Sunday, March 31, 2013

Survey: Samsung takes the lead from Nokia, BlackBerry in key emerging markets

By Simon Evans MIAMI (Reuters) - World number one Serena Williams fought back from a set down to beat Maria Sharapova 4-6 6-3 6-0 and win the Sony Open for a record sixth time on Saturday as she continued her dominance over her closest rival. With the win, Williams, who struggled with her serve in the first two sets, becomes only the fourth woman in the Open era to win the same WTA tournament six times, joining Martina Navratilova, Chris Evert and Steffi Graf. "I finally have some record," Williams said. "Like it's really cool. I can't seem to catch up with Margaret Court or Steffi or ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/survey-samsung-takes-lead-nokia-blackberry-key-emerging-233306758.html

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Video Interviews with Tyler Perry's Temptation Cast & Crew

Tyler Perry's Temptation is a steamy, cautionary tale of Judith (Jurnee Smollett-Bell), who has all her life choices brought into question by the arrival of a handsome, rich stranger. Grae Drake talks to the cast about what the set was like, why it's fun to play a lost soul, and what their real-life temptations are.

Click here to watch more video interviews

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1927137/news/1927137/

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MSI Slidebook S20 review: MSI's flagship Windows 8 Ultrabook has a flawed design

MSI Slidebook S20 review: MSI's flagship Windows 8 Ultrabook has a flawed design

If you've been following our reviews of Windows 8 laptops, you know we haven't been too kind to the slider form factor. It's not like we set out to pan these machines, but time and again we've found that the propped-up display ruins the typing experience. Keep that in mind as we begin our review of the Slidebook S20, MSI's flagship Win 8 device, priced at $1,200 in the US. It's a bold move from a company whose bread and butter is not ultraportables, but gaming systems. In fact, the 11.6-inch S20 is the outfit's only high-end Windows 8 Ultrabook. So the company must have quite a bit of confidence in that form factor, then, if it didn't bother with dockable tablets or some other kind of convertible design. Could that mean the S20 has something all the others don't?

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/dvdU-h4k5CU/

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Friday, March 29, 2013

Analysis - Underappreciated consumer stars in S&P 500 rally

By Rodrigo Campos and Herbert Lash

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Investors who had bet on the American consumer even as the U.S. economy was entering the Great Recession are the biggest winners as the S&P 500 stock index set a new closing record on Thursday.

Millions of jobs were lost in 2008 and 2009, the toughest recession in half a century, and many Americans saw the value of their investments and their homes dive. The U.S. consumer retrenched, focused on paying down debt.

And yet, the two strongest equity sectors that have fuelled the S&P 500's <.spx> recovery are consumer staples and consumer discretionary stocks, supported by strong earnings growth among names like Amazon.com Inc and Estee Lauder .

Since the benchmark index hit its previous closing high in October 2007, the consumer discretionary sector has gained 40.4 percent, while staples are up 41.3 percent. They have outperformed other sectors such as technology, while financials have been the worst, down 49.1 percent.

The benchmark closed at 1,569.19 on Thursday, overtaking the previous record of 1,565.15 set October 9, 2007. With the S&P 500 up just over 10 percent through the first quarter of 2013, prospects bode well for the market to at least hold these gains, if not push higher, as the U.S. central bank is expected to maintain its stimulus plan for now.

"The Federal Reserve's policies have been the primary catalyst to this rally," said David Joy, chief market strategist at Ameriprise Financial in Boston, where he helps oversee $675 billion in assets under management.

"What the Fed does and says in the months ahead will be the primary determinant of what stock prices do."

Discretionary and staples have posted 14 straight quarters of earnings growth, the longest streak among the 10 S&P 500 sectors. Eight of the 20 best-performing stocks since the 2007 highs are consumer discretionary companies, including Amazon, Netflix Inc and Priceline.com Inc .

Recent data shows the U.S. consumer, despite higher taxes and gasoline prices, continues to support the recovery. Retail sales rose at their fastest rate in five months in February and the U.S. unemployment rate, at 7.7 percent, is at four-year lows.

The government stimulus program passed in 2009 was in part responsible, as it slowed the rate of economic contraction during a rough time for the economy.

"It's easy to argue whether or not (the stimulus) was good for the economy, but numbers are showing it helped consumer spending," said to Brian Jacobsen, chief portfolio strategist at Wells Fargo Funds Management in Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin.

DIVIDENDS SAVE THE DAY

As a whole, the S&P is paying more in dividends now than in the last quarter of 2007. More than 400 issues in the S&P 500 pay dividends, the highest since 1998, and the S&P's dividend yield is currently 2.45 percent, compared with 1.89 percent in the fourth quarter of 2007.

With the Fed forcing rates lower through its monetary stimulus, investors had to move elsewhere for yield. The attractive dividend yield in stocks, such as consumer staples, have brought in older investors, said Jeff Rubin, market strategist at Birinyi Associates in Westport, Connecticut. The current dividend yield in consumer staples is 2.75 percent, according to S&P.

"It has to do with the changing dynamic of who has the money," he said. "Baby boomers are retiring with trillions of dollars in assets they need to live off of. The historical asset of choice has been bonds, but at 1.8 percent on a 10-year note that's not going to get them the income they need."

The consumer staples sector has posted a total return of more than 60 percent going back to the 2007 high, thanks to reinvested dividends, while the consumer discretionary group follows with more than 53 percent. In fact, just one S&P sector - financials - is in the red compared to the 2007 highs on a total return basis.

One reason the consumer discretionary names may have done well is because that sector's downturn started earlier than the rest of the market. Earnings growth turned negative for the sector in the fourth quarter of 2006 and by the time the discretionary stocks hit bottom in March 2009, their forward price-to-earnings ratio was above 20.

That forward P/E peaked above 27 on April 2009. Despite the sector's rise since, the P/E is now just above 16, owing to the exponential growth in earnings. That's higher than most sectors, but below the 17 level where it stood at the 2007 peak.

Earnings growth among discretionaries is expected to continue, with fourth quarter 2012 growth estimated at 7.9 percent compared to an overall 1.5 percent expected earnings growth on the S&P 500 according to Reuters data.

A MORE BALANCED MARKET

Financials made up more than 20 percent of the index in October 2007, due in part to record-breaking profits from companies like Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns, which no longer exist. Financials now make up 15.9 percent of the index.

At the top of the internet bubble in 2000, the information technology sector accounted for roughly 35 percent of the S&P. Tech is still the largest sector, but at 18.2 percent.

David Rosenberg, chief economist and strategist at Gluskin Sheff & Associates in Toronto, said the new S&P record could bring more investors into equities.

"It could be that you get a wave of buying from frustrated people who have been watching their savings erode in real terms," he said. "Watching headlines about the market hitting a new high could be a catalyst of frustration that pushes people off the sidelines."

There are concerns, however. The U.S. stock market has diverged substantially from credit spreads, U.S. and European government bonds and emerging markets stocks, notes Marko Kolanovic, global head of derivative and quantitative strategies at JPMorgan Securities.

That suggests the S&P 500 "might be underestimating global risks, and hence could be prone to reversion, i.e. underperformance in relative or absolute terms," he wrote in a note on Thursday.

Mike O'Rourke, chief market strategist at JonesTrading in New York, said that more than 65 percent of speculator positions in the futures market are long positions - a sign that many are bullish right now.

The mild pullback in the S&P prior to Thursday's gains, triggered by worries about a bailout in Cyprus, helped even out technical indicators that were showing the market's run was overextended. The short-term relative strength index, which touched the 70 level that indicates an overbought condition as of mid-March, has retreated considerably.

Many market participants expect the market to pull back after hitting a new high, which would make the technical indicators even stronger.

(Reporting by Rodrigo Campos and Herb Lash; Editing by David Gaffen, Tiffany Wu and Tim Dobbyn)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/analysis-underappreciated-consumer-stars-p-500-rally-202407685--sector.html

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Thursday, March 28, 2013

Supreme Court, in next gay marriage case, eyes federal law (reuters)

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

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Hey Look We Found Tatooine In Real Life

French astronomers think they found Tatooine in real life and we didn't even have to travel to a galaxy far, far away (well, it's still kind of far). The fictional home of Luke Skywalker is called 2MASS0103(AB)b in real life and it revolves around two suns that move relatively close together. Basically, this planet is in the binary star system just like Tatooine. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/JOs2hxoTuyI/hey-look-we-found-tatooine-in-real-life

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Measuring the magnetism of antimatter

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

In a breakthrough that could one day yield important clues about the nature of matter itself, a team of Harvard scientists have succeeding in measuring the magnetic charge of single particles of matter and antimatter more accurately than ever before.

As described in a March 25 paper in Physical Review Letters, the ATRAP team, led by Gerald Gabrielse, the George Vasmer Leverett Professor of Physics, and including post-doctoral fellows Stephan Ettenauer and Eric Tardiff and graduate students Jack DiSciacca, Mason Marshall, Kathryn Marable and Rita Kalra was able to capture individual protons and antiprotons in a "trap" created by electric and magnetic fields. By precisely measuring the oscillations of each particle, the team was able to measure the magnetism of a proton more than 1,000 times more accurately than an antiproton had been measured before. Similar tests with antiprotons produced a 680-fold increase in accuracy in the size of the magnet in an antiproton.

"That is a spectacular jump in precision for any fundamental quality," Gabrielse said, of the antiproton measurements. "That's a leap that we don't often see in physics, at least not in a single step."

Such measurements, Gabrielse said, could one day help scientists answer a question that seems more suited for the philosophy classroom than the physics lab ? why are we here?

"One of the great mysteries in physics is why our universe is made of matter," he said. "According to our theories, the same amount of matter and antimatter was produced during the Big Bang. When matter and antimatter meet, they are annihilated. As the universe cools down, the big mystery is: Why didn't all the matter find the antimatter and annihilate all of both? There's a lot of matter and no antimatter left, and we don't know why."

Making precise measurements of protons and antiprotons, Gabrielse explained, could begin to answer those questions by potentially shedding new light on whether the CPT (Charge conjugation, Parity transformation, Time reversal) theorem is correct. An outgrowth of the standard model of particle physics, CPT states that the protons and antiprotons should be virtually identical ? with the same magnitude of charge and mass ? yet should have opposite charges.

Though earlier experiments, which measured the charge-to-mass ratio of protons and antiprotons, verified the predictions of CPT, Gabrielse said further investigation is needed because the standard model does not account for all forces, such as gravity, in the universe.

"What we wanted to do with these experiments was to say, 'Let's take a simple system ? a single proton and a single antiproton ? and let's compare their predicted relationships, and see if our predictions are correct," Gabrielse said. "Ultimately, whatever we learn might give us some insight into how to explain this mystery."

While researchers were able to capture and measure protons with relative ease, antiprotons are only produced by high-energy collisions that take place at the extensive tunnels of the CERN laboratory in Geneva, Gabrielse said, leaving researchers facing a difficult choice.

"Last year, we published a report showing that we could measure a proton much more accurately than ever before," Gabrielese said. "Once we had done that, however, we had to make a decision ? did we want to take the risk of moving our people and our entire apparatus ? crates and crates of electronics and a very delicate trap apparatus ? to CERN and try to do the same thing with antiprotons? Antiprotons would only be available till mid-December and then not again for a year and a half.

"We decided to give it a shot, and by George, we pulled it off," he continued. "Ultimately, we argued that we should attempt it, because even if we failed, that failure would teach us something." In what Gabrielse described as a "gutsy" choice, graduate student Jack DiSciacca agreed to use this attempt to conclude his thesis research, and new graduate students Marshall and Marable signed on to help.

Though their results still fit within the predictions made by the standard model, Gabrielse said being able to more accurately measure the characteristics of both matter and antimatter may yet help shed new light on how the universe works.

"What's also very exciting about this breakthrough is that it now prepares us to continue down this road," he said. "I'm confident that, given this start, we're going to be able to increase the accuracy of these measurements by another factor of 1,000, or even 10,000."

###

Harvard University: http://www.harvard.edu

Thanks to Harvard University for this article.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127457/Measuring_the_magnetism_of_antimatter

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You don't 'own' your own genes: Researchers raise alarm about loss of individual 'genomic liberty' due to gene patents

Mar. 25, 2013 ? Humans don't "own" their own genes, the cellular chemicals that define who they are and what diseases they might be at risk for. Through more than 40,000 patents on DNA molecules, companies have essentially claimed the entire human genome for profit, report two researchers who analyzed the patents on human DNA.

Their study, published March 25 in the journal Genome Medicine, raises an alarm about the loss of individual "genomic liberty."

In their new analysis, the research team examined two types of patented DNA sequences: long and short fragments. They discovered that 41 percent of the human genome is covered by longer DNA patents that often cover whole genes. They also found that, because many genes share similar sequences within their genetic structure, if all of the "short sequence" patents were allowed in aggregate, they could account for 100 percent of the genome.

Furthermore, the study's lead author, Dr. Christopher E. Mason of Weill Cornell Medical College, and the study's co-author, Dr. Jeffrey Rosenfeld, an assistant professor of medicine at the University of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey and a member of the High Performance and Research Computing Group, found that short sequences from patents also cover virtually the entire genome -- even outside of genes.

"If these patents are enforced, our genomic liberty is lost," says Dr. Mason, an assistant professor of physiology and biophysics and computational genomics in computational biomedicine at the Institute for Computational Biomedicine at Weill Cornell. "Just as we enter the era of personalized medicine, we are ironically living in the most restrictive age of genomics. You have to ask, how is it possible that my doctor cannot look at my DNA without being concerned about patent infringement?"

The U.S. Supreme Court will review genomic patent rights in an upcoming hearing on April 15. At issue is the right of a molecular diagnostic company to claim patents not only on two key breast and ovarian cancer genes -- BRCA1 and BRCA2 -- but also on any small sequence of code within BRCA1, including a striking patent for only 15 nucleotides.

In its study, the research team matched small sequences within BRCA1 to other genes and found that just this one molecular diagnostic company's patents also covered at least 689 other human genes -- most of which have nothing to do with breast or ovarian cancer; rather, its patents cover 19 other cancers as well as genes involved in brain development and heart functioning.

"This means if the Supreme Court upholds the current scope of the patents, no physician or researcher can study the DNA of these genes from their patients, and no diagnostic test or drug can be developed based on any of these genes without infringing a patent," says Dr. Mason.

One Patented Sequence Matched More Than 91 Percent of Human Genes

Dr. Mason undertook the study because he realized that his research into brain and cancer disorders inevitably involved studying genes that were protected by patents.

Under U.S. patent law, genes can be patented by those researchers, either at companies or institutions, who are first to find a gene that promises a useful application, such as for a diagnostic test. For example, the patents received by a company in the 1990s on BRCA1 and BRCA2 enables it to offer a diagnostic test to women who may have, or may be at risk for, breast or ovarian cancer due to mutations in one or both of these genes. Women and their doctors have no choice but to use the services of the patents' owner, which costs $3,000 per test, "whereas any of the hundreds of clinical laboratories around the country could perform such a test for possibly much less," says Dr. Mason.

The impact on these patents is equally onerous on research, Dr. Mason adds.

"Almost every day, I come across a gene that is patented -- a situation that is common for every geneticist in every lab," says Dr. Mason.

Dr. Mason and his research partner sought to determine how many other genes may be impacted by gene patents, as well as the overall landscape of intellectual property on the human genome.

To conduct the study, Dr. Mason and Dr. Rosenfeld examined the structure of the human genome in the context of two types of patented sequences: short and long fragments of DNA. They used matches to known genes that were confirmed to be present in patent claims, ranging from as few as 15 nucleotides (the building blocks of DNA) to the full length of all patented DNA fragments.

Before examining the patented sequences, the researchers first calculated how many genes had common segments of 15 nucleotide (15mer), and found that every gene in the human genome matched at least one other gene in this respect, ranging from as few as five matches 15mer to as many as 7,688 gene matches. They also discovered that 99.999 percent of 15mers in the human genome are repeated at least twice.

"This demonstrates that short patent sequences are extremely non-specific and that a 15mer claim from one gene will always cross-match and patent a portion of another gene as well," says Dr. Mason. "This means it is actually impossible to have a 15mer patent for just one gene."

Next, researchers examined the total sequence space in human genes covered by 15mers in current patent claims. They found 58 patents whose claims covered at least 10 percent of all bases of all human genes. The broadest patent claimed sequences that matched 91.5 percent of human genes. Then, when they took existing gene patents and matched patented 15mers to known genes, they discovered that 100 percent of known genes are patented.

"There is a real controversy regarding gene ownership due to the overlap of many competing patent claims. It is unclear who really owns the rights to any gene," says Dr. Rosenfeld. "While the Supreme Court is hearing one case concerning just the BRCA1 patent, there are also many other patents whose claims would cover those same genes. Do we need to go through every gene to look at who made the first claim to that gene, even if only one small part? If we resort to this rule, then the first patents to be granted for any DNA will have a vast claim over portions of the human genome."

A further issue of concern is that patents on DNA can readily cross species boundaries. A company can have a patent that they received for cow breeding and have that patent cover a large percentage of human genes. Indeed, the researchers found that one company owns the rights to 84 percent of all human genes for a patent they received for cow breeding. "It seems silly that a patent designed to study cow genetics also claims the majority of human genes," says Dr. Rosenfeld.

Finally, they also examined the impact of longer claimed DNA sequences from existing gene patents, which ranged from a few dozen bases up to thousands of bases of DNA, and found that these long, claimed sequences matched 41 percent (9,361) of human genes. Their analysis concluded that almost all clinically relevant genes have already been patented, especially for short sequence patents, showing all human genes are patented many times over.

"This is, so to speak, patently ridiculous," adds Dr. Mason. "If patent claims that use these small DNA sequences are upheld, it could potentially create a situation where a piece of every gene in the human genome is patented by a phalanx of competing patents."

In their discussion, the researchers argue that the U.S. Supreme Court now has a chance to shape the balance between the medical good versus inventor protection, adding that, in their opinion, the court should limit the patenting of existing nucleotide sequences, due to their broad scope and non-specificity in the human genome.

"I am extremely pro-patent, but I simply believe that people should not be able to patent a product of nature," Dr. Mason says. "Moreover, I believe that individuals have an innate right to their own genome, or to allow their doctor to look at that genome, just like the lungs or kidneys. Failure to resolve these ambiguities perpetuates a direct threat to genomic liberty, or the right to one's own DNA."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Weill Cornell Medical College.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Jeffrey Rosenfeld, and Christopher E Mason. Pervasive sequence patents cover the entire human genome. Genome Medicine, 2013 (in press) DOI: 10.1186/gm431

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/jAfUr59mL1E/130326101614.htm

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Wednesday, March 27, 2013

ONEfamily: Foster Care Q&A Part II: Decisions, Expenses, and the ...

Originally posted by Leslie Word at Waiting On A Word.

This is the second installment of the Foster Care Q&A Series. ?If you missed the first post,?Foster Care: The Basics, please take a moment and read it first.

Disclaimer: Each state has their own Foster Care rules and regulations. ?I will try and answer questions as basic and broad as possible, but will be speaking from our experience as foster parents in Alabama. ?I encourage you to research your state Department of Human Resources or independent Foster Care Agencies to learn more.?


1. ?Can you decide what ages and gender of the children you will foster??

? ? ?Yes. ?As a foster parent, you have the right to set parameters on your age range, gender preference, physical and emotional disabilities. ?When a social worker calls you with a potential placement, they will be giving you as much information as they know. There is a quick turnaround time between removal of the child from their home and placement into a foster home. ?It's important to take note that they often do not have a full medical history of the child. ?As a foster parent, you must be flexible and willing to accept that children may come into your home with more medical or emotional issues than first determined by the social worker.

2. Do foster parents get reimbursed for expenses related to the child??

? ? ?Foster Parents receive a monthly subsidy for each child in their home. ?This is to cover their "room and board." ?In addition, foster children are on Medicaid and any additional medical expenses are paid by the state department of social services. ?In Alabama, and most likely other states, foster children under the age of five are eligible for WIC (Women, Infants, Children Food/Nutrition Program). ?This program provides a monthly supplement of formula for infants or basic food necessities for toddlers. ?This is a great help to foster parents with food costs.

3. ?How much interaction will the child have with their biological family while in foster care??

? ? ?The court system will decide how much interaction the biological family will have with one another. The purpose of foster care is first and foremost always reunification. ?The court system will give the family as many chances as possible that are safe for the child and will provide an opportunity for the biological family and child to maintain their bond. ?It could be a weekly supervised visit at the Department of Human Resources, an unsupervised visit at on a Saturday afternoon, or overnight visits to the birth family, to name a few examples.

4. ?Does the foster parent have much face to face interaction with the biological family??

? ? ?It often depends on the specific case of the child. ?There will be times where the biological family is deemed too dangerous and a threat to the safety of the child and therefore, interaction is not encouraged. ?In other cases, if the foster parent feels comfortable and reunification is the end goal for the child, interaction may be a good idea. ?For example, the parents of the child may accompany the foster parent to the child's doctor appointments or come to the child's soccer games.

Foster Care Q&A: Part 3 Coming Soon!?

Looking for some other blogs of Foster Parents around the country? Head over?here?for a huge list of foster care blogs.?


Have more questions after reading this? ?Leave them in the comments below or send an email to onefamily@frazerumc.org.

Source: http://frazeronefamily.blogspot.com/2013/03/foster-care-q-part-ii-decisions.html

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Hairy Situation: Celebrities That Forgot To Shave!

Hairy Situation: Celebrities That Forgot To Shave!

Funny Kim Kardashian photoshopped picLife is busy for most of us, but can you imagine being a celebrity walking the red carpet or performing on stage without shaving your legs or armpits? That’s just nasty! If you have time to style your hair and have your makeup perfect…then girl you have time to shave! Of course the photo of ...

Hairy Situation: Celebrities That Forgot To Shave! Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News

Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/03/hairy-situation-celebrities-that-forgot-to-shave/

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Functional ovarian tissue engineered in lab

Mar. 26, 2013 ? A proof-of-concept study suggests the possibility of engineering artificial ovaries in the lab to provide a more natural option for hormone replacement therapy for women. In Biomaterials, a team from Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center's Institute for Regenerative Medicine report that in the laboratory setting, engineered ovaries showed sustained release of the sex hormones estrogen and progesterone.

Although there are medications that can compensate for the loss of female sex hormone production, the drugs are often not recommended for long-term use due to the increased risk of heart disease and breast cancer.

"Our goal is to develop a tissue- or cell-based hormone therapy -- essentially an artificial ovary- to deliver sex hormones in a more natural manner than drugs," said Emmanuel C. Opara, Ph.D., professor of regenerative medicine and senior author. "A bioartificial ovary has the potential to secrete hormones in a natural way based on the body's needs, rather than the patient taking a specific dose of drugs each day."

Ovaries are the female reproductive organs that produce eggs that are fertilized for pregnancy as well as secrete hormones important to bone and cardiovascular health. The loss of ovarian function can be due to surgical removal, chemotherapy and radiation treatments for certain types of cancer, and menopause. The effects of hormone loss can range from hot flashes and vaginal dryness to infertility and increased risk of osteoporosis and heart disease.

"This research project is interesting because it offers hope to replace natural ovarian hormones in women with premature ovarian failure or in women going through menopause," Tamer Yalcinkaya, M.D., associate professor and section head of reproductive medicine at Wake Forest Baptist. "The graft format would bring certain advantages: it would eliminate pharmacokinetic variations of hormones when administered as drugs and would also allow body's feedback mechanisms to control the release of ovarian hormones."

The project to engineer a bioartificial ovary involves encapsulating ovarian cells inside a thin membrane that allows oxygen and nutrients to enter the capsule, but would prevent the patient from rejecting the cells. With this scenario, functional ovarian tissue from donors could be used to engineer bioartificial ovaries for women with non-functioning ovaries.

The Wake Forest Baptist team isolated the two types of endocrine cells found in ovaries (theca and granulosa) from 21-day-old rats. The cells were encapsulated inside materials that are compatible with the body. The scientists evaluated three different ways of arranging the cells inside the capsules.

The function of the capsules was then evaluated in the lab by exposing them to follicle-stimulating hormone and luteinizing hormone, two hormones that stimulate ovaries to produce sex hormones. The arrangement of cells that most closely mimicked the natural ovary (layers of cells in a 3-D shape) secreted levels of estrogen that were 10 times higher than other cell arrangements.

The capsules also secreted progesterone as well as inhibin and activin, two hormones that interact with the pituitary and hypothalamus and are important to the body's natural system to regulate the production of female sex hormones.

"Cells in the multilayer capsules were observed to function in similar fashion to the native ovaries," said Opara. "The secretion of inhibin and activin secretion suggests that these structures could potentially function as an artificial ovary by synchronizing with the body's innate control system."

Opara said the next step in the research, already underway, is to evaluate the function of the ovarian structures in animals.

Opara's co-researchers were Sivanandane Sittadjody, Ph.D, Sunyoung Joo, M.D., Ph.D., James J. Yoo, M.D., Ph.D., and Anthony Atala, M.D., all from Wake Forest Baptist, and Justin M. Saul, Ph.D., a former Wake Forest Baptist researcher now at Miami University.

The study was supported, in part, by the National Institutes of Health (award #R01DK080897).

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

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Sivanandane Sittadjody, Justin M. Saul, Sunyoung Joo, James J. Yoo, Anthony Atala, Emmanuel C. Opara. Engineered multilayer ovarian tissue that secretes sex steroids and peptide hormones in response to gonadotropins. Biomaterials, 2013; 34 (10): 2412 DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2012.11.059

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/z6ZUn40lAPE/130326151131.htm

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Dungeons & Dragons Coming To iOS Later This Year As Wizards Of The Coast Teams Up With Playdek

d&dA new partnership between mobile game publisher Playdek and Wizards of the Coast, famed creator of Magic: The Gathering and other tabletop games will bring Dungeons & Dragons to the iPhone, iPad and iPod touch later this year. Playdek will be developing officially sanctioned and licensed titles that bring various Wizards of the Coast tabletop experiences to iOS devices, with the first such efforts slated to go live sometime in 2013.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/YQ6eTZgfdvY/

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Monday, March 25, 2013

This Coin-Firing Cardboard Pistol Turns Pocket Change into Ammo

Tweaking the design of his bizarre pump-action Oreo gun, Joerg Sprave has built a smaller version designed to take office warfare to the next level (if the next level is a long two-hour talk with human resources). Made only using stuff you'd find around the office—like cardboard, glue, staples, and rubber bands—the pump-gun is able to fire euro coins, US nickels, or M5 washers. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/NjnOR5dOldA/this-coin+firing-cardboard-pistol-turns-pocket-change-into-ammo

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Thursday, March 14, 2013

Obama defends new grassroots movement against criticism

By Steve Holland

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama dismissed criticism on Wednesday of a grassroots group that his former campaign team set in motion to advance his agenda and rejected concerns that the organization could give high-dollar donors undue influence over government policies.

Obama spoke to 75 people who attended a dinner on behalf of Organizing for Action, a nonprofit that will use private donations to promote his second-term agenda. Some paid $50,000 to attend the group's two-day "founders summit" this week.

Good-government groups have feared the organization could be a vehicle for wealthy donors to gain access to the president and influence government policies and decisions.

Obama said he wanted Organizing for Action to develop a network of citizens across the country to help press Congress on priorities of his second term like gun control, an overhaul of U.S. immigration laws and reducing the threat of climate change.

"I think here in Washington this idea has been viewed with suspicion, and people have been puzzled about what it is that we're trying to do, because the usual idea is, 'Well this must just be a mechanism to try to win the next election in 2014,'" Obama said.

Instead, he wants to make sure that the "voices of ordinary people are heard in the debates that are going to be taking place."

Looking out at a crowd that included Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt, Obama said people who have been key backers of his presidential campaigns in the past have not asked him for favors.

"One of the things I'm proudest of during the course of two campaigns where we raised an awful lot of money is that the people who got involved didn't ask me for stuff, except to be true to my vision and true to our agenda," Obama said.

The group's founders, former Obama campaign manager Jim Messina and former White House senior adviser David Plouffe, reiterated that Organizing for Action is about promoting the president's concerns, not electing candidates.

Donor fatigue from last year's long campaign may affect contributions to the group, at least for a while. Elections drive most donor dollars and the next one is not until 2014.

'OUTSOURCING THE PRESIDENCY'

The group, founded in January, finds itself under renewed criticism that it will simply become a conduit for big-money contributors to get the ear of the president.

"It is operating as an arm of the presidency and it's funded by private money including large contributions and bundlers raising large amounts," said Fred Wertheimer, head of Democracy 21, a campaign finance reform group.

"So this private funding arm tied to the president creates opportunities for donors to obtain corrupting influence over government policies and decisions," Wertheimer said. "This is an unacceptable entity. It's almost like outsourcing a portion of the presidency."

An editorial in USA Today on Wednesday had a similarly critical take on Organizing for Action, saying Obama has long said he would like to limit the influence of money on politics but that his group "epitomizes just about everything he says he is against."

Those at the St. Regis Hotel summit took issue with the charge. "I don't think the president will sell access. He doesn't have to. He was reelected by a great majority of the people," said Marsha Fishman of Dallas, a volunteer since Obama first ran for president in 2008.

She said the group will organize in neighborhoods across the country to support Obama's proposals by staging rallies, writing letters to the editor and calling members of Congress.

(Editing by Fred Barbash, Xavier Briand and Prudence Crowther)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-defends-grassroots-movement-against-criticism-011123470.html

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Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Home Improvement Floor Stapler | All About Floors

Posted by GuestPoster on March 12th, 2013

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The?floor stapler??tends to make something which utilized to be severe discomfort really easy and easy. In contrast towards the staplers you might be familiar with, the floor stapler comes with a few additional attributes. The device is designed to hook in to the tongue of the floor plank to hold by itself in place. When you whack it with a mallet, the ground stapler staples the plank towards the underlayment. The truly intelligent factor about these is that they hearth their staples in a ideal 45 levels the moment the plank is forced as tight as may be towards its neighbor. This implies there is small possibility of a niche displaying up, at any time.

?

When beginning a hardwood floor job, the hardest part of using a flooring stapler isn?t getting the tool prepared. That is just a make a difference of sliding a strip of staples in to the journal and after that jacking within the air provide.

?

The difficult component is getting flooring prepared. It generally takes two to three courses of wooden before there is enough space to maneuver the ground stapler into location. Till that is prepared to go, I generally begin by drilling and countersinking holes for decking screws to keep the planks in place. I could make use of a normal nailgun, but screws possess a few important advantages. It is a lot simpler to plug the countersunk holes later on, and so they do not danger cracking even really hard wood. Screws also outcome inside a much much more solidly mounted board. If I get some really warped ?banana wood? early on within the occupation, I may need to make use of a pry bar to hold them flat. If that happens, I want the first couple of boards to be mounted as strong as can be in order they can hold towards the power.

?

Following about three or 4 courses, there?s sufficient area to get the stapler in position and also the function goes quick. All I?ve to do is set the stapler down along with every new course. The stapler?s physique sits along with the board and retains it down. The stapler?s entrance lip hooks the board?s tongue. A gentle tap using the mallet around the stapler then makes sure everything in place? I said a mild tap, simply because anything greater than that could mark the boards or harm the stapler.

?

Once the stapler is firmly in place, I swing the mallet down onto the actuator pad in a great solid strike. This transfers sufficient power towards the boards to push them in position gymnasium-tight the exact instant the staple is fired from the gun. Because the boards are held tight against one another, the staple shoots through the free 1 and secures it towards the underlayment, completely aligned.

?

Now it is just a make a difference of repeating these actions every foot or so. As soon as issues get close to the wall, I generally use decking screws for the final step to avoid the risk of hitting the wall with the mallet. Once the whole flooring is done, I pull out the established of tapered plug cutters from my toolbox and make some plugs from the brief scrap of floor plank. These get glued in position over all the screw holes, along with a belt sander sands them flush.

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Source: http://www.all-about-floors.com/home-improvement-floor-stapler/

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Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Police: Delhi gang rape suspect kills self in jail

NEW DELHI (AP) ? A man on trial for the gang rape and fatal beating of a woman aboard a bus in New Delhi committed suicide in an Indian jail early Monday, raising further questions about a criminal justice system already criticized for failing to protect the nation's women.

Ram Singh, who was accused of driving the bus on which the 23-year-old student was raped by a group of six men in December, was under suicide watch at New Delhi's Tihar Jail when he hanged himself with his own clothes at about 5:30 a.m., police officials said.

Singh and his four fellow defendants were facing the death penalty if convicted of the attack, which horrified Indians and set off national protests. A sixth accused is being tried and jailed separately because he is a juvenile.

Singh's lawyer and his family alleged foul play in his death and said he had been assaulted in jail prior to his death.

"What do you mean killed himself? He has been killed in prison," said Singh's lawyer, A. P. Singh. Lawyers for the defendants had previously accused police of beating confessions out of the men.

Ram Singh's father, Mangelal Singh, said his son had been raped in prison by other inmates and had been repeatedly threatened by inmates and guards. Nevertheless, he said he visited his son four days ago and the man appeared fine and gave no hint of the despair that could drive him to take his own life.

Ram Singh also had a badly injured hand and would have been unable to orchestrate a suicide, his father said, speaking from outside his small home in a New Delhi slum.

"Somebody has killed him," he said, insisting he would push for a top level investigation into the death.

Mangelal Singh said he feared for the safety of another son who is also on trial in the rape case.

The defendants were being housed in separate buildings on the jail grounds and were all under suicide watch, a jail official said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly on the matter.

Indian jails have a reputation for overcrowding, poor management and brutal treatment of inmates.

The rape victim and a male friend were attacked after boarding the bus Dec. 16 as they tried to return home after watching a movie, police say. The six men, the only occupants of the private bus, beat the man with a metal bar, raped the woman and used the bar to inflict massive internal injuries to her, police say. The victims were dumped naked on the roadside, and the woman died from her injuries two weeks later in a Singapore hospital.

The brutal attack set off nationwide protests about India's treatment of women and spurred the government to hurry through a new package of laws to protect them.

Singh's death comes as the trial was deep underway, with another hearing scheduled for Monday.

K.T. S. Tulsi, a former top lawyer in the office of the solicitor general of India, said the suicide should have no impact on the trail, which is being held in a closed courtroom under a gag order that prevents news organization from publishing details of the proceedings.

He said the death highlighted how important it was for society not to demonize people who have been accused of crimes but not yet been convicted.

"It is so unfortunate that the media goes on to presume that they are guilty and goes on to condemn them and demonize them to an extent that it makes the life of these people not worth living," he said.

___

Associated Press reporter Manish Swarup contributed to this report.

___

Follow Ravi Nessman on Twitter at www.twitter.com/ravinessman

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/police-delhi-gang-rape-suspect-kills-self-jail-023445604.html

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Police: Smoke inhalation killed 7 in Ky. fire

This Sunday, March 10, 2013 photo shows the charred remains of a home after a fire erupted, Saturday, March 9, 2013 in Gray, Ky, killing two adults and five children inside. (AP Photo/Lisa Norman-Hudson)

This Sunday, March 10, 2013 photo shows the charred remains of a home after a fire erupted, Saturday, March 9, 2013 in Gray, Ky, killing two adults and five children inside. (AP Photo/Lisa Norman-Hudson)

A partially burned child's photo is seen Monday, March 11, 2013, in the debris of a house fire in which seven people were killed Saturday in southeastern Kentucky. Officials say two adults and five children were killed in the fire in Gray, Ky. (AP Photo/Brett Barrouquere)

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) ? An engaged couple and five children killed in a weekend house fire in southern Kentucky died from smoke inhalation, investigators said Tuesday as they worked to determine the cause of the blaze.

Trooper Shane Jacobs said those who died in the blaze Saturday in the community of Gray were 27-year-old Jesse Disney; his fianc?e, 22-year-old Nina Asher; her three children, 3-year-old William Gray Jr., 2-year-old Camden Gray and 8-month-old Abigail Gray; and family friends who were staying over, 2-year-old Paiten Cox and 2-year-old Brielle Cox.

Investigators were trying to determine the cause of the fire and have said it could take some time before the cause is determined. Jacobs said autopsies were done Monday and that neither arson nor foul play were suspected.

The blaze shook the rural community of Gray in the foothills of Appalachia near the Daniel Boone National Forest and the Tennessee and Virginia state lines.

At the J&G Market convenience store, just up the road from the home, a large empty bubble-gum bucket bore a sign seeking donations to help offset the funeral costs. And Vankirk-Grisell Funeral Home in Corbin planned to donate services to the family of the Cox children.

Knox County Magistrate Giulio Cima, who represents the Gray area, said the two visiting children were bathed and fed a hot meal on Friday night.

"There's a lot of things that happen in this world that you can't answer for," Cima said. "This is going to be bad for that family for a long time."

A phone number could not be immediately located for the Cox family.

Cima's brother, Gino, is Jesse Disney's uncle. Gino Cima tried to rescue the adults and children from the fire, but was unsuccessful.

"He's lucky he got in and got out," Giulio Cima said.

The two firefighters who pulled the children from the charred house sat near a tree in the front yard afterward, looking despondent, Giulio Cima said.

"This right here is probably the worst thing that happened in this county in years," Cima said. "But we're going to get through it."

On Monday, charred photos, books, children's art, broken glass and pieces of the collapsed roof littered the lawn outside the house near Disney's relatives. Another of Disney's uncles, Bobby James Disney, picked through the remains after speaking with arson investigators.

"It's heartbreaking, losing those kids like that," Bobby James Disney said. "Those kids are helpless."

The area contains the homes of so many family members that it's nicknamed "Disneyland."

___

Follow Associated Press reporter Brett Barrouquere on Twitter: http://twitter.com/BBarrouquereAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-03-12-Kentucky-Fatal%20Fire/id-feeffc00fbd84808be2641c2cb5ff7c1

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Fewer adverse events with 'double kissing' crush stent than culotte

Mar. 10, 2013 ? Patients with a type of coronary lesion linked with poor prognosis fared significantly better with the stent technique known as double kissing crush than with culotte stenting, according to data from the DKCRUSH-III trial presented today at the American College of Cardiology's 62nd Annual Scientific Session.

DKCRUSH-III is the first head-to-head comparison of double kissing (DK) crush and culotte stent techniques in coronary artery disease. The study focused on bifurcation lesions, which involve a main branch and a smaller side branch forking off a major artery.

DK crush and culotte are two-stent procedures named for their configurations. The culotte technique places stents in the main artery and the side branch, overlapping them in the main vessel before the branch forks, akin to pants legs that meet at the seat. The DK crush technique extends a small piece of the branch stent into the main artery, where it is squeezed against the main artery's wall. This approach introduces two points where the balloons used in stenting inflate in the artery and connect for a "double kiss."

Bifurcation lesions are Y-shaped trouble spots, which account for about 15 percent of lesions treated with coronary stents. Bifurcation lesions present technical problems associated with higher rates of recurrent blockage at the treated site known as restenosis and lower rates of long-term favorable outcome. High morbidity and mortality are connected with a subset called unprotected left main coronary artery (ULMCA) disease. Approximately two-thirds of significant ULMCA disease involves the distal bifurcations. Such lesions magnify the challenge for the interventional cardiologist, who threads balloon-tipped catheters and stents through major arterial pathways and then must veer off to reach these smaller side channels. The best treatment for this lesion type has been a matter of debate.

"Angiographic follow-up at eight months found 12 cases of in-stent restenosis in the side branch with DK crush and 22 with culotte [6.8 percent vs. 12.6 percent]," said Jun-Jie Zhang, MD, an interventional cardiologist in the cardiovascular department of Nanjing First Hospital, Nanjing Medical University, in Nanjing, China. "Thus, we have to say that DK crush is superior to culotte stenting."

The multicenter study randomly assigned patients with ULMCA distal bifurcation lesions to treatment with DK crush (210 patients) or culotte (209 patients) stenting. At one year, major adverse cardiac events occurred in 6.2 percent of the DK crush patients and 16.3 percent of the culotte patients. The culotte approach had markedly higher rates of repeat intervention at the target lesion and the target vessel: 6.7 percent target lesion vs. 2.4 percent, and 10.5 percent target vessel vs. 4.3 percent. Clotting at the stent site was low in both groups.

"Although this trial did not include a bypass surgery group to contrast with the stenting techniques, the promising results achieved by DK crush were comparable with those after coronary artery bypass," Dr. Zhang said.

The study will extend clinical follow-up for participating patients to five years, and further research through the DKCRUSH-V study is ongoing.

DKCRUSH-III was funded by the Jiangsu Provincial Outstanding Medical Program.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American College of Cardiology.

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


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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/vi27VXIXtRQ/130311101800.htm

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Monday, March 11, 2013

Jeb Bush: Is the world ready for a third Bush in the White House?

Is the world ready for a third President Bush, the possibility of barely more than a generation that would include 20 years of Bushes as the nation?s chief executive, commander-in-chief, leader of the free world?

Try as he might, former Florida Governor could not avoid that question as he made the rounds of the TV news shows Sunday morning.

"I've decided to defer any consideration of it until the proper time to make those kinds of considerations," Mr. Bush demurred on CNN's "State of the Union."

"My big decision was to force myself not to think about it until it's time, the proper time to think about it, which is out into the future," Bush said on CBS?s "Face the Nation." "We just had an election, four years is a long way from now, and I think it?s better to stay focused on the things that I'm doing now."

What he?s focusing on now ? and the official reason for his sitting down for five interviews ? is promoting his new book. Titled ?Immigration Wars: Forging an American Solution,? it was coauthored by Clint Bolick, described by the Washington Post as ?an activist conservative lawyer.?

Everybody knows the GOP lost a huge majority of the Hispanic vote last year. Today, Republicans are scrambling to repair relations with that growing portion of the electorate ? moving rapidly away from Mitt Romney?s ?self-deportation? answer to illegal immigration toward a more benign if not humane attitude, including talk of a ?path to citizenship.?

RECOMMENDED: Could you pass a US citizenship test?

Given his background, Jeb Bush would seem to be right in line with that.

As a teenager on a student exchange program, he taught English as a second language in Mexico. A year after he graduated from the University of Texas (Phi Beta Kappa with a degree in Latin American studies), he married Columba Garnica Gallo, who had been born in Mexico and whose father had been a migrant worker.

?He?s practically Cuban, just taller,? Sen. Marco Rubio once told the Miami Herald. ?He speaks Spanish better than most of us.?

Want your top political issues explained? Get customized DC Decoder updates.

The problem for Bush today is, he seems in his book to have taken a harder line on immigration than he has in the past, one that can be sound-bitten to seem tougher than the more moderate line most Republicans are promoting.

?A grant of citizenship is an undeserving reward for conduct that we cannot afford to encourage,? he writes.

As described in the Washington Post review of the book, he wants the estimated 11 million undocumented people in the US to plead guilty and pay a fine in return for a chance at legal residency ? but not citizenship.

?Anyone who does not come forward under this process will be subject to automatic deportation, unless they choose to return voluntarily to their native countries,? Bush writes.

Since the book came out, and in his TV talkfest Sunday, Bush tried to clarify his position.

On CBS?s ?Face the Nation,? he explained that he wrote the book last year (during presidential race) ?at a time when the tenor of the debate on immigration was dramatically different than it is today.? That is, a time when most of the GOP hopefuls (Newt Gingrich was a notable exception) were scrambling to the right on illegal immigrants.

"I haven't changed,? he said. ?The book was written to try to create a blueprint for conservatives that were reluctant to embrace comprehensive reform, to give them perhaps a set of views that they could embrace. I support a path to legalization or citizenship so long as the path for people that have been waiting patiently is easier and costs less."

If Jeb Bush has any serious political speed bump ahead of him, it?s likely to be ? not the latest kerfuffle over his attitude on immigration ? but the record of his older brother?s two presidential terms: launching a long, costly, and controversial war in Iraq, tax cuts that benefitted the wealthy, widened income inequality, and helped lead to record deficits.

On Fox News Sunday, host Chris Wallace put the obvious question delicately: ?Do you think there would be any Bush baggage? Do you think that would be a problem??

"I love my brother and I'm proud of his accomplishments and I love my dad and I'm proud to be a Bush," he replied. "If I run for president, it is not because of something in my DNA that compels me to do it. It would be the right thing to do for my family, that the conditions are right and I have something to offer. And if I don't run, I have a blessed life."

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/jeb-bush-world-ready-third-bush-white-house-170629856.html

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Tech-savvy Newark Mayor Booker: Government flunking social media

AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - Cory Booker, the constantly tweeting mayor of Newark, New Jersey, who intends to run for the U.S. Senate, said on Sunday that the federal government needs to reinvent the often overly formal way it uses social media.

"It's just using it as an announcement system, like you used to listen to in class: ?The cafeteria will be serving roast beef, and I will be at this place or that place'," Booker told Reuters after an appearance at the South by Southwest Interactive Festival in Austin, Texas. "But that's not interaction, that's not collaboration."

Booker, 43, a rising star in the Democratic Party who has more than 1.3 million followers on Twitter, told the Austin audience that he can't be a mayor who sits behind a desk and waits for the world to come to him.

Last year, the Newark mayor was hailed as a hero for inviting into his home neighbors who, he learned on Twitter, lost power because of Superstorm Sandy.

He also uses Twitter to give city phone numbers to constituents, share inspirational quotes, declare his love for the TV series Star Trek and answer questions from local students while admonishing them not to tweet in class.

"On it," he replied to a resident who complained recently of a broken street light.

Booker, who made a failed run for Newark mayor in 2002 before winning the job in 2006, said he's been hooked on Twitter since actor Ashton Kutcher called and told him why he should dive into the micro-blogging site.

'TELLING YOUR TRUTH'

Booker said it was important to be himself on social media - and that this would still be true if he were in the Senate.

"Life is about telling your truth and being who you are, 100 percent," he said. "This world desperately needs authenticity, people who have the courage to tell their truth every single day, and I would not stop being who I am just because of the title that's before my name."

One of his Twitter followers, Shuronda Robinson of Austin, said she took her 12- and 13-year-old sons to his appearance at South by Southwest and made sure he shook the boys' hands.

"I was so inspired," she said after Booker's remarks to an audience that didn't fill a large auditorium. "I wanted my boys to see someone living with purpose."

Newark, eight miles from Manhattan and New Jersey's largest city, was once a thriving manufacturing center but for the last half century has battled political corruption, urban blight and high crime.

Booker, a former Rhodes Scholar, has made reducing crime a major priority. In March 2010, Newark experienced its first murder-free month since 1944.

While Booker's national profile is rising, some Newark residents have criticized him for being absent from the city as he travels around the country, appears on TV programs and meets business leaders.

Booker said that traveling has helped him secure benefits to Newark, such as a $100 million gift to its schools from Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg.

"He didn't come to Newark to say, ?Hey, I want to give you $100 million,'" Booker said. "We were at a conference together."

Booker has filed papers to run for the Senate in 2014. Senator Frank Lautenberg, 89, a long-serving New Jersey Democrat, has said he will not seek re-election. Booker has been leading in New Jersey polls for the seat.

"It is even my intention to run, but I'm not going to come to any conclusions until after November," Booker told Reuters.

(Reporting by Corrie MacLaggan; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Philip; Barbara)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/tech-savvy-newark-mayor-booker-government-flunking-social-012635134.html

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Trio of biomarkers may help identify kidney cancer in early stages

Trio of biomarkers may help identify kidney cancer in early stages [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 11-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Jeremy Moore
jeremy.moore@aacr.org
215-446-7109
American Association for Cancer Research

PHILADELPHIA A new immunoassay that tests for the presence of three biomarkers appears to be a valid screening method for the early detection of malignant kidney cancer, according to data published in Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research.

"Renal cell carcinoma, a malignant tumor arising from the kidney, is one of the most difficult forms of cancer to detect and treat properly because it remains silent until disseminating to other organs," said Nam Hoon Cho, M.D., of the Department of Pathology at Yonsei University Health System in Seoul, Korea. "Furthermore, because imaging, which is high-cost, is seldom performed without any specific reasons, developing a blood-tumor biomarker is a great chance to detect the silent killer."

The new immunoassay developed by Cho and colleagues from Genomine Inc. measured the levels of three potential biomarkers for kidney cancer: nicotinamide N-methyltransferase (NNMT), L-plastin (LCP1) and nonmetastatic cells 1 protein (NM23A).

Using this assay, the researchers measured concentrations of NNMT, LCP1 and NM23A in 189 plasma samples from 102 healthy controls and patients with benign tumors and 87 patients with kidney cancer. Plasma levels indicated that all three biomarkers were highly elevated in patients with kidney cancer. For example, the median level of NNMT concentration in healthy controls was 68 pg/mL compared with 420 pg/mL for patients with kidney cancer.

Next, the researchers tested the ability of the immunoassay to distinguish plasma samples from healthy controls and patients with kidney cancer using the same 189 plasma samples already tested. The results indicated that the three-marker assay was highly accurate. When it correctly identified 90 percent of the samples from healthy controls, it also correctly identified 94.4 percent of the samples from patients with kidney cancer.

To validate the accuracy of the test, the researchers blind tested an additional 100 plasma samples from 73 healthy controls and 27 patients with kidney cancer. In this analysis, 67 of the samples from the 73 healthy controls and all of the samples from patients with kidney cancer were classified correctly.

"If this biomarker is truly valid and accurate to detect renal cell carcinoma, a number of patients with renal cell carcinoma could potentially be saved through early diagnosis," Cho said.

Cho and colleagues hope that this biomarker will soon be commercially available. They are currently working toward approval by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

###

Follow the AACR on Twitter: @aacr
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About the American Association for Cancer Research

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


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

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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.


Trio of biomarkers may help identify kidney cancer in early stages [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 11-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Jeremy Moore
jeremy.moore@aacr.org
215-446-7109
American Association for Cancer Research

PHILADELPHIA A new immunoassay that tests for the presence of three biomarkers appears to be a valid screening method for the early detection of malignant kidney cancer, according to data published in Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research.

"Renal cell carcinoma, a malignant tumor arising from the kidney, is one of the most difficult forms of cancer to detect and treat properly because it remains silent until disseminating to other organs," said Nam Hoon Cho, M.D., of the Department of Pathology at Yonsei University Health System in Seoul, Korea. "Furthermore, because imaging, which is high-cost, is seldom performed without any specific reasons, developing a blood-tumor biomarker is a great chance to detect the silent killer."

The new immunoassay developed by Cho and colleagues from Genomine Inc. measured the levels of three potential biomarkers for kidney cancer: nicotinamide N-methyltransferase (NNMT), L-plastin (LCP1) and nonmetastatic cells 1 protein (NM23A).

Using this assay, the researchers measured concentrations of NNMT, LCP1 and NM23A in 189 plasma samples from 102 healthy controls and patients with benign tumors and 87 patients with kidney cancer. Plasma levels indicated that all three biomarkers were highly elevated in patients with kidney cancer. For example, the median level of NNMT concentration in healthy controls was 68 pg/mL compared with 420 pg/mL for patients with kidney cancer.

Next, the researchers tested the ability of the immunoassay to distinguish plasma samples from healthy controls and patients with kidney cancer using the same 189 plasma samples already tested. The results indicated that the three-marker assay was highly accurate. When it correctly identified 90 percent of the samples from healthy controls, it also correctly identified 94.4 percent of the samples from patients with kidney cancer.

To validate the accuracy of the test, the researchers blind tested an additional 100 plasma samples from 73 healthy controls and 27 patients with kidney cancer. In this analysis, 67 of the samples from the 73 healthy controls and all of the samples from patients with kidney cancer were classified correctly.

"If this biomarker is truly valid and accurate to detect renal cell carcinoma, a number of patients with renal cell carcinoma could potentially be saved through early diagnosis," Cho said.

Cho and colleagues hope that this biomarker will soon be commercially available. They are currently working toward approval by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

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About the American Association for Cancer Research

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


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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-03/aafc-tob030513.php

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