can help protect against Prostate Cancer or at least lower its improvement is premature. Sun exposure stop Prostate Cancer and the new research recommend vitamin D in supplement will probably be a safer remedy presently for guys. Researchers shown that vitamin D has most micronutrients market and avert the Prostate Cancer in guys.

Chemotherapy is normally not effective against Prostate Cancer though newer drugs created in current years have shown the capability to relieve symptoms in guys with sophisticated Prostate Cancer. According to Prostate Cancer Foundation, symptoms of the ailment contain a necessity to urinate quite regularly, weak urine flow, difficulty in beginning urination, painful or burning urination, painful ejaculation, blood cells in the semen or urine, as well as frequent pain and cramps in the lower back, hips and upper thighs. One of the several prevalent symptoms listed above is the difficulty beginning to pass urine, but preserve your eye out for the other individuals.

Source: http://cancersocietygh.com/prostate-cancer-symptoms/

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Chinese online literature: Voices in the wilderness | The Economist

FOR THE country that invented paper it is no small irony that China's most innovative writing happens off the page. A number of authors, stifled by state censorship and a conservative publishing industry, are finding freedom online.

In the late 1990s aspiring literati began to share works online. One of these, Li Jie, started to write internet stories for no other reason than to kill time. Bored with her job serving customers in a bank, she signed up under the pen name Anni Baobei. Her depiction of a damaged, disillusioned youth hit a nerve. Aged just 25, to the horror of her parents, Ms Li gave up a secure income to write full time. The gamble paid off. She made the transition to print and is still one of China's bestselling authors.

Internet writing has been nothing short of a revolution for Chinese literature. It has allowed myriad voices to be heard. The digital landscape and technology have changed since the first wave of authors began to write; readers in China now access novels through smartphones and tablets rather than desktops. Yet the internet remains the "single root" in China today to kick-start a career as a wordsmith, says Jo Lusby, managing director of Penguin China, a publishing house. "There are no authors under the age of 35 who were not discovered on the internet," she adds.

Online literature sites have blossomed in the last decade. They provide a rich, and grassroots, alternative to the staid state-run publishing houses. While all books published in the mainland are subject to scrutiny by cautious editors and zealous censors, online literature sites are watched less carefully. They still operate behind the ?great firewall?, China?s internet-filtering system which blocks sensitive words or topics, but the sheer volume of works produced, combined with the lack of editorial oversight, creates an important loophole.

On sites such as Rongshuxia visitors pay per instalment to read works. Authors, often posting and writing simultaneously, can gauge reader feedback and shift plots as they go. Innovative editors from China's burgeoning private publishing industry trawl through them to find the next big thing.

In 2002 Hao Qun was working as a car salesman in Chengdu, a metropolis in southern China, when he began to write a novel. Under the pseudonym Murong Xuecun (the name by which he is now known) he posted his work online in instalments, in Dickensian fashion, adjusting characters and plot turns as he went. The resulting book "Chengdu, Please Forget Me Tonight", a brutal indictment of a disenchanted urban China, found fans in the country's cyber-youth. It has attracted an estimated three to five million readers, according to Harvey Thomlinson, Mr Murong?s English-language publisher and translator. In 2008, the book (published in English as ?Leave Me Alone: A Novel of Chengdu?) was longlisted for the Man Asian Literary prize. Known for tackling social issues, Mr Murong (pictured right) also serialised ?Dancing Through Red Dust?, a novel about China's corrupt legal system, online in 2008.

Online writing is not without perils. Mr Murong says that one impatient reader tried to write his own version of the next chapter before the author?s instalment had been published. Piracy is another issue. But Mr Murong insists that copyright abuse is the least of his concerns: "A relaxed and free environment is more important than royalties."

Internet writing is not, however, just a platform for speaking out; it is for entertainment too. While many state publishers continue to stubbornly view literature as a vehicle for propaganda or self-improvement, online sites are driven by market forces and the interests of readers have encouraged niche genres, from teen romance to time travel. On the site Qidian, the top three ranked novels in January were a Chinese knight-errant novel, fantasy fiction and historical fiction. Mainstream acceptance has followed. In 2011, internet novels were included for the first time as candidates for the state-approved Mao Dun Literature prize.

With 564m internet users in China, online literature sites are big business. Shanda Literature is one of the largest players. The company, founded in 2008, conglomerated the popular websites Qidian and Hongxiu, among others. It currently has more than 6m user-generated titles in its database, according to the company's CEO, Hou Xiaoqiang.

Shanda is interested in marketable writers who can generate income for the company through spin-off TV, film and video-game deals. But with success comes growth and recognition, making it impossible for Shanda to stay under the radar?to remain operational, good government relations are key. Mr Hou claims that Shanda's websites have far less intervention from censors than traditional publishing houses. But he says he "stands firm" in cracking down on content which violates state rules.

With their old spaces squeezed as such sites attract more state surveillance, some of the more daring political writers are turning to even newer online platforms, especially micro-blogs, to express their views. Social media is now a far more important tool for Mr Murong?his account on Sina Weibo (a Chinese version of Twitter) has more than 3m followers. Posts can be deleted by censors, but not before they have been read by thousands. Although no replacement for long-form fiction, it enables authors to connect directly with readers and pass on sensitive messages that online sites might no longer stand.

For Ms Li writing online has become too mass market. In the 1990s, she explains, the few internet users were well-educated and authors who posted online were passionately serious about their craft. Now vanity publishing is rife and anyone can try their hand as a writer. "The internet has become too popularised," she argues. The sheer quantity and speed of online literature means that much will be forgettable dross. But the internet has opened up pathways around China?s state censorship apparatus. From the wilderness, new important voices will continue to emerge.

Source: http://www.economist.com/blogs/prospero/2013/03/chinese-online-literature

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Forty-six gene sequencing test for cancer patients in UK

Mar. 25, 2013 ? The first multi-gene DNA sequencing test that can help predict cancer patients' responses to treatment has been launched in the National Health Service (NHS), thanks to a partnership between scientists at the University of Oxford and Oxford University Hospitals NHS Trust.

The test uses the latest DNA sequencing techniques to detect mutations across 46 genes that may be driving cancer growth in patients with solid tumours. The presence of a mutation in a gene can potentially determine which treatment a patient should receive.

The researchers say the number of genes tested marks a step change in introducing next-generation DNA sequencing technology into the NHS, and heralds the arrival of genomic medicine with whole genome sequencing of patients just around the corner.

The many-gene sequencing test has been launched through the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Oxford Biomedical Research Centre (BRC), a collaboration between Oxford University Hospitals NHS Trust and Oxford University to accelerate healthcare innovation, and which has part-funded this initiative.

The BRC Molecular Diagnostics Centre carries out the test. The lab, based at Oxford University Hospitals, covers all cancer patients in the Thames Valley area. But the scientists are looking to scale this up into a truly national NHS service through the course of this year.

The new ?300 test could save significantly more in drug costs by getting patients on to the right treatments straightaway, reducing harm from side effects as well as the time lost before arriving at an effective treatment.

'We are the first to introduce a multi-gene diagnostic test for tumour profiling on the NHS using the latest DNA sequencing technology,' says Dr Jenny Taylor of the Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics at Oxford University, who is programme director for Genomic Medicine at the NIHR Oxford BRC and was involved in the work. 'It's a significant step change in the way we do things. This new 46 gene test moves us away from conventional methods for sequencing of single genes, and marks a huge step towards more comprehensive genome sequencing in both infrastructure and in handling the data produced.'

Dr Anna Schuh, who heads the BRC Molecular Diagnostics Centre and is a consultant haematologist at Oxford University Hospitals, adds: 'Patients like the idea of a test that can predict and say up front whether they will respond to an otherwise toxic treatment. What the patient sees is no different from present. A biopsy is taken from the patient's tumour for genetic testing with a consultant talking through the results a few days later. It is part of the normal diagnostic process.'

Cancer is often described as a genetic disease, since the transition a cell goes through in becoming cancerous tends to be driven by changes to the cell's DNA. And increasingly, new cancer drugs depend on knowing whether a mutation in a single gene is present in a patient's cancer cells.

For example, a lung cancer patient may have a biopsy taken to check for changes in the EGFR gene. If there is a mutation, the patient may then be treated with a drug that works as an EGFR inhibitor. If there is no mutation, such drugs won't work and the patient would get a different drug that would be more effective for them. Knowing the presence or absence of mutations in a certain gene can choose the treatment path for that patient.

The NHS can currently test for mutations in 2 or 3 genes -- genes called BRAF, EGFR or KRAS -- using older sequencing technology that has been around for decades. Efforts are being made to look at increasing the number of cancer genes sequenced to nine as standard.

The Oxford scientists are the first to make such multi-gene tests possible in the NHS using the latest DNA sequencing techniques. The NHS service they have launched looks for mutations in 46 genes, and they are now working towards verifying the use of a test involving 150 genes.

Having a diagnostic test or 'panel' that can screen for mutations in multiple genes at once will be important for access to all the new cancer drugs that are coming along.

'It will be very difficult to manage in NHS diagnostic labs without gene panels,' explains Dr Schuh. 'Currently, new cancer drugs tend to get approved alongside a diagnostic test specific to that drug which can determine which patients will benefit. But as more and more drugs like this come along, we can't possibly run all the many different separate tests this could mean. We need one test for a range of drugs.'

Dr Taylor adds: 'We wanted a test that would use the latest DNA sequencing techniques to detect a wide range of mutations in a wide range of genes. A test that would be able to cover more cancers and more treatments, all for a similar cost to conventional methods.'

The test is run on a next generation sequencing platform from Life Technologies Corporation, called the Ion Personal Genome Machine (PGM(TM)). The test and accompanying software have been substantially modified as requested by the Oxford team to fulfil diagnostic standards in their lab.

This work was co-funded by the Technology Strategy Board, the UK's innovation agency, through a grant to the NIHR Oxford BRC, Life Technologies Corporation, AstraZeneca, and Janssen Research & Development, LLC, one of the Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies.

As part of the test development, the Oxford team looked to improve the initial sample preparation in the lab, and to provide the software and infrastructure support to handle and analyse the amount of information involved. Most importantly, the Oxford group has carried out tests and comparisons to verify the robustness of the technique with cancer biopsies direct from patients.

The team compared the new 46 gene test against conventional techniques for 80 consecutive cancer biopsies in the hospital lab's workflow.

The next-generation DNA sequencing method detected all the mutations the conventional method did; it detected new mutations the conventional method didn't; and detected mutations present at much lower levels in the samples. The time taken for the 46 gene test also fitted into the standard turnaround time for samples at the lab.

There is definite benefit in screening some of the 46 genes included in the test; there is probable or likely clinical benefit in screening some of the others; mutations in further genes might be important in some cancers but not others; and the other genes, we don't know as yet. But having this information means researchers can investigate whether a mutation has biological significance.

'We can keep data, bank it and link it with anonymised clinical data on patients' cancers for future research,' explains Dr Schuh.

The test looks for mutations in 'hotspot' regions of each gene -- areas where mutations are more likely to occur. This does mean the test may miss up to 5% of mutations, as they can occur elsewhere, but this is still significantly better than the 'false negative' rate using current methods.

It can also detect mutations present in only 5% of the tumour cells present in a sample. This is much lower than is possible currently, and is important in being able to capture information from cells present in only small numbers in a tumour, but which are still important in driving cancer growth.

Having shown that it is possible to introduce the 46 gene test as an NHS service, the researchers are now moving on to investigate the potential of a test that will sequence 150 genes. The team will use the test first of all with 500 existing samples from patients taking part in cancer clinical trials to be able to compare the results retrospectively with information from the trials. They will then use the test with 1000 new cancer biopsies to better understand how the extra information could be used in guiding treatments for patients and their outcomes.

Dr Schuh says: '"Panel" tests have significant potential while we wait for the cost of sequencing whole patient genomes to come down. Even then, panel tests may be with us for some time. After whole genome sequencing does come into use, it may be that panel tests are used first with patients' biopsies, with only those whose panel test shows no result having their entire DNA sequenced to look for rarer genetic changes.'

Lord Howe, Health Minister, said: 'We want to be among the best countries in the world at treating cancer and know that better tailored care for patients could potentially save lives.

'Health research like this is incredibly important and I'm delighted we could support the work of researchers in Oxford through the National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre.

'By rapidly translating findings from genetics research into real benefits for patients, their work will make sure that patients get the right treatments straight away, reduce potential side effects and also help us use NHS funds more effectively.'

The 46-gene panel is based on Ion AmpliSeq(TM) chemistry from Life Technologies Corporation. The test requires a very small amount of DNA (5 nanograms), an advantage when working with clinical samples that are typically limited in quantity.

The Ion Personal Genome Machine (PGM(TM) and Ion AmpliSeq(TM) are for Research Use Only, not intended for use in diagnostic procedures. Life Technologies intends to pursue CE-IVD designation for the PGM.

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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/~3/auuouxKLTHo/130325101533.htm

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Sunday, 24 March 2013

Severe U.S. storm to bring heavy snow, possible tornadoes

By Mary Wisniewski

CHICAGO (Reuters) - The calendar says spring but the forecast looked like winter as a major storm this Palm Sunday weekend was forecast to bring heavy snow, flooding rain and severe thunderstorms as it moved east across the United States.

Snow had already started falling in eastern Colorado and parts of Kansas early on Saturday, according to AccuWeather.com senior meteorologist Tom Kines.

Interstate-70 was closed from east of Denver to the Kansas state line because of blowing and drifting snow, according to the Colorado Department of Transportation. Snow delayed arriving flights at Denver International Airport, said spokesman Heath Montgomery.

The snow was expected to move east to Kansas City, St. Louis, Indianapolis and Columbus, Ohio, over the next 24 hours, before moving into the mid-Atlantic states, he said.

The snow could measure from three to six inches in the Midwest, but accumulations in the Baltimore-Washington area could be much less due to higher temperatures, Kines said.

A potential for "tremendous rainfall" could hit areas south of the snow line, according to AccuWeather.com.

Rough weather is expected in the Gulf Coast region from Florida to eastern Texas through Saturday, with large hail, damaging winds and possible tornadoes, Kines said. The system was already affecting the Tallahassee region of Florida on Saturday morning.

"All in all, this is a pretty nasty storm," Kines said.

Forecasters expect severe weather in the Gulf Coast region during this time of year, he said, but the swath of heavy snow across the country's mid-section in late March is unusual.

An Ohio prosecutor fed up with the continued cold and snow issued a mock indictment this week for fraud against Punxsutawney Phil, the famed prognosticating Pennsylvania groundhog, who had forecast an early spring.

(Reporting by Mary Wisniewski and Keith Coffman; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Doina Chiacu)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/severe-u-storm-bring-heavy-snow-possible-tornadoes-164536444.html

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News Summary: SKorea misidentifies cyberattack

March 22 (Reuters) - Austria 6 Faroe Islands 0 - World Cup qualifying Group C result. In Vienna Scorers: Philipp Hosiner 8, 20, Andreas Ivanschitz 28, Zlatko Junuzovic 77, David Alaba 78, Gyorgy Garics 82 Halftime: 3-0 Teams: Austria: 12-Heinz Lindner; 2-Gyorgy Garics, 4-Emanuel Pogatetz, 3-Aleksandar Dragovic, 5-Christian Fuchs (13-Markus Suttner 72); 6-Andreas Ivanschitz (9-Andreas Weimann 63), 10-Zlatko Junuzovic, 19-Veli Kavlak (18-Christoph Leitgeb 56), 8-David Alaba, 7-Marko Arnautovic, 20-Philipp Hosiner Faroe Islands: 1-Gunnar Nielsen, 2-Jonas Naes, 3-Pol Justinussen, 4-Odmar Faero, ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/news-summary-skorea-misidentifies-cyberattack-172829331.html

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Saturday, 23 March 2013

Harvard stripped of quiz tournament titles

By Daniel Lovering

CAMBRIDGE, Massachusetts (Reuters) - Harvard University will be stripped of four national quiz championship titles after organizers found a competitor from the Ivy League school inappropriately accessed information about questions used in the tournament.

The National Academic Quiz Tournaments said that a security review found that Harvard competitor Andy Watkins accessed pages on its administrative Website just before the 2009, 2010 and 2011 Intercollegiate Championship Tournaments or "Quiz Bowls".

"We can't have that happen," said Robert Hentzel, NAQT president said on Friday.

The quiz organizers said their review found that Watkins accessed Web pages that showed the first 40 characters of questions to be asked at the tournaments, though it said it had no direct or statistical evidence that Watkins and three others took advantage of their prior access in game situations.

Hentzel, the group's president, said sometimes even the first 40 characters of a question can be telling.

At the time of the review, Watkins was working for the quiz organizer as question writer for high-school level contests. The NAQT said Watkins has been terminated as a question writer.

Watkins denied any wrongdoing.

"My immaturity damaged my much-prized relationship with NAQT and cast undue doubt on three remarkable accomplishments by three Harvard teams," said Watkins, in a statement issued by the organization. "I regret my breaches of question security .... Though I know everyone will make their own judgments, I did compete in good faith."

A Harvard spokesman declined to comment on the news.

The academic setback for the prestigious New England school came a day after Harvard scored a rare athletic triumph -- winning its first-ever game in the national college basketball championships.

It follows an incident last year when dozens of students were forced to withdraw temporarily from the university after cheating on a final exam in the largest academic scandal to hit the nearly four-century-old school in recent memory.

The National Academic Quiz Tournaments said they would vacate all of Harvard's wins at the Division I events in 2009 through 2011 and recognize other teams as national champions.

It named the University of Minnesota as undergraduate champion in 2009; the University of Chicago as Division I champion in 2010; the University of Minnesota as Division I champion in 2011, and Virginia Commonwealth University as undergraduate champion in 2011.

(Editing by Scott Malone and Andrew Hay)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/harvard-stripped-quiz-tournament-titles-220451440.html

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Whoa! See Christina Aguilera's Fresh-Faced Makeover

From her crazy wigs to her clownish makeup, Christina Aguilera has been getting a lot of negative attention for her appearance lately. But not anymore!

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/christina-aguilera-gets-natural-makeover/1-a-529350?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Achristina-aguilera-gets-natural-makeover-529350

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Thursday, 21 March 2013

Cypriots: Hope, but also fear they 'will be like slaves' to Russia

Andreas Pavlidis owns a small ice cream and frozen yogurt store just off the main shopping street in Nicosia, Cyprus. He opened the store a year ago, but said he is earning enough to make a living.

"Sales have dropped somewhat over the last few months because of the uncertainty around the economy," Pavlidis said. "People may not be going on holidays or buying clothes, but at least they are still buying food. Our products only cost one to three euros, and people still want a little treat now and then, so we are doing fine."

Pavlidis' store is an exception. In the city center of Nicosia, the capital of Cyprus, many stores are closed or rundown and store windows are plastered with "for sale" signs.

Teenagers sit in cafes, pensioners huddle together playing backgammon, known as "Tavli." A few tourists snap pictures of old churches. The only luxury they seem to enjoy is their afternoon coffee at Starbucks or the local coffee shop.

Reacting to Tuesday's overwhelming vote against the controversial deposit tax, Pavlidis said: "It is good. We sent a clear sign to Europe."

During the short visit to Pavlidis? store, he stressed twice that Cypriots are not like Greeks, a sentiment shared by others in the capital.

"We are hardworking,? Pavlidis said. ?I work 60 hours a week. We want to rebuild the economy ourselves. We do not want help from (German Chancellor Angela) Merkel."

He added: "We much prefer Russia to be involved than Germany's Merkel, who has been bluffing all along. The Germans will do whatever they want with us."

(Read More:Russia Talks 'Looking Beyond' Loan Extension: Cyprus)

But others disagree. One man, who identified himself as George, said: "If Russia makes a bigger investment in Cyprus, we will be like slaves."

If Cyprus strikes a deal with Russia for a loan in exchange for gas reserves, he said, the country will have to give in to Russia's demands for years.

Pavlidis remains optimistic: "Going back to the Cypriot lira may just be what we need. It may be difficult in the first three to four years, but it will certainly be better in the long run."

A graphic design student named Efi said the job market is tough.

"It is so difficult to find a job, with so many young people from other countries coming here and accepting lower pay," she said. But Efi says she will stay in Cyprus.

"Where else should I go?? she said. ?I hope the situation will get better soon."

? 2013 CNBC LLC. All Rights Reserved

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653351/s/29cbcf9e/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Cbusiness0Ccypriots0Ehope0Ealso0Efear0Ethey0Ewill0Ebe0Eslaves0Erussia0E1C8976355/story01.htm

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Major computer crash in SKorea; hackers suspected

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) ? Computer networks at major South Korean banks and top TV broadcasters crashed en masse Wednesday, paralyzing bank machines across the country and prompting speculation of a cyberattack by North Korea.

Screens went blank at 2 p.m. (0500 GMT), with reports of skulls popping up on some computer screens, the state-run Korea Information Security Agency said ? a strong indication that hackers planted a malicious code in South Korean systems. Some computers came back online more than 2 ? hours later.

Police and South Korean officials couldn't immediately determine the cause. But experts said a cyberattack orchestrated by Pyongyang was likely to blame. The rivals have exchanged threats following U.N. sanctions meant to punish North Korea over its nuclear test last month.

The shutdown appeared to be more of an inconvenience than a source of panic. There were no immediate reports that bank customers' records were compromised. It also didn't affect government agencies or networks essential to the country's infrastructure, such as power plants or transportation systems.

Still, it raised worries about the overall vulnerability to attacks in South Korea, a world leader in broadband speed and mobile Internet access. Previous hacking attacks at private companies compromised millions of people's personal data. Past malware attacks also disabled access to government agency websites and destroyed files in personal computers.

The shutdown comes amid rising rhetoric and threats of attack from Pyongyang in response to U.N. punishment for its December rocket launch and February nuclear test. Washington also expanded sanctions against North Korea this month in a bid to cripple the regime's ability to develop its nuclear program.

North Korea has threatened revenge for the sanctions and for ongoing routine U.S.-South Korean military drills it considers rehearsals for invasion.

Seoul believes North Korea runs an Internet warfare unit aimed at hacking U.S. and South Korean government and military networks to gather information and disrupt service.

Seoul blames North Korean hackers for several cyberattacks in recent years. Pyongyang has either denied or ignored those charges. Hackers operating from IP addresses in China have also faced blame.

The latest network paralysis took place just days after North Korea accused South Korea and the U.S. of staging a cyberattack that shut down its websites for two days last week. Loxley Pacific, the Thailand-based Internet service provider, confirmed the outage but did not say what caused the shutdown in North Korea.

Shinhan Bank, a major South Korean lender, reported a two-hour system shutdown Wednesday, including online banking and automated teller machines. It said networks later came back online, and that banking was back to normal at branches and online. Shinhan said no customer records or accounts were compromised.

The other bank, Nonghyup, also a major lender, said its system eventually came back online. Officials didn't answer a call seeking details on the safety of customer records.

Jeju Bank said some of its branches also reported network shutdowns.

At one Starbucks in downtown Seoul, customers were asked to pay for their coffee in cash, and lines were forming outside disabled bank machines. Seoul is a largely cashless city, with many people relying on debit and credit cards to pay for goods and services.

Broadcasters KBS and MBC said their computers went down at 2 p.m., but officials said the shutdown did not affect daily TV broadcasts. Computers were still down more than three hours after the shutdown began, the news outlets said.

The YTN cable news channel also said the company's internal computer network was completely paralyzed. Footage showed workers staring at blank computer screens.

KBS employees said they watched helplessly as files stored on their computers began disappearing as the computer went into shutdown mode.

"It's got to be a hacking attack," Lim Jong-in, dean of Korea University's Graduate School of Information Security. "Such simultaneous shutdowns cannot be caused by technical glitches."

The South Korean military raised its cyberattack readiness level but saw no signs of cyberattacks on its networks, the Defense Ministry said.

No government computers were affected, officials said. President Park Geun-hye called for quick efforts to get systems back online, according to her spokeswoman, Kim Haing.

In 2011, computer security software maker McAfee Inc. said North Korea or its sympathizers likely were responsible for a cyberattack against South Korean government and banking websites earlier that year.

The analysis also said North Korea appeared to be linked to a 2009 massive computer-based attack that brought down U.S. government Internet sites.

Pyongyang denied involvement.

But the accusations from both sides show that the warfare between the foes has expanded into cyberspace.

Last week, North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency accused South Korea and the U.S. of expanding an aggressive stance against Pyongyang into cyberspace with "intensive and persistent virus attacks."

South Korea denied the allegation and the U.S. military declined to comment.

Lim said hackers in China were likely culprits in the outage in Pyongyang.

But signs Wednesday pointed to North Korea, he said.

"Hackers attack media companies usually because of a political desire to cause confusion in society," he said. "Political attacks on South Korea come from North Koreans."

Last week, North Korea's Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea warned South Korea's "reptile media" that the country was prepared to wage a "sophisticated strike" on the country.

Orchestrating the mass shutdown of the networks of major companies would take at least one to six months of planning and coordination, said Kwon Seok-chul, chief executive officer of Seoul-based cyber security firm Cuvepia Inc.

The company that provides network services for the companies that suffered outages said it did not spot signs of a cyberattack on its networks, said Lee Jung-hwan, a spokesman for LG Uplus Corp.

Lim said tracking the source of the outage would take months.

___

Associated Press writers Sam Kim and Foster Klug contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/major-computer-crash-skorea-hackers-suspected-075931447.html

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Should science on brain injury inspire a sporting ban?

By Kate Kelland, Health and Science Correspondent

LONDON (Reuters) - When Ireland's Katie Taylor was taking hits and striking blows for boxing's Olympic debut in an east London ring last year, John Hardy did not want to look.

To this leading neuroscientist and molecular biologist, a boxing bout is little more than a session of mutual brain injury. He was horrified to see women boxing at Olympic level for the first time at the London 2012 Games.

"We shouldn't get our fun out of watching people inflict brain damage on each other," said Hardy, who is chair of Molecular Biology of Neurological Disease at University College London's Institute of Neurology. "To me as a neuroscientist it's almost surreal."

Hardy, whose research work focuses on Alzheimer's and other types of dementia, said having women in an Olympic boxing ring was "a terrible thing" - not because he thinks women should not compete alongside men in sport, but because women boxing simply meant more people inflicting more damage on more brains.

That, in turn, was highly likely to mean more people suffering the devastating, incurable symptoms of brain diseases such as Alzheimer's.

Advances in modern neuroscience mean scientists know more than ever about chronic brain damage and the long-term trauma that can result from frequent knocks to the head.

"You get tiny lesions along the blood vessels where they have torn the nerve cells around them. This damages those nerve cells, and those cells start to develop the tangles that you see in Alzheimer's disease," Hardy said.

"And what we now understand is that this process spreads."

Partly due to this new understanding, now is a time of intense sensitivity about and scrutiny of brain damage in sport - particularly among North America's National Football League (NFL) players.

Former San Diego Chargers player Junior Seau committed suicide last year after what some believe were years of depression stemming from multiple concussions he suffered as a player.

Last week, the NFL and General Electric Co announced a $60-million effort with leading neurologists to speed up research on brain injury to improve diagnosis and treatment amid growing concern about sports-related concussion.

RULE CHANGES

A study published last year found that even minor repeated head blows during sports such as hockey and American football may damage the learning ability of sports men and women after just one season.

The brain debate has even reached the White House, where President Barack Obama suggested in January that changes be made to NFL rules to reduce the level of violent impact.

In soccer too, concerns are growing about the damage players might be doing to their brains when they head the ball.

A small study of female soccer players published last month found evidence of mental impairment caused by repeatedly bouncing a football off the head. The U.S. researchers who conducted that study said the effects suggested headers caused "mild traumatic brain injury of the frontal lobes".

When it comes to boxing, health experts and scientists - and even some competitors themselves - have been worried about brains for decades.

The Irish former featherweight world champion Barry McGuigan, perhaps fearful of what damage might already have been done, said in 1988: "Boxing damages your brain; don't let anyone tell you any different".

Around the same time, fellow lightweight fighter Terry Marsh, who was later diagnosed with epilepsy, said: "I don't need the British Medical Association to tell me getting hit on the head can't do me any good."

As far back as 1928, the American pathologist Harrison Stanford Martland wrote a paper entitled "Punch drunk" in which he showed that prize fighters were suffering from brain injury caused by the rupture of blood vessels.

The "punch drunk" condition, known more formally as chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) or as its variants, dementia pugilistica or boxer's dementia, is a neurodegenerative disease that can affect boxers and others who suffer knocks to the head.

It can cause depression, aggression, impulsivity and memory loss and has been linked to suicide.

"A lot of boxers, and indeed American footballers too, have a period in their 30s and 40s where they are depressed, they drink, they show explosive tempers, and have basically pretty messed up lives," said Hardy.

BAD JUDGEMENT

It is not hard to find examples of boxers whose brains have begun to fail them.

American heavyweight champion and boxing idol Muhammad Ali began struggling with a stutter and trembling hands even before he came to the end of his fighting career. His subsequent decline with the neurodegenerative disorder Parkinson's syndrome has been painful for fans to witness.

Mike Tyson, a former undisputed heavyweight champion of the world, was convicted and imprisoned for rape, had multiple marriages and break ups, was declared bankrupt and was eventually diagnosed with the brain condition bipolar disorder.

British former heavyweight world champion Frank Bruno was diagnosed with the same condition while his compatriot Michael Watson needed six brain operations and suffered lasting damage after being knocked down in a 1991 bout.

Hardy argues that there is a tendency to think of these problematic lives as par for the course for boxers - who were more likely than non-boxers to come from disadvantaged backgrounds and mix in unstable circles.

"But the truth is they have bad judgment because of the injuries to their brain," he said. In the language of brain science this was called "loss of executive control", he explained, "and this in itself is part of the disease process".

"It's not inherent in their personalities as boxers, it's damage to the frontal cortex. They are already experiencing brain injury."

In an article posted on the World Boxing Association's (WBA) website, Calvin Inalsingh, head of the association's medical advisory committee, admits that "boxing is the only sport in which the objective is to render blows to the head and body of the opponent so as the cause the opponent to be incapacitated".

It is this, according to Hardy, that means when it comes to arguing for a ban on sports that cause brain injury, boxing is in a class of its own.

In other sports, such as American football, soccer or rugby, where the objective is to score touchdowns or goals or tries, and where head injury may be a by-product of that aim, authorities can and do change the rules or adjust the advice on protective clothing to make the game safer.

"But the whole point of boxing is to inflict brain damage," said Hardy. "That's why I think it's really a hopeless case in terms of a sport."

He has little doubt that in time, as medical knowledge expands, boxing will be banned, although he accepts there may be many more years of argument between brain scientists and sports authorities first.

"In science we have become very good at identifying causes and mechanisms of disease but unfortunately we understand things for a long time before we get better at solving them."

(Editing by Clare Fallon)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/science-brain-injury-inspire-ban-023210010--nfl.html

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Cohen slams Maloof for skipping 'RHOBH' show

Bravo

Andy Cohen hosts "Real Housewives of Beverly Hills" reunion

By Drusilla Moorhouse, TODAY contributor

If loose lips sink ships, Brandi Glanville is the iceberg that sank Adrienne Maloof's Titanic on "The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills."

And Adrienne's reaction to her co-star's "truth bomb" -- caught on film but censored from the broadcast -- resulted in her exit from the show, Andy Cohen confirms in next week's Season 3 reunion.

In a new clip from the show, the host and Bravo executive voices his displeasure about Adrienne's refusal to participate -- and its repercussions.

"Today we are missing one of the Housewives that has been with us since the beginning," he says. "Adrienne Maloof has decided not to participate today."

During the season, Brandi revealed a Maloof family secret during taping that Bravo edited out of the show.

"Adrienne refused to speak directly about it," Cohen tells viewers. "We know that frustrated you in the audience -- and that frustrated all of us, too.

"If you read the tabloids you might have theories on what the secret is, but Adrienne won't be here to tell her side of the story. Not only is she absent tonight, but she won't be on the show next season."

After a dramatic pause longer than most Bravo "and the winner is ..." teasers, Cohen drops the boom:

"Adrienne's final act as a Housewife is not showing up tonight."

Do you think Adrienne should've participated to tell her side of the story? Will you show up for the tempestuous Season 3 finale? Tell us on our Facebook page!

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Source: http://theclicker.today.com/_news/2013/03/19/17373607-andy-cohen-slams-adrienne-maloof-for-skipping-real-housewives-of-beverly-hills-reunion?lite

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Tuesday, 19 March 2013

Elite athletes also excel at some cognitive tasks

Mar. 18, 2013 ? New research suggests that elite athletes -- Olympic medalists in volleyball, for example -- perform better than the rest of us in yet another way. These athletes excel not only in their sport of choice but also in how fast their brains take in and respond to new information -- cognitive abilities that are important on and off the court.

The study, of 87 top-ranked Brazilian volleyball players (some of them medalists in the Beijing and London Olympics) and 67 of their nonathletic contemporaries, also found that being an athlete minimizes the performance differences that normally occur between women and men. Female athletes, the researchers found, were more like their male peers in the speed of their mental calculations and reaction times, while nonathletic females performed the same tasks more slowly than their male counterparts.

The study appears in the journal Frontiers in Psychology.

"I think we have learned that athletes are different from us in some ways," said University of Illinois psychology professor and Beckman Institute director Arthur Kramer, who led the study with graduate student Heloisa Alves.

"We found that athletes were generally able to inhibit behavior, to stop quickly when they had to, which is very important in sport and in daily life, " Kramer said. "They were also able to activate, to pick up information from a glance and to switch between tasks more quickly than nonathletes. I would say these were modest differences, but they were interesting differences nonetheless."

Overall, the athletes were faster at memory tests and tasks that required them to switch between tasks. They were quicker to notice things in their peripheral vision and to detect subtle changes in a scene. And in general, they were better able to accomplish tasks while ignoring confusing or irrelevant information.

Perhaps the most interesting discovery was that female athletes had significant cognitive advantages over their nonathletic counterparts, Kramer said, advantages that minimized the subtle speed differences between them and the men. The female athletes were faster than their nonathletic peers at detecting changes in a scene and could more quickly pick out relevant details from a distracting background. Their performance on these and the other tasks was on par with the male athletes, whereas nonathletic males consistently outperformed their female peers.

Nonathletes excelled at only one of the cognitive tests the researchers administered. In this test, called the stopping task, participants were asked to type a "Z" or "/" key as soon as they saw it on a computer screen -- unless they heard a tone shortly after the character appeared, in which case they were told to refrain from responding. Nonathletes tended to be faster in cases where the tone never sounded, while athletes were better at inhibiting their responses after hearing a tone.

The ability to inhibit a response is one marker of what brain researchers call "executive function," the capacity to control, plan and regulate one's behavior, Kramer said. While it has obvious advantages in sport, the ability to quickly inhibit an action also is useful in daily life, he said.

"One way to think about it is you're in your car and you're ready to start off at a light and you catch in your side vision a car or a bicyclist that you didn't see a second ago," he said. Being able to stop after having decided to go can be a lifesaver in that situation.

"So both facilitating and inhibiting behavior is important," he said.

Kramer said the athletes' slower performance on this one task might be the result of a strategic decision they had made to wait and see if the tone sounded before they committed to pressing a key.

"My bet is that the athletes were just learning to read the task a little better," he said. "So if I'm a little slower in going, I'll be a little better at stopping if I need to."

All in all, the new findings add to the evidence that those who spend years training on specific physical tasks tend to also have enhanced cognitive abilities, Kramer said.

"Our understanding is imperfect because we don't know whether these abilities in the athletes were 'born' or 'made,' " he said. "Perhaps people gravitate to these sports because they're good at both. Or perhaps it's the training that enhances their cognitive abilities as well as their physical ones. My intuition is that it's a little bit of both."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Heloisa Alves, Michelle W. Voss, Walter R. Boot, Andrea Deslandes, Victor Cossich, Jose Inacio Salles, Arthur F. Kramer. Perceptual-Cognitive Expertise in Elite Volleyball Players. Frontiers in Psychology, 2013; 4 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00036

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_science/~3/MGGdIeiAfaw/130318151634.htm

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