Thursday, June 28, 2012

Pen International ? Free the Word! Day at Poetry Parnassus

June 28 2012

Written by Chloe Wong

Yesterday?s Free the Word! Festival day at the Southbank Centre in partnership with English PEN and as part of the Poetry Parnassus was full of wonderful readings and spoken-word performances by poets from around the world. At the International Writers Breakfast we welcomed Zarganar, Burmese writer, comedian and poet ? a previous PEN International main case for the Writers in Prison Committee. Released from imprisonment in late 2010 as part of a mass amnesty of political prisoners, Zarganar spoke movingly about his experiences under arrest and the importance of freedom of expression and the role of the writer.

There were four panel sessions following the Writers Breakfast ? focusing on global conflict, exile and audience, minority languages and marginalized voices, and a robust discussion of questions of nationhood and poetry. Speakers during the day included Jack Mapanje from Malawi, David Shook from Mexico, Jo Shapcott from the UK, Sir Andrew Motion (Poet Laureate 1999 ? 2009) who spoke of the importance of poetry in speaking truth to power. Rafeef Ziadeh, a Palestinian performance poet and activist, Shailja Patel from Kenya, Syl Cheney Coker from Sierra Leone and Kosal Khiev from Cambodia were also among the participants.

English PEN set up two special zones at the Queen Elizabeth Hall at the Southbank Centre ? Freedom to write, where guests could take part in creative writing workshops, and Freedom to Read, where a range of PEN-related publications were on display ? including the recently launched The World Record, an anthology featuring the work of hundreds of poets participating in the Poetry Parnassus in translation.

The day was a wonderful celebration of writing, of poetry and of freedom of expression.

We?ll be featuring videos of all of the sessions online later this week.

Laura McVeigh, Director of PEN International

Creative writing workshop by Wendy Ann Greenhalgh

Zarganar receiving cartoon by Martin Rowson

Cartoon presented to Zarganar by Martin Rowson

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Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Beyonce Tribute to Michael Jackson: Remembering the King of Pop, Pure Swag


Michael Jackson died June 25, 2009, or three years ago this week. In a touching tribute to MJ, Beyonce remembers the artist who changed her life forever.

The "Crazy in Love" singer and new mom wrote a touching message on her website about Jackson on Monday, Michael Jackson's death anniversary.

Beyonce, 30, said her first producer had her listen MJ's "Who's Loving You" on repeat. "What he wanted me to learn was his soul," the star recalls.

"You could hear his soul. It's something that's God given."

Beyonce and Michael Jackson

"For whatever reason he could evoke more emotion than an adult," she went on. "It was these little things he did that were pure swag."

And the mother of Blue Ivy Carter and wife of rapper Jay-Z credits the King of Pop for teaching her that "sometimes you have to forget technique."

"Michael Jackson changed me forever, and helped me to become the artist I am," Beyonce writes, adding simply "Thank you Michael."

Jackson died on June 25, 2009 from an overdose of the anesthetic propofol, given to him by Dr. Conrad Murray. He was only 50 years old.

[Photo: WENN.com]

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College Grads And Their Families Learn To Live Together | FOX8 ...

(CNN) ? Lauren Ramsdell had a year to kill in between finishing college in May and getting married next year. So she decided to move back in with her parents.

It made the most sense, the 21-year-old graduate of Elon University in North Carolina said. She had no immediate job prospects and with a wedding coming up, she wanted to save money while looking for a job and plotting her next step.

Plus, she missed her parents and her hometown of Raleigh, and ?I don?t think there?s any shame in that,? she said.

?Just because you move home doesn?t mean you?ve failed,? said Ramsdell, who has a degree in journalism and art history. ?There used to be a logical progression: college, job, move on with life. But that?s not happening anymore.?

More than half of college graduates move back home, sociologist Katherine Newman wrote in her book, ?The Accordion Family: Boomerang Kids, Anxious Parents, and the Private Toll of Global Competition,? based on surveys conducted worldwide.

And many of them are finding it isn?t as painful as it sounds, she said. By setting ground rules and establishing expectations on both sides, parents and their adult children are learning to live together.

?People anticipate it will be more complicated than it turns out to be,? said Newman, dean of the Zanvyl Krieger School of Arts and Sciences at Johns Hopkins University. ?It?s remarkably smooth for most families.?

Perhaps that?s because it?s such a common phenomenon. A Pew Research Center analysis of U.S. census data found that the share of Americans living in multigenerational households is at its highest level since the 1950s.

Overall, 39% of adults ages 18 to 34 say they either live with their parents or moved back in at some point in recent years, according the report. Among 18- to 24-year-olds, 53% said they live at home or moved in temporarily, compared with 41% among adults ages 25 to 29, and 17% among those ages 30 to 34.

For adult children, part of the fear of returning home has to do with being torn away from their social circles. But, thanks to social media, especially Facebook, they?re staying in touch with more friends from different times in their lives, Newman said, and finding that others are moving back home, too. The Pew report found that among adults ages 25 to 34, 61% said they have friends or family members who have moved back in with their parents over the past few years because of economic conditions.

Personal autonomy may have been more important to members of their parents? generation ? many of whom left home as soon as they could and never looked back. Now, the tide is reversing, Newman said. She said she is hopeful that the trend of parents welcoming their adult children home will lead to those children opening their homes down the road to their aging parents, if necessary.

Newman has adopted the term ?accordion family? to refer to the multigenerational working family as children move away and return and household dynamics stay in flux. Thanks to greater accessibility to education, the cultural and educational gap between parents and children is smaller than it was in previous eras, Newman said.

?Parents and children are more likely to be similarly educated and that adds to the common denominators,? Newman said. ?When I was a kid I did not listen to Frank Sinatra, who was my mother?s favorite singer. But my kids listen to the Rolling Stones.?

Baby boomer parents especially tend to welcome back their adult children with open arms because they spent more time at work than in the home compared with previous generations, she said.

?They?re happy to see them coming back because they weren?t so tired of them in first place,? Newman said. ?They?re not as likely to be thinking, ?Where is Susie at midnight?? or ?Is Johnny studying?? They?re getting the young adult version where surveillance and discipline issues have gone away.?

If relations were bad to begin with, however, moving home won?t make them any better, she said. An adult child staying out all night can still disturb the rest of the household.

During summer breaks, when Joan Reilly?s daughter would wake her in the middle of the night just by entering the home, she would tell herself, ?only two more months.?

Now, her daughter is returning home for the foreseeable future after graduating in May from Sacred Heart University in Connecticut. Reilly said she is happy to have her home. But she?s been down this road before, and it wasn?t as smooth as she?d hoped it would be.

Her older daughter did not want to return to her parents? home in the Bronx after graduating in 2003, but she couldn?t find a job and had nowhere else to go. Most of her friends had moved on, and she spent a lot of time alone in her room until she finally found a job and became financially stable enough to leave.

?I guess I was clueless. I really thought she?d be glad to be home and around us again,? said Reilly, an administrative assistant at a college in the Bronx. ?But that wasn?t realistic because that?s not the life she really wanted. She wanted to not be living at home, but the economy prevented her from doing that and I guess that frustrated her.

?I had to learn to not take that too personally,? she said. ?We had different expectations.?

The older daughter went all the way to Australia on a work visa, where she met her future fianc? and married. She still lives there today. In fact, Reilly?s younger daughter is currently visiting her. But, when she returns, Reilly said she hopes they can reach common ground when it comes to coming and going as she pleases.

?I want to work out a compromise with her because if she wants to go out and have a good time that?s OK,? she said. ?Hopefully, either she sleeps at a friend?s house or doesn?t stay out so late so I don?t lose all sleep, just out of respect.?

It?s not the only ground rule. Reilly also expects her to do her own laundry and pay her cell phone bill while she looks for a job.

?We?ve had the conversation many times, but I think it?s going to be hard for her. I don?t know if she really believes what we say.?

Establishing ground rules and mutual terms is key to ensuring a successful transition, said Tracy Metro, host of ?I Live With My Mom,? a program on YouTube home and design channel, SPACEStv.

?The real question is how to be a grown-up in your childhood home, and that?s by behaving like a grown-up,? said Metro, former host of TLC?s ?Designing Spaces.?

It?s tempting for both sides to revert to the original family dynamic of mom making dinner, doing laundry and treating the adult child, like, well, a child, she said. A better approach is to behave as if you?re living on your own but just happen to be under the same roof as your parents. That means doing your laundry, cleaning, buying your own food or cooking for the house occasionally, she said. Every family deals with finances differently, but it doesn?t hurt to start the conversation about contributing to the household.

Upgrading your childhood room, if you?re still in it, can help pave the way to mental clarity necessary for becoming an adult, she said. It starts with getting rid of childhood mementos such as stuffed animals, toys and trophies.

?One nostalgic item showcases a bit of nostalgia; 20 of them is showcasing an obsession,? she said. ?We keep things because they?ve always been around, but as you get older it?s important to question why we have things. There?s nothing wrong with keeping them for memory?s sake but (put) them in a box.?

Ramsdell knew her childhood room wouldn?t cut it when she moved home last month. Timing worked out so that her parents moved into her late grandfather?s room, and she moved into theirs and completely redecorated it.

Otherwise, she pitches in with chores when asked to and cooks occasionally. She offered to mow the lawn but says her parents politely declined because it would be difficult to get back on the lawn boy?s list when she left. Overall, she attributes the success of the arrangement to the fact that she has always had a good relationship with her parents.

Plus, there?s an endgame in sight when she gets married next June.

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Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Steve Brown: The Grown-Up?s Platform (Offthekuff)

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10 Things to Know for Monday

People watch from Mesa Road as a wildfire continues to burn west of Colorado Springs, Colo. on Sunday, June 24, 2012. The fire erupted Saturday and grew out of control to more than 3 square miles early Sunday, prompting the evacuation of more than 11,000 residents and an unknown number of tourists. (AP Photo/The Colorado Springs Gazette, Susannah Kay)

People watch from Mesa Road as a wildfire continues to burn west of Colorado Springs, Colo. on Sunday, June 24, 2012. The fire erupted Saturday and grew out of control to more than 3 square miles early Sunday, prompting the evacuation of more than 11,000 residents and an unknown number of tourists. (AP Photo/The Colorado Springs Gazette, Susannah Kay)

Water sneaks into a restaurant in Cedar Key, Fla. as Tropical Storm Debby churns on the Florida Gulf coast waiting to makes its way across the Gulf of Mexico early Sunday, June 24, 2012. (AP Photo/Phil Sandlin)

Andy Murray of Britain returns a shot during practice at the All England Lawn Tennis Championships, Wimbledon, England, Sunday, June 24, 2012. (AP Photo/Sang Tan)

Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about today (all times EDT):

1. VOTERS SKEPTICAL THAT ECONOMY CAN BE FIXED

Half of Americans in a new AP poll say it won't matter much whether Obama or Romney wins ? even though the presidential candidates have staked their chances on who would be better at fixing the economic mess.

2. BIDEN HAD RESERVATIONS ABOUT WAR BUILDUP

A new book reveals that as Obama considered adding as many as 40,000 U.S. forces to a backsliding war in Afghanistan in 2009, the vice president warned him that the military rationale for doing so was flawed.

3. COLORADO SEEING WORST WILDFIRES IN A DECADE

A raging inferno moved in on some of Colorado's most popular summer tourist destinations over the weekend, destroying nearly two dozen homes near Rocky Mountain National Park and pushing tourists away from Pikes Peak.

4. DEBBY LASHES FLORIDA WITH HEAVY RAIN

The tropical storm whips the Sunshine State with bands of drenching rain while its center remains largely still in the Gulf of Mexico. Its slow progress means that the most pressing threat from the storm is flooding, not wind.

5. PRESIDENT HITTING THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL IN NEW ENGLAND

Obama will fly to New Hampshire, where he will speak at Oyster River High School in Durham at 2:05 p.m. before heading to Boston.

6. UNLIKELY ALLIANCE FORCED LUGO FROM POWER

The impeachment of Fernando Lugo was an unlikely marriage of Paraguay's two main political parties who had long checked each other's power in Congress.

7. SEEKING TO BRIDGE THE GAP ON TWO ICONIC TRAILS

The North Country National Scenic Trail runs 4,600 miles from North Dakota to New York's eastern border. But a group is trying to bridge the final 40-mile gap to the Appalachian Trail.

8. OPERATION ANVIL BEATING BACK DRUG FLIGHTS

Since April, the DEA and State Department have assisted Honduras police and military to move more quickly and pursue more suspicious flights conducted by drug traffickers.

9. "JEOPARDY' HOST SUFFERS MILD HEART ATTACK

Alex Trebek, 71, host of the Emmy award-winning game show, is expected to recover in time to resume production on a new season next month.

10. THIRD TENNIS MAJOR POISED TO BEGIN

Play begins this morning at Wimbledon where stars such as Novak Djokovic, Roger Federer and Maria Sharapova will compete on the grass courts at the All England Club.

Associated Press

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Wolfson confirms the Samsung Galaxy S III uses its audio chip

Wolfson confirms the Samsung Galaxy S III will use its audio chip

The Galaxy S III was widely tipped to possess a Wolfson digital-to-analog converter for high quality audio output -- a feature not seen in this range since the first Galaxy S. That notion has just been confirmed by the Scottish electronics firm itself, which says its WM1811 Audio Hub has been selected for use in Sammy's flagship. The chip promises "crystal clear voice call quality" and "enriched audio playback for music and video" thanks to its 24-bit hi-fi DAC, active noise reduction circuits and other wizardry. The GS II, meanwhile, used a Yamaha DAC to convert digital data (e.g. in an mp3 file) into an analog signal that could drive a speaker (for example in your headphones), but even if most people couldn't hear the difference, audiophiles have insisted they preferred the sound in the older Galaxy. The only question remaining, which the PR after the break does not expand upon, is whether the Wolfson hardware is found in all variants of the new phone. Check out the More Coverage links for further reading.

Update: Francois Simond (aka Supercurio) tweeted us to say that the US variant of the GS III uses Qualcomm's own WCD9310 for audio, not the Wolfson. Yup, it's that multi-talented Snapdragon S4 again.

Continue reading Wolfson confirms the Samsung Galaxy S III uses its audio chip

Wolfson confirms the Samsung Galaxy S III uses its audio chip originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 26 Jun 2012 05:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Video: Prosecutor in Sandusky case speaks out

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Monday, June 25, 2012

Supreme Court strikes down part of Ariz. law (cbsnews)

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Sony, Panasonic tying up in advanced TV displays

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Friday, June 22, 2012

Find the right care home for your elderly citizens











Residential care homes are perfect for residents who need a similar degree of support supplied by assisted living or nursing facilities, but who wish to reside in a significantly smaller community. Because this type of care home includes a more intimate setting, residents can receive specialized attention for needs for example mental care, diabetes care, specialized diet-plan care, and take care of residents who speak a principal language apart from English, etc. In case your parent or family member can't manage their very own home a care home might be their finest choice.

The aim of the residential care house is to supply their residents having a home-like setting comparable to their own family's home but which provides similar choose to an assisted living facility. Based on where you reside in the united states a residential care home might be called different names, like a Retirement homes Essex, Board Care Homes, Personal Care Homes, or perhaps a Group Home. Most residential care homes offer transportation services so that your family members can visit and in the bank, the doctor's office, shopping, the pharmacy, etc.

Homes typically serve 20 or fewer residents and therefore are now a possible option for seniors rather than an assisted living or elderly care facility. Nearly all these homes are remodeled homes in a neighborhood setting and often match another homes in the region, but there's also custom made homes only for senior housing. Most residential care homes are privately operated and operated in which the owners may survive or from the property.

You will find day to day activities for example games, games, baking, movies, music, preparing evening meals, and crafts and arts. Residents reside in a home-like setting, that is just like a household where each resident includes a room much like a bedroom. Due to the home-like setting, most of the owners focus on a particular type of care, for instance Dementia care or Diabetes care.

Each home should be licensed within the state it are operating in. Payment per month for any residential homes Essex includes the price of housing and also the price of care provided. The amount of care provided inside a ranges from the low-level of care much like an Assisted Living facility, to high amounts of care much like an elderly care facility. The higher the degree of care that is required the larger the care cost.

Residential care homes are today becoming an important part of our society. Elderly citizens have specific requirements that are to be addressed very seriously. They on the other hand have some serious medical requirements that need an attendant all the time with them.

In all these cases care homes Essex have been an option that has allowed individuals to seek better care for the senior citizens. While you are choosing a care home you are to make sure that the care home is good enough to meet all the requirements of the elderly citizens.

Looking for care homes in Essex you can find it at: http://www.frintondene.com

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A Crypto Expert's View on Scary Bird Flu Data

Avian InfluenzaAfter months of contentious debate, the journal Science is publishing a controversial study on Friday about H5N1 avian influenza?s ability to spread among mammals. The report faced a tortuous path to publication as some researchers sought to censor the study?s findings for fear that they could be replicated and put to nefarious use. In a Science Perspective article accompanying the H5N1 research led by Ron Fouchier at the Erasmus Medical Center in the Netherlands, cryptographer Bruce Schneier draws parallels between cyber security and efforts to control access to scientific data.

Whether a virus effects computers or living things, a head-in-the-sand approach to protecting information about the virus?s nature is unlikely to be successful, according to Schneier, chief security technology officer and co-founder of digital security services firm BT Counterpane. He points out that virologists take significant risks when they rely on secrecy to protect their findings. Secrets are difficult to keep and once the data is exposed the researchers have little recourse?the genie is out of the bottle.

Likewise, the omission of technical details?initially proposed by the U.S. government?s National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity?s (NSABB) for Fouchier?s research as well as another H5N1 study led by Yoshihiro Kawaoka at the University of Wisconsin-Madison published last month in Nature?provides poor security, according to Schneier. (Scientific American is part of the Nature Publishing Group). Kawaoka?s research detailed the mutation of lab-made strains of the H5N1 avian flu virus to the point where it became highly transmissible in ferrets. Sooner or later someone would have filled in any missing pieces, either through trial and error or working backward from the study?s results.

It is also a mistake to think that an experiment is too difficult for others to replicate for lack of access to the necessary equipment. ?What is impossible today will be a Ph.D. thesis in 20 years, and what was a Ph.D. thesis 20 years ago is a high-school science fair project today,? Schneier says.

Although much research is now analyzed, stored and disseminated via computer networks, scientists should understand something that most businesses still haven?t grasped: ?Everything gets hacked,? Schneier says. The list of organizations whose data has been compromised by cyber attackers or insiders leaking information includes banks, government agencies, military institutions?and the list goes on. One of the most glaring recent examples is the professional networking Web site LinkedIn. After a massive security breach and a seemingly complacent response to the theft of millions of poorly protected customer passwords LinkedIn now faces a $5-million class action suit and, perhaps worse, a general sense of mistrust among its users.

Trying to keep scientists from publishing the results of sensitive research for fear that an enemy might use this information is problematic, says Schneier. If the scientific community is facing a difficult problem with serious consequences, someone, somewhere will be working on a solution. And even a prestigious journal like Science or Nature had refused to publish the H5N1 research, it would have found its way to the public online, where there are no international borders.

Labs have some recourse against ?opportunistic attackers??those who exploit weak security for financial gain. Against them, relative security is important. ?You are safe if you are more secure than other networks,? Schneier says. Targeted attacks are another matter. ?It is almost impossible to secure a network against a sufficiently skilled and tenacious adversary,? he writes. ?All we can do is make the attacker?s job harder.?

Schneier?s Perspective article elaborates on a presentation he gave at April?s Royal Society H5N1 research conference in London. ?I wasn?t asked to comment on H5N1?I was asked to explain the realities of cyber security,? he says. ?But after listening to everyone talk about the issue, I realized that I had a lot of related experience that might be useful to the virology community.?

Although this was the first time Schneier has specifically applied lessons from computer security and cryptography to another academic discipline in this way, the nature of the data being protected is irrelevant, he says. ?The names and motivations of the attackers are slightly different, but so what? It?s all on the same computers and networks,? he adds. ?The attack tools are all the same.?

Image courtesy of the U.S. Geological Survey

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Obama and Romney both spending heavily, but GOP super PAC lead is widening (Star Tribune)

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How Long Should Your Fun Team Building Be?

Time is very essential especially for organizations. A lot can happen in a few minutes and hours. That is why it is very essential to use time wisely. If you?re going to have a fun team building activity, make sure that the hunt is not too long so that it doesn?t bore the participants. In Cityhunt, they organize fun team building activities that last from 1.5 hours to 3 hours. If you want, you can even choose activities that are as short as 1 hour and as long as 48 years. Yes, the company can make that possible. Just contact them and let them know how long you want the activities to be.

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Thursday, June 21, 2012

Pakistan nabs French man with reported 9/11 links

(AP) ? Pakistan has arrested a French man reportedly linked to one of the masterminds of the Sept. 11 terrorist attack, a reminder of the country's vital role in the war on international jihadist groups at a time of deteriorating relations with the U.S., security officials said Wednesday.

Naamen Meziche was captured in a raid near the border with Iran, officials said, without specifying when this had happened.

Western media reports have described Meziche as an al-Qaida operative with links to European jihadist groups believed to have been living until now in either Pakistan or Iran. CNN and the Wall Street Journal have reported that Meziche was a friend of Mohammed Atta, who piloted American Airlines Flight 11 into the World Trade Center. However, he does not appear to have any operational role in the attacks.

The officials did not give their names in keeping with the policy of the Pakistani security forces.

The officials said Meziche was a close associate of Younis al-Mauritani, who Pakistani security forces arrested in September last year in a joint operation with the CIA. That arrest also took place in the Baluchistan region, which borders Iran. U.S. officials said al-Mauritani was believed to have been plotting attacks in Europe. It is unclear where al-Mauritani is now being held. One of the officials said he had been in Iran but it was not clear when he'd come to Pakistan.

A senior Pakistan security official said al-Mauritani's interrogation led officials to Meziche. He was arrested while trying to flee the country, likely on his way to Somalia, said the official. If Meziche is found to have broken the law in Pakistan he would be charged and tried inside the country, the official said. Otherwise he would be deported to France. The official said al-Mauritani had asked Meziche to conduct foreign operations for al-Qaida.

Baluchistan borders Afghanistan to the northeast and has been a hotbed of militant activity.

Pakistani intelligence agents are currently questioning the French national.

The arrest highlights the Pakistani security forces' key role in the anti-al-Qaida campaign, even as the U.S. and Pakistan are going through one of the rockiest stages in their relationship since the Sept. 11 attacks in the U.S. The Navy SEAL raid on the Pakistan garrison city of Abbottabad that killed Osama bin Laden last year raised questions about whether Pakistani security officials at some level knew of the al-Qaida leader's presence in their country. On the Pakistani side, the raid infuriated the military because it was not told about the attack ahead of time and, once it happened, was powerless to stop it.

Tensions increased even further in November when U.S. forces accidentally killed 24 Pakistani border troops, prompting Pakistan to close supply lines to American and NATO forces in Afghanistan. Those supply lines remain closed to this day as Pakistan demands an apology from the U.S. for the deaths.

The U.S. has accused Pakistan of not doing enough to go after militant groups operating in its territory. During a June 7 visit to Kabul, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said the U.S. was losing patience with Pakistan over its failure to go after the Haqqani network, considered one of the most dangerous militant groups fighting in Afghanistan. The U.S. has blamed an attack on the American Embassy in Kabul last year on the network.

Pakistan also argues that the U.S. does not recognize the tough price the country has already paid for taking on militant groups operating on its territory, a battle that has killed tens of thousands of Pakistani civilians and security forces. Many analysts believe Pakistan is reluctant to target the Haqqanis and other Afghan militants based on its soil because they could be useful allies in Afghanistan after foreign forces withdraw, especially in countering the influence of India.

Associated Press

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Rove super PAC posts $4 million donations in May

WASHINGTON (AP) ? New filings posted by a Republican "super" political committee formed by veteran strategist Karl Rove show the group reaped nearly $5 million in May, aiding GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney in his effort to unseat President Barack Obama.

The $4.6 million tally is an impressive boost from a month earlier and a sign that GOP political committees are widening the financial gap over struggling Democratic party rivals.

The new figures for Rove's American Crossroads augment an equally strong $8 million performance in May by a separate pro-Romney super PAC, Restore Our Future.

The national campaign organizations run by Obama and Romney spent millions of dollars last month to promote their candidate. But the super PACs helping Romney are poised to account for a growing share of that fundraising largess.

Associated Press

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The Dry Ice 'Snowflakes' of Mars

Personally, I wouldn't try it, but if you like exposing your penis to pressures so low that the blood inside it boils, while also subjecting it to temperatures so low as to cause the urine to flash freeze before it can leave the urethra, be my guest.

Not exactly what I would call "fun" myself, but I guess everyone has their kink.

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School Lunch Routine | Bye Bye, Bitters

I listen to the radio while I work. I need some kind of ?noise? in the background or I just can?t get anything done. Most of the time, I couldn?t even recount to you what was discussed on the programs I frequent.

The other day, however, Michelle Obama was on Talk of the Nation talking about her book and childhood health focus in general.

The subject of school lunches came up. The discussion focused on how healthy/unhealthy various lunch options were, but it got me thinking of my own history with School Lunch.

Elementary School

I know I purchased lunch in lower elementary school (when we lived in Virginia), but I don?t remember much about what was served except that I?d always get chocolate milk and one time the lunch lady said she?d tell my mother that all I did at lunch was drink chocolate milk rather than eat my food so I ate everything in sight that day and then threw up on the playground at recess. That night, my mother told me that I could eat (or not eat) whatever I wanted at lunch.

Also, my favorite school lunch was this thing called ?Breakfast for Lunch? where we?d have waffles and bacon at midday. That was ruined, however, in third grade when a classmate tragically lost her battle to cancer and the rumor-mill circulated the idea that waffles at lunch was the cause of her death. Kids are crazy.

Later on, around fifth grade, I started bringing lunches from home.

In sixth grade, we had a problem at my school where someone would steal all the treats out of everyone?s lunch (this was easily done as we kept our belongings in unlocked lockers in the hallway). At lunch, people would glumly eat their sandwiches and talk about the pudding or cookies that had been stolen from them that day. People always assumed I had the best stuff because all that was left when we got to the cafeteria was fruit, yogurt, and a sandwich on whole wheat bread. I went with it rather than admit that there had never been sweets in my lunchbox.

Junior High

I bought my lunch daily (it was only $1.25 ? something that sticks with me to this day? inexplicably). Lunch consisted of a main course and option of two sides. My favorite side was canned pears. I still love canned pears. While the school lunch was relatively healthy, the other half of the cafeteria sold ice cream treats (drumsticks, ice cream sandwiches, pudding pops, etc) for 25 cents. You bet I ate my fill of chocolate eclairs in those two years.

High School

I never brought my lunch in high school. We had many lunch options in my high school (including various fast food chains, which was probably not so great for us, health wise). I got the same thing every day. I?d go to the deli side of the hot food line and get a turkey sandwich on a kaiser roll with?Swiss?cheese and mustard. Large Cherry Coke. The only variations were on Friday when I?d let myself have one of the super-delicious, likely-full-of-lard chocolate chip cookies or during Lent when the Cherry Coke was swapped with water and a sense of moral superiority.

Overall, I suppose there always were unhealthy options readily available.?In elementary school, my parents -understandably ? had more control and stocked our home with healthy snacks. In high school, though, I could have gotten pizza and fries every day. There were vending machines selling chips, soda, and candy.

While it can be argued whose job it is to teach self-control and healthy eating habits, it?s hard to think that these easily-available unhealthy options are completely blameless.

What were your young lunches like? Did you have vending machines in your schools? Were the lunch options provided by the school healthy?

Fun Future-Helena-Foreshadowing Moment?Tangentially?Related to Lunch: I used to forget to bring money for lunch and would have to beg, borrow, or steal to get fed. OK, I didn?t really steal much. Anyway, my father gave me a $20 bill to put in an envelope and keep in my locker for days when I?d forgotten cash. An emergency kitty, if you will.

Well, my high school was kinda fancy and we had a Credit Union in (one of the) cafeterias. I took my $20 and opened an account. That?s right, I?ve always been into financial responsibility. From mid-high school to mid-college when I finally got around to closing the account, that $20 had grown by about a dollar. Well done, young me.

19. June 2012 by Helena
Categories: Fat Tuesday | Tags: childhood, food, health, lunch, meals, school | 7 comments

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Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Crowdfunding sought for $10,000 spacesuit

Space tourists may want more than oxygen masks if disaster leads to loss of air pressure inside a private spacecraft. A startup plans to offer $10,000 spacesuits as safety backups for the commercial space industry, but even ordinary citizens can now reserve their own spacesuit ahead of time.

The dream of a commercial spacesuit grew out of a partnership between Ted Southern, a Brooklyn-based inventor and artist, and Nikolay Moiseev, a Russian space suit engineer. The latest goal for their startup, Final Frontier Design, is to raise $20,000 through the crowd-funding website Kickstarter ? enough to complete the third generation of their spacesuit before 2013.

"The future commercial space industry (SpaceX, Boeing, Sierra Nevada, Virgin, Armadillo, XCOR, etc.) will need these suits for the basic safety of manned flights," Southern wrote on the Kickstarter project page. "Current NASA suits cost well into the millions, while our 3G is intended to retail for a small fraction of this."

Anyone who donates $10,000 to the Kickstarter project gets their own complete custom-built spacesuit, with smaller donations still earning a variety of spacesuit parts as pledge prizes. But donors who qualify for "real spacesuit hardware" as prizes must get their paperwork in order, according to the International Traffic in Arms Regulations.

  1. More space news from msnbc.com

    1. Aurora makes the sky sing the blues

      Science editor Alan Boyle's blog: A double-burst of solar particles sparked auroral lights over the weekend, as expected ? but in some parts of the world, the colors were not what you'd expect.

    2. NASA and FAA work out spaceship rules
    3. Chinese astronauts enter space module
    4. 'White marble' photo shows Arctic view of Earth

Southern and Moiseev first teamed up to win a $100,000 second-place prize in NASA's 2009 astronaut glove challenge before they went on to found Final Frontier Design. Their goal is to create a spacesuit to be worn inside spacecraft during launch and re-entry ? just in case of emergencies involving the depressurization of a spacecraft.

Final Frontier Design is building its third-generation spacesuit, according to the NASA flight certification standards. Its improvements over the second-generation spacesuit include the ability to withstand greater operating pressure, a carbon fiber waist ring, a retractable helmet and improved gloves and glove disconnects.

"We need your help to make this new suit!" Southern wrote. "While our costs are comparatively modest, spacesuits are expensive.? Every little bit helps us to pay for the materials, equipment and tooling required to make high technology safety garments."

The Kickstarter project will be funded only if it raises at least $20,000 by July 15.

Follow InnovationNewsDaily on Twitter @News_Innovation or on Facebook.

? 2012 InnovationNewsDaily.com. All rights reserved. More from InnovationNewsDaily.com.

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Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Lil Scrappy, Cash Out Bring ATL Love To 'RapFix Live'

Esteemed video director Chris Robinson will also join Sway live Wednesday at 4 p.m. ET on MTV.com.
By Rob Markman


Lil Scrappy
Photo: Taylor Hill/ Getty Images

Lil Scrappy is back, and in a major way. The Dirty South MC will star will VH1's new reality series "Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta," premiering Monday (June 18); will release his new album, The Grustle, on June 26; and will make his first "RapFix Live" appearance on Wednesday.

It was 2006 when Scrappy dropped his debut album, Bred 2 Die Born 2 Live. With both Lil Jon and 50 Cent serving as executive producers, the ATL MC had the best of both worlds: Jon's crunk sound and Fif's gangster bravado. Scrappy continued to release mixtape material independently on the street, but his long-awaited The Grustle never saw the light of day — that is, until now.

The LP's lead single, "Helicopter," features 2 Chainz and Twista, and on June 26, Scrappy fans will finally get the album they've been asking for. They'll also simultaneously get a glimpse into Scrappy's romantic life on "Love & Hip Hop." He'll break it all down at 4 p.m. ET this Wednesday on MTV.com.

Scrap isn't the only ATL rapper who will grace the red couch this week: Newcomer Cash Out will also appear on "RapFix Live." The young rapper's current single, "Cashin' Out," has become a club staple and earned him a record deal with L.A. Reid over at Epic Records.

To cap things off, we will welcome esteemed video director Chris Robinson (Nas' "Daughters," Alicia Keys' "Fallin' " and Jay-Z's "Change Clothes") and take a look back at Hot 107.9's Birthday Bash all-star concert in Atlanta.

Catch Lil Scrappy, Cash Out and Chris Robinson on "RapFix Live" Wednesday at 4 p.m. ET on MTV.com, and be sure to join the Twitter conversation using the hashtag #RapFixLive. Send your questions for the artists to @MTVRapFix!

Related Artists

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New cerebellar ataxia gene identified in dogs

New cerebellar ataxia gene identified in dogs [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 18-Jun-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Professor Hannes Lohi
hannes.lohi@helsinki.fi
358-919-25085
University of Helsinki

A novel candidate gene in human early-onset degenerative ataxias

Researchers at the University of Helsinki and the Folkhlsan Research Center, Finland, have identified the genetic cause of early-onset progressive cerebellar degeneration the Finnish Hound dog breed. The study, led by Professor Hannes Lohi, revealed a new disease mechanism in cerebellar degeneration. A mutation was identified in the SEL1L gene, which has no previous link to inherited cerebellar ataxias.

This gene find is the first in canine early-onset cerebellar degeneration, and has enabled the development of a genetic test to help eradicate the disease from the breed. At the same time, SEL1L represents a novel candidate gene in human early-onset degenerative ataxias.

The research was published in the scientific journal PLoS Genetics on June 14, 2012.

Inherited ataxias affect both humans and animals. In humans, the hereditary ataxias are a heterogeneous disease group, characterized by cerebellar degeneration and dysfunction. The cerebellum is a part of the brain that is involved in coordination of movement. Degeneration of the cerebellar structures causes ataxia, which is a neurological sign of defective motor coordination that can affect gait, balance, speech and gaze. Approximately 20 known disease-causing genes have been identified in both autosomal recessive and dominant ataxias in humans but the genetic background of canine cerebellar ataxias has remained largely unknown.

The clinical signs of Finnish Hound cerebellar ataxia are present by the age of two months. The affected puppies have difficulty in controlling their leg movements and keeping their balance. The disease progresses rapidly, and in the end eating becomes impossible because of uncontrolled head movements. There is no cure for the disease and affected puppies have to be euthanized.

The research conducted by Professor Lohi and co-workers revealed marked neuronal loss in the cerebellar cortex of affected Finnish Hound puppies. By comparing the genomes of affected and healthy dogs, the cause of the disease was pinpointed to a single nucleotide change in the SEL1L gene. The nucleotide alteration causes an amino acid change in the encoded SEL1L protein.

"The identified ataxia gene is the first early-onset degenerative cerebellar ataxia gene that has been identified in dogs", says professor Hannes Lohi. In addition to Finnish Hounds, cerebellar degeneration has been identified in several other dog breeds.

"The SEL1L gene has not been previously connected to cerebellar ataxias in any species and it represents a novel candidate gene for human early-onset ataxias", Lohi continues. "In fact, we have already screened a small cohort of human patients for possible disease-causing SEL1L mutations".

The gene identification in Finnish Hound dogs reveals a new disease mechanism, which will hopefully shed more light in to the pathogenesis of neuronal degeneration. The amino acid change in SEL1L hits an evolutionary conserved functional domain, and is very likely to affect the normal function of the protein. SEL1L functions in quality control of newly synthesized proteins, in a cell organelle referred to as the endoplasmic reticulum. A failure in the quality control system causes endoplasmic reticulum stress and eventually cell death.

"It is very interesting that although the SEL1L gene is expressed in several different tissues, we only saw pathological changes in the cerebellar cortex of affected dogs. It is known that certain neurons in the cerebellar cortex seem to be very sensitive to endoplasmic reticulum stress, which might offer some explanation to the cerebellum-restricted cell loss", tells M.Sc Kaisa Kystil, the first author of the article. "We were also able to measure increased endoplasmic reticulum stress in the affected puppies' cerebellar cortex, which gives more support to SEL1L as the causative gene in Finnish Hound ataxia", Kystil adds.

Finnish Hound ataxia is a single gene defect, inherited in an autosomal recessive manner. According to the research, 10% of Finnish Hounds carries the recessive ataxia mutation in their genome. A genetic test has been developed for breeding purposes. The test has enabled to identify disease carriers, and when mated with non-carriers, they too can be used in breeding programs. If all carrier dogs were excluded by breeders, the genetic diversity of the breed could be affected. The Finnish Hound ataxia test is offered by a DNA-test laboratory Genoscoper (genoscoper.com), and is the first test for a native Finnish breed developed by the research group.

###

The research group led by Professor Lohi is based at the Veterinary and Medical Faculties in the University of Helsinki and at the Folkhlsan Research Center. Professor Lohi's research has been supported by the University of Helsinki, the European Commission (LUPA), the Academy of Finland, the Sigrid Juselius Foundation, Biocentrum Helsinki, the Jane and Aatos Erkko Foundation, and Folkhlsan. The ataxia study was also supported by the Finnish Veterinary Association.



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


New cerebellar ataxia gene identified in dogs [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 18-Jun-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Professor Hannes Lohi
hannes.lohi@helsinki.fi
358-919-25085
University of Helsinki

A novel candidate gene in human early-onset degenerative ataxias

Researchers at the University of Helsinki and the Folkhlsan Research Center, Finland, have identified the genetic cause of early-onset progressive cerebellar degeneration the Finnish Hound dog breed. The study, led by Professor Hannes Lohi, revealed a new disease mechanism in cerebellar degeneration. A mutation was identified in the SEL1L gene, which has no previous link to inherited cerebellar ataxias.

This gene find is the first in canine early-onset cerebellar degeneration, and has enabled the development of a genetic test to help eradicate the disease from the breed. At the same time, SEL1L represents a novel candidate gene in human early-onset degenerative ataxias.

The research was published in the scientific journal PLoS Genetics on June 14, 2012.

Inherited ataxias affect both humans and animals. In humans, the hereditary ataxias are a heterogeneous disease group, characterized by cerebellar degeneration and dysfunction. The cerebellum is a part of the brain that is involved in coordination of movement. Degeneration of the cerebellar structures causes ataxia, which is a neurological sign of defective motor coordination that can affect gait, balance, speech and gaze. Approximately 20 known disease-causing genes have been identified in both autosomal recessive and dominant ataxias in humans but the genetic background of canine cerebellar ataxias has remained largely unknown.

The clinical signs of Finnish Hound cerebellar ataxia are present by the age of two months. The affected puppies have difficulty in controlling their leg movements and keeping their balance. The disease progresses rapidly, and in the end eating becomes impossible because of uncontrolled head movements. There is no cure for the disease and affected puppies have to be euthanized.

The research conducted by Professor Lohi and co-workers revealed marked neuronal loss in the cerebellar cortex of affected Finnish Hound puppies. By comparing the genomes of affected and healthy dogs, the cause of the disease was pinpointed to a single nucleotide change in the SEL1L gene. The nucleotide alteration causes an amino acid change in the encoded SEL1L protein.

"The identified ataxia gene is the first early-onset degenerative cerebellar ataxia gene that has been identified in dogs", says professor Hannes Lohi. In addition to Finnish Hounds, cerebellar degeneration has been identified in several other dog breeds.

"The SEL1L gene has not been previously connected to cerebellar ataxias in any species and it represents a novel candidate gene for human early-onset ataxias", Lohi continues. "In fact, we have already screened a small cohort of human patients for possible disease-causing SEL1L mutations".

The gene identification in Finnish Hound dogs reveals a new disease mechanism, which will hopefully shed more light in to the pathogenesis of neuronal degeneration. The amino acid change in SEL1L hits an evolutionary conserved functional domain, and is very likely to affect the normal function of the protein. SEL1L functions in quality control of newly synthesized proteins, in a cell organelle referred to as the endoplasmic reticulum. A failure in the quality control system causes endoplasmic reticulum stress and eventually cell death.

"It is very interesting that although the SEL1L gene is expressed in several different tissues, we only saw pathological changes in the cerebellar cortex of affected dogs. It is known that certain neurons in the cerebellar cortex seem to be very sensitive to endoplasmic reticulum stress, which might offer some explanation to the cerebellum-restricted cell loss", tells M.Sc Kaisa Kystil, the first author of the article. "We were also able to measure increased endoplasmic reticulum stress in the affected puppies' cerebellar cortex, which gives more support to SEL1L as the causative gene in Finnish Hound ataxia", Kystil adds.

Finnish Hound ataxia is a single gene defect, inherited in an autosomal recessive manner. According to the research, 10% of Finnish Hounds carries the recessive ataxia mutation in their genome. A genetic test has been developed for breeding purposes. The test has enabled to identify disease carriers, and when mated with non-carriers, they too can be used in breeding programs. If all carrier dogs were excluded by breeders, the genetic diversity of the breed could be affected. The Finnish Hound ataxia test is offered by a DNA-test laboratory Genoscoper (genoscoper.com), and is the first test for a native Finnish breed developed by the research group.

###

The research group led by Professor Lohi is based at the Veterinary and Medical Faculties in the University of Helsinki and at the Folkhlsan Research Center. Professor Lohi's research has been supported by the University of Helsinki, the European Commission (LUPA), the Academy of Finland, the Sigrid Juselius Foundation, Biocentrum Helsinki, the Jane and Aatos Erkko Foundation, and Folkhlsan. The ataxia study was also supported by the Finnish Veterinary Association.



[ 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.


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Parties are worlds apart on how to fix economy

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Millions of Americans are desperate for work, runaway government spending clouds the future and Democratic and Republican candidates are busy making one thing clear: They're light years apart on what to do about it.

They do agree that in this election, the economy is everything. President Barack Obama calls it "the defining issue of our time." But for voters wishing Washington would come together in a time of crisis, Obama, his Republican rival Mitt Romney and their congressional allies don't offer much hope

Instead, they've taken to describing the gulf on economic policy in galactic terms. Romney must be "on a different planet," an Obama adviser declares. The president is "living in an alternative universe," the Republican Party chief says.

On planet Republican: The economy is backsliding, and the president is to blame. His stimulus spending did more harm than good, and his big-government rules are strangling businesses. The answer is repealing health care, energy and financial regulations and cutting taxes. That should spark investment and create jobs. Tackling the deficit requires huge spending cuts, just not at the Pentagon. The unsustainable guarantee of Medicare and Medicaid must change.

In the Democratic universe: The economy's slowly improving, thanks to government spending that helped fend off a depression. Another dose of targeted spending will help. Republican policies in the Bush administration ? cutting taxes and eliminating rules ? brought on the financial crisis and budget deficits. The rich should help dig us out by paying higher taxes. The Pentagon's budget must be cut, but entitlement spending can be controlled without drastically altering the social safety net.

"These two positions are almost diametrically opposed to each other," said Sung Won Sohn, a California State University economics professor. "And there's no common ground it seems."

They can't both be right.

How do voters decide which economic world they're living in?

You could try asking an economist.

Republicans and Democrats alike offer up prominent names ? many still arguing the supply-siders versus Keynesian debates that heated up during the Reagan administration. Did President George W. Bush's tax cuts boost the economy or just pile up more debt? Was Obama's $831 billion stimulus worthwhile or wasted money?

"Our economy is too complex, too complicated. No one knows for sure what the right answer is," Sohn said. "Economists are the first ones to admit we've been wrong many, many times."

This time, the stakes are high.

Recovery from the financial meltdown and 2007-2009 recession has been slow. Not even half of the 8.8 million jobs that were lost have come back. States and cities are still laying off workers. Unemployment hovers at 8.2 percent. Even for those with jobs, wages and net worth haven't recovered. Europe's troubles pose new threats.

More problems are ahead: Annual deficits of more than a trillion dollars per year have piled up $15.7 trillion in national debt. The crush of baby boomer retirees over the next two decades threatens to ruin the nation's finances, unless politicians slow spending on Medicare and Social Security.

Anxiety about the mushrooming national debt, exacerbated by bank bailouts and stimulus spending, fueled the tea party movement that helped Republicans win control of the House in 2010. That set off a series of showdowns with Obama over taxes, spending and the federal debt ceiling.

The ongoing brinkmanship has unsettled Wall Street investors, business owners timid about hiring and plenty of voters, too. Three-quarters of Americans say the federal government is too divided along party lines. Only 20 percent think it can usually work together to get things done, according to a Pew Research Center poll conducted in April.

A glimmer of Washington cooperation would make a big difference for the economy right now, said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics.

"If they could signal that they would be willing to work together to do something substantive and helpful," he said, "it could ease the collective psyche and help soothe nerves."

So far, no one's signaling a congressional kumbaya to come after the November elections.

Instead, Obama is telling voters they can break the stalemate by electing Democrats. That's a longshot ? an Obama win would be unlikely to sweep Democrats into control of the House. If elected, Romney is considered more likely to enjoy a kindred Congress. But Democrats would probably hold onto enough Senate seats to impede Romney's agenda under that chamber's rules.

Times of war bring the nation together; maybe economic peril can do the same. Are voters scared enough to push for action?

"People like low taxes. People like small government," said David Wyss, former chief economist for Standard & Poor's. "But then they want their Social Security and Medicare, and a strong Defense Department, and getting the airport and the roads built in their city. Nobody's willing to tell them they can't have it both ways."

Sohn, who's been following these debates since serving as an economist for Richard Nixon's White House, said the problems are too dire this time to allow politicians to hide behind their partisan differences.

"In this situation, the worst thing you can do is to cause gridlock by trying to stick to your economic philosophy," he said. "We want to make sure the economic ship stays afloat. If the ship sinks, all this argument is for naught."

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