Sunday, March 31, 2013

Marilyn Monroe ?Crazy? Letter Up For Auction

Marilyn Monroe “Crazy” Letter Up For Auction

Marilyn Monroe photosMarilyn Monroe wrote of her despair and the feeling she was going “crazy” in letters to her acting mentor. The actress, who died from an overdose, opened up in the sad letters about her struggles in front of the camera. The handwritten letter is expected to sell for $30,000 to $50,000 in the May 30 ...

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Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/03/marilyn-monroe-crazy-letter-up-for-auction/

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Texas county district attorney and wife found dead

(Reuters) - Authorities in Texas were investigating the deaths of the Kaufman County criminal district attorney and his wife on Saturday, in what news reports said was a shooting at their home.

The deaths of Criminal District Attorney Mike McLelland and his wife follows the January slaying of Kaufman County Assistant District Attorney Mark Hasse, who was shot and killed as he walked from his car to a Dallas-area courthouse.

"We are investigating the deaths of the Kaufman County district attorney and his wife," said Kaufman County Sheriff's Office spokesman Lieutenant Justin Lewis.

Lewis said the investigation was at a preliminary stage and that he had no further information.

The Dallas Morning News, citing unnamed sources, said that the couple was found shot at their home.

(Reporting by Tim Gaynor in Phoenix, Editing by Alex Dobuzinskis and Philip Barbara)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/texas-county-district-attorney-wife-found-dead-032732367.html

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Speedy astronauts make fastest trip yet to the ISS

Victoria Jaggard, physical sciences news editor

soyuz-faster.jpg

(Image: NASA/Carla Cioffi)

Now you can get to the International Space Station in less time than it takes to fly from London to New York.

A Russian Soyuz capsule usually takes at least two days to rendezvous with the ISS, because of the carefully timed dance of manoeuvres that must take place for a spaceship to safely meet the orbiting laboratory. Using a new launch process, three astronauts have now made the trip in just under 6 hours.

Russian cosmonauts Pavel Vinogradov and Alexander Misurkin and NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy launched at 20:43 GMT on 28 March from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. Soaring high above the western coast of Peru, they successfully docked with the space station at 02:28 GMT on 29 March - a flight time of just 5 hours, 45 minutes.

After a slight delay getting the pressure equalised between the two craft, the Soyuz hatch opened at 04:35 GMT. With a flurry of hugs and camera flashes, the record-setting spacefarers greeted the three crew members already aboard the ISS.

The Soyuz itself has not been supercharged and wasn't flying any quicker than normal. The shorter time allowance simply required that mission managers had to be more precise. When a Soyuz capsule enters orbit, it is on an orbital path a bit lower than the space station's, which means it circles the Earth faster. As the craft closes in on the ISS, a series of thruster burns boosts the capsule into the right orbit for docking.

Getting Soyuz to match the station's altitude and speed is a tricky business. If the capsule has a couple of days before docking, the thruster burns can be spaced out over 34 orbital laps. Shrinking the time between launch and docking gives the astronauts just 4 orbits to meet up with the ISS, according to NASA. The speedier meeting also means the space station has to do some of the work. On 21 March an uncrewed cargo vehicle already docked with the ISS fired its thrusters to shift the station about 4.8 kilometres higher, putting it in the right position to meet the Soyuz craft.

"Conducting a single-day launch-to-docking takes considerable amounts of planning and maneuvering of the space station in order to set both the station and the Soyuz on the proper orbit so they can chase each other," says NASA spokesman Joshua Buck at the agency's headquarters in Washington DC. "It also requires a compressed timeline for the Soyuz crew, with them having to conduct two days' worth of operations within 6 hours."

For safety reasons the astronauts must stay in restrictive pressurised space suits during the faster trip, but the 6-hour journey drastically reduces the time they have to spend in the cramped Soyuz capsule, as well as the amount of food and fuel they need for the trip.

Now that fast-track launches have been shown to work for Soyuz flights, ISS managers can decide whether to use the method on a case-by-case basis, says Buck. He adds that SpaceX's Dragon capsule will continue to take the slow road to the space station.

Source: http://feeds.newscientist.com/c/749/f/10897/s/2a246ad0/l/0L0Snewscientist0N0Cblogs0Cshortsharpscience0C20A130C0A30Cspeedy0Eastronauts0Emake0Ethe0Efas0Bhtml0Dcmpid0FRSS0QNSNS0Q20A120EGLOBAL0Qonline0Enews/story01.htm

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Obama: 'Shame on us' (CNN)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/295405293?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Saturday, March 30, 2013

IRS knowingly sends Billions in Fraudulent Refunds to Illegal ...

A WTHR-TV Indianapolis investigative report exposes a fraudulent scheme wherein the IRS is sending $4.2 billion per year to illegal immigrants as an "additional child tax credit" for children who don't even live in the U.S.

Further, the IRS and Congress have been ignoring the scheme for years. ?The Inspector General's office has repeatedly identified the problem in audit after audit.? The IG, Russell George says, "The magnitude of the problem has grown exponentially," but the IRS is doing nothing to stop it.

"It's so easy it's ridiculous," the tax preparer whistleblower who exposed the fraud admits.? Names are simply listed on the IRS form. "The more you put on there, the more you get back." No questions asked?the check's in the mail.

Below is the video of the shocking report.

The whistleblower notified the IRS of dozens of returns that were "fraudulent, 100% fraudulent tax returns." But, no response was ever received from the IRS. Out of frustration he went to WTHR investigative reporter Bob Segall.

"If the opportunity is there, and they can give it to me, why not take advantage of it?" admits one of the undocumented perpetrators to Segall on camera.

Segall found that there are "2 million?undocumented workers right now who are getting tax refunds because of this loophole."

Meanwhile, American school kids hoping for the opportunity of a lifetime to see the inside of the White House find the doors are closed supposedly because we can no longer afford to let them in.?

Source: http://townhall.com/columnists/bobbeauprez/2013/03/30/irs-knowingly-sends-billions-in-fraudulent-refunds-to-illegal-immigrants-n1553242

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Judge: Jolie didn't plagiarize 'Blood and Honey'

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? A federal judge says actress Angelina Jolie didn't steal the story for her movie "In the Land of Blood and Honey" from a Croatian author.

City News Service reports Friday's tentative ruling in Los Angeles will throw out the suit accusing Jolie of copyright infringement.

In 2011, author James Braddock sued Jolie and the film company that made the film, saying it was partly based on his book "The Soul Shattering."

U.S. District Judge Dolly M. Gee wrote in a tentative ruling that the plots, characters and themes in the two works were not "substantially" similar, though both centered on war romances.

Jolie wrote, directed and co-produced the film.

Braddock has been ordered to tell the court why his complaint should not be dismissed with prejudice.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/judge-jolie-didnt-plagiarize-blood-honey-010625344.html

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Risk of autism is not increased by 'too many vaccines too soon,' study shows

Mar. 29, 2013 ? Although scientific evidence suggests that vaccines do not cause autism, approximately one-third of parents continue to express concern that they do; nearly 1 in 10 parents refuse or delay vaccinations because they believe it is safer than following the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) schedule. A primary concern is the number of vaccines administered, both on a single day and cumulatively over the first 2 years of life. In a new study scheduled for publication in The Journal of Pediatrics, researchers concluded that there is no association between receiving "too many vaccines too soon" and autism.

Dr. Frank DeStefano and colleagues from the CDC and Abt Associates, Inc. analyzed data from 256 children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and 752 children without ASD (born from 1994-1999) from 3 managed care organizations. They looked at each child's cumulative exposure to antigens, the substances in vaccines that cause the body's immune system to produce antibodies to fight disease, and the maximum number of antigens each child received in a single day of vaccination.

The researchers determined the total antigen numbers by adding the number of different antigens in all vaccines each child received in one day, as well as all vaccines each child received up to 2 years of age. The authors found that the total antigens from vaccines received by age 2 years, or the maximum number received on a single day, was the same between children with and without ASD. Furthermore, when comparing antigen numbers, no relationship was found when they evaluated the sub-categories of autistic disorder and ASD with regression.

Although the current routine childhood vaccine schedule contains more vaccines than the schedule in the late 1990s, the maximum number of antigens that a child could be exposed to by 2 years of age in 2013 is 315, compared with several thousand in the late 1990s. Because different types of vaccines contain varying amounts of antigens, this research acknowledged that merely counting the number of vaccines received does not adequately account for how different vaccines and vaccine combinations stimulate the immune system. For example, the older whole cell pertussis vaccine causes the production of about 3000 different antibodies, whereas the newer acellular pertussis vaccine causes the production of 6 or fewer different antibodies.

An infant's immune system is capable of responding to a large amount of immunologic stimuli and, from time of birth, infants are exposed to hundreds of viruses and countless antigens outside of vaccination. According to the authors, "The possibility that immunological stimulation from vaccines during the first 1 or 2 years of life could be related to the development of ASD is not well-supported by what is known about the neurobiology of ASDs." In 2004, a comprehensive review by the Institute of Medicine concluded that there is not a causal relationship between certain vaccine types and autism, and this study supports that conclusion.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Elsevier, via AlphaGalileo.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Frank DeStefano, Cristofer S. Price, and Eric S. Weintraub. Increasing exposure to antibody-stimulating proteins and polysaccharides in vaccines is not associated with risk of autism. The Journal of Pediatrics, 2013 DOI: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2013.02.001

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/WLfmupyDKeg/130329090310.htm

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Ex-Anglican leader says Cameron alienating Christians

LONDON (Reuters) - Prime Minister David Cameron is alienating Christians by promoting gay marriage, an influential former leader of the world's 80 million Anglicans said on Saturday.

In a strongly worded article, former Archbishop of Canterbury George Carey said Cameron's plan to legalise gay unions hid an "aggressive secularist" approach that threatened the link between church and state.

The comments echoed widespread concern about the policy among some Christians - and also highlighted the challenge facing Cameron whose efforts to modernise his Conservative Party have antagonised some traditional party voters.

"The danger I believe that the government is courting with its approach both to marriage and religious freedom, is the alienation of a large minority of people who only a few years ago would have been considered pillars of society," Carey wrote in the Daily Mail.

Carey's comments come at a bad time for Cameron, who as the economy flounders is attempting to woo right-leaning voters with tough talk on immigration and the European Union.

The former Anglican leader also condemned what he saw as a lack of government support for Christians who choose to wear a cross at work, a practice that has been challenged in the past due to rules on religious expression at the workplace.

He cited a survey by pollster ComRes saying more than two thirds of Christians in Britain felt they were a "persecuted minority" and that more than half who voted Conservative in 2010 would not do so in 2015.

"It was a bit rich to hear that the prime minister has told religious leaders that they should 'stand up and oppose aggressive secularisation' when it seems that his government is aiding and abetting this aggression every step of the way," Carey said.

Cameron's Downing Street office rejected Carey's accusations, and praised the church's role in charities and education, but did not address the issue of gay marriage.

"This government strongly backs faith and Christianity in particular, including backing the rights of people wanting to wear crosses at work and hold prayers at council meetings," Downing Street said in a statement.

"The prime minister values the profound contribution that Christianity has made and continues to make to the country, which is why he strongly backs it," the statement continued.

Carey was Archbishop of Canterbury from 1991 to 2002. Current Archbishop Justin Welby this month said some gay relationships were "stunning" in quality, but he is also opposed to gay marriage.

As elsewhere in Europe, the number of regular churchgoers in Britain has been declining in recent decades.

(Reporting by Mohammed Abbas)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ex-anglican-leader-says-cameron-alienating-christians-110802409.html

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Payroll & Benefits Coordinator - NAIS Career Center


Payroll & Benefits Coordinator POSTED: Mar 29
Salary: Open Location: North Hollywood, California
Employer: Oakwood School Type: Full Time - Administration
Category: Other Preferred Education: 4 Year Degree

Oakwood School is a progressive coeducational K-12 non-profit independent day school located in the San Fernando Valley area of Los Angeles.? It was founded in 1951 by a group of parents who wanted to provide their children with an educational experience that was rich in the arts, sciences, and humanities, challenging to their creative and intellectual capacities and, above all, humane.

Oakwood School is currently seeking an experienced Payroll & Benefits Coordinator to manage the full-cycle payroll functions and coordinating employee benefits. Working with the Human Resources and Accounting team, the incumbent will process the semi-monthly payroll and manage all changes, reporting, reconciliations and audits. The Payroll & Benefits Coordinator interfaces with all faculty and staff employees providing answers to payroll and employee benefits inquires and providing overall support within the payroll and employee benefits disciplines.
?

RESPONSIBILITIES

  • Prepares and coordinates semi-monthly payroll and employee benefits for over 200 exempt and non-exempt full-time, part-time, temporary employees and 1099 consultants in California using ADP payroll software;
  • Updates the system for newly hired and terminated employees, enters and monitors benefits, 403(b),HSA, FSA and wage deductions and confirms Vacation, Sick and Personal Leave is calculated and documented accurately;
  • Collaborates with Human Resources for proper transfer of data and reconciling of payroll records;
  • Ensures compliance with all applicable state and federal wage and hour laws as well as tax filings and proper deductions;
  • Processes and documents payroll funds transfers with Accounting;
  • Coordinates any special checks and reimbursement payments; processes wage garnishments;
  • Assists with payroll and 403(b) audits; assists in the review and/or input of federal and state W4 data and local tax withholding set up;
  • Assists with ongoing set up, testing and maintenance of the payroll system; helps with conversions by reconciling data and post conversion issues. Helps in planning and testing system upgrades and/or interfaces;
  • Creates bimonthly, monthly, quarterly and year-end HR and payroll reports;
  • Makes recommendations to improve the quality and efficiency of the payroll and benefits process;
  • Provides excellent customer service to all employees as primary contact for payroll and benefits related topics;
  • Assists with new hire orientations and terminations, benefits open enrollment, detailed HRIS data input, payroll and HR reporting and related employee communications; and
  • Additional duties, as assigned.
NOTES:
Additional Salary Information: Salary commensurate with experience; comprehensive benefits package offered.

QUALIFICATIONS

  • BA/BS in Accounting or a related field preferred
  • Three+ years? experience processing CA payroll
  • Knowledge of appropriate tax laws, payroll deductions, tax rates and maximum allowances for 403b,HSA, ?FSA, FICA, state disability and other withholdings
  • Strong proficiency in Microsoft Word and Excel
  • Keen attention to detail, process execution and follow-through with excellent organization skills
  • Excellent oral and written communication skills with the ability to confidently interact with all faculty and staff employees

Please forward resume and letter of interest to Stephanie Sztanski, Director of Human Resources at Oakwood School. Competitive salary and benefits package offered.? ?

Check us out at www.oakwoodschool.org


Oakwood School

North Hollywood CA

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Source: http://careers.nais.org/jobs/5292565/payroll-benefits-coordinator

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Friday, March 29, 2013

How herpesvirus invades nervous system

Mar. 27, 2013 ? Northwestern Medicine scientists have identified a component of the herpesvirus that "hijacks" machinery inside human cells, allowing the virus to rapidly and successfully invade the nervous system upon initial exposure.

Led by Gregory Smith, associate professor in immunology and microbiology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, researchers found that viral protein 1-2, or VP1/2, allows the herpesvirus to interact with cellular motors, known as dynein. Once the protein has overtaken this motor, the virus can speed along intercellular highways, or microtubules, to move unobstructed from the tips of nerves in skin to the nuclei of neurons within the nervous system.

This is the first time researchers have shown a viral protein directly engaging and subverting the cellular motor; most other viruses passively hitch a ride into the nervous system.

"This protein not only grabs the wheel, it steps on the gas," says Smith. "Overtaking the cellular motor to invade the nervous system is a complicated accomplishment that most viruses are incapable of achieving. Yet the herpesvirus uses one protein, no others required, to transport its genetic information over long distances without stopping."

Herpesvirus is widespread in humans and affects more than 90 percent of adults in the United States. It is associated with several types of recurring diseases, including cold sores, genital herpes, chicken pox, and shingles. The virus can live dormant in humans for a lifetime, and most infected people do not know they are disease carriers. The virus can occasionally turn deadly, resulting in encephalitis in some.

Until now, scientists knew that herpesviruses travel quickly to reach neurons located deep inside the body, but the mechanism by which they advance remained a mystery.

Smith's team conducted a variety of experiments with VP1/2 to demonstrate its important role in transporting the virus, including artificial activation and genetic mutation of the protein. The team studied the herpesvirus in animals, and also in human and animal cells in culture under high-resolution microscopy. In one experiment, scientists mutated the virus with a slower form of the protein dyed red, and raced it against a healthy virus dyed green. They observed that the healthy virus outran the mutated version down nerves to the neuron body to insert DNA and establish infection.

"Remarkably, this viral protein can be artificially activated, and in these conditions it zips around within cells in the absence of any virus. It is striking to watch," Smith says.

He says that understanding how the viruses move within people, especially from the skin to the nervous system, can help better prevent the virus from spreading.

Additionally, Smith says, "By learning how the virus infects our nervous system, we can mimic this process to treat unrelated neurologic diseases. Even now, laboratories are working on how to use herpesviruses to deliver genes into the nervous system and kill cancer cells."

Smith's team will next work to better understand how the protein functions. He notes that many researchers use viruses to learn how neurons are connected to the brain.

"Some of our mutants will advance brain mapping studies by resolving these connections more clearly than was previously possible," he says.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Northwestern University, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Sofia?V. Zaichick, Kevin?P. Bohannon, Ami Hughes, Patricia?J. Sollars, Gary?E. Pickard, Gregory?A. Smith. The Herpesvirus VP1/2 Protein Is an Effector of Dynein-Mediated Capsid Transport and Neuroinvasion. Cell Host & Microbe, 2013; 13 (2): 193 DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2013.01.009

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/DpfJns9Ndl0/130328091754.htm

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Thursday, March 28, 2013

EBay targets $110 billion of marketplace volume in 2015

By Alistair Barr

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - EBay Inc aims to handle $110 billion of sales volume on its marketplace in 2015 by expanding globally, getting more local inventory online and using mobile technology to engage more with shoppers, executives said on Thursday.

The new forecast, made by Devin Wenig, president of eBay's Marketplaces business in North America, compares with Gross Merchandise Volume, or GMV, of $75 billion in 2012.

GMV is a closely watched measure of eBay's performance. Doug Anmuth, an analyst at J.P. Morgan, was expecting 2015 GMV of $101 billion.

After bleeding market share to Amazon.com Inc for years, Chief Executive John Donahoe began a turnaround effort in 2009 that set the Internet commerce company back on track by borrowing from its larger rival's playbook.

He took what was then a muddled auctions website and made it easier for shoppers to buy new items at fixed prices and get more free shipping and returns - essentially mimicking the Amazon experience. He also embraced mobile technology, creating shopping apps for smartphones and tablets that brought in new customers.

But eBay's online marketplace is still growing less than Amazon's and some analysts are concerned its growth may struggle to keep up with the overall expansion of the online retail sector.

On Thursday, Wenig told analysts and investors that the Marketplaces business will deliver "at least" market rates of growth.

"They are saying they have fixed the core marketplace, and they are now positioned to drive incremental growth from local, mobile and global initiatives," said Colin Sebastian, an analyst at R.W. Baird.

CEO Donahoe said that the company would enable $300 billion of commerce in 2015, up 71 percent from $175 billion in 2012.

That forecast includes sales on eBay's online marketplace, payments processed by PayPal and other transactions touched by the company's various businesses, such as GSI Commerce.

"That's one of the ways we will measure our success," Donahoe said during eBay's investor day at its headquarters in Silicon Valley.

To get this done, eBay is focusing on three main sources of potential growth - global expansion, local commerce and mobile applications that it hopes will encourage consumers to shop more on its marketplace and use PayPal more to pay for those purchases.

EBay is aiming to increase sales in emerging markets and BRIC countries - Brazil, Russia, India and China, by four times current levels in three years, Wendy Jones, an executive overseeing the global push, said.

By the end of 2015, as much as 25 percent of eBay active users and over 12 percent of global sales will come from BRIC countries and emerging markets, she added.

EBay's top executives will give other, new three-year financial forecasts later on Thursday.

Expectations run high on Wall Street. Anmuth of J.P. Morgan, is expecting revenue of $21.16 billion in 2015 and earnings of $3.98 per share that year, versus $14 billion and $2.36 a share in 2012.

The analyst is also calling for 2015 PayPal transaction volume of $246.9 billion that year.

(Reporting by Alistair Barr; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn, Tim Dobbyn, and Kenneth Barry)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ebay-ceo-says-company-enable-300-billion-commerce-154139664--sector.html

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Fungi pull carbon into northern forest soils

Organisms living on tree roots do lion?s share of sequestering carbon

By Meghan Rosen

Web edition: March 28, 2013

Enlarge

The fungus Cortinarius armillatus pulls carbon-rich sugars from tree roots in exchange for water and nutrients. Fungi store substantial amounts of carbon belowground in boreal forests, new research shows.

Credit: Courtesy of Karina Clemmensen

Sequestration may be questionable fiscal policy, but it means good news in the context of carbon cycles. Vast underground networks of fungi may sequester heaps of carbon in boreal forest soil, a study suggests. By holding onto the element, the fungi do the environment a favor by preventing carbon dioxide from escaping into the atmosphere and warming the planet.

Mycorrhizal fungi, which grow underground in and on tree roots, hold 50 to 70 percent of the total carbon stored in leaf litter and soil on forested islands in Sweden, researchers report March 28 in Science. The new findings poke holes in a long-held idea that carbon in boreal forests accumulates mainly above ground in a litter of pine needles, mosses and leaves. The researchers suggest instead that trees direct carbon deeper into the soil via their root systems.

?It?s hard to quantify how important mycorrhizal fungi are in ecosystems,? says forest ecologist Erik Hobbie of the University of New Hampshire in Durham, who was not involved with the study. ?This paper presents hard evidence about their importance.?

Trees suck carbon dioxide from the air and turn the carbon into sugars to fuel growth of branches, leaves and roots. Because trees are so good at capturing carbon dioxide, ecosystems stash loads of carbon in forests. Cold boreal forests are thought to be carbon-storing superstars mostly because litter stacks up on their floors and takes a long time to decompose. These forests stow away nearly a quarter of all the carbon stocked in the Earth?s land surfaces. ?

But scientists have not understood where exactly trees put their carbon. The issue becomes important when researchers build computer simulations that track carbon cycling. ?People talk about how plants shuttle half their carbon to the belowground root system, but it has kind of been neglected in carbon storage models,? says study coauthor Karina Clemmensen, a fungal ecologist at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences in Uppsala.

Clemmensen and colleagues measured the age and accumulation of carbon in soil samples from 30 islands sprinkled across two lakes in northern Sweden. At each island, Clemmensen?s team plunged long, hollow tubes with sharpened ends into the ground to extract soil cores.

Since new, carbon-rich litter settles layer by layer on forest floors, prevailing wisdom suggested the scientists would ?find older carbon as they went down. But instead, researchers found stores of young carbon deep beneath the surface. Only sugars shipped down trees to their roots could explain the young carbon?s presence in soil below ground, says Clemmensen.

Next, her team analyzed DNA and fungal molecules in the soil samples. Beneath the forest floor, soil was packed with traces of mycorrhizal fungi, which stretch long filamentous fingers through the earth and sop up water and nutrients. The fungi pull in carbon in the form of sugars from tree roots. Above ground, fungi that break down leaf litter dominated.

The study?s findings could help global carbon modelers tweak their simulations, says climatologist Victor Brovkin of the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology in Hamburg. ?How to model soil carbon is poorly understood,? he says. ?That?s why this new evidence is important to us.?

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/349265/title/Fungi_pull_carbon_into_northern_forest_soils

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Kansas was unbearably hot 270 million years ago

Temperatures soared to nearly 74 degrees Celsius, research suggests

By Erin Wayman

Web edition: March 28, 2013

Enlarge

HOT TIMES

During the Permian period, the continents came together to form Pangaea (map of supercontinent's configuration 280 million years ago shown). Air temperatures near the equator might have been as high as nearly 74? Celsius.

Credit: ? Ron Blakey/NAU Geology

The Permian period was hot, hot, hot: Around 270 million years ago, air temperatures near the equator may have soared to almost 74? Celsius or 165? Fahrenheit, scientists report March 18 in Geology. That?s far hotter than anywhere on Earth today.

?I can?t even imagine what it would have been like,? says Neil Tabor, a sedimentary geochemist at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, who wasn?t involved in the research. The intense heat may explain why plants and animals vanished from parts of the tropics at this time, he says, a disappearance that preceded the mass extinction that ended the Permian period 252 million years ago. Only microbes that thrive under extreme conditions could have survived such temperatures.

Evidence for the sweltering heat comes from Kansas, which was near the equator during the Permian, when the continents fused to form Pangaea. Previous work showed that, in the middle Permian, western Kansas was a desert where lakes of brine repeatedly formed, evaporated and left behind salt deposits. Geologist Kathleen Benison of West Virginia University in Morgantown and a colleague had determined that air temperatures there reached 50? C, no hotter than California?s Death Valley today.?

Benison and Jay Zambito, also of West Virginia, were surprised to find the even hotter temperatures while investigating another site in western Kansas. They looked at crystals of halite, or rock salt, which act as natural thermometers. As the crystals grow in evaporating lakes of brine, they trap microscopic bubbles of saltwater. In the lab, scientists can estimate the temperature at which the bubbles formed, thereby taking the temperature of the ancient brine itself. Each bubble, Benison says, ?is a very specific snapshot for a single time and place.? Since the brine pools were only tens of centimeters deep, the bubbles are good proxies for air temperature, she adds.

The team collected almost 400 temperature readings across 15 layers in sediments buried roughly 600 to 800 meters deep. The whole record corresponds to about 270 million years ago, but how much time elapsed across the layers is unknown.?

Near the beginning and end of the record, average air temperatures were in the 20s and 30s Celsius.Temperatures spiked in the middle layers to an average of almost 45? C, with daytime temperatures ranging from about 25? C to almost 74? C. Benison and Zambito plan to investigate temperatures over a larger geographic area to see whether the sizzling heat was a regional phenomenon.

But some researchers are not convinced that the team actually found such extreme temperatures. ?It?s a question of whether or not they?ve measured the air temperature,? says geochemist Ron Spencer of the University of Calgary in Canada. In some modern salt pans, even shallow brine can be much hotter than the air because it retains heat better.

If the air temperatures are valid, they create a mystery. ?It?s unclear at the moment how we could get such extreme conditions at this place,? Tabor says. Climate simulations can?t yet reconcile how the area could be that hot and still have liquid water at the surface.

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/349248/title/Kansas__was_unbearably_hot_270_million_years_ago

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ModernMix is a $5 program that lets you run Metro-style apps in desktop-style windows

ModernMix is a $5 program that lets you run Metrostyle apps in desktopstyle windows

Sometimes you just wanna close a window. Or resize it, or drag it so that it overlaps with something else. That's how Windows works, and it's more or less how you'd expect to interact with Windows 8 in particular. The problem is, those old-world rules don't necessarily apply to newer Metro-style apps: yes, you can snap them in place next to traditional x86 programs, but you can't resize those windows, nor can you arrange them so that they overlap with each other.

Fortunately for you multitaskers out there, Stardock's new app ModernMix squeezes all your Metro programs into traditional desktop windows -- ones you can resize, minimize, drag around and even close completely. The app also lets you pin Metro apps to the Taskbar on the desktop, as well as run them at full-screen when the mood strikes. It's priced at $5, but Stardock is offering a 30-day free trial to folks who prefer to try before they buy. Just remember: you'll need Windows 8, not RT. Not that you RT users are spending much time in the desktop anyway.

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Source: Stardock

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/cHJcNYvH-1c/

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Scientists find new gene markers for cancer risk

NEW YORK (AP) ? A huge international effort involving more than 100 institutions and genetic tests on 200,000 people has uncovered dozens of signposts in DNA that can help reveal further a person's risk for breast, ovarian or prostate cancer, scientists reported Wednesday.

It's the latest mega-collaboration to learn more about the intricate mechanisms that lead to cancer. And while the headway seems significant in many ways, the potential payoff for ordinary people is mostly this: Someday there may be genetic tests that help identify women with the most to gain from mammograms, and men who could benefit most from PSA tests and prostate biopsies.

And perhaps farther in the future these genetic clues might lead to new treatments.

"This adds another piece to the puzzle," said Harpal Kumar, chief executive of Cancer Research U.K., the charity which funded much of the research.

One analysis suggests that among men whose family history gives them roughly a 20 percent lifetime risk for prostate cancer, such genetic markers could identify those whose real risk is 60 percent.

The markers also could make a difference for women with BRCA gene mutations, which puts them at high risk for breast cancer. Researchers may be able to separate those whose lifetime risk exceeds 80 percent from women whose risk is about 20 to 50 percent. One doctor said that might mean some women would choose to monitor for cancer rather than taking the drastic step of having healthy breasts removed.

Scientists have found risk markers for the three diseases before, but the new trove doubles the known list, said one author, Douglas Easton of Cambridge University. The discoveries also reveal clues about the biological underpinnings of these cancers, which may pay off someday in better therapies, he said.

Experts not connected with the work said it was encouraging but that more research is needed to see how useful it would be for guiding patient care. One suggested that using a gene test along with PSA testing and other factors might help determine which men have enough risk of a life-threatening prostate cancer that they should get a biopsy. Many prostate cancers found early are slow-growing and won't be fatal, but there is no way to differentiate and many men have surgery they may not need.

Easton said the prospects for a genetic test are greater for prostate and breast cancer than ovarian cancer.

Breast cancer is the most common malignancy among women worldwide, with more than 1 million new cases a year. Prostate cancer is the second most common cancer in men after lung cancer, with about 900,000 new cases every year. Ovarian cancer accounts for about 4 percent of all cancers diagnosed in women, causing about 225,000 cases worldwide.

The new results were released in 13 reports in Nature Genetics, PLOS Genetics and other journals. They come from a collaboration involving more than 130 institutions in the United States, Europe, and elsewhere. The research was mainly paid for by Cancer Research U.K., the European Union and the U.S. National Institutes of Health.

Scientists used scans of DNA from more than 200,000 people to seek the markers, tiny variations in the 3 billion "letters" of the DNA code that are associated with disease risk.

The scientists found 49 new risk markers for breast cancer plus a couple of others that modify breast cancer risk from rare mutated genes, 26 for prostate cancer and eight for ovarian cancer. Individually, each marker has only a slight impact on risk estimation, too small to be useful on its own, Easton said. They would be combined and added to previously known markers to help reveal a person's risk, he said.

A genetic test could be useful in identifying people who should get mammography or PSA testing, said Hilary Burton, director of the PHG Foundation, a genomics think-tank in Cambridge, England. A mathematical analysis done by her group found that under certain assumptions, a gene test using all known markers could reduce the number of mammograms and PSA tests by around 20 percent, with only a small cost in cancer cases missed.

Among the new findings:

? For breast cancer, researchers calculated that by using all known markers, including the new ones, they could identify 5 percent of the female population with twice the average risk of disease, and 1 percent with a three-fold risk. The average lifetime risk of getting breast cancer is about 12 percent in developed countries. It's lower in the developing world where other diseases are a bigger problem.

? For prostate cancer, using all the known markers could identify 1 percent of men with nearly five times the average risk, the researchers computed. In developed countries, a man's average lifetime risk for the disease is about 14 to 16 percent, lower in developing nations.

?Markers can also make a difference in estimates of breast cancer risk for women with the BRCA1 or BRCA2 gene mutations. Such women are rare, but their lifetime risk can run as high as 85 percent. Researchers said that with the new biomarkers, it might be possible to identify the small group of these women with a risk of 28 percent or less.

For patients like Vicki Gilbert of England, who carries a variation of the BRCA1 gene, having such details about her cancer risk would have made decision-making easier.

Gilbert, 50, found out about her genetic risk after being diagnosed with the disease in 2009. Though doctors said the gene wouldn't change the kind of chemotherapy she got, they suggested removing her ovaries to avoid ovarian cancer, which is also made more likely by a mutated BRCA1.

"They didn't want to express a definite opinion on whether I should have my ovaries removed so I had to weigh up my options for myself," said Gilbert, a veterinary receptionist in Wiltshire. "...I decided to have my ovaries removed because that takes away the fear it could happen. It certainly would have been nice to have more information to know that was the right choice."

Gilbert said knowing more about the genetic risks of cancer should be reassuring for most patients. "There are so many decisions made for you when you go through cancer treatment that being able to decide something yourself is very important," she said.

Dr. Charis Eng, chair of the Genomic Medicine Institute at the Cleveland Clinic, who didn't participate in the new work, called the breast cancer research exciting but not ready for routine use.

Most women who carry a BRCA gene choose intensive surveillance with both mammograms and MRI and some choose to have their breasts removed to prevent the disease, she said. Even the lower risk described by the new research is worrisomely high, and might not persuade a woman to avoid such precautions completely, Eng said.

___

AP Medical Writer Maria Cheng contributed to this report from London.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/scientists-gene-markers-cancer-risk-162853893.html

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Strong NZ sales boost Hallenstein Glasson - Stuff.co.nz

Hallenstein Glasson has boosted its first-half net profit by 15 per cent to $10.4 million, with strong performances across its brands in New Zealand and outweighing a poor showing from Glassons in Australia.

But the NZX-listed fashion retailer said second-half sales so far were down 1 per cent year-on-year, with record warm temperatures in both countries making it difficult to sell winter stock.

Group sales for the six months ending February 1 were $115.7m - up 6.6 per cent year-on-year.

Net profit at menswear chain Hallensteins rose 21 per cent to $5.1m on a 6 per cent lift in sales. Same-store sales rose 8 per cent.

In a statement to the NZX, Hallenstein Glasson chief executive Graeme Popplewell said Hallensteins continued to reposition its brand and that was delivering dividends.

Glassons in New Zealand increased net profit almost 13 per cent year-on-year to $4.6m, with total and same-store sales both up 2 per cent.

Storm - a womenswear chain for more fashion-conscious shoppers - drove net profit up almost 73 per cent to $822,000, on a 39 per cent boost in sales. Same-store sales were up 27 per cent.

Popplewell said it would open its first Australian Storm store in Melbourne later this year.

The Australian market - where there are only Glassons - had been a challenge, he said.

Sales at Glassons Australia rose 13 per cent but same-store sales slipped 1 per cent. The division made a net loss of $600,000, following a $204,000 loss the previous first half.

"Sales over the December-January period did not meet expectations," he said.

"Given the positive growth we achieved earlier in the year this was disappointing, however, we remain positive about our future in this market."

The Glassons Australia result included a $500,000 hit for store-relocation and restructuring, he said.

Online sales continued to grow strongly and the group remained focused on investing and emphasising the sales channel.

Popplewell said second-half sales had begun to recover as the cooler weather set in. The group was not expecting the retail environment to show any significant uplift and was working on the premise that conditions would remain competitive.

The group declared an interim dividend of 16 cents per share, up from 14.5c in the previous first-half. Its shares last traded at $5.52 on the NZX, up 38 per cent on a year ago.

- ? Fairfax NZ News

Source: http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/industries/financial-results/8478489/Strong-NZ-sales-boost-Hallenstein-Glasson

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Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Pope wants to stay in simple residence for now

Mar 26 (Reuters) - Leading money winners on the 2013 PGATour on Monday (U.S. unless stated): 1. Tiger Woods $3,787,600 2. Brandt Snedeker $2,859,920 3. Matt Kuchar $2,154,500 4. Steve Stricker $1,820,000 5. Phil Mickelson $1,650,260 6. Hunter Mahan $1,553,965 7. John Merrick $1,343,514 8. Dustin Johnson $1,330,507 9. Russell Henley $1,313,280 10. Kevin Streelman $1,310,343 11. Keegan Bradley $1,274,593 12. Charles Howell III $1,256,373 13. Michael Thompson $1,254,669 14. Brian Gay $1,171,721 15. Justin Rose $1,155,550 16. Jason Day $1,115,565 17. Chris Kirk $1,097,053 18. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pope-wants-stay-simple-residence-now-151559639.html

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Russia's Growth Leads Yuri Milner Back As Ostrovok Takes $25M From General Catalyst, Accel and Others

yuriIt's often difficult to discern the mind of Yuri Milner. Despite building his investments out of Russia initially, he hasn't invested in a startup there for over there years. What's luring him back? No doubt the enormous growth and potential of the market there. So it's not a huge surprise that he's invested in one of Russia's hottest startups today, hotels booking service Ostrovok.ru which has pulled in a $25 million Series B round. Ostrovok may now be the best funded startup in Russia. However, then putting boots on the ground to build up the hotels inventory - which is really only just coming online in Russia - is a very capital intensive business.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/wI8yXURFq8M/

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Coupon clipping declines as shoppers get saavier

Nati Harnik / AP file

Margery Gibbs uses coupons at a store in Omaha, Neb., in 2009. Coupon use fell in 2012 after several strong years.

By Allison Linn, TODAY

The good, old-fashioned coupon ? which surged in popularity in recent years ? appears to be falling out of favor.

Two separate studies show that coupon use declined significantly in 2012.

One study, from coupon industry consulting firm Inmar, found that about 3 billion coupons were redeemed in 2012, a drop of about 14.3 percent from approximately 3.5 billion coupons redeemed in 2011. Another, from NCH Marketing Services, found that coupon use fell by 17 percent in 2012 over the year before.

The drop came after several good years for the coupon, which seemed to indicate that the weak economy had helped bring coupon clipping back in style. The coupon has even enjoyed its 15 minutes of pop culture fame thanks to the reality show ?Extreme Couponing,? which documents people using thousands of coupons to save hundreds of dollars stockpiling diapers, paper towels and other items.

But experts say that while frugality is still in vogue, many shoppers have gotten so savvy at saving money that they've moved past the coupon.

?It was like the training wheels ? to teach people how to save money,? Phil Lempert, the chief executive of Supermarket Guru, said of coupons.

Experts say it?s pretty common for coupon use to rise when the economy goes south, and start falling as the economy gets better.

But the economic gains in 2012 weren?t really strong enough to warrant people giving up their frugal habits. In addition, experts say they saw plenty of other reasons that coupon use has declined.

?It?s sort of a thousand cuts,? said David Mounts, the chief executive of Inmar. ?It?s little things here and there.?

For starters, there were slightly fewer coupons. The industry distributed about 310 billion coupons in 2012, down from 313 billion in 2011 and a big drop from 336 billion in 2010, according to Inmar?s research.

Last year?s batch of coupons also tended to be for smaller discounts and to expire more quickly than in the past, Mounts said.

In addition, shopping habits have changed.

Some customers have started to want more than a one-size-fits-all coupon that you clip out of a Sunday newspaper, Mounts said.??Instead, more shoppers are looking for personalized deals that more closely match their shopping habits. They also want deals that are delivered digitally so they don?t have to manage a stack of paper.

So far, though, those types of coupons aren?t that widespread. Inmar?s data shows that more than four in 10 coupons still come from the newspaper inserts.

Frugally minded shoppers also are finding even more sophisticated ways to save money, said Lempert of Supermarket Guru, which tracks customer shopping habits.

These days, he?s seeing more savvy shoppers going to multiple stores to find the best prices on food and other items. Their stops may include drugstores, dollar stores, warehouse chains like Costco and specialty grocers such as Trader Joe?s.

They?re also turning more to store brands that may be cheaper than name brands, even when there?s a coupon for the branded item, he said.

Many younger customers also are constantly changing their eating and shopping habits, he said, and may not be as interested in buying the items that are traditionally discounted with coupons. They also may be more captivated by new types of ways to save, such as a four-hour sale promoted on Twitter.

?Frankly, the coupons weren?t meeting their needs,? Lempert said.

The extreme couponing fad may not have helped either.

The trend sparked a backlash among some in the industry, who alleged that the TV show set unrealistic expectations.

Lempert thinks it also made some shoppers feel uneasy. He said he receives thousands of emails a week from shoppers, and reaction to extreme couponing was largely negative.

Despite such challenges, experts say?the coupon industry is adapting to changing customer preferences.?Inmar?s early data from the start of 2013 appears to be showing more positive trends in coupon use than last year, Mounts said, which suggests coupon clipping likely won't disappear completely any time soon.

Do you use coupons?

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653381/s/29fed6c8/l/0Llifeinc0Btoday0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A30C260C174190A860Ecoupon0Eclipping0Edeclines0Eas0Eshoppers0Eget0Esaavier0Dlite/story01.htm

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Online Marketing: When it's Time to Rebrand | Internet ... - TechWyse

You?ve taken years to create your brand, as many businesses have, including big names like business.com. And, whether you?re a small business or a corporate giant, changing your brand can be scary.

Many customers find you online based on brand alone ? the logo in your Facebook picture ? for example. However, with the business world evolving at a rapid pace, it?s important that your company is able to keep up, and for some that means taking the leap to rebrand.

They key to making it a smooth online transition is planning, prep and flawless execution.

Create Your Plan

When making a brand change, it?s imperative that you have a plan and process in place for creating your new brand and implementing it; this starts at a higher level, asking the right questions.

For example, Tony Uphoff, business.com?s new CEO told SearchEngineLand.com in an interview, ?We?ve been collecting data on how small-to-medium enterprise buyers research, compare and ultimately buy products on the Internet today.?

After answering these types of questions, business.com became fresh and modern, like many of their competitors in the online business sphere.

So, once you?ve been able to answer the high-level questions and collected the right information, you need to determine how the new brand will be incorporated into your online marketing efforts. There are two steps you need to take: Prepping your customers and perfecting your timing.

1. Prepping Your Customers

If you?re creating a new logo, not only do you want to prep your current customers but get them excited too. There are a number of ways you can use your online presence to do so ? both on your website and your social networks.

  • Poll on Facebook: Ask your customers what they think is going to happen ? design change, new product, etc. This gets them thinking about it and makes them want to check back to see if they were right.
  • Related blog posts: Business.com chose to run a teaser blog post ? Top 5 Companies That Have Teased a New Product. The final company was business.com; but with no new product. They opted for, ?Stay tuned to see the final product of our learnings.? The tease gets them involved and interested.
  • Enticing shares: Intrigue your customers by reminding them of the upcoming change ? perhaps you release a clue about the new product, a blurry photo of the new design, or an employee working on the ?project.?

2. Having Timely Execution

Finally, the most important piece of the puzzle is how you execute your new brand. After all the hard work you?ve put into it, you want the final reveal to go off without a hitch. To do that, you want to be sure your updates and public changes are timely.

  • Social assets and verbiage: The moment your new product or look is launched, be sure to update all your social networks, and direct customers and followers to the home or product page. Ideally you should have a statement from the company, whether in a blog post or press release, explaining the news.
  • Follow up posts: Business.com followed up two days later with the blog post: Logo Upgades: 5 B2B Companies that Made the Change. The key is bringing awareness to what you?re doing in the context of your industry and competitors.
  • Scheduled interviews: Be sure that you have done the necessary PR so online interviews and articles covering the changes will be live within 5-7 days of launch; this will keep people buzzing about your news.

Your brand is an integral part of online marketing, and making that change can be nerve-wracking. However, many big names, like business.com, have done it thanks to good preparation and timely execution, and you can too.

Written By Jessica Sanders.

Jessica Sanders is a professional blogger and copyeditor for ResourceNation.com, B2B lead generation resource. She writes on a variety of topics including online marketing. Follow them on Twitter and Facebook!

Related posts:

Source: http://www.techwyse.com/blog/internet-marketing/online-marketing-when-it%E2%80%99s-time-to-rebrand/

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Motown songwriter-producer Deke Richards dies

Mar 26 (Reuters) - Leading money winners on the 2013 PGATour on Monday (U.S. unless stated): 1. Tiger Woods $3,787,600 2. Brandt Snedeker $2,859,920 3. Matt Kuchar $2,154,500 4. Steve Stricker $1,820,000 5. Phil Mickelson $1,650,260 6. Hunter Mahan $1,553,965 7. John Merrick $1,343,514 8. Dustin Johnson $1,330,507 9. Russell Henley $1,313,280 10. Kevin Streelman $1,310,343 11. Keegan Bradley $1,274,593 12. Charles Howell III $1,256,373 13. Michael Thompson $1,254,669 14. Brian Gay $1,171,721 15. Justin Rose $1,155,550 16. Jason Day $1,115,565 17. Chris Kirk $1,097,053 18. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/motown-songwriter-producer-deke-richards-dies-014758541.html

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Hunger-spiking neurons could help control autoimmune diseases

Mar. 25, 2013 ? Neurons that control hunger in the central nervous system also regulate immune cell functions, implicating eating behavior as a defense against infections and autoimmune disease development, Yale School of Medicine researchers have found in a new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

Autoimmune diseases have been on a steady rise in the United States. These illnesses develop when the body's immune system turns on itself and begins attacking its own tissues. The interactions between different kinds of T cells are at the heart of fighting infections, but they have also been linked to autoimmune disorders.

"We've found that if appetite-promoting AgRP neurons are chronically suppressed, leading to decreased appetite and a leaner body weight, T cells are more likely to promote inflammation-like processes enabling autoimmune responses that could lead to diseases like multiple sclerosis," said lead author Tamas Horvath, the Jean and David W. Wallace Professor of Biomedical Research and chair of comparative medicine at Yale School of Medicine.

"If we can control this mechanism by adjusting eating behavior and the kinds of food consumed, it could lead to new avenues for treating autoimmune diseases," he added.

Horvath and his research team conducted their study in two sets of transgenic mice. In one set, they knocked out Sirt1, a signaling molecule that controls the hunger-promoting neuron AgRP in the hypothalamus. These Sirt1-deficient mice had decreased regulatory T cell function and enhanced effector T cell activity, leading to their increased vulnerability in an animal model of multiple sclerosis.

"This study highlights the important regulatory role of the neurons that control appetite in peripheral immune functions," said Horvath. "AgRP neurons represent an important site of action for the body's immune responses."

The team's data support the idea that achieving weight loss through the use of drugs that promote a feeling of fullness "could have unwanted effects on the spread of autoimmune disorders," he notes.

Other authors on the study include Giuseppe Matarese, Claudio Procaccini, Ciro Menale, Jae Geun Kim, Jung Dae Kim, Sabrina Diano, Nadia Diano, Veronica De Rosa, and Marcelo O. Dietrich.

The study was funded by grants from the NIH Director's Pioneer Award.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Yale University. The original article was written by Karen N. Peart.

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/k95LXvvaaiY/130325160516.htm

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Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Looks Like Those 1M Mystery BlackBerry 10 Devices Went To A Verizon Distributor

blackberry logoBlackBerry delivered one of the world's most mysterious press releases a short time ago when it revealed that it had sold a cool 1 million BB10 devices to an unnamed partner, but now it looks like some sleuthing has turned up the real client. AllThingsD and Detwiler Fenton both report that the likely source of the order was Brightstar, an international distribution company that counts Verizon, along with carriers around the world as its partners.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/xQ84OAD-1cA/

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Extreme Weather Photos Of The Week

  • Communal workers clean snow after heavy snow fell in the western Ukrainian city of Lviv on March 22, 2013. (YURIY DYACHYSHYN/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Golfball sized hail litter the ground by Andrew Stamps and his wife Valorie as they prepare to cover their shattered rear window of her 2009 Toyota Avalon in Pearl, Miss., Monday, March 18, 2013, following a hailstorm that hit communities throughout central Mississippi. The National Weather Service in Jackson says there were a few super cells in central Mississippi and reports of hail up to baseball size in Clinton, golf ball and tennis ball sized in Pearl and Brandon and quarter sized in downtown Jackson, Miss. The Mississippi Emergency Management Agency says severe weather has caused damage in at least 10 counties as the storms moved through parts of the state. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

  • Dents cover a vehicle being hauled to a repair shop in Pearl, Miss., Monday, March 18, 2013, following a hailstorm that hit communities throughout central Mississippi. The National Weather Service in Jackson says there were a few super cells in central Mississippi and reports of hail up to baseball size in Clinton, golf ball and tennis ball sized in Pearl and Brandon and quarter sized in downtown Jackson, Miss. The Mississippi Emergency Management Agency says severe weather has caused damage in at least 10 counties as the storms moved through parts of the state. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

  • A woman walks with umbrella during heavy snowfall in the western Ukrainian city of Lviv on March 22, 2013. (YURIY DYACHYSHYN/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Lightning steaks across the sky behind the Young Meadows Presbyterian Church in Montgomery, Ala., Monday, March 18, 2013. Strong storms moved across much of Alabama on Monday, bringing hail, high winds, and heavy rainfall as a cold front passed through the state. (AP Photo/Dave Martin, File)

  • This picture taken on March 21, 2013 shows people talking inside a damaged factory after a serious storm and heavy wind hit the area in Dongguan, south China's Guangdong province. South China was warned on March 22 to prepare for more heavy rain and hailstorms, as five provinces continue to repair damage caused by severe weather which resulted in the deaths of at least 24 people. (STR/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Elderly Chinese sit beside snow covered trees in a city park after heavy snowfall in Beijing on March 20, 2013. Beijing and the northern China has been experiencing its coldest winter in more than 30 years and has seen tens of thousands of the countries livestock dying and transport chaos as flights and highways are shutdown. (MARK RALSTON/AFP/Getty Images)

  • A cylclist delivers a child to school in the embassy district after heavy snowfall in Beijing, on March 20, 2013. Beijing and the northern China has been experiencing its coldest winter in more than 30 years and has seen tens of thousands of the countries livestock dying and transport chaos as flights and highways are shutdown. (MARK RALSTON/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Scaffolding lies strewn across the ground after collapsing during a tornado on March 20, 2013 in Daoxian, China. Three people have been killed and about 50 others injured after a tornado struck Central China's Hunan Province early on Wednesday morning. (ChinaFotoPress/Getty Images)

  • Betteann Karpinski walks under her umbrella in the snow, down Main Street in the historic village of Old Deerfield on March 19, 2013 in Deerfield, Massachusetts. Another winter storm blew through the Northeast yesterday, with snow and sleet closing schools in some areas and making for a messy morning commute. (Matthew Cavanaugh/Getty Images)

  • Vehicles drive through drifting snow on the A6 road near the town of Buxton in north-west England, on March 22, 2013. Britain should be celebrating the start of spring but the kingdom was shivering Friday after heavy snowfall left tens of thousands of homes without power. (ANDREW YATES/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Flames erupt from First Christian Church Disciples of Christ at 700 J.R. Miller Blvd., early Monday, March 18, 2013, in Owensboro, Ky. Firefighters were called to the scene at 3:22 a.m. according to Owensboro Fire Department Chief Steve Mitchell. Mitchell says lightning accompanying a storm likely caused the blaze that gutted the auditorium of the church and cut off power to the neighborhood, including Brescia University. (AP Photo/Owensboro Messenger-Inquirer, Jenny Sevcik)

  • Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/24/extreme-weather-photos_n_2935597.html

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