সোমবার, ৩১ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

Mexico: Resort town shoppers trapped by gunfight (AP)

CABO SAN LUCAS, Mexico ? Mexican officials say hundreds of people cowered for more than an hour at a shopping center in the resort town of Cabo San Lucas while security forces traded fire with gunmen outside and then searched for them in stores.

No injuries have been reported from Saturday afternoon's gunbattle, which did damage some cars and entrance doors. Police say they arrested two men suspected of being involved in an overnight attack near the center that killed a Mexican marine.

Authorities say the shooting at the Plaza Sendero shopping center erupted when marines, soldiers and police found armed men in the parking lot.

Police ordered shoppers to stay inside during the shooting and later search. People were allowed to leave an hour later.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111030/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_mexico_mall_shootout

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Obama cites income gap to push stalled jobs bill (AP)

WASHINGTON ? President Barack Obama is banking on a new report detailing the income disparity in the country as further evidence of the need for his $447 billion jobs bill.

A report this past week by the Congressional Budget Office found that average after-tax income for the top 1 percent of U.S. households had increased by 275 percent over the past three decades. Middle-income households saw just a 40 percent rise. For those at the bottom of the economic scale, the jump was 18 percent.

Obama said in his weekly radio and Internet address Saturday that he would pay for his jobs plan with an added tax on people who make at least $1 million a year.

Senate Republicans have blocked action on the bill, which mixes tax breaks for businesses and public works spending, because they oppose much of the increased spending and the tax on millionaires.

"These are the same folks who have seen their incomes go up so much, and I believe this is a contribution they're willing to make," Obama said. "Unfortunately, Republicans in Congress aren't paying attention. They're not getting the message."

Obama is now trying to get Congress to pass the individual components of the bill. But Senate Republicans also stalled progress on the first of those measures, $35 billion to help local governments keep teachers on the job and pay the salaries of police officers, firefighters and other emergency services workers.

Saying the country cannot wait for Congress, Obama has begun bypassing Congress and taking steps on his own that he says will encourage economic growth.

On Friday, Obama directed government agencies to shorten the time it takes for federal research to turn into commercial products in the marketplace. The goal is to help startup companies and small businesses create jobs and expand their operations more quickly.

The president also called for creating a centralized online site for companies to easily find information about federal services. He previously had announced help for people who owe more on their mortgages than their homes are worth and for the repayment of student loans. The White House also challenged community health centers to hire veterans.

"We can no longer wait for Congress to do its job," Obama said. "So where Congress won't act, I will."

The congressional report, based on Internal Revenue Service and Census Bureau data, was released as the Occupy Wall Street movement spreading across the country protests bailouts for corporations and the income gap.

In the weekly GOP message, Illinois Rep. Bobby Schilling urged Obama to support bills that Republicans say would help create jobs by blocking various energy and environmental regulations and streamlining administrative procedures. The bills, passed by the Republican-controlled House, await action in the Democratic-run Senate.

Shilling said the bills give the White House and Congress an opportunity to build on the common ground created by the passage of recent free-trade agreements, and a measure to void a law requiring federal, state and many local governments to withhold 3 percent of their payments to contractors until their taxes are paid. Obama included repealing that tax in his jobs plan.

"Republicans have a jobs plan, one with some bipartisan support, but it's stuck in the Senate," said Schilling, owner of a pizza parlor in Moline, Ill. "We're asking President Obama to work with us and call on the Senate to pass the `forgotten 15' to help the private sector create jobs, American jobs desperately needed."

___

Online:

Obama address: www.whitehouse.gov

GOP address: www.youtube.com/HouseConference

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111029/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_obama

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Would Anybody Else Prefer a Cadre of Streaming Net Boxes to Cable? [Just Me?]

I was looking at my cable bill today and becoming deeply angry at the fact that I have to subscribe to a suite of Cantonese channels in order to get The Cartoon Network. The hell? I don't even speak Cantonese. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/ecnT7gRMEXg/would-anybody-else-prefer-a-cadre-of-streaming-net-boxes-to-cable

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রবিবার, ৩০ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

New findings contradict dominant theory in Alzheimer's disease

Friday, October 28, 2011

For decades the amyloid hypothesis has dominated the research field in Alzheimer's disease. The theory describes how an increase in secreted beta-amyloid peptides leads to the formation of plaques, toxic clusters of damaged proteins between cells, which eventually result in neurodegeneration. Scientists at Lund University, Sweden, have now presented a study that turns this premise on its head.

The research group's data offers an opposite hypothesis, suggesting that it is in fact the neurons' inability to secrete beta-amyloid that is at the heart of pathogenesis in Alzheimer's disease.

The study, published in the October issue of the Journal of Neuroscience, shows an increase in unwanted intracellular beta-amyloid occurring early on in Alzheimer's disease. The accumulation of beta-amyloid inside the neuron is here shown to be caused by the loss of normal function to secrete beta-amyloid.

Contrary to the dominant theory, where aggregated extracellular beta-amyloid is considered the main culprit, the study instead demonstrates that reduced secretion of beta-amyloid signals the beginning of the disease.

The damage to the neuron, created by the aggregated toxic beta-amyloid inside the cell, is believed to be a prior step to the formation of plaques, the long-time hallmark biomarker of the disease.

Professor Gunnar Gouras, the senior researcher of the study, hopes that the surprising new findings can help push the research field in a new direction.

"The many investigators and pharmaceutical companies screening for compounds that reduce secreted beta-amyloid have it the wrong way around. The problem is rather the opposite, that it is not getting secreted. To find the root of the disease, we now need to focus on this critical intracellular pool of beta-amyloid.

"We are showing here that the increase of intracellular beta-amyloid is one of the earliest events occurring in Alzheimer's disease, before the formation of plaques. Our experiments clearly show a decreased secretion of beta-amyloid in our primary neuron disease model. This is probably because the cell's metabolism and secretion pathways are disrupted in some way, leading beta-amyloid to be accumulated inside the cell instead of being secreted naturally", says Davide Tampellini, first author of the study.

The theory of early accumulation of beta-amyloid inside the cell offers an alternate explanation for the formation of plaques. When excess amounts of beta-amyloid start to build up inside the cell, it is also stored in synapses.

When the synapses can no longer hold the increasing amounts of the toxic peptide the membrane breaks, releasing the waste into the extracellular space. The toxins released now create the seed for other amyloids to gather and start forming the plaques.

###

Lund University: http://www.lu.se

Thanks to Lund University for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/114731/New_findings_contradict_dominant_theory_in_Alzheimer_s_disease

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Steve Martin turns tweets into book (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) ? Veteran actor and comedian Steve Martin is writing a book based on his Twitter posts, with all profits going to charity, the book's publishers said on Friday.

Martin announced the book via Twitter in a tweet that said "Due to absolutely no demand, soon I'm publishing a book of my tweets. Many of your replies included! All my profits to charity."

The book will be called "The Ten, Make That Nine Habits, of Very Organized People. Make That Ten," and will be a collection of Martin's tweets as well as responses from followers, publishers Grand Central Publishing said in a statement.

The book is due for release in summer 2012, and all profits will go to charity.

The 66-year-old "Pink Panther" actor has embraced the social networking site, building a fan base of more than 1.7 million followers.

Martin's tweets made news in December 2010 when the actor claimed to be tweeting updates from legal proceedings at jury duty, which are usually subjected to confidentiality. He later confirmed that the tweets were false and posted as a parody.

The actor's last book, a novel called "The Object of Beauty" was published in 2010 and made the New York Times bestseller list.

Martin is currently appearing alongside Owen Wilson and Jack Black in the comedy, "The Big Year," which was released in U.S. theaters earlier this month.

(Reporting and Writing by Piya Sinha-Roy; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/celebrity/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111028/people_nm/us_books_stevemartin

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শনিবার, ২৯ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

Microsoft cracks open a window to the future, anticipates our laziness (video)

In the future, we'll all be slaves to rectangles. No, really. Well, at least that's the prognosis, albeit sanitized, Microsoft has slickly pieced together in its Productivity Future Vision concept video. It's a mostly seamless world where all of our interactions are made to be mobile, virtual, efficient and white-washed, but it actually just reads as too darn fussy and overcomplicated. Sure, we could get behind contactless payment, tablets with holographic displays and eyeglasses that translate conversations when you've just stepped off a red eye into some foreign destination -- that's all incredibly useful. But car windows with agenda overlays and transparent refrigerator door displays? Some things are better left lo-tech. For Redmond's part, the company's merely aiming to project ways these various implementations of "real technology" will intersect and "actively assist" us with our harried lives. Take a peek at MS' sanctioned tomorrow land and its sparse piano soundtrack after the break.

Continue reading Microsoft cracks open a window to the future, anticipates our laziness (video)

Microsoft cracks open a window to the future, anticipates our laziness (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 27 Oct 2011 21:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/3D-UNKoLPPI/

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শুক্রবার, ২৮ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

[OOC] Ughh...!

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This topic is an Out Of Character part of the roleplay, ?Left 4 Dead: New Apocalypse?. Anything posted here will also show up there.

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I just got a notification saying when we post we cant add other people talking that aren't our characters in the same post. Sorry T^T

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Hillary St. Pierre: Yes, There Is an Upside to Being Terminally Ill

Go head, read the title again then pick your mouth up off the floor. You read right. I'm talking about the positives of being terminally ill, the upside of going down.

What makes me such an expert on this topic you may wonder? The answer is simple. After two failed stem cell transplants for Hodgkin's lymphoma where the treatment almost killed me, I opted to stop trying to cure my cancer, deciding instead to live with it as a chronic, but terminal, disease at the age of 26.

Shocking to make that decision, I know. I once was part of the healthy population. I once told myself that I wouldn't stop fighting until I was killed or cured, but then I found out it didn't have to be do or die anymore. There's a cancer loophole: using therapy to keep the cancer at bay while still living a relatively healthy, active life. However, opting for option number three landed me directly into the dying category.

Soon after making the choice to fight my disease on my own terms, an amazing transformation happened. I felt freed to cope with dying openly, face to face.

All the years before in active, curative treatment when I brought up the possibility of dying I was met with a barrage of "think positives" or "mind over matter" that sent me crawling back into a lonely dark corner to deal silently with my feelings, normal feelings, and fears every patient has.

Accepting the reality of my disease trajectory and working within those limits took the burden of faking confidence off my shoulders. I could finally cry. I could admit my fears and have people just listen and support without attempting to fix an unfixable my situation.

By accepting my disease as part of my life, my friends and family followed my lead and began to accept it as well. My disease was no longer the elephant in the room. Talking about cancer wasn't the equivalent of bringing up politics or religion with a stranger anymore. Nobody had to tiptoe around the subject. We finally opened up communication for everybody about their ideas, thoughts, and fears. My cancer could finally be a kitchen table topic that didn't end in tears or even a big joke at the family Christmas party.

With the adults surrounding me now changing their attitude towards my cancer, and truly believing my disease is something I can live with while sustaining quality life for a significant amount of time, the tension and anxiety of tests, appointments and treatments eased. With the new relaxed environment and way of facing cancer head on, fighting for a long life and happiness instead of a cure the feelings of security trickled down to the children in my life.

My 8-year-old son, X, who has grown up riddled with depression and anxiety from the idea that I could die any time, quickly caught on that the fight had changed for the better. We'd turned a corner in taking control of my disease by accepting it as part of our life, and then, so could he. X embraced the new found openness. He began to discuss his feelings with his cousins and friends, all the other children in our life who had never had anybody directly address my disease with them before. They, in response, began to confide in him about the stressors in their life causing a metamorphosis in communication. These boys weren't working out their feelings with grunts on the basketball court, they were sitting down with tears in their eyes and talking about their mom's miscarriage or how their mom abandoned them alongside X's cancer tales. I have never before seen or even imagined how emotionally aware and supportive young boys could be to each other

By accepting the cards and playing the cards I'd been dealt I no longer felt like I was fighting the emotional battle alone, and soon after, neither did anybody else. Family, friends and myself were able to move forward planning for what will inevitably happen to all of us, together. I no longer felt alone or had to sneak around planning my funeral, buying a cemetery plot, or writing a will. I had support. If the process became too difficult, and I wanted to take time to cry, I picked a shoulder and cried often having the person join me, which is more refreshing and validating than I'd ever imagined.

Accepting my cancer and my prognosis brought back more normalcy than I ever thought would return to my life. Allowing myself to live with my disease and buying time, I'm doing the opposite of giving up or being pessimistic. I'm being realistic and taking the best route available. Even though I have the label "terminally ill," I know my chances and my time is what I make it. Medical knowledge has been doubling every 10 years and maybe, just maybe, I'll be here when my cure comes.

?

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/hillary-st-pierre/coping-with-cancer_b_1031023.html

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৭ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

Occidental domestic production hits record in 3Q

(AP) ? Occidental Petroleum says its third-quarter net income jumped nearly 50 percent on the back of record domestic production and higher oil prices.

Worldwide crude oil prices were $97.33 per barrel over the first nine months of 2011, compared with only $73.58 per barrel during the same period last year, Occidental said.

"The third quarter 2011 domestic production was 436,000 (barrels of oil equivalent) per day," said President and CEO Stephen I. Chazen. "The highest in Occidental's history."

The Los Angeles company on Thursday reported earnings of $1.77 billion, or $2.17 per share, for the quarter. That compares with $1.19 billion, or $1.46 per share, for the same part of 2010. Revenue increased 26.1 percent to $6.01 billion.

The results shattered Wall Street estimates of $1.97 per share on revenue of $5.46 billion, according to FactSet. Shares of Occidental Petroleum Corp. jumped 4 percent, or $3.52, in premarket trading to $90.72.

Domestic volumes spiked thanks to operations in South Texas and the Williston Basin, even as production in the Middle East and North Africa production declined because of the conflict in Libya and price issues.

During the quarter, Occidental cranked up oil and gas production by 5 percent to 739,000 barrels per day. Oil prices increased 34.5 percent to $97.24 per barrel and natural gas prices rose slightly to $4.23 per 1,000 cubic feet.

And earnings in the chemical segment hit $717 million over the first three quarters of the year, more than doubling earnings from the same period in 2010. Occidental saw strong exports of its chemicals and higher margins with demand higher for almost all of its products.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-10-27-Earns-Occidental%20Petroleum/id-2e3f201f4c3e4bf9a56e81819f7da050

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বুধবার, ২৬ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

Road Service Automotive Collection Agencies | Collection Agency ...

by Collection Agency Information

Road Service Automotive collection agencies have revolutionized debt payment in the Road Service Automotive business sector. Road Service Automotive collection agencies offer their services by helping business deal with their unpaid debt by collecting delinquent payments from customers, clients and patients. This is a task that not all businesses are willing to do themselves due to the risk of jeopardizing the personal relationships they have formed with their customers, the legal liabilities and internal costs.

industrycollectionagenciesDebt collection is one of the most exhausting tasks since it involves persistent and consistent contact, done in an authoritative tone and usually responded with tense exchanges. This makes certain businesses shay away from proper debt collection practices. However, this can lead to major financial losses and can risk their business suffering from financial instability. This makes it necessary for them to seek the help of professional Road Service Automotive collection agencies as third-party debt collectors.

There are many advantages to using a Road Service Automotive collection agency and business are willing to invest in such a service. They do this not only to recover any outstanding payments but at the same time, protect their relationship with their customers and limit legal liabilities.

Benefits of Hiring Road Service Automotive Collection Agencies:

  • They Have The Experience and Expertise. Road Service Automotive collection agencies work with one motto in mind: to recover debt from your customers in a quick and efficient manner. Being a business owner, you work around a core business and you should always keep in mind that there is no use in wasting you and your employees? time accomplishing a task that you all do not specialize in. Hiring a Road Service Automotive collection agency on the other hand, can do all of these for you and help you handle complicated issues regarding debt collections.
  • Pay For Results. The payment for the services offered by Road Service Automotive collection agencies are contingency based - meaning, they will not get paid unless they have successfully collected outstanding balances from your customers. Because of such an agreement, you are assured that these agencies will do their best to pursue your uncollected debts.
  • Legal Compliance. Debt collections are not just about successfully collecting outstanding balances, since this process is governed by both Federal and complex state laws, which constantly change and vary from one state to another. This fact is enough for you to invest in Road Service Automotive collection agencies since you have no assurance that neither your staff nor you, are fully aware of all the laws involved in debt collection. A professional Road Service Automotive collection agency, on the other hand, is experienced and are fully capable of understanding all the laws that need to be followed in debt collection. They make sure that all guidelines are observed, while making sure that all your debts are collected successfully within the specified period of time.

Professional Road Service Automotive collection agencies are one of the best solutions available for companies when it comes to debt collection. So if you are a business owner and have tons of unpaid debts by costumers, you may want to consider their services.

Road Service Automotive Collection Agencies

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Related Collection Agency Articles

Source: http://collectionagency.info/industries/road-service-automotive/

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Viagra May Help Children With Rare Blood Pressure Disorder (HealthDay)

TUESDAY, Oct. 25 (HealthDay News) -- New research suggests that the active ingredient in the erectile dysfunction drug Viagra, which was initially developed as a treatment for heart disease, could help children with a rare condition called pulmonary arterial hypertension.

The drug, which is expensive to take regularly and has side effects, is already approved to treat the condition in adults. And some pediatricians use it to treat children, said Dr. Thomas Kulik, senior associate in cardiology at Children's Hospital Boston. But it has not yet received U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval for that purpose.

Pulmonary arterial hypertension, a rare condition, causes abnormally high blood pressure in the arteries that lead to the lungs. It can be inherited, accompany some forms of heart disease or occur for no known reason, Kulik said. The disease can limit the ability to exercise and lead to heart failure or even death.

In adults, research has shown that sildenafil -- best known by the brand name Viagra -- can help improve oxygen delivery and exercise tolerance, but it's not clear if it improves lifespan, said Kulik, who is also an associate professor of pediatrics at Harvard Medical School in Boston.

In the new study, researchers gave a placebo or low, medium or high doses of sildenafil to children aged 1 to 17 years for 16 weeks. After that time, they tested 105 of the children.

Previously, study author Dr. Robyn Barst of Columbia University in New York City led research that found that the active ingredient in another erectile drug, Cialis (tadalafil), seemed to effectively treat pulmonary hypertension in adults.

In the new study, researchers found that that children who took the drug and could exercise at the end of the study had more improvement in lung function than those who took the placebo. The researchers, including two from Pfizer, manufacturer of Viagra, also found that the children could exercise more and with greater ease.

Kulik, who is familiar with the findings but was not involved with the study, said the effect was modest at best. Still, he said, "sildenafil probably somewhat increases the ability of pediatric patients to exercise."

In adults, he said, the drug can cause vision problems, and in kids it can cause a condition called priapism, in which the penis remains erect. Lowering the dose can eliminate the problem, he said.

Overall, a medium dose appears safest and most effective, the researchers said, but still more research is needed. Kulik said it will take some time to determine if it improves lifespan for children with the condition.

The drug can cost several thousand dollars a year, he said.

The study was scheduled to be released Tuesday at the American College of Chest Physicians annual meeting, in Honolulu.

Research presented at meetings is considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed medical journal.

More information

To learn more about pulmonary arterial hypertension, visit the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sexualhealth/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111026/hl_hsn/viagramayhelpchildrenwithrarebloodpressuredisorder

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মঙ্গলবার, ২৫ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

NASA to launch new Earth-observing satellite

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? After a five-year delay, an Earth-observing satellite will be launched to test new technologies aimed at improving weather forecasts and monitoring climate change.

The $1.5 billion NASA mission comes in a year of weather extremes from the Midwest tornado outbreak to the Southwest wildfires to hurricane-caused flooding in New England.

"We've already had 10 separate weather events, each inflicting at least $1 billion in damages," said Louis Uccellini of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

The satellite will lift off before dawn Friday from Vandenberg Air Force Base, California, aboard a Delta 2 rocket that will boost it into an orbit some 500 miles (800 kilometers) high.

The space agency already has a fleet of satellites circling the Earth, taking measurements of the atmosphere, clouds and oceans. But many are aging and need replacement.

The latest ? about the size of a small school bus ? is more sophisticated. It carries five different types of instruments to collect environmental data, including four that never before have flown into space.

One of the satellite's main jobs is to test key technologies that will be used by next-generation satellites set to launch in a few years.

NOAA meteorologists plan to feed the observations into their weather models to better anticipate and track hurricanes, tornadoes and other extreme weather.

The information will "help us understand what tomorrow will bring," whether it's the next-day forecast or long-term climate change, said Andrew Carson, the mission's program executive at NASA headquarters.

The satellite is part of a bigger program with a troubled history. Originally envisioned as a joint civil-military weather satellite project, ballooning costs and schedule delays caused the White House last year to dissolve the partnership.

Under the restructuring, the Defense Department is building its own military satellites while NASA is developing a new generation of research satellites for NOAA. Friday's launch is considered the first step toward that goal.

The satellite was supposed to fly in 2006, but problems during the development of several instruments forced a delay. NASA invested about $895 million in the mission while NOAA and the Air Force contributed $677 million.

For the launch, NASA invited 20 of its Twitter followers to Vandenberg, where they will receive front-row seats to view the liftoff.

Once in orbit, the satellite, built by Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp. in Boulder, Colorado, will spend the next five years circling the Earth from pole to pole about a dozen times a day. Data will be transmitted to a ground station in Norway and routed to the United States via fiber optic cable. NASA will manage the mission for the first three months before turning it over to NOAA.

___

Online:

Mission details: http://www.nasa.gov/npp

___

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

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2011-10-24-Earth%20Satellite/id-cea881c97be145a0a8b38e5d63f12749

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Researchers identify mysterious life forms in the extreme deep sea

ScienceDaily (Oct. 24, 2011) ? A summer research expedition organized by scientists at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego has led to the identification of gigantic amoebas at one of the deepest locations on Earth.

During a July 2011 voyage to the Pacific Ocean's Mariana Trench, the deepest region on the planet, Scripps researchers and National Geographic engineers deployed untethered free-falling/ascending landers equipped with digital video and lights to search the largely unexplored region. The team documented the deepest known existence of xenophyophores, single-celled animals exclusively found in deep-sea environments. Xenophyophores are noteworthy for their size, with individual cells often exceeding 10 centimeters (4 inches), their extreme abundance on the seafloor and their role as hosts for a variety of organisms.

The researchers spotted the life forms at depths up to 10,641 meters (6.6 miles) within the Sirena Deep of the Mariana Trench. The previous depth record for xenophyophores was approximately 7,500 meters (4.7 miles) in the New Hebrides Trench, although sightings in the deepest portion of the Mariana Trench have been reported. Scientists say xenophyophores are the largest individual cells in existence. Recent studies indicate that by trapping particles from the water, xenophyophores can concentrate high levels of lead, uranium and mercury and are thus likely highly resistant to large doses of heavy metals. They also are well suited to a life of darkness, low temperature and high pressure in the deep sea.

"The research of Scripps Professor Lisa Levin (deep-sea biologist) has demonstrated that these organisms play host to diverse multicellular organisms," said Doug Bartlett, the Scripps marine microbiologist who organized the Mariana Trench expedition. "Thus the identification of these gigantic cells in one of the deepest marine environments on the planet opens up a whole new habitat for further study of biodiversity, biotechnological potential and extreme environment adaptation."

The xenophyophores are just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to considerations of the nature and diversity of life at extreme depths. For example, according to Dhugal Lindsay (Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, or JAMSTEC), the Dropcam movie also depicts the deepest jellyfish observed to date.

The instruments used to spot the mysterious animals were "Dropcams" developed and used by National Geographic Society Remote Imaging engineers Eric Berkenpas and Graham Wilhelm, participants in the July voyage.

"The 'Dropcams' are versatile autonomous underwater cameras containing an HD camera and lighting inside of a glass bubble," said Berkenpas. "They were created by National Geographic engineers to allow scientists and filmmakers to capture high-quality footage from any depth in the ocean. The devices were baited and used 'camera-traps' to capture imagery of approaching marine life."

Dropcams utilize a thick-wall glass sphere capable of withstanding more than eight tons per-square-inch pressure at extreme depth.

"Seafloor animals are lured to the camera with bait, a technique first developed by Scripps Professor John Isaacs in the 1960s," said Kevin Hardy, a Scripps ocean engineer and cruise participant. Hardy advanced the ultra-deep glass sphere design used on 'Dropcams' more than a decade ago. "Scripps researchers hope to one day capture and return novel living animals to the laboratory for study in high pressure aquariums that replicate the trench environment."

Also during the expedition, Scripps researchers successfully tested an advanced seafloor Deep Ocean Vehicle (DOV) design, using similar spheres to recover microbes and test other advanced system components.

The xenophyophore sightings were positively identified by Scripps' Levin, director of the Scripps Center for Marine Biodiversity and Conservation, and confirmed by Andrew Gooday of the UK National Oceanography Center.

"As one of very few taxa found exclusively in the deep sea, the xenophyophores are emblematic of what the deep sea offers. They are fascinating giants that are highly adapted to extreme conditions but at the same time are very fragile and poorly studied," said Levin. "These and many other structurally important organisms in the deep sea need our stewardship as human activities move to deeper waters."

This project was funded by NASA, the National Geographic Society Expeditions Council, Joanie Nasher, Patty and Rick Elkus.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/3-gCjr0hyp4/111024165037.htm

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Life Insurance Reviews - TermLifeInsurance.com

Life insurance reviews are a great tool to help you find the perfect policy to take care of your loved ones after you have passed away. However, it is vital that you understand what you are looking at when comparing life insurance so you can make an accurate decision about what is worth buying. Doing your research before you start shopping will make the process of reading the reviews much easier and less time consuming.

Taking Advantage of Ratings

One of the most important tools when looking at life insurance reviews is the company ranking. This is used to compare companies so it is easy to see who is the best in the business. These rankings are based on a letter system like school grades so they are easy to understand. It is important to note that several different agencies give reviews each year so you may see different grades for the same company depending on where you look.

Keep a special eye out for E, F, R or S reviews. E means the company is under supervision. F reveals that the life insurance agency is voluntarily liquidating. R and S reveal that the company has a suspended rating because they refused to provide adequate information for a review. It is also important to note that some companies do not offer reviews lower than a C, so be wary of grades this low.

Life insurance reviews take several things into account when giving their verdict. One of the most important is the financial status of the company. If they are in a solid position financially and have not needed to default on paying out claims then it is significantly more likely that they will get a high rank. It is vital to the customer that their agency is able to pay their death benefit regardless of what is going on in the overall market.

Customer service also plays a big part in life insurance reviews. You will be spending a great deal of time dealing with your life insurance company. You need to be able to trust these people with anything you feel needs discussing about your financial future. If you are dealing with a company that is rude or never makes time for you to see your agent then your inexpensive rate may not be worth anything.

In order to check how your company stacks up against the others check out peer reviews. These will give you the perspective of customers like yourself so you can see what the office you will be working with every day is like. It is important to note that some reviews may be excessively passionate. It may be a better idea to look for patterns in the comments rather than looking at individual responses.

Checking life insurance reviews at government websites is also a great way to see what a life insurance company is really like. These will show any formal complaints that were brought against the company and any efforts they made to rectify the issue at hand. It is important to weigh one against the other so you can get an idea of how seriously your company takes disgruntled customers. Make a special note of any times your life insurance company has defaulted on payments to their beneficiaries.

Finding the Right Plan

Shopping for life insurance is a lengthy process so it is important to get started early and to give yourself plenty of time to look at all the information you need to make an informed decision. The more you look at what options are available to you the easier it will be for you to decide what is the best route to take when making a purchase. Use life insurance reviews to help you understand where the companies you are interested in relate to each other so you can pick the best one.

When making your own life insurance reviews it is important to look at as many quotes as possible. This will give you a better idea of what is available so you do not miss a great deal that can save you hundreds each year. Read all life insurance reviews thoroughly so you do not miss hidden fees or restrictions that may result in your company rejecting the claim your loved ones file.

Read any life insurance reviews you choose to use in your decision very carefully. Take notes on each company so you can keep track of who made which offer and what pros and cons come with signing up for each company. If you are not comfortable making this decision by yourself talk it over with your family or your financial advisor to get a second opinion on what the best plan is for you.

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Source: http://www.termlifeinsurance.com/life-insurance-reviews.html

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সোমবার, ২৪ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

Con artist who helped Google probe to be sentenced (AP)

PROVIDENCE, R.I. ? A massive federal investigation that resulted in Google Inc. forfeiting $500 million this year to settle criminal claims over its advertising began with the 2008 arrest of a jet-setting career con artist, who took federal agents in Rhode Island into the underground world of peddling pills online.

David Whitaker, 36, finalized the decision to help federal agents investigate Google within six weeks of being arrested in California after being expelled from Mexico, where he told authorities he spent his time selling drugs online, according to his plea agreement. He had already served three prison sentences and was staring down a maximum sentence of 65 years in Rhode Island for bilking $8.7 to $22.6 million from small businesses and a credit card company during the mid-2000s, court records show.

The plea deal he signed with federal prosecutors offered some salvation. If he agreed to help the government with an investigation, prosecutors would recommend a punishment "at the lowest point of sentences" when Whitaker learns his fate in the fraud case on Dec. 2 in U.S. District Court in Providence.

That was the start of his two-year stint using his experience to help federal agents expose how operators exploited Google's automated ad system known as AdWords to promote illegal Canadian pharmacies to American consumers.

But Whitaker's role in the Google case is cold comfort to those who say they were ripped off by his Rhode Island electronics equipment provider, Mixitforme Inc. He pleaded guilty in 2008 to wire fraud, conspiracy and other charges.

"It's wrong for the feds to use him," said Matthew Grosso, 47, who says he lost his Stony Brook, N.Y., business and $1.3 million after his dealings with Whitaker went sour in 2005.

"You're just perpetuating this guy's god mentality."

Whitaker's victims paint a picture of a high-flying executive who cheated them out of their small businesses.

Mixitforme began selling discount electronics in 2005 with Whitaker and a partner at the helm. The company claimed it had strong ties to overseas suppliers that made its prices about 30 percent lower than its competitors, officials said. The firm also claimed to be an authorized distributor for Apple and Motorola and said it had a special arrangement with Sony to sell its products. Federal prosecutors say those were all lies.

But Whitaker still found a way to lure clients. Grosso recalled visiting warehouses in New York and New England to look at Whitaker's stockpiles of consumer electronics, including iPods and gaming systems.

Trevor Sears, 36, of Salt Lake City, said he would only place orders with Whitaker after seeing photographs of the inventory he wanted to purchase.

Both Grosso and Sears said they placed small orders at first without problems.

But as customers poured more money into Mixitforme, Whitaker blew through Mixitforme's earnings by buying four luxury automobiles, renting a Miami mansion for $200,000 monthly, flying in a private airplane, staying in luxury hotels, renting a yacht and using a limousine driver and security team regularly, according to an affidavit signed by U.S. Secret Service Special Agent Craig Marech.

Grosso recalled Whitaker suggesting they meet at The Ritz-Carlton on Central Park in New York City, where Whitaker had a room. He said other people who did business with Whitaker described going to meet him on airport tarmacs where he'd fly in to on a private jet.

"He was living high on the hog," Grosso said.

At the same time, prosecutors say, deliveries slowed and excuses and cover-ups started piling up, such as faked tracking numbers for shipments or claims the goods were being held by customs agents. From July 2005 to March 2006, Mixitforme failed to deliver about $13 million worth of electronic equipment, Marech wrote.

Finally, Sears said, he flew to Rhode Island to confront Whitaker in his downtown Providence office about a $319,600 order that wasn't delivered.

"He wouldn't see me. He was locked in his office," said Sears, who is launching his first new business, 10bucksupplements.com, after spending years trying to get back on his feet.

"He literally ruined my life," said Sears. "For a few years, it was brutal."

Mixitforme was the latest scheme in a string of criminal accusations against Whitaker that date back more than a decade.

He was arrested in Hawaii in 1997 on charges of bank fraud and e-racketeering and he was sentenced to a year in prison, according to court papers. The next year, he was arrested in New Orleans on a bank fraud charge and sentenced to a year and a day in prison. U.S. marshals also picked him up in 2000 for making forged securities and he was sentenced to 10 months in prison, the affidavit said.

Finally, after federal agents executed a search warrant at the Providence headquarters of Mixitforme, Marech says Whitaker took off for Albuquerque, N.M., where he went by the name Slade Austin and set up a company called Coyotego.com that also sold consumer electronics at below-market prices. That business, too, was shut down after a search in July 2007, but by that time Whitaker had already fled to Mexico, Marech wrote.

But what may save him from a long sentence is one last strategy: his work for the government.

Whitaker helped investigators construct phony websites that purported to sell the drugs, officials said. Then, an undercover investigator would tell Google employees who were creating the advertising for the products that they were manufactured overseas and did not require customers to have a valid prescription, officials said.

Federal officials said Google knew as early as 2003 that its ad system was allowing Canadian pharmacies to make illegal sales. Shipping prescription drugs into the U.S. from abroad violates drug and other laws, investigators said. If the case had gone to trial, federal prosecutors would have to prove an Internet search engine helped pharmacies violate federal law.

Google is no longer letting Canadian online pharmacies advertise to U.S. consumers. It also agreed in August to forfeit $500 million to avoid criminal prosecution for accusations that it improperly profited from ads promoting Canadian pharmacies that illegally imported drugs into the United States.

A Google spokeswoman declined to comment, as did spokesmen for Rhode Island U.S. Attorney Peter F. Neronha and federal Food and Drug Administration investigators, who led the probe. Whitaker's attorney, George J. West, also declined to comment.

Grosso and Sears said they had no idea Whitaker helped federal investigators on the Google case. They say they hope his help doesn't overshadow their suffering.

"He sure lived off the money he stole from people while they went down in flames," Sears said. "I certainly hope he doesn't get leniency."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/internet/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111024/ap_on_hi_te/us_google_investigation_convict

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Equinix business exchange plays proximity card ? Cloud ...

It may seem counterintuitive, but in the cloud computing era, location does matter, at least when it comes to where data is stored and processed.

Data centers are becoming the market exchanges of the new digital economy so the?closer a business can put its data?and compute power?to its users and partners, the better.

That?s the thinking behind the new Equinix International Business Exchange (IBX). Equinix, the big data center services provider, built the online marketplace to help its data center ?customers?which include SaaS companies, managed service providers and financial services outfits?expand into new markets and tap into an existing battery of potential partners that already use those data centers, according to Jarrett Appleby, chief marketing officer.

Equinix fields 99 data centers in 38 countries and claims 4,000 business customers.

Partnering with partners that use the same data center is not new and Equinix even helped match-make some customers in the past, but in an ad hoc way. IBX should give these customers easy click through menus to find potential partners based on geography and type of services needed, Appleby said.

?You can say, look, I?m a Rackspace OpenStack customer in Singapore and I want to add this sort of service. Who can I work with that?s already in my data center?? he said.

The Equinix effort follows other work big data center hosters have done to cut latency times and boost throughput for business customers. In August, Amazon Web Services a Direct Connect program that gave large data center services companies, including Equinix?a fat, fast direct pipe into AWS.

Equinix sees an opportunity given the demographics of its customer base. ?Now more than half of our business is with customers who use us in multiple regions and 60 percent are businesses who use us in multiple countries, up about 10 percent from last year,? Appleby said.

If a business wants to expand into new geographies, it can do so faster if its data center provider is already local to the new venue and the business can utilize connections already in place, Appleby said.

He cited an example of Bloomberg L.P, big financial services firm ?which initially wanted to launch a new service in Chicago and New York. ?But then they figured, why not do that globally? We helped them get into ten markets in less than a year.?

Photo courtesy of?Flickr user DeclanTM.

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Source: http://gigaom.com/cloud/equinix-business-exchange-plays-proximity-card/

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রবিবার, ২৩ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

Plants feel the force: How plants sense touch, gravity and other physical forces

ScienceDaily (Oct. 21, 2011) ? "Picture yourself hiking through the woods or walking across a lawn," says Elizabeth Haswell, PhD, assistant professor of biology in Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis. "Now ask yourself: Do the bushes know that someone is brushing past them? Does the grass know that it is being crushed underfoot? Of course, plants don't think thoughts, but they do respond to being touched in a number of ways."

"It's clear," Haswell says, "that plants can respond to physical stimuli, such as gravity or touch. Roots grow down, a 'sensitive plant' folds its leaves, and a vine twines around a trellis. But we're just beginning to find out how they do it," she says.

In the 1980s, work with bacterial cells showed that they have mechanosensitive channels, tiny pores in the cells membrane that open when the cell bloats with water and the membrane is stretched, letting charged atoms and other molecules rush out of the cell. Water follows the ions, the cell contracts, the membrane relaxes, and the pores close.

Genes encoding seven such channels have been found in the bacterium Escherichia coli and 10 in Arabidopsis thaliana, a small flowering plant related to mustard and cabbage. Both E. coli and Arabidopsis serve as model organisms in Haswell's lab.

She suspects that there are many more channels yet to be discovered and that they will prove to have a wide variety of functions.

Recently, Haswell and colleagues at the California Institute of Technology, who are co-principal investigators on an National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant to analyze mechanosensitive channels, wrote a review article about the work so far in order to "get their thoughts together" as they prepared to write the grant renewal. The review appeared in the Oct. 11 issue of Structure.

Swelling bacteria might seem unrelated to folding leaflets, but Haswell is willing to bet they're all related and that mechanosensitive ion channels are at the bottom of them all. After all, plant movements -- both fast and slow -- are ultimately all hydraulically powered; where ions go the water will follow.

Giant E. coli cells

The big problem with studying ion channels has always been their small size, which poses formidable technical challenges.

Early work in the field, done to understand the ion channels whose coordinated opening and closing creates a nerve impulse, was done in exceptionally large cells: the giant nerve cells of the European squid, which had projections big enough to be seen with the unaided eye.

Experiments with these channels eventually led to the development of a sensitive electrical recording technique known as the patch clamp that allowed researchers to examine the properties of a single ion channel. Patch clamp recording uses as an electrode a glass micropipette that has an open tip. The tip is small enough that it encloses a "patch" of cell membrane that often contains just one or a few ion channels.

Patch clamp work showed that there were many different types of ion channels and that they were involved not just in the transmission of nerve impulses but also with many other biological processes that involve rapid changes in cells.

Mechanosensitive channels were discovered when scientists started looking for ion channels in bacteria, which wasn't until the 1980s because ion channels were associated with nerves and bacteria weren't thought to have a nervous system.

In E. coli, the ion channels are embedded in the plasma membrane, which is inside a cell wall, but even if the wall could be stripped away, the cells are far too small to be individually patched. So the work is done with specially prepared giant bacterial cells called spherophlasts.

These are made by culturing E. coli in a broth containing an antibiotic that prevents daughter cells from separating completely when a cell divides. As the cells multiply, "snakes" of many cells that share a single plasma membrane form in the culture. "If you then digest away the cell wall, they swell up to form a large sphere," Haswell says.

Not that spheroplasts are that big. "We're doing most of our studies in Xenopus oocytes (frog eggs), whose diameters are 150 times bigger than those of spheroplasts," she says.

Three mechanosensitive channel activities

To find ion channels in bacteria, scientists did electrophysiological surveys of spheroplasts. They stuck a pipette onto the spheroplast and applied suction to the membrane as they looked for tiny currents flowing across the membrane.

"What they found was really amazing," Haswell says. "There were three different activities that are gated (triggered to open) only by deformation of the membrane." (They were called "activities" because nobody knew their molecular or genetic basis yet.)

The three activities were named mechanosensitive channels of large (MscL), small (MscS) and mini (MscM) conductance. They were distinguished from one another by how much tension you had to introduce in order to get them to open and by their conductance.

One of the labs working with spheroplasts was led by Ching Kung, PhD, at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. The MscL protein was identified and its gene was cloned in 1994 by Sergei Sukharev, PhD, then a member of Kung's lab. His tour-de-force experiment, Haswell says, involved reconstituting fractions of the bacterial plasma membrane into synthetic membranes (liposomes) to see whether they would confer large-channel conductance.

In 1999, the gene encoding MscS was identified in the lab of Ian Booth, PhD, at the University of Aberdeen. Comparatively, little work has been done on the mini channel, which is finicky and often doesn't show up, Haswell says, though a protein contributing to MscM activity was recently identified by Booth's group.

Once both genes were known, researchers did knockout experiments to see what happened to bacteria that didn't have the genes needed to make the channels. What they found, says Haswell, was that if both the MscL and MscS genes were missing, the cells could not survive "osmotic downshock," the bacterial equivalent of water torture.

"The standard assay," Haswell says, "is to grow the bacteria for a couple of generations in a very salty broth, so that they have a chance to balance their internal osmolyte concentration with the external one." (Osmolytes are molecules that affect osmosis, or the movement of water into and out of the cell.) "They do this," she says, "by taking up osmolytes from the environment and by making their own."

"Then," she says, "you take these bacteria that are chockfull of osmolytes and throw them into fresh water. If they don't have the MscS and MscL proteins that allow them to dump ions to avoid the uncontrolled influx of water, they don't survive." It's a bit like dumping saltwater fish into a freshwater aquarium.

Why are there three mechanosenstivie channel activities? The currently accepted model, Haswell says is that the channels with the smaller conductances are the first line of defense. They open early in response to osmotic shock so that the channel of large conductance, through which molecules the cell needs can escape, doesn't open unless it is absolutely necessary. The graduated response thus gives the cell its best chance for survival.

Crystallizing the proteins

The next step in this scientific odyssey, figuring out the proteins' structures, also was very difficult. Protein structures are traditionally discovered by purifying a protein, crystallizing it out of a water solution, and then bombarding the crystal with X-rays. The positions of the atoms in the protein can be deduced from the X-ray diffraction pattern.

In a sense crystallizing a protein isn't all that different from growing rock candy from a sugar solution, but, as always, the devil is in the details. Protein crystals are much harder to grow than sugar crystals and, once grown, they are extremely fragile. They even can even be damaged by the X-ray probes used to examine them.

And to make things worse MscL and MscS span the plasma membrane, which means that their ends, which are exposed to the periplasm outside the cell and the cytoplasm inside the cell, are water-loving and their middle sections, which are stuck in the greasy membrane, are repelled by water. Because of this double nature it is impossible to precipitate membrane proteins from water solutions.

Instead the technique is to surround the protein with what have been characterized as "highly contrived detergents," that protect them -- but just barely -- from the water. Finding the magical balance can take as long as a scientific career.

The first mechanosensitive channel to be crystallized was MscL -- not the protein in E. coli but the analogous molecule (a homolog) from the bacterium that causes tuberculosis. This work was done in the lab of one of Haswell's co-authors, Douglas C. Rees a Howard Hughes investigator at the California Institute of Technology.

MscS from E. coli was crystallized in the Rees laboratory several years later, in 2002, and an MscS protein with a mutation that left it stuck in the presumed open state was crystallized in the Booth laboratory in 2008. "So now we have two crystal structures for MscS and two (from different bacterial strains) for MscL," Haswell says.

Of plants and mutants

Up to this point, mechanosensitive channels might not seem all that interesting because the lives of bacteria are not of supreme interest to us unless they are making us ill.

However, says, Haswell, in the early 2000s, scientists began to compare the genes for the bacterial channels to the genomes of other organisms and they discovered that there are homologous sequences not just in other bacteria but also in some multicellular organisms, including plants.

"This is where I got involved," she says. "I was interested in gravity and touch response in plants. I saw these papers and thought these homologs were great candidates for proteins that might mediate those responses."

"There are 10 MscS-homologs in Arabidopsis and no MscL homologs," she says. "What's more, different homologs are found not just in the cell membrane but also in chloroplast and mitochondrial membranes. "

The chloroplast is the light-capturing organelle in a plant cell and the mitochondria is its power station; both are thought to be once-independent organisms that were engulfed and enslaved by cells which found them useful. Their membranes are vestiges of their free-living past.

The number of homologs and their locations in plant cells suggests these channels do much more than prevent the cells from taking on board too much water.

So what exactly were they doing? To find out Haswell got online and ordered Arabidopsis seeds from the Salk collection in La Jolla, Calif., each of which had a mutation in one of the 10 channel genes.

From these mutants she's learned that two of the ten channels control chloroplast size and proper division as well as leaf shape. Plants with mutations in these two MscS channel homologs have giant chloroplasts that haven't divided properly. The monster chloroplasts garnered her lab the cover of the August issue of The Plant Cell.

"We showed that bacteria lacking MscS and MscL don't divide properly either,"Haswell says, "so the link between these channels and division is evolutionarily conserved."

The big idea

But Haswell and her co-authors think they are only scratching the surface. "We are basing our understanding of this class of channels on MscS itself, which is a very reduced form of the channel," she says. "It's relatively tiny."

"But we know that some of the members of this family have long extensions that stick out from the membrane either outside or inside the cell. We suspect this means that the channels not only discharge ions, but that they also signal to the whole cell in other ways. They may be integrated into common signaling pathways, such as the cellular osmotic stress response pathway.

We think we may be missing a lot of complexity by focusing too exclusively on the first members of this family of proteins to be found and characterized," she says. "We think there's a common channel core that makes these proteins respond to membrane tension but that all kinds of functionally relevant regulation may be layered on top of that."

"For example," she says, "there's a channel in E. coli that's closely related to MscS that has a huge extension outside the cell that makes it sensitive to potassium. So it's a mechanosensitive channel but it only gates in the presence of potassium. What that's important for, we don't yet know, but it tells us there are other functions out there we haven't studied."

What about the sensitive plant?

So are these channels at the bottom of the really fast plant movements like the sensitive plant's famous touch shyness? (To see a movie of this and other "nastic" (fast) movements, go to the Plants in Motion site maintained by Haswell's colleague Roger P. Hangartner of Indiana University).

Haswell is circumspect. "It's possible," she says. "In the case of Mimosa pudica there's probably an electrical impulse that triggers a loss of water and turgor in cells at the base of each leaflet, so these channel proteins are great candidates.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Washington University in St. Louis. The original article was written by Diana Lutz.

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: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/10/111021125711.htm

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Three Reasons Rick Perry Is Still Down in the Polls (ContributorNetwork)

Texas Gov. Rick Perry, a candidate for president of the United States, should by now be the front runner, perhaps even over Mitt Romney, the former Mass governor. Indeed, for a time, Perry was the front runner.

The fall of Perry in the polls since his surge just after his announcement for president has been ascribed to a series of poor debate performances. However there are two major issues that have irked conservative voters concerning Perry. In addition Perry's campaign has been snake bit by a press report that interjected the ugly issue of race into his campaign and character.

What is the Texas Dream Act?

The Texas Dream Act is a law signed by Gov. Perry in 2001 that allowed certain children of illegal aliens to attempt Texas institutions of higher education at in-state tuition rates. A student has to have lived in Texas for a certain number of years, has to have attended and graduated from a Texas high school or gotten a GED, and has to have applied to the Immigration and Naturalization Service for legal status. The act passed by overwhelming margins and was considered non controversial at the time.

However, since 2001, illegal immigration has become a burning issue in American politics, particularly for conservative voters. The Texas Dream Act is seen by many as a magnet for illegal aliens, who might use it to take their children to the United States in order to get a better education. Perry did not help matters when he suggested that those who did not support the act lacked a heart.

What was the HPV Vaccination Program?

In February, 2007, Perry issued an executive order requiring that Texas girls receive the HPV vaccination which protects against the human papilloma virus, thought to lead to cervical cancer. Perry was criticized for, in effect, using government power to override parental authority, since the girls being vaccinated were still minors. That the girls were still minors and were getting protection from a sexually transmitted disease was another flash point among conservative Texans. There was also the matter of an alleged relationship between Perry and Merck, the manufacturer of the drug. The Texas Legislature passed a law undoing the order.

What was N Word Rock?

A hunting camp used by Perry and his family was called by a name that no one in polite society uses again. It was marked by a rock by the gate to the hunting area. Perry claimed that his father had the name on the rock painted over as soon as possible. There are those who dispute that story, suggesting at least racial insensitivity on the part of Perry. Herman Cain, the Godfather's Pizza CEO and rival for the president of Perry's, made that suggestion.

Texas resident Mark Whittington writes about state issues for the Yahoo! Contributor Network .

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111021/pl_ac/10258565_three_reasons_rick_perry_is_still_down_in_the_polls

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Tax reform is essential, inevitable, and impossible

Tax reform is even more necessary now than it was in 1986. Everyone agrees that the tax system is complex, unfair, and inefficient.

Twenty-five years ago tomorrow, Ronald Reagan signed the Tax Reform Act of 1986. It was a beautiful fall day and the signing was on the back lawn of the White House. I was there along with many of the other Treasury staff who worked on the historic legislation, as well as a bus load of tourists from Iowa who were hoping for a White House tour, but had to settle for parts as extras in the stagecraft of official Washington. Because I am really tall (6?6?), one tourist asked me to take a picture of the scene, which she couldn?t see through the crowd. I hope it came out.

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I loved tax reform. It lured me away from the sleepy New England college where I was a professor and changed my life. Whether you judge TRA86 a success or a failure, it was a major change to the tax code. It cut top individual income tax rates from 50 to 28% and corporate rates from 46 to 34%. It eliminated a host of loopholes, deductions, and preferences?mostly on the corporate side. It removed poor people from the income tax rolls. It taxed capital gains the same as ordinary income, eliminating the single biggest driver of individual income tax shelters and making it possible to slash top tax rates while maintaining the progressivity of the income tax.

And it was fun. Treasury and Hill staff who worked on tax reform worked incredibly long hours crafting and recrafting provisions as the bill evolved through its many permutations. It was thrilling. Even though almost nobody actually thought it would become law, imagining a complete rewrite of the tax code is about as much fun as a tax geek can have. We were rewriting the Internal Revenue Code of 1954. Exciting!

But there was little reason for optimism until late in the process. The first version that passed the House wasn?t much of a reform. Compared with the pristine blueprint that Treasury produced for the President in 1984, the House bill had restored most of the loopholes and didn?t cut rates much. The Congressional leadership didn?t look promising. Ways and Means Chairman Dan Rostenkowski was an old school Chicago pol. (Later, he?d go to jail for embezzling postage stamps.) Senate Finance Chairman Bob Packwood used to have weekly meetings with his big donors where they?d tell him about their desires?none of which involved paring loopholes and deductions. (Packwood eventually retired in disgrace after several female staffers recounted his improper advances.) But at some point, these sleazy pols decided that reform was good politics. Ronald Reagan?s style of benign neglect turned out to be perfect for tax reform. He?d be AWOL for months, and then show up at a key point to make a great speech or do some arm-twisting. A junior senator from New Jersey, known more for his jump shot than his legislative prowess, turned out to be a master tactician and strategist. Bill Bradley, who later proved to be a lousy politician on the national stage when he ran for president, had unsurpassed skills in the back rooms and ante chambers of Congress.

Somehow, after multiple near-death experiences, the Tax Reform Act passed with overwhelming bipartisan majorities in both Houses of Congress and was signed by the president on that beautiful fall day. I stayed in Washington, made some amazing friends, got to work on Health Reform I at CBO in 1994, returned to the Treasury to head up the office where I?d been a staffer during tax reform, started the Tax Policy Center, and eventually returned to academia to hold a chair in memory of one of my legislative heroes, Pat Moynihan (who was a senior Democrat on Senate Finance during tax reform). I?m pretty sure none of that would have happened without tax reform as I?d never have come to Washington in the first place. So I have just warm feelings about the Tax Reform Act of 1986.

And it?s easy to get excited about the possibility of a Tax Reform Act of 2014. Tax reform is even more necessary now than it was in 1986. Everyone agrees that the tax system is complex, unfair, and inefficient. And it doesn?t come close to raising enough revenue to pay for the government, whose needs will only grow as the baby boomers retire and health care costs continue to rise. There are lots of tax reform plans out there, including the ones produced by theBipartisan Policy Center (my favorite since I helped write it), the Bowles-Simpson panel, and an excellent report commissioned by President Bush. There?s even an action-forcing event in 2012 when the Bush tax cuts are scheduled to expire. Rather than extending what everyone agrees is a deeply dysfunctional tax code, why not remake it to meet the needs of 21st century America?

Cue the patriotic music.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/x0JnP8sAOW4/Tax-reform-is-essential-inevitable-and-impossible

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