Monday, 31 October 2011

The Herman Cain sexual harassment allegations: 'Devastating'? (The Week)

New York ? A bombshell Politico story alleging past bad behavior by Cain threatens to derail the GOP presidential hopeful's thriving campaign

Surprise GOP presidential frontrunner Herman Cain was accused of inappropriate, "sexually suggestive behavior" by two female employees who worked for him during his tenure as head of the National Restaurant Association in the 1990s,?according to a "devastating"?report?published Sunday night by?Politico.?Details on the specific allegations remain scant, but the two women were reportedly paid settlements to leave the trade association after these episodes. The Cain camp argues?that Politico is "casting aspersions on [Cain's] character and spreading rumors that never stood up to the facts." On Fox News Monday morning, Cain acknowledged that the women had indeed accused him in the '90s, but called their allegations "totally baseless and totally false." How bad is this for Cain?

It's a bomb, but it can be defused:?This is serious,?says Joe Gandelman at?The Moderate Voice. The damning allegations are apparently well-sourced and thoroughly vetted. But this bombshell?doesn't have to spell the end of Cain's campaign. If he attempts to "defuse the charges head on" with specific answers to every question asked, the story will fade. Attacking?Politico?might seem smart since that strategy "will play well to the party's conservative base," which loves to discredit the supposedly liberal media, but it will only open Cain up to more scrutiny, essentially "inviting the media" to dig up more dirt. If Cain is swift, smart, and honest, he can still make this go away.
"The?Politico?breaks Herman Cain scandal"

Actually, this could ruin Cain:?It may not matter whether these allegations are even true,?says Ed Driscoll at?Pajamas Media. "It's the attack that counts," especially with relatively disengaged voters who may only remember the screaming headline. The Cain campaign's response will be key to determining how damaging this story will be ? and so far, Team Cain's "awful," muddled response does not inspire confidence. A long-winded rebuttal on TV by Cain's spokesman Sunday night, for instance, "did nothing to stop his employer's potential hemorrhaging."?
"The?Politico?draws first blood"

C'mon. This is a transparent attack by the liberal media: Just like the shameful accusations against Clarence Thomas in 1991, this is another "high-tech lynching"of a conservative black man conducted by members of the liberal media, says Jeffrey Lord at The American Spectator. When Bill Clinton faced the Lewinsky sex scandal during his second term, his defenders argued that "these kind of charges were only about sex," and not relevant to his political job. But when a conservative black candidate is accused by anonymous women of "inappropriate behavior," it's considered enough to keep him out of the Oval Office? What a double standard.
"High-tech lynching: The sequel starring Herman Cain"

If anything, this proves Cain is for real: It's no coincidence that someone leaked this story to Politico?now, says Erick Erickson at Red State. It's an indicator that Cain's rivals are taking his "very real" polling lead seriously. In past GOP nominating fights, "we have never seen a candidate publicly vetted... like this." The closest comparison is Mike Huckabee in 2008, who faced "a never ending media attack" as rival GOP campaigns were caught off guard by Huckabee's success, and dished dirt to the media to squelch Huckabee's surge. It's clear that some establishment figures "want to make sure Herman Cain cannot become Mike Huckabee for 2012."
"The oppo dump on Herman Cain begins in earnest"

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politicsopinion/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/theweek/20111031/cm_theweek/220915

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YouTube launches broad entertainment venture

NEW YORK (AP) ? YouTube is making a bold step into original programming in an entertainment venture with some 100 content creators, from Madonna to The Wall Street Journal.

The Google Inc.-owned video site said Friday that it's launching more than 100 new video channels. The partners include an array of Hollywood production companies, celebrities and new media groups that will produce mainly niche-oriented videos.

YouTube is shelling out $100 million to producers, according to people familiar with the matter, who spoke on condition of anonymity. The money is an advance on advertising money the videos will bring in, and Google will recoup its portion first before splitting the proceeds. Advances are as high as $5 million per channel, said another person familiar with the arrangement, also speaking on condition of anonymity.

Neither person was authorized to comment publicly on the matter.

Google declined to offer financial details of the deals, but said the majority of revenue will go to partners.

Participants include Madonna, former NBA star Shaquille O'Neal, comedian Amy Poehler, actor Ashton Kutcher, "Office" star Rainn Wilson, spiritual doctor Deepak Chopra and "Modern Family" actress Sofia Vergara. Most are creating channels through their production companies. Madonna is a partner with the dance channel DanceOn, while O'Neal plans the Comedy Shaq Network.

Lionsgate is presenting a fitness channel, and other channels will be launched by news satire the Onion, professional wrestling's WWE, online magazine Slate and news service Thomson Reuters.

The channels will roll out beginning this month, though most will premiere next year. YouTube says the channels will add 25 hours of new original content daily, with dozens of Web series debuting at scheduled times.

Ultimately, YouTube is aiming to create a new digital video platform that will rival television programming.

In a blog posting Friday night, YouTube said the channels are being developed "specifically for the digital age." The video site compared the expanded video offerings to the advent of cable television.

YouTube has tried to build a more advertiser-friendly product of professional-quality video, as opposed to simply user-created videos. Advertisers generally prefer to have their ads matched with known quantities. YouTube has also previously tried to urge viewers to stay longer with TV-like services like the YouTube Leanback, which continuously plays a personalized selection of videos.

Google is also looking to add professionally produced content to its huge roster of user-generated videos, to give users of its Google TV platform something to watch.

Major Hollywood networks such as News Corp.'s Fox and The Walt Disney Co.'s ABC have blocked their content from being shown on Google TV because the sides have been unable to come to a licensing deal that the networks believes pays them fairly. Networks also don't want to jeopardize their lucrative relationship with pay TV distributors like Comcast Corp. and DirecTV.

Google is a platform that has been adopted by set-top box maker Logitech, which makes a device called a Logitech Revue that sells for $100.

___

Nakashima reported from Los Angeles.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2011-10-28-YouTube-Original%20Programming/id-d9934720cdf0476ebfe1eb1af1042aea

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Pasco County state golf preview

State Golf Tournament

WHEN: Tuesday and Wednesday

WHERE: 2A ? Mission Inn Resort and Club (El Campeon and Las Colinas courses), 10400 County Road 48, Howey-in-the-Hills; 1A boys ? Deer Island Golf and Lake Club, 18000 Eagles Way, Tavares; 1A girls ? Harbor Hills Country Club, 6538 Lake Griffin Road, Lady Lake

GOLFERS (school, class): 2A ? Dylan Strout (Mitchell, Jr.); 1A ? Austin Padova (Fivay, Sr.); Lauren Riehle (Saddlebrook Prep, Sr.)

NEED TO KNOW: Of the three individual golfer's to advance to the state tournament, Strout shot the lowest at regions, plus has been the most consistent during the golf postseason. After a 74 at Sunshine Athletic Conference and a 75 at districts, Strout shot a regional low-round 74 to become the first Mustangs boys golfer to advance to state. ... Padova makes his third-straight individual trip to state. As a sophomore at Ridgewood, he finished 49th (+11), as a junior finished 15th (+1), but has struggled the past two rounds: 83 at districts and 78 at regionals. ... Riehle is making her third trip to state, where she finished both 37th (+16) last season and as an eighth grader (+31), but also shot a 6-over 78 at regionals and an even-par 72 at districts.

Mike Camunas

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/tbo/sports/~3/IMO4klTd6JQ/

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Saturday, 29 October 2011

Attorney General Holder to face lawmakers on gun sting (reuters)

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Durbin: If 2012 is a ???referendum,??? Democrats are ???in trouble??? (Daily Caller)

Illinois Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin told the Chicago Tribune that if the 2012 election is a ?referendum? on President Barack Obama, then Democrats are ?in trouble.?

In an interview Thursday?for the Tribune?s ?Chicago Live? series, Durbin was asked about the election.

?If it is a referendum, then we?re in trouble because the economy?s not good and people?ll say, ?well, I just want to make it clear I don?t like the way things are,?? Durbin said.

?However,? Durbin clarified, ?it won?t be. It?ll be a contest. And there?ll be two people ? the president, and the Republican nominee ? with very different views on what to do with America, where it should go from here, and that?s what the voters will make their choice on.?

See the video here. Durbin?s comments are six minutes in.

Follow Alexis on Twitter

Read more stories from The Daily Caller

Durbin: If 2012 is a 'referendum,' Democrats are 'in trouble'

Matthew Perry lists $20 million in real estate but has no comment on capital gains tax

FBI report warns of growing Juggalo threat

Rep. Trey Gowdy: I'm not a 'tea party congressman'

Critics: Obama's college aid plan increases tuition costs, hurts students

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/democrats/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/dailycaller/20111028/pl_dailycaller/durbinif2012isareferendumdemocratsareintrouble

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Friday, 28 October 2011

Treasury prices sink on hopes for Europe bank plan (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Spreading optimism about Europe's ability to solve its debt crisis sent Treasurys lower Wednesday as traders sought out riskier investments.

The price of the 10-year Treasury note dropped 81 cents for every $100 invested, pushing the yield up to 2.21 percent from 2.14 percent late Tuesday.

Traders were monitoring talks between European leaders at propping up the region's banks, bailing out Greece and preventing the crisis from spreading to other countries.

European banks will be forced to increase their capital cushions to help them survive choppy financial markets, officials said. The money-raising would be the first step of a larger plan aimed at stabilizing Europe's financial markets and preventing a deep recession there.

However, leaders and banks remain at odds over the size of losses banks will take on Greek bonds they hold. Greece can't afford to repay its lenders. Writing down the value of Greek debt will cause massive losses for French and German banks.

Signals that a plan is taking shape sent U.S. stocks higher and Treasury prices lower. Stocks offer a bigger upside for investors when the economy is growing. Treasurys are more attractive when traders fear losses on other investments.

Treasury prices began to rise sharply in February as the U.S. economy weakened and Europe's debt crisis threatened to spread to the U.S. Strong demand pushed the 10-year yield to a record low of 1.71 percent on Sept. 22. The yield has risen since then as the economy improved and European leaders appeared closer to solving the debt crisis.

Also Wednesday, an auction of five-year Treasury notes drew strong interest, as the uncertain economic and financial outlook kept demand high for investments seen as safe.

The Treasury Department auctioned $35 billion in notes at a yield of 1.055 percent, slightly lower than the yield of five-year notes trading in the market. That means traders' bids were higher than market prices for similar investments.

The ratio of bids to Treasurys sold was higher than the recent average, according to CRT Capital Group LLC. The higher ratio reflects rising demand.

The yield on the five-year Treasury note later rose to 1.07 percent from 0.99 percent late Tuesday.

The price of the 30-year Treasury bond fell $1.72 for every $100 invested, pushing its yield up to 3.21 percent from 3.15 percent.

The yield on the two-year Treasury note rose to 0.29 percent from 0.25 percent.

The yield on the three-month Treasury bill rose to 0.02 percent from 0.01 percent. Its discount wasn't available.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111026/ap_on_bi_ge/us_credit_markets

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Thursday, 27 October 2011

Panetta: No decision yet on US-Libya military ties (AP)

TOKYO ? U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta pointedly declined Tuesday to say whether the Obama administration intends to seek military ties with Libya's new government, amid uncertainty about Islamist influences there after the demise of strongman Moammar Gadhafi.

Asked at a news conference whether Libya should be a U.S. military partner and what such a relationship would entail, Panetta said the U.S. would take its lead from NATO, whose months-long air campaign helped Libyan rebels oust and eventually kill Gadhafi.

Panetta offered no direct clues to the administration's inclinations on establishing military-to-military relations with the North African nation.

"A lot of that at this point still rests with NATO," Panetta said, adding that the U.S.-led alliance was discussing when to end its Libya mission. He added that he understood some Libya leaders had called for NATO to continue its mission "during this interim as they try to establish some new governance."

"So I guess what I would do at this point is leave the decision as to future security involvement in the hands of NATO and then beyond that, that will give us a basis on which to determine whether there is an additional role," he said.

He said the immediate U.S. concerns in Libya are focused on the possibility of providing medical assistance to Libya's wounded and preventing weapons from falling into the wrong hands. Of particular concern are anti-aircraft weapons.

Questions also persist about the nature of the new Libya and the degree of Islamist influence in a government now led by National Transitional Council leader Mustafa Abdul-Jalil, who said Sunday that Islamic Sharia law would be the main source of legislation, that laws contradicting its tenets would be nullified, and that polygamy would be legalized.

Libya is a deeply conservative Muslim nation, with most women wearing headscarves or the all-encompassing niqab. Islamists were heavily repressed under Gadhafi and are eager to have their say, raising the prospect of a battle for influence between hardline and moderate Muslims.

During the rebel uprising, the U.S. military was a key participant in the NATO air campaign. But Washington chose not to provide training for the rebels or supply them with weapons. Some in Washington have questioned the extent of their commitment to democracy.

At his news conference with Japanese Defense Minister Yasuo Ichikawa, Panetta also expressed satisfaction with Japan's efforts to end a stalemate over the relocation of U.S. Marines on the southern Japanese island of Okinawa.

Panetta, on his first visit to Asia as Pentagon chief, was scheduled to travel Wednesday to South Korea to meet with government leaders and talk to U.S. troops.

___

Robert Burns can be reached on Twitter at http://twitter.com/robertburnsAP

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111025/ap_on_re_as/as_panetta_asia

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Monday, 24 October 2011

Blue Arkansas ? Blog Archive ? Auto-crash? Get An Automotive ...

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Source: http://bluearkansasblog.com/?p=8055

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Mauritania army raid killed al-Qaida group leader (AP)

NOUAKCHOTT, Mauritania ? A senior military official in Mauritania's army says soldiers killed a leader of al-Qaida's North Africa affiliate during an air raid this week.

The colonel who spoke on the condition of anonymity following military protocol said late Friday that Tiyib Ould Sidi Ali has been eliminated. He said that Ali was a leader for al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb and was wanted for his role in a failed bombing attempt on the capital in February, and an attack against the Israeli Embassy in Mauritania in 2008.

Mauritania's army said its soldiers conducted an air raid in the Wagadou Forest just across the border in the nation of Mali on Thursday because AQIM, which is based there, was preparing to mount an attack on Mauritanian soil.

AQIM is an Algerian-born terrorist group that joined with al-Qaida in 2006 and has become a security threat in northwestern Africa.

(This version Corrects that Tiyib is first name, Ali is last.)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111022/ap_on_re_af/af_mauritania_al_qaida

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Sunday, 23 October 2011

Toshiba Satellite P755-S5390


Sometimes all you need is a computer that can get things done. That description definitely applies to the Toshiba Satellite P755-S5390 ($799.99 list at Staples), a good-size laptop with an eye-catching design and some forward-thinking hardware that propels it to success at almost any everyday task you can throw at it short of gaming. Its battery life leaves something to be desired, but aside from that it?s a surprisingly powerful and well-rounded system that just narrowly misses out on the top tier of mainstream models.

Design
Weighing 5.6 pounds and measuring 1.1 by 13.4 by 9 inches (HWD), the P755-S5390 is about average in terms of portability. Toshiba calls the color of its plastic chassis ?Platinum,? but we call that optimistic: Think of it as a shiny dark gray with a raised and textured horizontal pattern (which Toshiba also dubs its Fusion X2 Finish) gracing the lid and palm rest; the striping extends to the keyboard deck and the touch pad, too, though they look much darker and more matte in style. Also on the lid you?ll find a silvery Toshiba logo; extending around edge of the lid and the inside of the laptop is a smooth and shiny border. The bezel surrounding the 15.6-inch widescreen 1,366-by-768 display (in which there is, of course, a webcam) and the chiclet-style keys are regular black, with the latter bearing subdued light-gray printing rather than a blaring white.

You do get that color, however, when you turn on the laptop. You'll see it in the system power and activity lights, a strip on the touch pad, and the Satellite logo on the lower-left corner. It's also prominent in the row of media-control and other laptop-function keys located near the display hinge: one starts the Toshiba eco Utility, one toggles the wireless on and off, one plays or pauses your media, one mutes the sound, and a strip lets you adjust the volume).

A nice addition to the keyboard is a full-size number pad; the space bar, alas, is unusually short and squat in design, which can occasionally make it difficult to press. Located above the touch pad is a button that deactivates it, and the mouse buttons are located below; they?re soft and only moderately clicky, but as part of the design scheme they?re coated with the same material as the slick outside border of the laptop, which can make your fingers slide across them.

Features
The Intel Core i7-2670QM processor in the P755-S5390 is an especially robust chip: It has four processing cores that can divide into eight threads by way of Intel?s Hyper-Threading technology, and it has a standard clock speed of 2.2GHz that can rise to as much as 3.1GHz when Turbo Boost is activated. As a member of Intel?s second-generation Core (aka ?Sandy Bridge?) family, this CPU also gives you access to that line?s full swath of features, including Quick Sync Video (for accelerated media format conversions) and Wireless Display 2.0 (for streaming content to your HDTV if you own?a Netgear Push2TV adapter).

Rounding out the components are 6GB of DDR3 RAM that?s upgradable to 8GB; a 640GB hard drive; 802.11b/g/n wireless networking; and built-in Harman Kardon stereo speakers. On the left edge of the system you?ll find VGA and HDMI ports for outputting video to an external display, an Ethernet jack, and two USB ports: one 2.0 and one the faster 3.0. A multiformat card reader is positioned at the very center of the laptop?s front edge; on the right edge are the headphone and microphone jacks, two USB 2.0 ports, and the DVD burner.

Preinstalled on the hard drive are the Windows 7 Home Premium operating system, and some additional software items you may or may not find useful: Windows Live Essentials, a 30-day trial of Norton Internet Security 2012, Microsoft Office Starter 2010, Skype, and the expected swath of Toshiba tools and utilities.

Customers who buy this system from Staples can avail themselves of several services the retailer offers. This includes setting the new system up, data transfer from your old PC to your new one, software installation, and tech support and protection plans that range in price from $14.99 to $169.99.

Performance
Toshiba Satellite P755-S5390The P755-S5390 is a bit difficult to categorize in terms of performance. Though the laptop?s price places it squarely in the mainstream category, its processor is a fair sight better than what we usually see in this class?but the system lacks the robust rounder edges we?d usually use to identify a desktop replacement laptop. So compared with other midrange systems, the P755-S5390 comes out on top in all cases, even against our Editors? Choice Asus U46E-BAL5 ($699.99 list, 4.5 stars)?and the more gaming-oriented, Sandy Bridge version of the HP Envy 14 ($1,079.99 direct, 4 stars). It nabbed a straight 2,400 in our PCMark 7 overall performance test, whereas the Asus U46E-BAL5 reached only 2,215; the P755-S5390?s times of 1 minute 31 seconds in Handbrake and 3:39 in Adobe Photoshop CS5, and its score of 5.35 in CineBench R11.5, were markedly better than what we saw from any other similar system we tested.

Even more disappointing were its gaming capabilities. The P755-S5390 could never get above (or even close to) our 30-frames-per-second (fps) threshold for smooth playability; it cracked into the very low 20fps on both our Crysis and Lost Planet 2 tests (at 1,024-by-768 resolution, with medium details), but no higher. In both cases, these numbers were better than those of the Asus U46E-BAL5, but the HP Envy 14 did much better in Crysis (45.5fps) and in our 3DMark 06 video benchmark test (7,751 versus 4,992 for the P755-S5390 at 1,024 by 768; and 6,509 versus 4,139 at the systems? native resolutions).

Battery life, on the other hand, was far from the P755-S5390?s strong suit. Loaded with its standard 48Wh battery, it only lasted 4 hours 11 minutes during our MobileMark 2007 battery-rundown test?more than an hour shorter than what you get with the HP Envy (5:15) and less than half what the Samsung QX411-W01 can deliver (a stunning 8:48). Even looked at against desktop replacement systems it?s a poor showing?the lowest amount of life among them comes from the most recent 15-inch Apple MacBook Pro ($2,199.99 direct, 4 stars)?and even that ekes out 4:40.

Unlike our Editors? Choice, the Asus U46E-BAL5, the Toshiba Satellite P755-S5390 isn?t intricately appointed in every area: You won?t find on it the Asus U46E-BAL5?s larger hard drive, more RAM, WiMAX, remarkable longevity when not plugged in, or lower price. So we have to let the Asus U46E-BAL5 retain its edge, despite the P755-S5390?s superior performance on all our productivity tests. Even so, the P755-S5390 stands out from the mainstream crowd and is absolutely worth considering if you have a lot of work to do?and quickly.

BENCHMARK TEST RESULTS

More laptop reviews:
??? Toshiba Satellite P775-S7320
??? Asus U56E-BBL6
??? Toshiba Satellite L775D-S7340
??? Dell Inspiron 15R (I15RN-5882DBK)
??? Dell Inspiron 14R (I14RN-1364PBL)
?? more

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Saturday, 22 October 2011

Murdoch to pay $3.2 million to schoolgirl's family (AP)

LONDON ? Rupert Murdoch's company said Friday it has agreed to pay 2 million pounds ($3.2 million) to the family of a murdered schoolgirl whose phone was hacked by the tabloid News of the World.

News International and the family of Milly Dowler confirmed the settlement in a joint statement.

Murdoch shut down the 168-year-old News of the World in July after evidence emerged that its reporters had eavesdropped on the telephone voice mail messages of the 13-year-old who disappeared in 2002 and was later found murdered.

The statement said Murdoch also will donate 1 million pounds ($1.6 million) to charities chosen by the Dowler family.

"Nothing that has been agreed will ever bring back Milly or undo the traumas of her disappearance and the horrendous murder trial earlier this year," the Dowlers said in the statement. "The only way that a fitting tribute could be agreed was to ensure that a very substantial donation to charity was made in Milly's memory. We hope that projects will be undertaken so that some good can come from this."

The revelation that reporters eavesdropped on Milly Dowler's voice mail messages while police were searching for her ? and mounting evidence that phone hacking was routine at the newspaper ? shook Murdoch's media empire, and sent tremors through Britain's political, police and media establishments.

The scandal has forced the resignation of two of London's top police officers, ousted executives at Murdoch's News Corp. and claimed the job of Prime Minister David Cameron's former spin doctor, Andy Coulson, an ex-News of the World editor.

Murdoch's global News Corp. has expressed contrition, launched an internal inquiry and set aside 20 million pounds ($32 million) to compensate victims, who could number in their hundreds. Detectives have informed more than 450 people that they might have been spied on by the newspaper.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/britain/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111021/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_britain_phone_hacking

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China's military in diplomatic charm offensive (AP)

BEIJING ? China may make its neighbors nervous with its robust military build-up, but it's also increasingly using the army as part of its charm offensive abroad.

The People's Liberation Army, in a cultural shift for an institution known for strident nationalism and unbending loyalty to the Communist Party, is expanding overseas aid missions and military exchanges in a major way. It sent 50 medics to flood-hit Pakistan this week and dispatched a hospital ship last month on a 105-day trip to poor nations in the Caribbean ? right in America's backyard.

The diplomatic push, part of a larger global campaign by the Chinese government, aims to portray China as a responsible rising power, while softening the image of the 2.3 million-member military and boosting its ties with other nations' armed forces.

"It's has been a big step for them, but China appreciates this as a part of the normal practices of respected major powers in their relations with other countries," said Ron Huisken of the Australian National University's Strategic and Defense Studies Center.

China's "soft power" drive also includes foreign aid, cultural exchange and a massive expansion of state television to reach foreign audiences ? all attempts to win friends and correct what China considers to be a biased Western portrayal of it.

The military took its first big stab at overseas disaster relief last year, sending helicopters to help out with floods in Pakistan. Last month, the air force flew 7,000 tents to the once-again flood-ravaged country and it is also shipping aid to flooded areas of Thailand.

The People's Liberation Army, or PLA, has also become the biggest contributor of manpower to U.N. peace keeping missions, and its navy is part of a multinational anti-piracy flotilla off the coast of Somalia.

The Peace Ark hospital ship, which sailed to the Horn of Africa last year, set off on Sept. 16 for Cuba, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, and Costa Rica. More than 100 medical personnel are aboard for an operation dubbed Harmonious Mission 2011.

"The international community expects China to play such a role and that is part of China's foreign policy," said Xiong Zhiyong of the China Foreign Affairs University in Beijing.

Only recently has the PLA acquired the skills, equipement, and political will to carry out such missions.

Its previous inability to provide relief overseas was especially evident following the 2004 Asian tsunami.

While the U.S. Navy and other countries' militaries rapidly shipped in huge amounts of aid and personnel, and winning tremendous goodwill for their governments, China could do little more than send a medical team to Indonesia, along with tents and other supplies.

Overseas missions also help grow its ability to deal with domestic disasters, such as the massive 2008 Sichuan earthquake, Xiong said.

At home, students from across the developing world are increasingly coming to China to take two-year military command courses, while the PLA's University of Science and Technology has taken in a dozen army officer candidates from Laos, Mongolia, Turkmenistan and seven other countries.

The military's newspaper called that a sign the force is "integrating itself into the world with a much more open attitude."

Foreign military attaches are being granted more access to Chinese bases and training exercises, although much of that is carefully scripted. Top commanders have also began making more frequent visits abroad and participating in multinational forums such as the annual Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore that attracts top defense officials from the U.S., Britain, and other major nations.

The exchanges are part of the PLA's effort to evolve into a modern force, right down to the introduction of smart new dress uniforms intended to break down the distinction between PLA officers and their Western counterparts.

The military has been upgrading its warplanes, ships and submarines, and began sea trials this summer on a refurbished Soviet aircraft carrier, demonstrating how a once-decrepit force seems determined to go toe-to-toe with the U.S. and other regional militaries.

While that modernization disconcerts the U.S. and China's neighbors, China says it's needed to defend its interests. Some analysts say military diplomacy is a way to show off its strength to potential rivals, while also joining in international relief efforts.

"There is little trust between China and the U.S. so China's recent response is to demonstrate its military capability, which also fits its commitment to helping the global community," said Ni Lexiong, a military expert at Shanghai University of Political Science and Law.

Humanitarian missions such as the dispatch of a hospital ship to Cuba also deliver a signal of China's military resolve to its own public without risking actual confrontations with the U.S. or others, Ni said.

"The enormous public pressure requires a response and this doubly demonstrates the Chinese navy's logistical capability," Ni said.

The U.S. military for its part has been generally supportive of the PLA's humanitarian drive, saying that boosts transparency and chances for peaceful interactions.

"As the Chinese military develops the capability to deliver medical and humanitarian assistance beyond its immediate region, there will be opportunities for the United States and China to collaborate and share," the Pentagon said in its most recent report to Congress on China's armed forces.

But on military exchanges, the PLA has yet to grasp the intrinsic value of strong ties, said Australian expert Huisken, citing the recent suspension of exchanges with the Pentagon over U.S. arms sales to Taiwan. It's unclear what if any exchanges have so far been suspended or canceled.

"It remains a relatively superficial program," he said. "We still don't have a clue what their real aspirations are."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111021/ap_on_re_as/as_china_charm_offensive

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Friday, 21 October 2011

Why did Rick Perry call Herman Cain 'brother'? (The Week)

New York ? In this week's GOP presidential debate, the Texas governor called his black rival "brother" ? while referring to white candidate Mitt Romney as "sir"

Texas Gov. Rick Perry came out swinging at Mitt Romney in Tuesday night's GOP presidential debate in Las Vegas, but he struck a more jocular tone with Herman Cain. "Herman, I love you, brother, but let me tell you something," Perry said before criticizing Cain's 9-9-9 tax plan. Then, a moment later: "I'll bump plans with you, brother, and we'll see who has the best idea." Cain is the only black candidate in the GOP race, and the only candidate who got the "brother" treatment from Perry. The Texan called Romney "sir" several times, though in a somewhat disparaging way (watch video below). Perry spokesman Ray Sullivan insists that these nicknames have nothing to do with race, and that Perry is simply "a friendly fellow. He uses that kind of language." But what does it mean that he only used that "kind of language" with Cain?

Perry was just being cynical: Perry wasn't trying to create a race flap with his "brother" talk,?says Al Sharpton,?quoted in the?New York?Daily News. He was trying to fix one ? namely, the controversy over his family's "Niggerhead" hunting camp. On Tuesday night,?Perry "was openly trying to befriend the only black man on the stage." That's certainly a "cynical" way for Perry to try and improve his image after the "Niggerhead" flap ? but hardly racist.
"Rick Perry calls Herman Cain 'brother'...: Racial dig or friendly gesture?"

"Brother" is a southern evangelical thing: People will view this very differently in the North and the South,?says Nia-Malika Henderson in?The Washington Post.?And remember, Cain and Perry are both religious southerners. Perry has publicly called white churchgoers "brother," too, because "it is a Sunday morning greeting that both Perry and Cain, a preacher, have likely extended and routinely received before and after church service." It's a "term of endearment, shorthand for 'brothers in Christ.'"
"Rick Perry called Herman Cain 'brother.' Why?"

Regardless, Perry shouldn't have called Cain "brother": "Maybe it was a Christian dog whistle" on Perry's part, says Frank James at NPR. But plenty of other GOP candidates are also "well known for their Christian faith," and Perry didn't call them "brother." Fair or not, Perry's language set people's "nerves on edge" because "when a white man calls a black man 'brother' and if they are not actually brothers (think adoption), or in a Greek-letter fraternity, or soldiers... many a brotherized black man will immediately feel condescended to."
"Rick Perry 'brothers' Herman Cain and sets some nerves on edge"

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politicsopinion/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/theweek/20111020/cm_theweek/220489

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These Pizza Cones are Delicious, Portable Treat for Game Day Snacking [Food Hacks]

These Pizza Cones are Delicious, Portable Treat for Game Day Snacking Pizza is delicious, even more so when you make it yourself. Now you can take that pizza on the go with these pizza cones?all you need to make them is your favorite standard pizza recipe and an aluminum drink can to form the cones. Fill with delicious toppings, and bake. When you're finished, you'll have a fun and portable snack that's perfect for picnics, game-day snacks, or placating children.

Instructables user Mikeasaurus took an ordinary aluminum soda or beer can, cut off the top, and cut the top part of the can into vertical ribbons. Fold out those ribbons to make a conical shape out of the can, and then just wrap in your pizza dough, fill with your favorite pizza toppings, and toss in the oven.

Mikeasaurus walks you through the process of making a good pizza dough fro scratch and starting there, but we imagine you could use a pre-made pizza dough (as long as it's not pre-cooked) and your favorite toppings to get the same effect and save a little time (although nothing beats a good homemade pizza dough.) Eager to try this for yourself? Tried something similar and have something to say about the recipe? Share your thoughts in the comments below.

Pizza Cones | Instructables


You can reach Alan Henry, the author of this post, at alan@lifehacker.com, or better yet, follow him on Twitter or Google+.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/crcF4nLwd0E/these-pizza-cones-are-delicious-portable-treat-for-game-day-snacking

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Wednesday, 19 October 2011

New research links common RNA modification to obesity

ScienceDaily (Oct. 18, 2011) ? An international research team has discovered that a pervasive human RNA modification provides the physiological underpinning of the genetic regulatory process that contributes to obesity and type II diabetes.

European researchers showed in 2007 that the FTO gene was the major gene associated with obesity and type II diabetes, but the details of its physiological and cellular functioning remained unknown.

Now, a team led by University of Chicago chemistry professor Chuan He has demonstrated experimentally the importance of a reversible RNA modification process mediated by the FTO protein upon biological regulation. He and 10 co-authors from Chicago, China and England published the details of their finding in the Oct. 16 advance online edition of Nature Chemical Biology.

He and his colleagues have shown, for the first time, the existence of the reversible RNA modification process -- called methylation -- and that it potentially impacts protein expression and function through its action on a common RNA base: adenosine. The process is reversible because it can involve the addition or removal of a methyl group from adenosine. The team found that the FTO protein mediates cellular removal of the methyl group.

"An improved understanding of the normal functions of FTO, as exemplified by this work, could aid the development of novel anti-obesity therapies," said Stephen O'Rahilly, professor of clinical biochemistry and director of the Metabolic Research Laboratories at the University of Cambridge. O'Rahilly, a leading researcher in obesity and metabolic disease who also has studied FTO, was not directly involved in He's project.

"Variants around the FTO gene have consistently been associated with human obesity and artificial manipulation of the fto gene in mice clearly demonstrates that FTO plays a crucial role in the regulation of body weight," O'Rahilly explained. "However, the development of a deeper understanding of the normal biological role of FTO has been challenging."

Scientists already had demonstrated that FTO removes methyl groups from nucleic acids, but only on one rare type of DNA or RNA methylation. The new research from He and his colleagues shows that FTO also acts on the common messenger RNA modification called N6-methyladenosine, O'Rahilly said.

The paper arose from He's investigations of the AlkB family of proteins that act on nucleic acids. Based on this work, He and his collaborators proved that human cells exhibit reversible methylation of RNA bases, which significantly impact critical life processes.

Important but mysterious

Every human messenger RNA carries on average three to six methylations on adenosine. Scientists knew these methylations were extremely important but their function remained a mystery, He said. "For the first time, we show that these methylations are reversible and play a key role in human energy homeostasis," the process by which the body maintains a complex biochemical dynamic equilibrium.

The modification of N6-methyladenosine in messenger RNA is pervasive throughout the mammal kingdom and many other organisms. Despite its abundance, this modification's exact functional role remains unknown, He said. But his team's discovery strongly indicates that the modification has major roles in messenger RNA metabolism.

The finding may open a new research field -- RNA epigenetics -- for delving into the realm of biological regulatory processes, He said. The epigenetics of DNA and histones (proteins that package DNA in human cells) have become well-explored topics on the frontiers of biological research over the last 10 to 20 years. "It is safe to say 50 percent of biologists work on subjects related to epigenetics one way or another," He said.

DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) for decades has reigned as king over biological research on epigenetics of nucleic acids, as He noted in the December 2010 issue of Nature Chemical Biology. RNA (ribonucleic acid) modification was regarded more as a vassal that merely fine-tunes gene expression and regulation, until this recent discovery, which confirms the speculation by He and others that RNA modification has secretly wielded a far greater genetic influence than anyone had previously suspected. That's why, as He wrote last year, "reversible RNA modification might represent another realm for biological regulation in the form of 'RNA epigenetics.'"

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted (with editorial adaptations by ScienceDaily staff) from materials provided by University of Chicago. The original article was written by Steve Koppes.

Journal References:

  1. Guifang Jia, Ye Fu, Xu Zhao, Qing Dai, Guanqun Zheng, Ying Yang, Chengqi Yi, Tomas Lindahl, Tao Pan, Yun-Gui Yang, Chuan He. N6-Methyladenosine in nuclear RNA is a major substrate of the obesity-associated FTO. Nature Chemical Biology, 2011; DOI: 10.1038/nchembio.687
  2. Chuan He. Grand Challenge Commentary: RNA epigenetics? Nature Chemical Biology, 2010; 6 (12): 863 DOI: 10.1038/nchembio.482

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://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/10/111017155622.htm

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Monday, 17 October 2011

Emotions high ahead of Mideast prisoner swap

This week's planned Mideast prisoner swap is unleashing deep anguish in Israel and widespread elation in the Palestinian territories, laying bare the chasm of perspective dividing the two sides.

In Israel, the public is aghast at having to release convicted perpetrators of suicide bombings, deadly shootings and grisly kidnappings, although most understand that's what it takes to win freedom for a soldier captured during a routine patrol inside Israel at age 19.

The Palestinians, with equal vehemence, see the returnees as heroes who fought an occupier at a time of violence and argue moral equivalence between their actions and those of Israel's army.

These diverging narratives have been reflected in reactions to the deal, in which Israel will free some 1,027 Palestinian prisoners in exchange for Sgt. Gilad Schalit, captured by Gaza militants in a cross-border raid in June 2006.

Shalom Rahum, whose 16-year-old son Ofir was lured over the Internet to the West Bank by a woman and killed, said her release was reopening a painful episode.

"Our little consolation was our bit of justice," he said. "If there were a peace treaty, I'd say ... release all the prisoners because we are opening a new page. But we are not signing a peace treaty," he told Israel TV.

Following initial joy over the deal, Israelis have begun to ask questions about the lopsided price their government is paying. Many argue that militants who killed Israelis could return to armed activity and that releasing so many prisoners, including many implicated in deadly attacks, bolsters groups like Hamas at the expense of more moderate Palestinians.

To address Israeli security concerns, Hamas agreed to have more than 200 West Bank-based prisoners deported to either the penned-in Gaza Strip or to a third country, where it would be much harder to carry out attacks.

Of the 477 prisoners to be freed in the first of two groups, 285 were serving life in prison. The inmate with the longest sentence was serving 36 life terms.

While Israel has a long history of lopsided prisoner swaps, the Schalit deal has touched a nerve because memories of the attacks are so vivid. The list of prisoners who are being released reads like a who's who of perpetrators of some of the grisliest attacks of the second Palestinian uprising, which began in 2000 and lasted roughly five years.

They include the woman who directed a suicide bomber to a crowded Jerusalem pizzeria where he killed 16 people in 2001. The woman, Ahlam Tamimi, has said in a television interview that she has no regrets.

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Others on the list are Abdel Aziz Salha, who raised his bloody hands to a cheering crowd after killing two Israeli soldiers who accidentally drove into the West Bank city of Ramallah in 2000; Nasser Yateima, a mastermind of a hotel bombing that killed 30 people celebrating the Passover holiday in 2002; Ibrahim Younis, who planned a 2003 suicide bombing in Jerusalem that killed seven people, including an American-born doctor and his daughter who were celebrating on the eve of the young woman's wedding; and Fadi Ibrahim, the mastermind of a bus bombing in 2003 in the northern city of Haifa that killed 17 people.

Several families have filed court appeals against the prisoner swap, though that is not expected to halt the deal.

Ron Kehrman, whose daughter was among the victims in the Haifa attack, criticized the planned swap, saying it could result in more Israeli deaths. "Is the blood of the next captured soldier or citizen less red than the blood of Gilad Schalit?" he asked.

Other bereaved relatives were more accepting, acknowledging that Israel at least has a chance to bring back Schalit alive. Schalit's fate has become a national obsession, in part because military service is mandatory for Israeli Jews.

Among Palestinians, there is ongoing disagreement over whether the use of violence has been counterproductive in the quest for statehood. Recent polls indicate that support for attacks on Israelis has dropped since the uprising ended.

But even those opposed to violence on tactical grounds argue that the prisoners sacrificed for a common cause, and the Palestinians have the right to resist Israel's 44-year military occupation, even with what many elsewhere consider terrorist attacks.

Palestinians are quick to note that hundreds of Palestinian civilians have been killed in fighting with Israel as well, usually the result of "collateral damage" during military operations, such as targeted killings of militant leaders. Although Israel says it never intentionally targets civilians, Palestinians say civilian deaths are almost inevitable given the nature and locations of targets.

"It's a debate that will never end," said Kadura Fares, a Palestinian prisoners' rights advocate who himself spent 14 years in Israeli prisons for belonging to an armed group before emerging as an outspoken proponent of coexistence.

"An Israeli army officer, from our point of view, he is a terrorist if he gives orders to kill people or bomb certain areas. For Israelis, he is a hero," Fares said.

Fares said bombers or gunmen should not be held personally responsible for their actions because they were swept up in the atmosphere that prevailed at the time.

The issue of the prisoners is deeply emotional in Palestinian society, where virtually every family counts a member who has spent time in an Israeli prison. Israel says it is currently holding more than 5,000 Palestinian prisoners for crimes ranging from theft to infiltrating Israel illegally for work to carrying out deadly attacks.

In Gaza and the West Bank, Palestinians were preparing a hero's welcome for the returning prisoners.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas ? largely sidelined during the swap negotiations between Israel's government and Hamas, his political rival ? was planning a reception for released prisoners Tuesday, said an aide, Saeb Erekat.

The swap has dealt a setback to Abbas, who has long favored a negotiated peace deal with Israel. The implicit message of the deal to the Palestinian audience is that Israel will more readily make concessions under pressure than in negotiations with Palestinian moderates.

A Hamas leader in Gaza, Mahmoud Zahar, told the Israeli daily Yediot Ahronot in an interview published Sunday that the swap deal for Schalit will encourage the Islamic group to capture more soldiers.

"The lessons we've learned by kidnapping soldiers leads us to continue the kidnappings," the Hamas leader said.

___

Associated Press writers Mohammed Daraghmeh in Ramallah, West Bank, and Ibrahim Barzak in Gaza City, Gaza Strip, contributed to this report.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44920735/ns/world_news-mideast_n_africa/

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Twenty die in Mexican prison fight near border (Reuters)

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) ? Fighting in a prison on Mexico's border with the United States has killed 20 people and wounded 12 others, authorities said on Saturday.

The violence broke out this morning following an altercation between two inmates in the prison in Matamoros, a northeastern city right opposite Brownsville, Texas, the government of Tamaulipas state said in a statement.

Guards at the Centro de Ejecucion de Sanciones de Matamoros (CEDES) penitentiary later restored order with the aid of police, the statement added. The Tamaulipas government gave no details of weapons involved or how the victims died.

Many Mexican prisons are overcrowded and often plagued by violence linked to the country's powerful drug cartels. Turf wars between gangs fighting for control of smuggling routes in border regions have been particularly brutal.

The incident in Matamoros was one of the most violent to hit the country's prisons this year.

Since President Felipe Calderon's government sent in the army to crush the drug cartels at the end of 2006, more than 44,000 people have died in the ensuing violence.

(Reporting by Miguel Angel Gutierrez)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111015/us_nm/us_mexico_prison

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Report: Jobs memorial planned at Stanford Sunday (AP)

NEW YORK ? Apple is holding a memorial service for Steve Jobs on Sunday at Stanford University.

The Wall Street Journal says invitations have gone out to Silicon Valley luminaries and other people close to Jobs. Apple tells the newspaper that the evening event is private.

Apple has said that no public services are planned.

Jobs, who co-founded Apple and was the mastermind behind popular gadgets such as the iPhone and the iPad, died Oct. 5 at 56 after struggling for years with pancreatic cancer.

The Journal says a small private funeral was held a week ago. Apple is also holding an event this Wednesday for employees at its headquarters in Cupertino, Calif. It's billed as a celebration of his life.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/applecomputer/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111015/ap_on_hi_te/us_steve_jobs_memorial

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Sunday, 16 October 2011

Genetic Profiling Adds New Dimension to Breast Cancer Treatment (HealthDay)

FRIDAY, Oct. 14 (HealthDay News) -- Treatment for breast cancer has advanced in recent years by becoming more and more personalized.

Not personalized to the patient, mind you, but to the particular tumors and cancer cells inside that patient.

New tests are allowing doctors to figure out what genetic or biological factors are driving each individual woman's type of cancer, and new therapies are being targeted to directly attack those specific factors.

"When it comes to treating breast cancer, we used to throw the book at everyone," said Dr. Christy A. Russell, a board member of the American Cancer Society's California division and an associate professor at the University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine. "Now it's much more targeted."

That's a message worth sharing during October, Breast Cancer Awareness Month.

The same five treatment options are still available to women with breast cancer: surgery, chemotherapy, radiation therapy, hormone therapy and targeted therapy. But researchers are honing and improving each option, either to better target the cancer cells or to provide women with a wider range of treatment choices.

"Within each of those types of treatment modalities, we are refining how the treatment is delivered or how we choose which treatment is appropriate for each patient," said Susan Brown, a registered nurse and director of health education for Susan G. Komen for the Cure, a nonprofit group focused on fighting breast cancer.

For example, there have been few advances in creating new chemotherapy drugs to battle breast cancer, Russell said. "What has changed is trying to figure out who will benefit from chemotherapy," she said. "We are taking the cancers and having them evaluated genetically, to give us some genetic signatures to tell us if those cancers would shrink if they got chemotherapy."

This "genomic profiling" of a woman's specific cancer has "reduced the number of women with early breast cancer who are having to be treated with chemotherapy," Russell said.

One new test in particular, Oncotype DX, is being used to help women who would most likely benefit from hormone therapy because their cancer is spurred by estrogen or other female hormones.

Oncotype DX analyzes the genetic makeup of breast cancer cells to determine the likelihood that a woman's particular cancer will recur after hormone therapy treatment. If the likelihood is high, doctors will recommend that the woman undergo both hormone therapy and chemotherapy, Brown said.

"This information can help doctors decide whether to add chemotherapy to a treatment regimen that already includes hormone therapy," she said.

Doctors also have learned to analyze cancers for specific factors that, if blocked, can make chemotherapy more effective in killing the cancer cells.

About one-fourth of all breast cancer patients have cancer cells containing mutated forms of HER2neu, a gene that promotes the creation of a growth factor protein.

"In some breast cancers, instead of the cancer cells having two copies of the gene, the cells have 10 or 20 or more copies of the gene," Russell said. "The gene is producing a protein that causes the cell to grow much more rapidly and uncontrollably."

Treatment with a drug called trastuzumab (Herceptin) can block the growth signals transmitted by the gene, slowing the progress of the cancer and making it more susceptible to chemotherapy, Russell said.

"Most of the research going on now is trying to figure out how to combine these new targeted agents with chemotherapy so we can focus in on the specific gene abnormalities that are going on in the cells," she said.

This type of research also is combating the ability of cancer to grow resistant to chemotherapy and hormone therapy.

Researchers have learned that a growth factor protein known as mTOR promotes the spread of cancer cells and can bolster their resistance to hormone therapy, Russell said.

"Medications that act as mTOR inhibitors appear to be able to make some cancer cells that have become resistant to hormone therapy become sensitive to the therapy again," Russell said. "There are many pathways we are aware of that cancer cells are able [to use] to overcome their ability to be killed by chemotherapy. All of these different gene pathways are becoming known, and, as they are becoming known, they are developing drugs that are targeting those pathways. That's where the majority of the clinical trials are occurring."

Which means it is essential for women with breast cancer to participate in clinical trials, Brown said.

"Currently, fewer than 5 percent of patients enroll in clinical trials," she said. "The only way we're going to know more is if we are able to translate what we think we've learned in a lab into a clinical situation," Brown explained.

"Everything we know about breast cancer now is because of the very courageous women who came before us and enrolled in clinical trials," Brown added.

More information

The American Cancer Society has a detailed guide to breast cancer.

A companion article describes one woman's account of how breast cancer changed her life.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/health/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111014/hl_hsn/geneticprofilingaddsnewdimensiontobreastcancertreatment

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Saturday, 15 October 2011

No G20 progress seen on stronger Chinese yuan-G20 source

PARIS | Fri Oct 14, 2011 11:22am EDT

PARIS Oct 14 (Reuters) - China will not commit to a quick liberalisation of its yuan currency to help rebalance global growth, at a meeting of G20 financial leaders, but will offer to use expansionary fiscal policy to fuel domestic demand, a G20 official said on Friday.

Finance ministers and central bankers from the world's 20 biggest developing and developed economies (G20) meet in Paris on Friday and Saturday to discuss, among other things, ways to rebalance growth between the world's economic powers.

China's control over the exchange rate of its currency is seen by many G20 countries as one of the key reasons for global trade and savings imbalances.

The United States and Europe have long called for Beijing to free the yuan, which China says it would do, but only over the medium term, without giving any dates.

The European Union wanted China to agree to a road map of making the yuan fully convertible in a bid to elicit some commitment to dates, but the efforts failed.

"No, they were pretty firm on that -- there will be no progress," one G20 official said of talks with China.

"They say their contribution to global growth in the short-term will be to ensure that growth in China does not slow down, even if they face the risk of inflation, through expansionary fiscal policy," the official said.

"They always say that over the medium term they will make their currency fully convertible and free the exchange rate, but there will not be anything now," the official said.

Another G20 source said after preparatory talks late on Thursday that China would commit in Paris to boost its consumption through a five-year plan, via households and companies as well as infrastructure.

China and the United States sparred this week over a U.S. Senate bill to press Beijing to raise the yuan's value.

China's trade surplus narrowed for a second straight month in September, to $14.5 billion, with both imports and exports lower than expected, reflecting global economic weakness and domestic demand cooling.

Meanwhile, data released in Washington gave new ammunition to U.S. lawmakers pressing for legislation to crack down on Chinese currency practices that they blame for millions of lost American jobs.

The U.S. Commerce Department said the U.S. trade deficit with China rose to a record $29.0 billion in August as imports grew 6.4 percent to $37.4 billion. The trade gap with China totaled $189.3 billion through the first eight months of the year, on pace to surpass last year's record of $273 billion.

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/USmarketsNews/~3/xlBEZ9PwcZE/g20-china-currency-idUSL5E7LE2D320111014

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Utah officials trying to evict reptile rescuer

(AP) ? Utah transportation officials are trying to evict a reptile rescuer who's using his rental home as a shelter for hundreds of animals.

The Utah Department of Transportation filed papers on Friday against James Dix of West Valley City. The Deseret News of Salt Lake City reports (http://bit.ly/qpCxgM) Dix has more than 900 rescued animals at his home.

The transportation department got involved because the home is in the path of a planned freeway called the Mountain View Corridor. It says that Dix was paid more than $18,000 to vacate, but has failed to meet deadlines.

Court records show Salt Lake City's 3rd District Court has issued a summons for Dix.

Dix told the Associated Press on Wednesday he has found a new place, but has been delayed by zoning problems.

___

Information from: Deseret News, http://www.deseretnews.com

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/aa9398e6757a46fa93ed5dea7bd3729e/Article_2011-10-12-Reptile%20Rescuer-Eviction/id-6409ad5ae07b429f890896425a159d10

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Friday, 14 October 2011

A paperless leasing process

a href=http://www.shutterstock.com/gallery-590896p1.htmlJOSEPH S.L. TAN MATT/a/a href=http://www.shutterstock.comShutterstock/aJOSEPH S.L. TAN MATT/Shutterstock

The same economic and demographic factors that seem to be conspiring to lower homeownership rates are contributing to what some are calling a boom in the rental market.

While the U.S. might not be a ?renter nation? yet, the stats are compelling. Barron?s has predicted that rental rates may hit 36 percent by 2015, up from 32.8 percent in 2004. Data from some real estate research firms also indicate that effective rents nationwide are rising as rental vacancies drop.

For Joe Buczkowski, founder of LeaseRunner, that shift signals an opportunity.

LeaseRunner opened for business in August 2011 with the goal of providing a seamless, paperless leasing solution for residential and commercial property managers.

The value proposition is straightforward and simple: make it easier and more cost-effective for tenants and landlords to do business with each other by offering a one-stop shop that replaces traditional paper-based transactions with a digital solution.

With LeaseRunner, landlords can electronically manage the process of leasing a property from start to finish ? collecting applications, screening potential tenants, editing and digitally signing lease documents, and even collecting rent.

Tenants also benefit by being able to interact with landlords without turning over sensitive personal information like bank account and Social Security numbers.


Joe Buczkowski

Buczkowski, a Colorado attorney with an MBA and a knack for Web development, came up with the idea for LeaseRunner in late 2009 while in the hospital for the birth of his son.

Buczkowski was trying to lease several properties and, while his son slept, he tried to handle the paperwork from his laptop. Short on time, he searched for an online solution to help manage the process.

When he came up empty-handed, Buczkowski did what entrepreneurs do: He started a business to solve the problem.

LeaseRunner already has customers in 41 states, and Buczkowski is bullish about what he sees as a ?huge market? in the U.S.: There are about 40 million residential rental units, 13 million single-family rental homes, and more than 1.4 million office and retail buildings.

I asked Buczkowski more about how he?s leveraging his legal expertise, background in finance, and experience managing rental properties to make LeaseRunner a success.

Q: You have law and business degrees. How has each helped you with LeaseRunner?

A: My law degree has been especially useful. Here is a sample of the legal work involved in LeaseRunner:

  • lease-law research for all property types in all 50 states;
  • Fair Credit Reporting Act issues;
  • e-commerce laws and tax issues;
  • intellectual property matters, ACH (Automated Clearing House) banking regulations;
  • merchant banking laws;
  • a multitude of contracts with Web and data vendors;
  • corporate organizational documents;
  • partnership documents; and
  • accounting and tax prep.

Because of our legal background, my legal intern and I were able to do 99 percent of the legal work in-house. Outsourcing the legal work would have been cost-prohibitive.

My business degree is essential for the financial skills. You have to know how to balance a balance sheet and project financial statements. More importantly, you need to understand business models in order to be able to raise money.

Q: What?s tougher: being an attorney or being an entrepreneur?

A: Being an entrepreneur is more work than being an attorney, but sooooo much fun. I?ve never had more fun on the job than working on LeaseRunner.

Q: Please tell me more about your property management experience. How has it influenced the development of LeaseRunner?

A: I graduated with my juris doctorate/MBA degree in 2001, and started working for a family office (that) owned income properties in five states, consisting of office and industrial buildings, apartment complexes and some single-family homes. I developed an apartment complex, as well.

We eventually sold off the majority of the assets. Today, we have a handful of single-family homes and a handful of commercial buildings. Through it all, I learned more than I ever expected about property management.

This influenced the design of LeaseRunner, making it Web-based, inexpensive, eye-catching in design, and useful to a landlord of any property type.

Q: What advice would you offer to someone who was considering starting their own business?

A: My advice is to take an objective look at your business model and consider whether your business model is attractive to investors. Do you have a large market? Do you have a high gross profit? Do you have low fixed costs? Can you reach breakeven in one year? Are your capital requirements for your minimum viable product modest? Is your business difficult to duplicate? How easily can others copy your business?

There are many more questions like these you need to ask yourself.

Q: What are some of the challenges you?re facing as a business owner that you didn?t expect?

A: I think that marketing is one of the greatest challenges for a new business. As if getting new customers isn?t hard enough in the post-Lehman world, it is difficult to choose the correct marketing medium, given the plethora of marketing options available. With limited time and budget, you have to determine which marketing methods give you the best return on investment.

If I could do it over again, I would start marketing LeaseRunner before it launched. We did not start marketing until after launch so that we could beta test with some real, independent users.

Q: How does LeaseRunner distinguish itself from other property management solutions on the market?

A: There is no other product exactly like LeaseRunner. We offer a seamless leasing solution for any type of real estate. Other online competitors might offer parts of the services we have (like background checks), but you cannot take an applicant from digital application through rent collection like you can with LeaseRunner.

While our service is beneficial to many in the market, our early adopters are landlords with one or a handful of units.

Q: Why do you think going paperless is so important to property managers?

A: Going paperless saves more than trees. It saves so much time, and time really is money. Since the data from an application is combined with your property?s data and auto-fills a lease, there is no need for drafting or duplicate data entry.

The e-signature process is convenient for all parties and so intuitive that it is nearly impossible to make a mistake. Furthermore, the Web application is open 24 hours a day. Our world becomes more digital every day, and the real estate leasing process can and should follow suit.

The current economy requires us all to do more with less time and money, and landlords out there are looking for a way to simplify.

LeaseRunner screenshot.

LeaseRunner screenshot.

Want to recommend a real estate startup for an upcoming Startup Scene? Send your ideas to Natalie Fonseca at natalie@inman.com.

Natalie Fonseca is the co-founder and executive producer of Tech Policy Summit and the Privacy Identity Innovation (pii) conference, and the content producer for the Inman News Data Summit and Real Estate Connect conferences. You can follow her at @TechPolicy.

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Article source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/inmannews/~3/Q8Jo2BIrzek/a-paperless-leasing-process

Source: http://columbia-mo.net/2011/10/11/a-paperless-leasing-process/

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