Tuesday, July 31, 2012

NASA to athletic Mars rover: 'Stick the landing'

PASADENA, Calif. (AP) ? It's NASA's most ambitious and expensive Mars mission yet ? and it begins with the red planet arrival late Sunday of the smartest interplanetary rover ever built. Also the most athletic.

Like an Olympic gymnast, it needs to "stick the landing."

It won't be easy. The complicated touchdown NASA designed for the Curiosity rover is so risky it's been described as "seven minutes of terror" ? the time it takes to go from 13,000 mph to a complete stop.

Scientists and engineers will be waiting anxiously 154 million miles away as the spacecraft plunges through Mars' thin atmosphere, and in a new twist, attempts to slowly lower the rover to the bottom of a crater with cables.

By the time Earthlings receive first word of its fate, it will have planted six wheels on the ground ? or tumbled itself into a metal graveyard.

If it succeeds, a video camera aboard the rover will have captured the most dramatic minutes for the first filming of a landing on another planet.

"It would be a major technological step forward if it works. It's a big gamble," said American University space policy analyst Howard McCurdy.

The future direction of Mars exploration is hanging on the outcome of this $2.5 billion science project to determine whether the environment was once suitable for microbes to live. Previous missions have found ice and signs that water once flowed. Curiosity will drill into rocks and soil in search of carbon and other elements.

Named for the Roman god of war, Mars is unforgiving with a hostile history of swallowing man-made spacecraft. It's tough to fly there and even tougher to touch down. More than half of humanity's attempts to land on Mars have ended in disaster. Only the U.S. has tasted success, but there's no guarantee this time.

"You've done everything that you can think of to ensure mission success, but Mars can still throw you a curve," said former NASA Mars czar Scott Hubbard who now teaches at Stanford University.

The Mini Cooper-sized spacecraft traveled 8? months to reach Mars. In a sort of celestial acrobatics, Curiosity will twist, turn and perform other maneuvers throughout the seven-minute thrill ride to the surface.

Why is NASA attempting such a daredevil move? It had little choice. Earlier spacecraft dropped to the Martian surface like a rock, swaddled in airbags, and bounced to a stop. Such was the case with the much smaller and lighter rovers Spirit and Opportunity in 2004.

At nearly 2,000 pounds, Curiosity is too heavy, so engineers had to come up with a new way to land. Friction from the thin atmosphere isn't enough to slow down the spacecraft without some help.

During its fiery plunge, Curiosity will brake by executing a series of S-curves ? similar to how the space shuttle re-entered Earth's atmosphere. At 900 mph, it will unfurl its huge parachute. It then will shed the heat shield that took the brunt of the atmospheric friction and switch on its ground-sensing radar.

A mile from the surface, Curiosity will jettison the parachute and fire up its rocket-powered backpack to slow it down until it hovers. Cables will unspool from the backpack and slowly lower the rover ? at less than 2 mph. The cables keep the rocket engines from getting too close and kicking up dust.

Once the rover senses touchdown, the cords will be cut.

Even if the intricate choreography goes according to script, a freak dust storm, sudden gust of wind or other problem can mar the landing.

"The degree of difficulty is above a 10," said Adam Steltzner, an engineer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which manages the mission.

It takes 14 minutes for radio signals on Mars to travel to Earth. The lag means Curiosity will already be alive or dead by the time mission control finds out.

The rover's landing target is Gale Crater near the Martian equator. It's an ancient depression about the size of Connecticut and Rhode Island combined with a 3-mile-high mountain rising from the center of the crater floor.

Scientists know Gale was once waterlogged. Images from space reveal mineral signatures of clays and sulfate salts, which form in the presence of water, in older layers near the bottom of the mountain.

During its two-year exploration, the plutonium-powered Curiosity will climb the lower mountain flanks to probe the deposits. As sophisticated as the rover is, it cannot search for life. Instead, it carries a toolbox including a power drill, rock-zapping laser and mobile chemistry lab to sniff for organic compounds, considered the chemical building blocks of life. It also has cameras to take panoramic photos.

Humans have been mesmerized by the fourth rock from the sun since the 19th century when American astronomer Percival Lowell, peering through a telescope, theorized that intelligent beings carved what looked like irrigation canals. Scientists now think that if life existed on Mars ? a big if ? it would be in the form of microbes.

Curiosity will explore whether the crater ever had the right environment for microorganisms to take hold.

Even before landing, it got busy taking radiation readings in space during its 352-million-mile cruise ? information that should help its handlers back home determine the radiation risk to astronauts who eventually travel to the red planet.

Curiosity's journey has been fraught with bumps. Since NASA had never built such a complicated machine before, work took longer than expected and costs soared. Curiosity was supposed to launch in 2009 and land in 2010, but the mission ? already $1 billion over budget ? was pushed back two years.

The delay created a cascade. Burdened with budget woes, NASA reneged on a partnership with the European Space Agency to land a drill-toting spacecraft in 2018. The space agency is in the midst of revamping its Mars exploration program that will hinge heavily on whether Curiosity succeeds.

The extra time allowed engineers to test and re-test the rover and all its parts, taking a spacecraft stunt double to the Mojave Desert as if it were Mars. For the past several months, engineers held dress rehearsals at the sprawling JPL campus 10 miles northeast of downtown Los Angeles in anticipation of landing day when they will carry on a decades-old tradition of passing out "good luck" peanuts.

Practice is over. It's show time. To Mars or bust.

___

Follow Alicia Chang's Mars coverage at: http://www.twitter.com/SciWriAlicia

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nasa-athletic-mars-rover-stick-landing-170825784.html

projectglass stock act new york auto show khalid sheikh mohammed masters par 3 gwen stefani overeem

Monday, July 30, 2012

Liver cancer cells stop making glucose as they become cancerous

Liver cancer cells stop making glucose as they become cancerous Could not connect to DB: 1040: Too many connectionsCould not execute 'UPDATE pressrelease SET r_hits = r_hits+ 1, r_total_hits = r_total_hits+ 1, r_pub_hits = r_pub_hits+ 1, r_total_pub_hits = r_total_pub_hits+ 1 WHERE r_id = 217961' on database eurekalert:
2002: Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/tmp/mysql.sock' (2) [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 30-Jul-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Darrell E. Ward
Darrell.Ward@osumc.edu
614-293-3737
Ohio State University Medical Center

COLUMBUS, Ohio As liver cancer develops, tumor cells lose the ability to produce and release glucose into the bloodstream, a key function of healthy liver cells for maintaining needed blood-sugar levels.

The findings come from a study by scientists at The Ohio State Comprehensive Cancer Center Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute (OSUCCC James).

The loss of this type of glucose production, a process called gluconeogenesis, is caused by the over-expression of a molecule called microRNA-23a. The change might aid cancer-cell growth and proliferation by helping to maintain high levels of glycolysis under conditions of drastically reduced mitochondrial respiration, also known as the Warburg effect.

The findings suggest that suppressing miR-23a might reverse this process and offer a new treatment for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the most common form of liver cancer.

The research is published in the journal Hepatology.

"This study identifies an important mechanism that severely blocks glucose production and its release from the liver as liver cells transform into cancer cells," says principal investigator Dr. Samson Jacob, professor of molecular and cellular biochemistry and William and Joan Davis Professor in Cancer Research, Division of Hematology and Oncology at Ohio State and co-leader of the OSUCCC James Experimental Therapeutics Program. "It is conceivable that delivery of an anti-miR23a to the tumor site could reverse this."

For this study, Jacob and his colleagues used an animal model that develops diet-induced HCC, along with primary-tumor samples from patients and HCC cell lines. The mouse model mimics different stages of human hepatocarcinogenesis. Key findings include:

  • Levels of enzymes in the gluconeogenesis pathway were drastically reduced, along with transcription factors involved in the expression of the genes encoding those enzymes.
  • miR-23a expression was significantly up-regulated in the animal model and in primary human HCC.
  • miR-23a suppresses the enzyme glucose-6-phosphatase and the transcription factor PGC-1a, two important components of the gluconeogenesis pathway.
  • Interleukin-6 and Stat-3 signaling cause the upregulation of miR-23a.

"Based on our data," Jacob says, "we conclude that gluconeogenesis is severely compromised in HCC by IL6-Stat3-mediated activation of miR-23a, which directly targets and suppresses glucose-6-phosphatase and PGC-1a, leading to decreased glucose production in HCC."

Jacob notes that since glucose-6-phosphatase is also essential for liver cells to convert glycogen (the storage form of glucose) to glucose, suppression of this enzyme can block all pathways leading to glucose production by the liver.

###

Funding from the NIH/National Cancer Institute (grants CA086978 and DK088076) supported this research.

Other Ohio State researchers involved in this study were Bo Wang, Shu-Hao Hsu, Wendy Frankel and Kalpana Ghoshal.

The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute strives to create a cancer-free world by integrating scientific research with excellence in education and patient-centered care, a strategy that leads to better methods of prevention, detection and treatment. Ohio State is one of only 41 National Cancer Institute (NCI)-designated Comprehensive Cancer Centers and one of only seven centers funded by the NCI to conduct both phase I and phase II clinical trials. The NCI recently rated Ohio State's cancer program as "exceptional," the highest rating given by NCI survey teams. As the cancer program's 210-bed adult patient-care component, The James is a "Top Hospital" as named by the Leapfrog Group and one of the top 20 cancer hospitals in the nation as ranked by U.S.News & World Report.


[ 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.


Liver cancer cells stop making glucose as they become cancerous Could not connect to DB: 1040: Too many connectionsCould not execute 'UPDATE pressrelease SET r_hits = r_hits+ 1, r_total_hits = r_total_hits+ 1, r_pub_hits = r_pub_hits+ 1, r_total_pub_hits = r_total_pub_hits+ 1 WHERE r_id = 217961' on database eurekalert:
2002: Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/tmp/mysql.sock' (2) [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 30-Jul-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Darrell E. Ward
Darrell.Ward@osumc.edu
614-293-3737
Ohio State University Medical Center

COLUMBUS, Ohio As liver cancer develops, tumor cells lose the ability to produce and release glucose into the bloodstream, a key function of healthy liver cells for maintaining needed blood-sugar levels.

The findings come from a study by scientists at The Ohio State Comprehensive Cancer Center Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute (OSUCCC James).

The loss of this type of glucose production, a process called gluconeogenesis, is caused by the over-expression of a molecule called microRNA-23a. The change might aid cancer-cell growth and proliferation by helping to maintain high levels of glycolysis under conditions of drastically reduced mitochondrial respiration, also known as the Warburg effect.

The findings suggest that suppressing miR-23a might reverse this process and offer a new treatment for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the most common form of liver cancer.

The research is published in the journal Hepatology.

"This study identifies an important mechanism that severely blocks glucose production and its release from the liver as liver cells transform into cancer cells," says principal investigator Dr. Samson Jacob, professor of molecular and cellular biochemistry and William and Joan Davis Professor in Cancer Research, Division of Hematology and Oncology at Ohio State and co-leader of the OSUCCC James Experimental Therapeutics Program. "It is conceivable that delivery of an anti-miR23a to the tumor site could reverse this."

For this study, Jacob and his colleagues used an animal model that develops diet-induced HCC, along with primary-tumor samples from patients and HCC cell lines. The mouse model mimics different stages of human hepatocarcinogenesis. Key findings include:

  • Levels of enzymes in the gluconeogenesis pathway were drastically reduced, along with transcription factors involved in the expression of the genes encoding those enzymes.
  • miR-23a expression was significantly up-regulated in the animal model and in primary human HCC.
  • miR-23a suppresses the enzyme glucose-6-phosphatase and the transcription factor PGC-1a, two important components of the gluconeogenesis pathway.
  • Interleukin-6 and Stat-3 signaling cause the upregulation of miR-23a.

"Based on our data," Jacob says, "we conclude that gluconeogenesis is severely compromised in HCC by IL6-Stat3-mediated activation of miR-23a, which directly targets and suppresses glucose-6-phosphatase and PGC-1a, leading to decreased glucose production in HCC."

Jacob notes that since glucose-6-phosphatase is also essential for liver cells to convert glycogen (the storage form of glucose) to glucose, suppression of this enzyme can block all pathways leading to glucose production by the liver.

###

Funding from the NIH/National Cancer Institute (grants CA086978 and DK088076) supported this research.

Other Ohio State researchers involved in this study were Bo Wang, Shu-Hao Hsu, Wendy Frankel and Kalpana Ghoshal.

The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute strives to create a cancer-free world by integrating scientific research with excellence in education and patient-centered care, a strategy that leads to better methods of prevention, detection and treatment. Ohio State is one of only 41 National Cancer Institute (NCI)-designated Comprehensive Cancer Centers and one of only seven centers funded by the NCI to conduct both phase I and phase II clinical trials. The NCI recently rated Ohio State's cancer program as "exceptional," the highest rating given by NCI survey teams. As the cancer program's 210-bed adult patient-care component, The James is a "Top Hospital" as named by the Leapfrog Group and one of the top 20 cancer hospitals in the nation as ranked by U.S.News & World Report.


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

?


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


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-07/osum-lcc073012.php

dj am bully bohemian rhapsody bohemian rhapsody spike lee carson daly heejun han

Stanford football looks to replace Andrew Luck, but all set at tailback

SAN FRANCISCO ? Stanford coach David Shaw's priorities for training camp include identifying a starting quarterback, and filling holes at left tackle, wide receiver and safety.

Tailback is not among his chief concerns even though the Cardinal lost two dependable runners (Jeremy Stewart and Tyler Gaffney) and enters the 2012 season with just one proven commodity: senior Stepfan Taylor, who has rushed for 1,000 yards the past two seasons.

"It's a little different, but I'm extremely comfortable,'' said Shaw, whose team opens training camp Sunday. "I think we do a really good job teaching.''

One reason for the optimism is junior Anthony Wilkerson, who rushed for 282 yards last season. He has fully recovered from a knee injury that forced him to miss spring practice and "dominated his rehab,'' according to Shaw.

Beyond Wilkerson, Stanford has a slew of tailbacks with little game experience but considerable potential.

The group includes sophomores Ricky Seale and Jackson Cummings and redshirt freshman Remound Wright. True freshman Barry Sanders also has the potential to join the rotation.

"There's a lot of his dad in him,'' Shaw said, referencing the NFL Hall of Famer, "but at the same time he's his own runner.''

At quarterback, Brett Nottingham and Josh Nunes are competing for the vacancy left by Andrew Luck.

  • Backup kicker Eric Whitaker has quit the team to focus on academics, Shaw said.
  • Shaw's comments came during a media event sponsored by the Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl, which is scheduled for AT&T Park on Dec. 29.

    The game will match a Pac-12 team against Navy, which has an agreement with the bowl this season so long as the Midshipmen are bowl-eligible.

    For more on college sports, see Jon Wilner's College Hotline at blogs.mercurynews.com/collegesports. Contact him at jwilner@mercurynews.com or 408-920-5716.

  • Source: http://www.insidebayarea.com/top-stories/ci_21192961/stanford-football-looks-replace-andrew-luck-but-all?source=rss

    winning mega million numbers bruce weber boston globe google maps 8 bit mirror mirror robyn texas relays

    Sunday, July 29, 2012

    Ebola Outbreak Kills 13 In Uganda

    The BBC reports that an outbreak of the Ebola virus has killed 13 in Uganda, and infected seven more.
    "The health ministry says emergency measures are in place to deal with the outbreak, which began in late June but has only just been confirmed as Ebola. The cases have been reported in Kibaale district, about 170km (100 miles) to the west of the capital Kampala. ... Ebola is one of the most virulent diseases in the world. It is spread by close personal contact, and kills up to 90% of those who become infected. There is no vaccine for the virus. Symptoms include sudden onset of fever, weakness, headache, vomiting and impaired kidneys. The first victim of this outbreak was a pregnant woman."

    Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/LENqo4X06T0/ebola-outbreak-kills-13-in-uganda

    steelers browns va tech dan gilbert david stern david stern julian beever appeasement

    Capitol Hill Cooks | Bloody Mary popsicles, inspired by 14th and Union

    (Images: Em)

    Now that you can buy booze any old place on Capitol Hill, I finally got around to visiting Oola Distillery. ?Airy and spacious, with a welcoming sales room and staff, the craft distillery produces spirits using Washington-sourced ingredients and attends to each step of the process ?from grain to glass.? ?Oola?s spirits have become fixtures behind the bar on Capitol Hill and beyond, and of course you can buy them by the bottle yourself to enjoy at home.

    I left Oola with a warm fuzzy feeling, a bottle each of rosemary vodka, citrus vodka, and gin, and a recipe card. ?(You can get one too if you stop in.) ?I was going to make you ?Gone Green? (2 oz. Oola citrus vodka + ? oz. fresh lemon/lime juice + ? oz. sugar or simple syrup + 1 oz. of your favorite seasonal herb, torn; shake, strain, and serve with the crushed herb). ?I was going to make you ?The Evergreen? (1 ? oz. Oola rosemary vodka + ? oz. fresh grapefruit juice + 1 oz. Zirbenz Stone Pine Liqueur; shake, strain, and serve with a sprig of rosemary).

    But instead I made you these popsicles.

    So, yeah. ?You should probably be sipping Oola?s handcrafted gin alone or enjoying the vodka with a squeeze of lemon and a splash of simple syrup. ?But when you get to the bottom of the bottle, go ahead and save the last few ounces for these popsicles. ?Because it?s summer, and because they?re fun. ?

    (Need an easy kid-friendly alternative so they?ll leave you and your grown-up popsicles in peace? ?Try these easy frozen yogurt pops.)

    Bloody Mary popsicles
    This recipe, based on one by Cara from Fork and Beans, is spicy with horseradish and ginger. ?If you prefer a milder beveragesicle, you could use a classic Bloody Mary mix and/or leave out the ginger.

    6 Tbsp. (3 oz.) Oola Citrus Vodka
    1 ? c. horseradish Bloody Mary mix
    1-2 tsp. fresh ginger, finely minced or grated on a Microplane grater
    6 thin lime rounds, plus 6 more for serving
    6 celery sticks, trimmed 6 popsicle sticks (optional)
    Margarita salt (optional)
    6 glasses and spoons, for serving

    Stir together vodka, Bloody Mary mix, and ginger. ?Divide evenly between six popsicle molds. ?Drop a lime wheel into each popsicle mold, and use a knife to press it up against the side of the popsicle mold (so you can see it well when the popsicle is frozen). ?Freeze for 30 minutes. ?

    Remove the still-slushy popsicles from the freezer and place a celery stick*, trimmed so that it works as a handle*, into each. ?Add a popsicle stick* as well, if using.* (Can you tell* that I want you to read the note* below?)

    Return popsicles to the freezer for at least two hours. ?Run under hot water to unmold and sprinkle an edge with salt, if you?re using it. ?Because of the alcohol content, these popsicles will melt quickly, so do your friends a favor and serve them with a glass and spoon. ?

    *NOTE: Frozen celery sticks don?t make great popsicle handles, so if you plan to eat this as a right-side-up popsicle, you probably want to use popsicle sticks in addition to the celery. ?On the other hand, you might just want to eat the first few bites as a popsicle and then plop the whole thing in a glass, since it will be melting quickly. ?In that case, the celery stick will be perfectly adequate and you might as well omit the popsicle stick, which is less visually enchanting. ?Good luck with this difficult decision. ?

    Previous Capitol Hill Cooks Posts

    Capitol Hill Cooks is a home cooking recipe series featuring ingredients, ideas, and recipes from the neighborhood. Have a recipe you think we should share? Drop us a line at chs@capitolhillseattle.com. Em also writes about home cooking at emmycooks.com.

    Source: http://www.capitolhillseattle.com/2012/07/29/capitol-hill-cooks-bloody-mary-popsicles-inspired-by-14th-and-union

    basketball wives manny ramirez easter 2012 bachelor jeremy lin espn sassafras mardi gras 2012

    Saturday, July 28, 2012

    Plans for assassination of peace mediator Solheim WORLD NEWS ...

    July 27, 2012

    ? The Editor World News Tomorrow ? News_World news_News_latest news_WNT+News_Worldnewstomorrow_worlnewstomottow.com

    WORLD NEWS TOMORROW -According to the Norwegian newspaper Aftenposten, there were concrete plans to assassinate Norwegian peace envoy to Sri Lanka, Erik Solheim when he visited Colombo in May of 2000.

    Solheim, who was chief peace mediator on behalf of the Norwegian Department of Foreign Affairs, in the conflict between the governing Singhalese and the Tamil population, came to have talks with Sri Lanka?s President Chandrika Kumaratunga, together with State Secretary Raymond Johansen.

    The newspaper writes that a bomb attack was planned against Solheims convoy of cars. However, strict security measures are said to have prevented the attck, Aftenposten writes.

    Source: http://www.worldnewstomorrow.com/?p=2163

    samuel adams snowy owl one for the money 10 minute trainer sarah burke death etta james funeral erin brockovich

    EU regulators to probe five bailed-out Greek banks

    BRUSSELS (Reuters) - EU competition regulators temporarily cleared 18 billion euros ($22 billion) in state aid for four of Greece's largest banks -- National, Alpha, EFG Eurobank, Piraeus -- and said they would assess the support to see if it gives them an unfair advantage.

    The bridge recapitalization was granted by the Hellenic Financial Stability Fund in April as part of the banks' planned share capital increases.

    The European Commission said on Friday it had approved the aid for six months, while it waits for the Greek authorities to present details of the conversion of the bridge recapitalisation into a final recapitalization.

    The EU watchdog said it would study the aid to see if it was in line with EU state aid rules.

    Separately, the Commission also cleared 1.7 billion euros of public support to wind down Proton Bank. It will now investigate the restructuring plan for the new group created from the remains of that bank.

    ($1 = 0.8130 euros)

    (Reporting by Foo Yun Chee; editing by Rex Merrifield)

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/eu-regulators-probe-five-bailed-greek-banks-095219029--sector.html

    paul pierce strawberry festival knicks strikeforce tate vs rousey ciaa lindsay lohan the monkees

    Some Great Facts Related to Enterprise Resource Planning ? Article ...

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

    Source: http://companieslist.org/arts-entertainment/humanities/some-great-facts-related-to-enterprise-resource-planning/

    florida gators texas high school football fugazi fugazi indiana jones and the last crusade nba lockout dramamine

    Friday, July 27, 2012

    Planned reforms send N. Korea rice prices soaring

    Talk that North Korea's young leader plans to reform the broken economy is already having an impact. It is helping send rice prices even further out of the reach of most families in one of the world's most under-fed societies.

    Seo Jae-pyoung, a defector who now lives in South Korea, spoke this week to a friend in the secretive North who had furtively called him by mobile phone from a mountainside to plead for cash to be smuggled across to help.

    "He couldn't cope with the high prices, saying rice prices had shot up ... and he is running out of money," Seo told Reuters.

    "It shows that the economic situation is seriously worsening...I feel that...(it) has already reached the critical point and (leader Kim Jong Un) may know that without reform or openness, the regime is not going to last long."

    1. The death of Kim Jong Il

      1. Report: Red skies, stormy seas marked Kim's death
      2. Circumstances of Kim Jong Il's death fabricated?
      3. Politics trump hunger in N.Korea
      4. Slideshow: The life of Kim Jong ll
      5. Source: Military coup in N. Korea 'unlikely'
      6. NYT: In Kim's death, an extensive intelligence failure
      7. Cartoons: The life and death of Kim Jong Il
      8. Analysis: Opportunities, dangers loom over N. Korea
      9. Even in death, details of Kim Jong Il's life elusive
      10. Kim Jong Il remembered as 'Team America' star

    Hoarding
    One of the reasons he and others gave for the price increase was rice hoarding by middlemen hoping that talk of reform would materialize into a chance to turn a profit.

    Slideshow: Journey into North Korea (on this page)

    A source with ties to North Korea and its chief backer, China, told Reuters last week that the North is gearing up to experiment with economic reforms.

    Evidence is hard to come by in the almost hermetically sealed and suspicious state, where casual contact with outsiders can mean imprisonment. And because it usually takes defectors many months to make their way out of the North to a country where they can speak openly, information can be out of date.

    N. Korea leader Kim gets married, tours amusement park, state TV says

    But some of the defectors Reuters spoke to in Seoul said they were in clandestine contact with people inside the North. Reuters also spoke to foreigners who had gone to North Korea in recent months under government-sponsored visits.

    Few changes?
    The overall impression was that in the roughly seven months Kim Jong Un has been in office, there have been few tangible changes inside a country which is now, since Myanmar's decision to open up, Asia's last pariah state.

    Video: Hidden Planet: Go inside North Korea (on this page)

    "I've not heard anything to suggest any improvement for the rank and file there. And in some sectors, things continue to slide," said one Christian activist with Helping Hands Korea, which works with refugees fleeing the North.

    Kim, thought to be in his late 20s, is the third generation of a family dynasty that has ruled North Korea since its founding. He took over when his father Kim Jong Il died in December.

    With international sanctions over weapons programs, and the insistence of the Kims on food and resources going to the military first, the general population has been on the edge of starvation for decades.

    Source: Kim to reform North Korean economy after purge

    Startling
    The effects of such prolonged meager diets is one of the startling images of North Korea, making the chubby leader Kim stand out even more against his subjects.

    "What's strikingly obvious is peoples' stunted growth, they're all very short for their age," said one humanitarian worker who visited the North earlier this year.

    Slideshow: Daily life in North Korea (on this page)

    "There's always going to be a food shortage, The problem is, what they can produce, the best always goes to the best (top of society)," the humanitarian worker said. That elite refers especially to the military, estimated at 1.2 million out of a population of 25 million.

    According to North Korean defectors who still keep in touch with family and friends and Daily NK, which monitors conditions in the state, the price of 2.2 pounds of rice in the market was estimated to be at least one month's salary.

    Olympic flag flap: N. Korean team refuses to take field

    But that, said one defector, is meaningless because the cash-starved state, the main employer, rarely pays salaries.

    "Even if you are employed by the state, you do business in the market. If you are an office worker, you do business in the market in the afternoon ... There's no way other than this to make it there," said the woman, in her 30s, who asked not to be identified because she feared reprisals against family members still in the North. She fled the North late last year.

    Rock Center: A rare look inside North Korea

    "Basically, many people are doing restaurant business or selling things on credit and pay off credits later. There is a huge gap between the rich and the poor. Pyongyang has enough supplies but other areas fall short. So it is completely up to an individual's effort. If you try hard to make money, you can survive. But if you don't, you struggle," she said.

    She and other defectors said the authorities had been tightening their watch on the border with China, about the only route for escape. The dangers of crossing the border are compounded by the very high risk of being sent back to the North by Chinese authorities to face imprisonment or even execution.

    Video: North Korea?s Kim Jong Un is married (on this page)

    Fear of reform
    North Korea has dabbled with reforms over the years but never stuck to them, forced to rely increasingly on China to prop up a rusting industry and broken infrastructure.

    Most recently, in 2009, it orchestrated the re-denomination of the currency, a move deemed so catastrophic that the official who initiated it was reportedly executed.

    Full international news coverage from NBCNews.com

    None of the defectors Reuters spoke to believed the leadership would dare allow reforms that damage its grip. Some thought the Pyongyang elite had been scared by the disastrous 2009 experiment.

    Analysts say this fear of reform explains why the Kim dynasty has stuck so rigidly with a system that ensured the country was excluded from any benefit of being at the center of the world's most rapidly growing region ? China, Japan and South Korea.

    Shrinking economy
    While their economies have surged, North Korea's has shrunk. Once wealthier than the South, its economy is now less than three percent of South Korea's. Its population is half the size.

    Slideshow: The life of Kim Jong ll (on this page)

    "I think even if it loosens up, it would only be partial. If it fully opens, the regime will collapse. People began to not trust the regime after the currency reform in 2009," said the woman defector who said she fled because she could no longer tolerate the constraints on her life.

    Kim Yong-hwa, a defector who heads the NK Refugees Human Rights Association on Korea, was equally dismissive.

    "Is North Korea is planning to reform and open up? I think the foreign press is over-reacting. The only thing Kim Jong Il left to Kim Jong Un is debt. He has no funds to run the regime."

    (c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2012. Check for restrictions at: http://about.reuters.com/fulllegal.asp

    Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/48349353/ns/world_news-asia_pacific/

    lamar d antoni fashion star andrew bird lizzie borden lizzie borden iona

    New research confirms efficacy of transcranial magnetic stimulation for depression

    New research confirms efficacy of transcranial magnetic stimulation for depression [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 26-Jul-2012
    [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

    Contact: Holly Brown-Ayers
    hbrownayers@butler.org
    401-455-6501
    Women & Infants Hospital

    Naturalistic study shows transcranial magnetic stimulation works for depression in real-life clinical practice settings

    PROVIDENCE, R.I. In one of the first studies to look at transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) in real-world clinical practice settings, researchers at Butler Hospital, along with colleagues across the U.S., confirmed that TMS is an effective treatment for patients with depression who are unable to find symptom relief through antidepressant medications. The study findings are published online in the June 11, 2012 edition of Depression and Anxiety in the Wiley Online Library.

    Previous analysis of the efficacy of TMS has been provided through more than 30 published trials, yielding generally consistent results supporting the use of TMS to treat depression when medications aren't sufficient. "Those previous studies were key in laying the groundwork for the FDA to approve the first device for delivery of TMS as a treatment for depression in 2008," said Linda Carpenter, MD, lead author of the report and chief of the Mood Disorders Program and the Neuromodulation Clinic at Butler Hospital. "Naturalistic studies like ours, which provide scrutiny of real-life patient outcomes when TMS therapy is given in actual clinical practice settings, are the next step in further understanding the effectiveness of TMS. They are also important for informing healthcare policy, particularly in an era when difficult decisions must be made about allocation of scarce resources."

    Carpenter explains that naturalistic studies differ from controlled clinical trials because they permit the inclusion of subjects with a wider range of symptomatology and comorbidity, whereas controlled clinical trials typically have more rigid criteria for inclusion. "As a multisite study collecting naturalistic outcomes from patients in clinics in various regions in the U.S., we were also able to capture effects that might arise from introducing a novel psychiatric treatment modality like TMS in non-research settings," said Carpenter. In all, the study confirms how well TMS works in diverse settings where TMS is administered to a real-life population of patients with depression that have not found relief through many other available treatments.

    The published report summarized data collected from 42 clinical TMS practice sites in the US, and included outcomes from 307 patients with Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) who had persistent symptoms despite the use of antidepressant medication. Change during TMS was assessed using both clinicians' ratings of overall depression severity and scores on patient self-report depression scales, which require the patient to rate the severity of each symptom on the same standardized scale at the end of each 2-week period. Rates for "response" and "remission" to TMS were calculated based on the same cut-off scores and conventions used for other clinical trials of antidepressant treatments. Fifty-eight percent positive response rate to TMS and 37 percent remission rate were observed.

    "The patient outcomes we found in this study demonstrated a response rate similar to controlled clinical trial populations," said Dr. Carpenter, explaining that this new data validates TMS efficacy in treating depression for those who have failed to benefit from antidepressant medications. "Continued research and confirmation of the effectiveness of TMS is important for understanding its place in everyday psychiatric care and to support advocacy for insurance coverage of the treatment." Thanks in part to the advocacy efforts of Dr. Carpenter, TMS was recently approved for coverage by Medicare in New England, and it is also now covered by BCBSRI. "Next steps for TMS research involve enhancing our understanding of how to maintain positive response to TMS over time after the course of therapy ends and learning how to customize the treatment for patients using newer technologies, so TMS can help even more patients."

    ###

    Butler Hospital is the only private, nonprofit psychiatric and substance abuse hospital serving adults, adolescents and children in Rhode Island and southeastern New England. Founded in 1844, it was the first hospital in Rhode Island and has earned a reputation as the leading provider of innovative psychiatric treatments in the region. The flagship hospital for the Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior at the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Butler is recognized worldwide as a pioneer in conducting cutting-edge research.


    [ 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 research confirms efficacy of transcranial magnetic stimulation for depression [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 26-Jul-2012
    [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

    Contact: Holly Brown-Ayers
    hbrownayers@butler.org
    401-455-6501
    Women & Infants Hospital

    Naturalistic study shows transcranial magnetic stimulation works for depression in real-life clinical practice settings

    PROVIDENCE, R.I. In one of the first studies to look at transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) in real-world clinical practice settings, researchers at Butler Hospital, along with colleagues across the U.S., confirmed that TMS is an effective treatment for patients with depression who are unable to find symptom relief through antidepressant medications. The study findings are published online in the June 11, 2012 edition of Depression and Anxiety in the Wiley Online Library.

    Previous analysis of the efficacy of TMS has been provided through more than 30 published trials, yielding generally consistent results supporting the use of TMS to treat depression when medications aren't sufficient. "Those previous studies were key in laying the groundwork for the FDA to approve the first device for delivery of TMS as a treatment for depression in 2008," said Linda Carpenter, MD, lead author of the report and chief of the Mood Disorders Program and the Neuromodulation Clinic at Butler Hospital. "Naturalistic studies like ours, which provide scrutiny of real-life patient outcomes when TMS therapy is given in actual clinical practice settings, are the next step in further understanding the effectiveness of TMS. They are also important for informing healthcare policy, particularly in an era when difficult decisions must be made about allocation of scarce resources."

    Carpenter explains that naturalistic studies differ from controlled clinical trials because they permit the inclusion of subjects with a wider range of symptomatology and comorbidity, whereas controlled clinical trials typically have more rigid criteria for inclusion. "As a multisite study collecting naturalistic outcomes from patients in clinics in various regions in the U.S., we were also able to capture effects that might arise from introducing a novel psychiatric treatment modality like TMS in non-research settings," said Carpenter. In all, the study confirms how well TMS works in diverse settings where TMS is administered to a real-life population of patients with depression that have not found relief through many other available treatments.

    The published report summarized data collected from 42 clinical TMS practice sites in the US, and included outcomes from 307 patients with Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) who had persistent symptoms despite the use of antidepressant medication. Change during TMS was assessed using both clinicians' ratings of overall depression severity and scores on patient self-report depression scales, which require the patient to rate the severity of each symptom on the same standardized scale at the end of each 2-week period. Rates for "response" and "remission" to TMS were calculated based on the same cut-off scores and conventions used for other clinical trials of antidepressant treatments. Fifty-eight percent positive response rate to TMS and 37 percent remission rate were observed.

    "The patient outcomes we found in this study demonstrated a response rate similar to controlled clinical trial populations," said Dr. Carpenter, explaining that this new data validates TMS efficacy in treating depression for those who have failed to benefit from antidepressant medications. "Continued research and confirmation of the effectiveness of TMS is important for understanding its place in everyday psychiatric care and to support advocacy for insurance coverage of the treatment." Thanks in part to the advocacy efforts of Dr. Carpenter, TMS was recently approved for coverage by Medicare in New England, and it is also now covered by BCBSRI. "Next steps for TMS research involve enhancing our understanding of how to maintain positive response to TMS over time after the course of therapy ends and learning how to customize the treatment for patients using newer technologies, so TMS can help even more patients."

    ###

    Butler Hospital is the only private, nonprofit psychiatric and substance abuse hospital serving adults, adolescents and children in Rhode Island and southeastern New England. Founded in 1844, it was the first hospital in Rhode Island and has earned a reputation as the leading provider of innovative psychiatric treatments in the region. The flagship hospital for the Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior at the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Butler is recognized worldwide as a pioneer in conducting cutting-edge research.


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

    ?


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


    Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-07/wih-nrc072612.php

    tiger woods pirate bay erin andrews erin andrews Pepco tour de france instagram

    Is a carbon tax insurance against climate change? 'Only if you think ...

    'The insurance analogy is one of the most stupid ploys in the warmists' arsenal and boy, it faces some stiff competition for such a title'

    Source: http://www.climatedepot.com/a/16792/Is-a-carbon-tax-insurance-against-climate-change-Only-if-you-think-paying-many-multiples-of-the-insured-risk-in-annual-premiums-is-a-form-of-insurance-It-is-simply-a-straight-cost-with-no-benefit

    sacha baron cohen best picture nominees 2012 academy awards 2012 albert nobbs a star is born oscar nominees oscar nominations 2012

    Thursday, July 26, 2012

    Spain to struggle to fund 2012 debt crunch

    MADRID (Reuters) - Regional debts, soaring borrowing costs, a higher deficit and souring market sentiment are all making it nearly impossible for Spain to find 50 billion euros in funding it needs by year end without external aid.

    Madrid will need 10 billion euros more than expected at the start of the year to fund a softer deficit target agreed with the European Union, and 12 billion extra euros for a new liquidity line to highly indebted autonomous regions.

    That raises the total funding requirements for the rest of the year to around 50 billion, squandering the advantage Spain had gained in the first half of the year by "frontloading" its funding at a time when the European Central Bank was giving banks cheap money to buy government debt.

    Spanish officials had boasted that the second half of the year would not be difficult after they raised 59 billion worth of their expected 86 billion euro funding requirement in the first half of the year.

    But the benefit has evaporated now that the Treasury needs to find extra funding to meet a deficit target revised to 6.3 percent of Gross Domestic Product from 5.3 percent, and provide the new cash for its rescue fund for the regions.

    Spain's public finances have been a major concern for international investors since it missed deficit targets for last year by a wide margin. The crippled state of its banks and a second recession in three years, set to last well into next year, have made things worse.

    The country's funding costs have reached new euro-era highs. On Tuesday, the 10-year paper was trading at 7.60 percent, well above the 7 percent level seen as unsustainable for public finances.

    LIQUIDITY

    The Treasury can use the cash it has in its coffers and short-term liquidity to repay 12.87 billion of debt maturing on July 30. A bigger test looms on October 29 and 31, with no less than 20.27 billion euros of debt maturing in two days.

    Spain now has a liquidity buffer of 28.9 billion euros in cash. But that has been melting down rapidly in the last two months - from 44 billion euros in April and 40.3 billion euros in May.

    July and October are also traditionally good months for the fiscal position of the country as taxes are being collected, but tax collection has been weak since the start of the year, down 5 percent compared to the same period last year.

    If Spain cannot sell enough medium or long-term bonds, it can also kick the ball downfield by issuing short-term T-bills. But relying on short-term funding to finance long-term needs hardly removes the problem and comes at a mounting cost.

    Spain placed 3 billion euros on Tuesday for which it paid the second highest yield on short-term paper since the birth of the euro.

    The Treasury said earlier in the year it planned to issue 100 billion euros in short-term bills by year end, which it said it would use to soften its funding curve. It has so far tapped the short term bill market for 47 billion euros and needs to roll over around 35 billion by the end of the year.

    FINDING BUYERS

    So far, thanks in part to the European Central Bank's cheap money, the sharp increase in yields on Spain's debt in secondary markets has yet to raise its average funding costs, which remain on target and below those of previous years.

    The average yield for Spanish debt was 3.27 percent at the end of June, compared to 3.90 percent one year earlier, the Economy Ministry said on Tuesday.

    Keeping those costs affordable in future will require that Spain be able to find buyers for new bonds. Foreign buyers have stayed clear of the Spanish bond market for weeks, and persuading Spanish banks to buy their country's bonds has become increasingly difficult.

    It will be even more difficult if the sovereign credit rating, currently one step away from junk territory, is downgraded any further.

    "There are no international buyers. The small banks have no capacity to buy anymore, the big ones are just rolling over their paper and basically only the state-intervened banks are buying right now," said a senior debt analyst who asked to remain anonymous.

    Nevertheless, he said Spain could still manage to fund itself for the year if it receives some kind of liquidity help.

    One possible source of support could be the hundreds of billion euros still parked by banks at the ECB after they obtained around 1 trillion euros in cheap loans in December and February. If it was to be freed up, Spain could benefit greatly from it.

    Another option would be a rescue line from the permanent European bailout fund in the form of primary or secondary market debt buying. But the European Stability Mechanism will not enter into force until September and, because it is only partly pre-funded, it lacks the firepower to fully shield Spain from markets.

    "Until it gets all its capital, this is a one-bullet gun. So my guess is that the euro zone will wait until the last minute before it uses it in Spain, because if you miss the shot, you're dead," the analyst said. ($1 = 0.8253 euros)

    (Reporting by Julien Toyer; Editing by Peter Graff)

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/50-billion-euros-could-too-much-spain-raise-060242615--business.html

    florida primary full force odd fellows eli whitney blake griffin dunk on kendrick perkins kendrick perkins steve jones

    freelance IT writers | Workaholics4Hire.com

    Location: Work At Home

    Looking for freelance writers to produce articles related to small-and-medium sized business and tech/security topics.
    Pay is $300/article. Word count = 500-600 words.
    Here?s the rub: We?re looking for IT professionals and/or tech writers who can put a human voice to subjects that are admittedly somewhat dry and robotic by nature. This isn?t a technical writing position. We need content that is engaging, shareable and up to speed with current trends and news. Again, the importance of your ability to speak like a human (and engage other humans) on these topics cannot be overstated.

    Writers will need to exhibit the following:

    • ?An ability to successfully write for a specified target audience (writers will be provided with research info for each article)
    • ?Familiarity with things like endpoint protection solutions, online and mobile security risks, and general pain points felt by SMBs, even ahead-of-the-curve information
    • ?An ability to research and synthesize information succinctly ? in about 600 words
    • ?A good sense of humor and just the right level of irreverence that can engage and entertain a business/corporate audience without insulting them. Sophos, TechCrunch and Gizmodo are good examples of the tone we?re looking for (minus the swearing).
    • ?A background/appreciation for any or all things tech is mandatory
    • ?An excellent grasp of grammar, spelling, syntax, punctuation, etc. (familiarity with the AP Stylebook is preferred)
    • ?Unfailing dedication to meeting deadlines

    Articles are $300 each / word count = 600 words

    Please provide a brief bio, along with resume/CV and any relevant links/writing samples.

    How To Apply For This Work At Home Job

    For full contact details, click this link to visit the site where this ad originally appeared: /bloggingpro.com/

    If the ad is no longer available, or the position has been filled, please submit your comment below so we can update this listing accordingly. Please assist your fellow job seekers by helping us keep this database up to date and accurate.

    Be Notified of New Jobs For Free!

    Be notified of new jobs available. Internal listings require a password to view. To get yours for free, enter your name and email, choose your desired primary occupation, and click the submit button below.

    Source: http://workaholics4hire.com/freelance-it-writers/

    beverly hills hotel whitney houston national anthem dolly parton i will always love you beverly hilton hotel whitney houston found dead i will always love you whitney houston 2012 grammy awards

    Sprint second-quarter loss widens on Nextel charges

    NEW YORK (Reuters) - Sprint Nextel Corp on Thursday posted a wider quarterly loss as it took hefty charges for the planned shutdown of its old Nextel network.

    The No. 3 U.S. mobile service reported a loss of 246,000 subscribers in the quarter, compared with the average expectation of about 203,000 subscriber losses, according to five analysts contacted by Reuters.

    The customer numbers included losses of 688,000 subscribers on the Nextel network, which Sprint bought in 2005. On top of the work Sprint is doing to shut down the older network, the company is spending billions of dollars to upgrade its own network.

    In contrast, Sprint's bigger rivals Verizon Wireless and AT&T Inc , both added customers in the quarter.

    Sprint, which committed to spend $15.5 billion on Apple Inc iPhones over the next few years, said that its iPhone sales had declined in the quarter.

    The quarterly loss widened to $1.37 billion or 46 cents per share, from $847 million, or 28 cents per share in the year-ago quarter. The loss included a $782 million depreciation charge for the network decommissioning and an impairment cost related to the share price of its Clearwirel Corp venture.

    Net operating revenue rose to $8.8 billion from $8.3 billion. Analysts expected $8.727 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

    Sprint said it increased its target for 2012 adjusted operating income before depreciation and amortization to a range of $4.5 billion to $4.6 billion from its previous target of $3.7 billion to $3.9 billion.

    Sprint shares were largely unchanged in premarket trading after closing at $3.37 on New York Stock Exchange Wednesday.

    (Reporting By Sinead Carew; editing by Jeffrey Benkoe and Maureen Bavdek)

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sprint-second-quarter-loss-widens-nextel-charges-115323295--sector.html

    first night ball drop dick clark new years eve brock lesnar vs alistair overeem times square new years eve liquor store how to tie a bow tie

    Budget office: Obama's health law reduces deficit

    WASHINGTON (AP) ? President Barack Obama's health care overhaul will shrink rather than increase the nation's huge federal deficits over the next decade, Congress' nonpartisan budget scorekeepers said Tuesday, supporting Obama's contention in a major election-year dispute with Republicans.

    About 3 million fewer uninsured people will gain health coverage because of last month's Supreme Court ruling granting states more leeway, and that will cut the federal costs by $84 billion, the Congressional Budget Office said in the biggest changes from earlier estimates.

    Republicans have insisted that "Obamacare" will actually raise deficits ? by "trillions," according to presidential candidate Mitt Romney. But that's not so, the budget office said.

    The office gave no updated estimate for total deficit reductions from the law, approved by Congress and signed by Obama in 2010. But it did estimate that Republican legislation to repeal the overhaul ? passed recently by the House ? would itself boost the deficit by $109 billion from 2013 to 2022.

    "Repealing the (health care law) will lead to an increase in budget deficits over the coming decade, though a smaller one than previously reported," budget office director Douglas Elmendorf said in a letter to House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio.

    The law's mix of spending cuts and tax increases would more than offset new spending to cover uninsured people, Elmendorf explained.

    Tuesday's budget projections were the first since the Supreme Court upheld most of the law last month but gave states the option of rejecting a planned expansion of Medicaid for their low-income residents. As a consequence, the budget office said the law will cover fewer uninsured people.

    Thirty million uninsured people will be covered by 2022, or about 3 million fewer than projected this spring before the court ruling, the report said.

    As a result, taxpayers will save about $84 billion from 2012 to 2022. That brings the total cost of expanding coverage down to $1.2 trillion, from about $1.3 trillion in the previous estimate.

    The Congressional Budget Office has consistently projected that Obama's overhaul will reduce the deficit, although previous estimates aren't strictly comparable with Tuesday's report because of changes in the law and other factors.

    At the time it was approved in 2010, CBO estimated the law would reduce the deficit by $143 billion from 2010 to 2019. And CBO estimated that last year's Republican repeal legislation would increase deficits by $210 billion from 2010 to 2021.

    That may sound like a lot of money, but it's actually a hair-thin margin at a time when federal deficits are expected to average around $1 trillion a year for the foreseeable future.

    When the law is fully in effect, 92 percent of citizens and legal residents are estimated to have coverage, as compared to 81 percent now.

    Democrats hailed Tuesday's estimates as vindication for the president. "This confirms what we've been saying all along: the Affordable Care Act saves lots of money," said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev.

    Actually, the government will spend more. It just won't go onto the national credit card because the health care law will be paid for with a combination of spending cuts and tax increases.

    Republicans said they remain unswervingly committed to repealing what they dismiss as "Obamacare." When combined with other budget-cutting measures, GOP leaders say that repeal will ultimately reduce deficits. Romney says if elected he will begin to dismantle the law his first day in office.

    Medicaid has been one big question hanging over the future of Obama's law since the Supreme Court ruled.

    Some GOP-led states, such as Texas and Florida, say they will not go forward with the expansion. Others are uncommitted, awaiting the voters' verdict on Obama in November.

    Although the federal government would bear all of the initial cost of that expansion, many states would have to open their Medicaid programs to low-income childless adults for the first time.

    CBO analysts did not try to predict which specific states would jump in and which would turn down the Medicaid expansion. Instead, they assumed that many states would eventually cut deals with the federal government to expand their programs to some degree.

    As a result, the budget office estimates that more than 80 percent of the low-income uninsured people eligible under the law live in states that partially or fully expand their programs.

    The big coverage expansion under the law doesn't start until 2014, with middle-class uninsured people signing up for subsidized private plans and more low-income people picked up through Medicaid.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Laurie Kellman contributed to this report.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/budget-office-obamas-health-law-reduces-deficit-182759278.html

    pennsylvania primary jerome simpson hand sanitizer obama on jimmy fallon google drive apple stock pilar sanders

    U.S. solar plan creates energy zones, excludes sensitive lands

    The Obama administration unveiled plans Tuesday to ramp up solar energy production, offering incentives for solar developers to cluster projects on 285,000 acres of federal land in the western U.S and opening an additional 19 million acres of the Mojave Desert for new power plants.

    The long-awaited plan also appears to rewind previous land-use decisions by the federal government. The pending policy rules out a long list of environmentally sensitive lands where the government ? seeking to fast-track construction ? had allowed solar development over the objections of environmentalists.

    The plan places 445 square miles of public land in play for utility-scale solar facilities.

    Interior Secretary Ken Salazar told reporters on a conference call that the country had no solar projects in the planning stages when Obama took office, contrasting the situation with the current rush to build plants.

    "We have turned that around," he said. "Three years later we stand at a proud moment in American history. It's hard to overstate what a significant milestone this is for our administration."

    The plan establishes 17 solar energy zones in six Western states, including 154,000 acres in California. The zones were chosen because they avoided major environmental, cultural or other conflicts. The policy encourages developers to select sites within zones by promising minimal environmental reviews and expedited permitting.

    In addition, the administration is completing work on a range of additional financial incentives, such as lower land lease payments and reduced costs of bonds.

    The first-of-its-kind plan was hammered out over two years by an array of federal, state and local groups. The new rules include a list of areas where development is forbidden because of environmental or cultural sensitivity. On the exclusion list is the entire Ivanpah Valley, a biologically diverse swath of desert that straddles the California-Nevada border.

    Conservation groups had fought to prevent approval of utility-scale projects in the region, contending that the desert ? home to scores of endangered plants and animals ? was not capable of absorbing industrial-scale change.

    Despite opposition and an unexpectedly large population of federally protected desert tortoises, the Ivanpah Valley now has at least two large projects underway, including the world's largest solar thermal power facility, being built by BrightSource Energy.

    "We had to learn the hard way from BrightSource that it is a sensitive area," said Ileene Anderson of the Center for Biological Diversity.

    An alliance of environmental groups, utilities and solar companies praised the new plan, saying it provided the industry needed certainty and guidelines while preserving the Mojave's most cherished places. The support is an about-face by developers, who had earlier opposed the zone approach as too restrictive.

    Critics contend that the policies are too late, coming after years of free-for-all leasing that encouraged rampant speculation. Since leasing began, the Bureau of Land Management has been working to process more than 300 solar applications.

    Many of those are for land in California's Mojave Desert, where counties have seen the cost of private land soar and the desert given over to thousands of acres of mirrors. The state has 2 1/2 times more acreage in solar zones than other states.

    While the zone concept is intended to guide development, it allows some flexibility for companies to construct plants on millions of acres included in designated "variance" zones. Developers may win approval to build in those areas but will have fewer government incentives to do so. California has three-quarters of a million acres in variance areas.

    The fast-tracking of solar facilities on public lands is expected to generate nearly 24,000 megawatts of power by 2030, according to Mike Pool, acting director of the Bureau of Land Management.

    But so far, the unprecedented urgency given to solar energy projects on public land has yielded only 50 megawatts, said Interior official Steve Black.

    The plan will be finalized after a 30-day comment period. Officials said that whatever rules are eventually adopted will apply only to new projects and not the 17 solar facilities already awarded permits or the 78 currently in the approval pipeline.

    julie.cart@latimes.com

    Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/latimes/news/science/~3/ujMQsHdWZ_U/la-me-0725-solar-zones-20120725,0,2816864.story

    lesotho a wrinkle in time benjamin netanyahu storm shelters nick lachey chevy volt christina hendricks

    Wednesday, July 25, 2012

    17-year-old girl builds artificial ?brain? to detect breast cancer

    5 hrs.

    An artificial ?brain? built by a 17-year-old whiz kid from Florida is able to accurately assess tissue samples for signs of breast cancer, providing more confidence to a minimally invasive procedure.

    The cloud-based neural network took top prize in this year?s Google Science Fair.?

    ?I taught the computer how to diagnose breast cancer,? Brittany Wegner, the Lakewood Ranch resident, told me today.

    ?And this is really important because currently the least invasive form of biopsy is actually the least conclusive, so a lot of doctors can?t use them.?

    Wegner wanted to create a way for more doctors to use the minimally invasive procedure, called Fine Needle Aspirate, in order to ease the process of having lumps examined.

    Breast cancer affects one in eight women worldwide, she noted, including members of her family.

    ?Early detection is really important,? Wegner said. ?And that is what I?m trying to do with my neural network.?

    Artificial neural networks are essentially computer programs coded to think like the brain, she explained. Only they can detect patterns that are too complex for mere humans.?

    And they get better as they process more and more data.

    Wegner started building these networks in the seventh grade after studying the future of technology for a school project.?

    ?I came across artificial intelligence and was just enthralled. I went home the next day and bought a programming book and decided that was what I was going to teach myself to do,? she said.

    Her first neural network played soccer.

    For her Google Science Fair project, she built a neural network with Java and then deployed it to the?cloud. She ran 7.6 million trials on it and found it is 99.1 percent sensitive to malignancy.

    ?As I get more data, the success rate will go up and the inconclusive rate will go down,? she said. ?So with more data, I think it is hospital ready.?

    She also?compared her custom-built network to three off-the-shelf products that she tweaked to work with her dataset. Her sensitivity to malignancy was 4.97 percent better than the commercial networks.

    Now that her network is built and shown to get smarter with experience, Wegner aims to deploy it in hospitals. She also wants to extend it to other types of cancer.

    ?It will require a little bit of coding and tweaking, but it would be very easy to adapt it so it could diagnose other types of cancer and potentially other medical problems,? she said.

    Before she gets cracking, though, Wegner deserves to bask in the glory of victory. The grand prize comes with $50,000 in scholarship money, an internship with a fair sponsor and a 10-day trip to the Galapagos Islands.

    ?I?ve never been to South America,? she said. ?I?m so excited.?

    To learn more about Wegner?s project and the other finalists, check out the Google Science Fair.

    John Roach is a contributing writer for NBCNews.com. To learn more about him, check out his website. For more of our Future of Technology series, watch the featured video below.

    Source: http://www.futureoftech.msnbc.msn.com/technology/futureoftech/17-year-old-girl-builds-artificial-brain-detect-breast-cancer-908308

    weather new orleans orcl the hartford illinois primary 2012 michael bay zsa zsa gabor illinois primary