Saturday, March 30, 2013

Miami Beach Fire Dispatcher Put On Leave With Pay After Response Delay

Miami Beach Fire Dispatcher Put On Leave With Pay After Response Delay

NBC6:

An emergency dispatcher has been placed on leave with pay after a man died when it took a Miami Beach Fire Rescue team 31 minutes to get to his home, authorities said Friday.

Read the whole story at NBC6

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Filed by Janie Campbell ?|?

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    Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/30/miami-beach-fire-dispatch_n_2984348.html

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    New study aims to prevent sports-related brain injury in youngsters

    Mar. 28, 2013 ? Ice hockey accounts for nearly half of all traumatic brain injuries among children and youth participating in organized sports who required a trip to an emergency department in Canada, according to a new study out of St. Michael's Hospital.

    The results are part of a first-of-its-kind study led by Dr. Michael Cusimano that looked at causes of sports-related brain injuries in Canadian youth and also uncovered some prevention tactics that could be immediately implemented to make sports safer for kids.

    "Unless we understand how children are getting hurt in sport, we can't develop ways to prevent these serious injuries from happening," said Dr. Cusimano, a neurosurgeon and the lead author of the study. "One would think that we know the reasons why kids are having brain injuries in sports, but until know, it was based mainly on anecdotes."

    The study used data from The Canadian Hospitals Injury Reporting and Prevention Program to look at the almost 13,000 children and youth aged 5-19 who had a sports-related brain injury between 1990 and 2009. The results appeared in the journal PLOS ONE today.

    The researchers categorized injuries by players' ages, what sport they occurred in and what mechanisms had caused them -- "struck by player," "struck by object" (such as net or post), "struck by sport implement" (such as ball or stick), "struck by playing surface" and "other."

    Hockey accounted for 44.3 per cent of all injuries and almost 70 per cent of them occurred in children over 10 as a result of player-to-player contact or being hit into the boards.

    Dr. Cusimano said they expected to see high numbers in hockey because it's Canada's "national sport."

    "This shows that body contact is still an area where we need to make major inroads to preventing brain injuries," Dr. Cusimano said. "For example, enforcing existing rules and making more effective incentives and disincentives about checking from behind could make huge improvements."

    Nineteen per cent of the youth who suffered brain injuries got them during soccer, with most in the 10 to 14 or 15 to 19 age group. In these age ranges, the most common cause of injury was being struck by another player, kicks to the head or head-on-head collisions. In the younger group, age five to nine, players were more likely to suffer a traumatic brain injury from striking a surface or a goal post than those in older groups.

    "There's a really straightforward solution here," Dr. Cusimano said. "Padding the goal posts could have potentially prevented a large number of these brain injuries in young children."

    The results also found that the youngest age group was at the highest risk for getting seriously injured in baseball. Most of the 15.3 per cent of injuries occurred in children under the age of 14, with 45 per cent of them in children under nine.

    Ball and bat injuries were most common, with the majority of injuries caused because the players stood too close to the batter or bat and were not supervised by an adult.

    "These results give us a very specific prevention message for kids under nine who play baseball: make helmets and supervision a mandatory," said Dr. Cusimano. "The younger the child, the more supervision they need when using things like bats and balls. Simple rules around not being close to the batter can be taught to children and adults."

    Football and rugby accounted for 12.9 per cent 5.6 per cent of injuries respectively, and the majority of them were caused by tackling.

    Basketball made up 11.6 per cent of injuries, mostly caused by player-to-player elbowing, which increased as players got older.

    "There is a real opportunity for prevention here," Dr. Cusimano said. "Having educational programs, proper equipment, rules and other incentives that support a culture of safety in sports should be a mandate of parents, coaches, players, sports organizations, schools, sports sponsors, and other groups like governments."

    Funding for the research was provided by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the Ontario Neurotrauma Foundation.

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    Story Source:

    The above story is reprinted from materials provided by St. Michael's Hospital, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


    Journal Reference:

    1. Michael D. Cusimano, Newton Cho, Khizer Amin, Mariam Shirazi, Steven R. McFaull, Minh T. Do, Matthew C. Wong, Kelly Russell. Mechanisms of Team-Sport-Related Brain Injuries in Children 5 to 19 Years Old: Opportunities for Prevention. PLoS ONE, 2013; 8 (3): e58868 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0058868

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

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

    Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/3M3mmJkKrl8/130329125301.htm

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    Thursday, March 28, 2013

    Telling tales can be a good thing: Personal stories help children develop emotional skills

    Mar. 27, 2013 ? A new study finds that mothers tell better, more emotional stories about past experiences which help children develop their emotional skills.

    The act of talking is not an area where ability is usually considered along gender lines. However, a new study published in Springer's journal Sex Roles has found subtle differences between the sexes in their story-relating ability and specifically the act of reminiscing. The research by Widaad Zaman from the University of Central Florida and her colleague Robyn Fivush from Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, discusses how these gender differences in parents can affect children's emotional development.

    Previous research in this area has concluded that the act of parents reminiscing with their children enables children to interpret experiences and weave together the past, present and future. There is also evidence that parents elaborate less when talking to sons than daughters.

    The primary objective of Zaman's study was to compare the reminiscing styles of mothers and fathers with their pre-school daughters and sons. This included how they elaborated on the story and the extent to which their children engaged with the story while it was being told.

    The researchers studied 42 families where the participating children were between four and five years old. Parents were asked to reminisce about four past emotional experiences of the child (happy, sad, a conflict with a peer and a conflict with a parent) and two past play interactions they experienced together. The parents took turns talking to the child on separate visits.

    The researchers found that mothers elaborated more when reminiscing with their children than fathers. Contrary to previous research, however, Zaman's study found no differences in the extent to which either parent elaborated on a story depending on the sex of the child. Mothers tended to include more emotional terms in the story than fathers, which they then discussed and explained to the child. This increased maternal engagement has the effect of communicating to the child the importance of their own version, perspective and feelings about the experience.

    The authors contend that through their increased interaction with the child, mothers are helping their children work through and talk about their experiences more than fathers, regardless of the type of experience. This may reflect the mother's efforts to try and help her child deal with difficult emotions, especially about negative experiences, all of which is related to better emotional well-being.

    The authors conclude that "these results are intriguing, and a necessary first step to better understanding how parents socialize gender roles to girls and boys through narratives about the past, and how girls and boys may then incorporate these roles into their own narratives and their own lives."

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    Story Source:

    The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Springer Science+Business Media.

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


    Journal Reference:

    1. Widaad Zaman, Robyn Fivush. Gender Differences in Elaborative Parent?Child Emotion and Play Narratives. Sex Roles, 2013; DOI: 10.1007/s11199-013-0270-7

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

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

    Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/mind_brain/child_development/~3/Wa7GWEuPVQc/130327103054.htm

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    'Spikes of ice' may dot Jupiter's moon Europa

    NASA / Ted Stryk

    Europa, as viewed from NASA's Galileo spacecraft. Visible are plains of bright ice, cracks that run to the horizon, and dark patches that likely contain both ice and dirt.

    By Miriam Kramer
    Space.com

    THE WOODLANDS, Texas ? The equator of Jupiter's icy moon Europa may be covered with huge spikes of ice, scientists say.

    Astronomers have known for some time that?Jupiter's moon Europa is icy, and now scientists are trying to understand just what form that ice takes by using some of the coldest places on Earth as analogues. Huge ice spikes, known as penitentes, found on Earth could form on Europa, they said.

    "It's a pretty obscure geological feature on the Earth," Dan Hobley, an astronomer at the University of Virginia, told Space.com after he presented his findings at the 44th annual Lunar and Planetary Science Conference.

    The 3.3 to 16.4 foot (1 to 5 meter) spikes of ice only grow in certain parts of the Andes mountains on Earth, but those areas of the world serve as good proxies for what Europa's geology might be like, Hobley said. [Photos of Europa, Jupiter's Mysterious Icy Moon]

    It takes a very specific set of circumstances for penitentes to form, Hobley said. The angle of the sun has to hit the ice in just the right way to keep the spikes of ice standing on end and buried deep into the ground. The blades grow in very dry conditions and can thrive in dirt-filled or clean circumstances.

    As far as scientists can tell right now, all of those environments exist along Europa's equator, Hobley said.

    ESO / B. Tafreshi

    These bizarre ice and snow formations are known as penitentes (Spanish for 'penitents'). They are illuminated by the moonlight, which is visible on the right. On the left, higher in the sky, the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds can be faintly seen, while the reddish glow of the Carina Nebula appears close to the horizon on the far left. Photo by ESO Photo Ambassador Babak Tafreshi.

    Although?Europa?has been observed using radar and spectroscopy, scientists have not been able to understand exactly what the surface of this moon looks like. The geological features of Europa seem "basically random," Hobley said, but the existence of penitentes could offer an explanation.

    Scientists have found that Europa's equator is warmer than it should be, and penitentes could explain that mysterious temperature, Hobley said. The ice spines reflect heat onto one another, creating a warmer area because the sunlight gets trapped bouncing from ice spike to ice spike, Hobley explained.

    The scientist and his colleagues are interested in understanding what the surface of Europa looks like, partially because it's a first step toward designing a viable lander that could safely touch down on the moon's frozen surface.

    But it might not be that simple, Hobley said.

    The icy shell of Europa's?surface might shift occasionally, displacing the area of the alien world that used to be its equator. Penitentes don't naturally form in higher latitudes, so if the shell does shift, that could create a problem for astronomers trying to map exactly where to set down a lander.

    "We're at the state where this is a good, solid guess," Hobley said.

    Follow Miriam Kramer?@mirikramer?and?Google+. Follow us?@Spacedotcom,?Facebook and?Google+. Original article on Space.com.

    Copyright 2013 Space.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653377/s/2a1b8025/l/0Lscience0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A30C280C1750A44560Espikes0Eof0Eice0Emay0Edot0Ejupiters0Emoon0Eeuropa0Dlite/story01.htm

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    Payday Cash Loan ? For Those Who Are Credit Challenged | Trade ...

    Payday money loans began appearing on the World Wide Internet in the 1990s. They were touted as a way to get swift, effortless money with out having to worry about qualifying. This is especially handy for individuals who are credit challenged and have issues acquiring loans anyplace else. Almost everything to receive a payday cash loan on-line can be done on the web without having having to worry about paperw?

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    Source: http://www.tradefinancebank.com/payday-cash-loan-for-those-who-are-credit-challenged/

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    FBI comes clean on top X-File: 'We never investigated' Hottel UFO memo

    FBI

    The FBI says a 1950 flying-saucer memo rates as the most popular file in its online document repository.

    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    The FBI says it never followed up on the most popular file in its online reading room ? a one-page UFO memo that passes along a second- or third-hand report about flying saucers and alien passengers that were supposedly recovered in New Mexico.

    The memo, dated March 22, 1950, has been viewed almost a million times over the past two years, the FBI said this week in a blog posting. It was written by Guy Hottel, who was the head of the FBI's field office in Washington at the time, and addressed to FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover.


    In the memo, Hottel discusses an account provided to an FBI agent ... that was attributed to an informant ... who purportedly heard from an Air Force investigator ... that "three so-called flying saucers had been recovered in New Mexico."

    "They were described as being circular in shape with raised centers, approximately 50 feet in diameter," the memo read. "Each one was occupied by three bodies of human shape but only three feet tall, dressed in metallic cloth of a very fine texture. Each body was bandaged in a manner similar to the blackout suits used by speed fliers and test pilots."

    Hottel said he was told that the saucers' control systems might have been disrupted by interference from "a very high-powered radar set-up" that the government had in the area. But he admitted in the memo that "no further evaluation was attempted" by the informant, whose name is blacked out in the online document.

    The Hottel memo has been in the public record since the 1970s, but it created a huge splash in 2011 when it was added to the FBI Vault, an online repository of public records. Here's how The Sun, a British tabloid, characterized the memo in a headline from those days: "Aliens Exist, Say Real-Life X-Files."

    Monday's posting was written to counter such characterizations. The FBI denied that the memo constituted evidence for the existence of extraterrestrial spacecraft ? and?said Hottel's report was never taken all that seriously. Instead, it was considered "an unconfirmed report that the FBI never even followed up on."

    The FBI said there was no reason to believe that the memo referred to another famous UFO saga, the purported discovery of a crashed alien spaceship in Roswell, N.M., in 1947. "The Hottel memo is dated nearly three years after the infamous events in Roswell," it said.?

    July 9, 2008: NBC's Willie Geist has a little fun with New Mexico flying saucers to mark the anniversary of the 1947 Roswell UFO incident.

    The bureau acknowledged that for a few years after the Roswell incident, Hoover followed up on an Air Force request by ordering his agents to verify any UFO sightings. "That practice ended in July 1950, four months after the Hottel memo, suggesting that our Washington Field Office didn't think enough of that flying saucer story to look into it," the posting said.

    There's an alternate explanation for the Hottel memo that makes a lot more sense. Two years ago, when the memo was added to the Vault, paranormal investigator Ben Radford noted that the informant's story matched the description of a UFO hoax that was concocted by a man named Silas Newton. In 1950, Newton was telling tales about flying saucers that had crashed at a radar station near the Arizona-New Mexico border. Newton was later convicted of fraud, and died in 1972.

    Ironically, there's a whole different section of the FBI Vault that's devoted to Newton, whom the bureau described as "a wealthy oil producer and con man." To get the story about the connections between Newton's tales and the Hottel memos, check out this thorough debunking on the Above Top Secret forum.

    Even though the FBI says the memo "does not prove the existence of UFOs," it's not confirming the Silas Newton story, either. "Some people believe the memo repeats a hoax that was circulating at that time, but the Bureau's files have no information to verify that story," it said.

    What do you think FBI Agent Fox Mulder would say? "The truth is out there"? Or "Trust no one"? Feel free to weigh in with your own verdict in the comment section below. ?

    Update for 6:35 p.m.: Mark Allin, chief operating officer for The Above Network, says the truth is out there, in the form of the Above Top Secret analysis that I mentioned earlier. "The short story is, without a doubt, 'Case Closed,'" Allin said today in an email. "The memo is based on a hoax that was carried out by a convicted con man named Silas Newton, and it was debunked years ago. It's a pretty good and interesting hoax story, to be certain, but there is no value in it beyond that."

    More about UFOs:


    Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's?Facebook page, following?@b0yle on Twitter?and adding the?Cosmic Log page?to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered to your email in-box every weekday. You can also check out?"The Case for Pluto,"?my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

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    Wednesday, March 13, 2013

    Study shows how one insect got its wings

    Tuesday, March 12, 2013

    Scientists have delved deeper into the evolutionary history of the fruit fly than ever before to reveal the genetic activity that led to the development of wings ? a key to the insect's ability to survive.

    The wings themselves are common research models for this and other species' appendages. But until now, scientists did not know how the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, first sprouted tiny buds that became flat wings.

    A cluster of only 20 or so cells present in the fruit fly's first day of larval life was analyzed to connect a gene known to be active in the embryo and the gene that triggers the growth of wings.

    Researchers determined that the known embryonic gene, called Dpp, sends the first signal to launch the activation of a gene called vn. That signal alone is dramatic, because it crosses cell layers.

    The activation of vn lasts just long enough to turn on a target gene that combines with more signals to activate genes responsible for cell growth and completion of wing development.

    "Our work shows how when you add a gene into the equation, you get a wing. The clue is that one growth factor, Dpp, turns on another growth factor, vn, but just for a short period of time. You absolutely need a pulse of this activity to turn on yet another gene cascade that gives you a wing, but if vn is active for too long, a wing wouldn't form," said Amanda Simcox, professor of molecular genetics at The Ohio State University and lead author of the study.

    "We learned all this from investigating 20 tiny cells. The events could be responsible for this big event in evolutionary history, when the insect got its wing. With the wing, if its environment turned bad, the insect could fly off, giving it an advantage."

    Within about five days, those 20 cells give rise to a 50,000-cell fully developed wing.

    Simcox and colleagues aren't yet certain that Dpp's activation of vn explains how all insects got their wings because of differences in the ways these invertebrates develop.

    The research is published this week in the online early edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

    Simcox began the analysis on a fruit fly larva that had recently hatched from the egg. She identified a tiny sac of cells representing where a future wing would be that was attached to the body cavity through tubing that runs the length of the larval body. Simcox dissected those sacs away from the body to study them specifically.

    By staining the cell sacs with substances that light up target genes, the researchers then made images of the sequence of genetic events they observed. It all started with Dpp, part of a family of genes known as bone morphogenetic protein genes that are well understood in developmental biology.

    The analysis showed that Dpp sent its signal from one cell layer to the other across the gap in the middle of the sac to activate the vn gene. The mechanism allowing the genes to talk to each other across that gap remains a mystery, Simcox noted.

    "But it's the only explanation because if we took away the function of Dpp, vn doesn't get turned on," she said.

    Dpp's activation of vn is the critical step in turning on its target, the Egfr signaling pathway, which sets off a series of gene activations that drive wing development ? specifically, activating genes called ap and iro-C. But vn also has the ability to regulate itself through a feedback loop so it stays on for longer in some cells where it is also needed for making the body of the fly at the location of the wing's attachment.

    In addition to imaging the genes' activity, the researchers zoomed in on the gene structure to identify the binding sites that enabled the gene signaling to occur. When they mutated the binding sites, the signals were disabled.

    "We had genetic evidence linking the events, tracing it back earlier than anyone had ever seen, and we showed directly through analysis of the binding sites that if they were mutated this expression went away," Simcox said. "We have good lines of evidence that there really is a connection."

    From here, she and colleagues plan to investigate how other insects develop their wings.

    ###

    Ohio State University: http://researchnews.osu.edu

    Thanks to Ohio State 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.

    This press release has been viewed 60 time(s).

    Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127255/Study_shows_how_one_insect_got_its_wings

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    History shows NKorean pattern: Wait, then attack

    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) ? Recent Korean history reveals a sobering possibility: It may only be a matter of time before North Korea launches a sudden, deadly attack on the South. And perhaps more unsettling, Seoul has vowed that this time, it will respond with an even stronger blow.

    Humiliated by past attacks, South Korea has promised ? as recently as Tuesday ? to hit back hard at the next assault from the North, opening up the prospect that a skirmish could turn into a wider war.

    Lost in the headline-making North Korean bluster about nuclear strikes on Washington in response to U.N. sanctions is a single sentence in a North Korean army Supreme Command statement of March 5. It said North Korea "will make a strike of justice at any target anytime as it pleases without limit."

    Those words have a chilling link to the recent past, when Pyongyang, angry over perceived slights, took its time before exacting revenge on rival South Korea. Vows of retaliation after naval clashes with South Korea in 1999 and 2009, for example, were followed by more bloodshed, including attacks blamed on North Korea that killed 50 South Koreans in 2010.

    Those attacks three years ago "are vivid reminders of the regime's capabilities and intentions," Bruce Klingner, a former U.S. intelligence official now at the Heritage Foundation in Washington, wrote in a recent think tank posting.

    Almost a mirror image of the current tensions happened in 2009, when the U.N. approved sanctions over North Korean missile and nuclear tests, and Pyongyang responded with fury. In November of that year, Seoul claimed victory in a sea battle with the North, and Pyongyang vowed revenge.

    In March 2010, the Cheonan, a 1,200-ton South Korean warship, exploded and sank in the Yellow Sea, killing 46 sailors. A South Korean-led international investigation found that North Korea torpedoed the ship, a claim Pyongyang denies.

    The Cheonan sinking may have been retaliation for the naval defeat four months earlier, said Koh Yu-hwan, a North Korea specialist at Seoul's Dongguk University.

    North Korean soldiers with weapons attend military training in an undisclosed location in this picture released by the North's official KCNA news agency in Pyongyang March 11, 2013. South Korea and ... more? North Korean soldiers with weapons attend military training in an undisclosed location in this picture released by the North's official KCNA news agency in Pyongyang March 11, 2013. South Korea and U.S. forces are conducting large-scale military drills until the end of April, while the North is also gearing up for a massive state-wide military exercise. North Korea has accused the U.S. of using the military drills in South Korea as a launch pad for a nuclear war and has threatened to scrap the armistice with Washington that ended the 1950-53 Korean War. REUTERS/KCNA (NORTH KOREA - Tags: POLITICS MILITARY CIVIL UNREST TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY) ATTENTION EDITORS - THIS PICTURE WAS PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY. REUTERS IS UNABLE TO INDEPENDENTLY VERIFY THE AUTHENTICITY, CONTENT, LOCATION OR DATE OF THIS IMAGE. THIS PICTURE IS DISTRIBUTED EXACTLY AS RECEIVED BY REUTERS, AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS. QUALITY FROM SOURCE. NO THIRD PARTY SALES. NOT FOR USE BY REUTERS THIRD PARTY DISTRIBUTORS less? ?

    In November 2010, North Korea sent a warning to South Korea to cancel a routine live-fire artillery drill planned on Yeonpyeong Island, which is only seven miles from North Korea and lies in Yellow Sea waters that North Korea claims as its own.

    South Korea went ahead with the drills, firing, Seoul says, into waters away from North Korean territory. North Korea sent artillery shells raining down on the island, killing two civilians and two marines.

    South Korea responded with artillery fire of its own, but the government of then-President Lee Myung-bak was severely criticized for what was seen as a slow, weak response. Lee, a conservative who infuriated North Korea by ending the previous liberal government's "sunshine policy" of huge aid shipments with few strings attached, vowed massive retaliation if hit again by the North.

    The government of newly inaugurated President Park Geun-hye, also a conservative, has made similar comments, though she has also said she will try to build trust with North Korea and explore renewed dialogue and aid shipments.

    South Korea's Defense Ministry on Tuesday repeated that it would respond harshly to any future attack from the North. Spokesman Kim Min-seok said there were no signs that North Korea would attack anytime soon, but warned that if it did, it would suffer "much more powerful damage" than whatever it inflicted on South Korea.

    North Korean leader Kim Jong Un on Monday visited artillery troops near disputed waters with South Korea and urged them to be on "maximum alert" because war could break out anytime, according to Pyongyang's official media.

    If war broke out, the United States would assume control of South Korea's military because of the countries' decades-old alliance that began with the U.S.-led military response to North Korean invaders in 1950. But South Korea has made clear that it has a sovereign right, and a political necessity, to respond strongly to future North Korean attacks.

    A clue to when North Korea might attack may be in the timing of the current threats. North Korea is furious over ongoing annual U.S.-South Korean military drills that will continue until the end of April.

    Pyongyang is highly unlikely to stage an attack when so much U.S. firepower is assembled, but analysts said it might hit South Korea after the drills end.

    "They are quiet when tension is high and state-of-the-art (U.S.) weapons are brought to South Korea for the drills," said Chon Hyun-joon, an analyst at the government-funded Korea Institute for National Unification in Seoul.

    If history is any guide, the most likely flashpoint is the Yellow Sea, where North Korea has complained about sea boundaries since the 1950s. The U.S.-led U.N. Command drew the so-called Northern Limit Line after failed attempts to negotiate a border after the Korean War, and Pyongyang says it clearly favors the South by boxing in North Korea close to its shores.

    Bloody sea battles in 1999, 2002 and 2009, and North Korea's artillery bombardment of Yeonpyeong Island in 2010, took place weeks after annual drills by South Korea and the United States, Chon said. In those cases and in the current drills, North Korea's state media reacted to the war games with harsh criticism, calling them preparations for a northward invasion.

    North Korea sometimes takes months to follow through on its occasionally cryptic threats or warnings, but it also has acted quickly.

    North Korea has attempted a military provocation within weeks of every South Korean presidential inauguration dating back to 1992, according to Victor Cha, a former Asia adviser to President George W. Bush, and Ellen Kim at the Center for Strategic and International Studies think tank in Washington. South Korea's new president was inaugurated Feb. 25.

    "Expect a North Korean provocation in the coming weeks," Cha and Kim wrote Thursday.

    ___

    AP writer Hyung-jin Kim contributed to this report from Seoul.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/history-shows-nkorean-pattern-wait-then-attack-112646404.html

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    Washington plans to extradite suspect from Oregon

    This photo provided by the King County sheriff?s office shows Michael "Chad" Boysen. King County sheriff's Sgt. Cindi West says 26-year-old Boysen was released Friday, March 8, 2013, after serving nine months on a burglary conviction. Now, Boysen is accused of killing his grandparents in Renton, Wash., since he was released. (AP Photo/King County Sheriff?s Office, Cindi L. West)

    This photo provided by the King County sheriff?s office shows Michael "Chad" Boysen. King County sheriff's Sgt. Cindi West says 26-year-old Boysen was released Friday, March 8, 2013, after serving nine months on a burglary conviction. Now, Boysen is accused of killing his grandparents in Renton, Wash., since he was released. (AP Photo/King County Sheriff?s Office, Cindi L. West)

    Police vehicles are parked outside of the Westshore Oceanfront Motel Tuesday, March 12, 2013, in Lincoln City, Ore., where the person assumed to be Michael Boysen is thought to be inside. Police surrounded the motel on the Oregon coast, using a loudspeaker to try to persuade the man inside to surrender. Police said they believe the man in the motel is Boysen, who is suspected of killing his grandparents last weekend in Renton, Wash. (AP Photo/Lauren Gambino)

    Police vehicles are parked outside of the Westshore Oceanfront Motel, Tuesday, March 12, 2013, in Lincoln City, Ore., where the person assumed to be Michael Boysen is thought to be inside. Police surrounded the motel on the Oregon coast, using a loudspeaker to try to persuade the man inside to surrender. Police said they believe the man in the motel is Boysen, who is suspected of killing his grandparents last weekend in Renton, Wash. (AP Photo/Lauren Gambino)

    The house where the bodies of an elderly couple were found Saturday, March 9, 2013, is shown Monday, March 11, 2013, in Renton, Wash. Washington state authorities are looking for Michael "Chad" Boysen, accused of killing the couple, who are his grandparents, in Renton, Wash., just hours after he was released from prison. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

    The house where the bodies of an elderly couple were found Saturday, March 9, 2013, is shown Monday, March 11, 2013, in Renton, Wash. Washington state authorities are looking for Michael "Chad" Boysen, accused of killing the couple, who are his grandparents, in Renton, Wash., just hours after he was released from prison. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

    SEATTLE (AP) ? Washington authorities plan to extradite a man caught in Oregon who's suspected of killing his grandparents after they picked him up from prison and hosted a welcome home party for him.

    King County prosecutors in Seattle expect to file charges against Michael Chadd Boysen, spokesman Dan Donohoe said Wednesday.

    Boysen, 26, is accused of killing Robert R. Taylor, 82, and Norma J. Taylor, 80, after they welcomed him to their Renton home after his release from prison Friday.

    He is held on a no-bail warrant from the Washington Department of Corrections for violating terms of his release, Donohoe said. Boysen remains at Legacy Emmanuel Medical Center in Portland, Ore., in serious condition, spokeswoman Amber Shoebridge said Wednesday.

    He had been in critical condition after he was found with self-inflicted cuts when police entered the motel room Tuesday to arrest him.

    Investigators don't know why he went to Lincoln City, said King County sheriff's Sgt. Cindy West. They also don't know what may have motivated him to kill his grandparents. They aren't saying exactly how the two were killed, except they weren't shot.

    Boysen checked into the WestShore OceanFront Suites on the Oregon coast Monday night under his own name and was recognized by an employee who called police.

    Boysen reportedly blocked the door with a refrigerator. Police used a robot to urge Boysen to surrender. They used a water cannon and tear gas before breaking through the door.

    Officers found him lying on the floor on his back with apparently serious self-inflicted cuts, Lincoln City police Chief Keith Kilian said.

    King County Sheriff John Urquhart called Boysen extremely dangerous because of threats he had made while in prison against his family and law enforcement. Authorities didn't learn of the threats until after he made the news, suspected of killing in his grandparents.

    The Taylors had picked him up from the Washington state prison at Monroe. They drove him to a meeting with a parole officer Friday, helped him get an identity card from the Department of Licensing and held a party for him.

    Officials believe they were killed that night or Saturday morning. Their bodies were found Saturday by Boysen's mother when she went to check on her parents.

    Boysen had just finished serving nine months in prison on a burglary conviction, said Washington state Corrections Department spokesman Chad Lewis. He was previously in prison between 2006 and February 2011 for four robbery convictions. Those convictions were related to an addiction to narcotic painkillers, Lewis said.

    ___

    Associated Press writers Lauren Gambino, in Lincoln City, Ore., and Jeff Barnard in Grants Pass, Ore., contributed to this report.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-03-13-Washington%20Fugitive/id-218a37be09e74cdb814689ad8690ee99

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    Tuesday, March 12, 2013

    Angry Birds cartoons head for TV screens

    HELSINKI (Reuters) - The makers of Angry Birds are launching a cartoon series this weekend, expanding further beyond its highly addictive games in a bid to expand entertainment and merchandising.

    Rovio, the company behind the popular mobile app game Angry Birds, said the cartoons will feature adventures of birds that appear in its games.

    Angry Birds Toons can be downloaded through on-demand services, and will also air on television channels such as FOX8 in Australia, ANTV in Indonesia, Cartoon Network in India, and MTV3 Juniori and MTV3 in Finland, it said.

    Rovio has expanded into merchandising and licensing in the past few years and its colorful, round bird characters are sold as stuffed animals and appear on everything from T-shirts to soda cans.

    It announced in December that it hired Hollywood executive David Maisel as executive producer of a 3D animated film planned for release in 2016.

    (Reporting by Ritsuko Ando, editing by Paul Casciato)

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/angry-birds-cartoons-head-tv-screens-133504198.html

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    Fundraiser for the Hunt family home draws solid community support ...

    Posted by editor on March 10, 2013 ? Leave a Comment?

    ?By Laura Stovel

    The rich harmonies of flute, guitar and trombone filled the Saint Francis Church hall Saturday while the drummer kept time. More than 100 people danced, socialized or milled around silent auction items lining the walls. For Sofa Kings drummer Simon Hunt, this wasn?t just any performance. The Home for the Hunts fundraiser dance and silent auction benefits his family and his community.

    Simon?s wife, Pauline Hunt, has ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig?s disease, a ?progressive and debilitating disease that causes paralysis and requires costly patient care in its later stages,? according to the Home for the Hunts website. ?The project will help the Hunt family add onto their house so that it is wheelchair accessible and meets Pauline?s needs as her health declines. As a Habitat for Humanity project ? the first in Revelstoke ? the Hunts will have financial and other help in expanding their house and they will pay back any loans so that Habitat for Humanity can help build homes for other families in need in Revelstoke. ?As one organizer Dana Cloghesy said, ?We are going for a legacy here, not just for the Hunts. Maybe we can help others in the community.?

    If donations of silent auction items are an indication of the importance of a cause, this project struck a chord with the community.? According to Cloghesy, who organized the silent auction, at least 105 businesses, artists and individuals donated the 116 items for auction. ?I find our community is very supportive in that way,? she said. With 175 tickets sold to the fundraising event, which also featured Vancouver musicians Simon and Marc Wild and Combine the Victorious, that support is evident.

    Habitat for Humanity usually builds houses from scratch but the Hunts needed a wheelchair accessible house right downtown that was big enough for their family of four. As there was little appropriate land downtown they decided to expand and modify their existing house instead. ?We needed to stay downtown for the girls:? Emily and Madeline, aged seven and five respectively. ?I?m not going to be able to drive them around in the future.?

    Cloghesy credits Cindy Pearce with getting Habitat for Humanity on board with the project. ?Cindy has a golden tongue. She got this going and she?s been the driving force behind this whole project.?

    Now that spring is coming, Pauline can get around town on a recumbent trike and in the future she will use a wheelchair, which is manageable in the downtown area. She said her ALS is ?definitely on the slow track and a lot of that is due to the support we have gotten.? The community support greatly reduces the stress in her life and this has positive implications for her health.

    The house is not the only challenge that Pauline has taken on. With her characteristic can-do attitude, Pauline, a former BC champion bike racer, has been trying out alpine sit skiing with the help of adaptive skiing organization Live it! Love it! She tried one out at Whistler. ?It?s a steep learning curve. You can?t snowplow on a sit ski,? she said.

    Here are a few photos from this warm-hearted community event:

    Darcy Purcell (left), Deane Brebner (center), and Don Bissonnette (right) admire skis up for auction at the Home for the Hunts fundraiser. Laura Stovel photo

    Darcy Purcell (left), Deane Brebner (center), and Don Bissonnette (right) admire skis up for auction at the Home for the Hunts fundraiser. Laura Stovel photo

    Pauline Hunt (right) talks with friends Heather Lea (left) and Katrina Balance (center). Laura Stovel photo

    Pauline Hunt (right) talks with friends Heather Lea (left) and Katrina Balance (center). Laura Stovel photo

    The Sofa Kings open the evening with some great tunes. Laura Stovel photo

    The Sofa Kings open the evening with some great tunes. Laura Stovel photo

    ?

    Source: http://www.revelstokecurrent.com/2013/03/10/fundraiser-for-the-hunt-family-home-draws-solid-community-support/

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    This Week in Small Business: The Next Big Battle - NYTimes.com

    Dashboard

    A weekly roundup of small-business developments.

    What?s affecting me, my clients and other small-business owners this week.

    The Budget: SkyNotFall

    The sequestration takes effect, and according to Keith Hennessy, the impact is: ?skynotfall.? Stephen Colbert offers a creative solution, and things are so bad that one ex-con is accused of sneaking back into jail. Some economists believe the sequestration doesn?t cut spending at all, but $92 million is whacked from the Small Business Administration?s budget, and Kelly Phillips Erb says some small businesses are already taking a hit. A small-business round table discusses the debt. These are four things to know about the next big budget battle, and do you also know who is one of the most influential people in the formation of the White House economics team?

    Small Business Statistics: The Bright Side

    The latest employment numbers bring ?great news.? Despite the Dow Jones industrial average?s record close, small businesses are still struggling and although the recovery is lifting profits, many analysts conclude it?s still not adding jobs. A survey shows steady job gains in February and Intuit?s small-business employment index edged up. Moderate growth continued in the Philadelphia region. But small-business hiring was down in Pennsylvania and small-business closings increased in Missouri. Lending to small companies weakened in January, and Destiny Bennett explains the real reason small-business owners are not getting loans. A survey finds more baby boomer owners are selling their businesses. On the bright side: now is a great time to be in the tax business!

    The Economy: Surpassing Saudi Arabia

    The United States was the world?s largest petroleum producer in November, surpassing Saudi Arabia for the first time in 10 years ? but an oil price analyst is doubtful about the potential of American oil production. Lance Roberts believes an asset bubble is indeed growing. Ezra Klein offers a few reasons to be optimistic. Economic activity in the nonmanufacturing sector increased for the 38th consecutive month, and activity in the manufacturing sector increased for the third consecutive month. Home prices nationwide increased on a year-over-year basis by 9.7 percent. Lumber prices approached an eight-year high. And these 100 facts about the economy will blow your mind.

    Management: Don?t Quit the Day Job (Yet)

    Forbes publishes its annual list of billionaires. GoDaddy?s founder warns against quitting your day job too soon. Mikey Rox lists 25 ways to raise your creativity, including: skim through a magazine. In this video, a blogger says Groupon and its former chief executive, Andrew Mason, should be ashamed. Marc Andreessen and B. Horowitz take a crack at annotating Mr. Mason?s goodbye memo. Jeff Cornwall tells a story of how he knew it was time to fire a customer. Patricia Lotich lists her top 10 small-business resources. These are five potentially disastrous financial mistakes every entrepreneur should know about. An online grocery store uses its customer-purchase histories to predict when items will run out. A receivables management firm offers an ?A to Z of receivables management.?

    Your People: The Cool Kids

    Yahoo reins in telecommuters, and Best Buy copies it. A study reveals that more than 600,000 commuters travel more than 90 minutes to work every day. A new national survey finds more than a third of American workers experience chronic work stress, with low salaries, lack of opportunity for advancement and heavy workloads topping the list of contributing factors. Kirsten Chiala takes a look at how companies and employees are benefiting from ?telework.? Richard Juman suggests three ways to inspire a healthy corporate culture. Chucky terrorizes drive-thru employees. A company offers an alternative to the student loan by connecting prospective employees with potential backers who are willing to invest in their career goals. Data crunchers are now the cool kids on campus and these are the top 50 apps employees sneak into work. This is one of the craziest buzzer beaters you?ll ever see.

    Start-Up: Blowing It

    After selling her start-up for $70 million at age 25, the founder blows through her fortune and heads to prison. These are the steps to follow to set up a home-based small business, and these are the funniest home Wi-Fi names. A new contest challenges you to explain what your start-up does and why anyone should care in six seconds. A crowdfunding site is started to drive the ?new American dream.? But a start-up guru doubts that crowdfunding will happen.

    Around the Country: A Start-Up Video Store?

    These are the 10 American companies with the best reputations. And here are 13 stores you will never shop at again (but this passionate owner of a video-rental store in Pennsylvania doesn?t care). A ?Grey?s Anatomy? star tries to turn around a failing coffee business in Seattle. Texas leads the country in business relocations and expansions. The 2013 Startup Law Summit is scheduled this week in Chicago (a city that needs a ?start-up growth anchor? according to Microsoft?s C.E.O.). San Francisco?s Bay Bridge lights up. Social entrepreneurship programs at Yale and Stanford Universities are scheduled for high school students this summer. Here are four underrated tech hubs to watch, and here are the 10 cities with the highest tax rates.

    Around the World: Singapore Is No. 1

    Singapore ranks as the top Tier 1 economy since 1980. German car sales plunge as Europe?s auto crisis deepens, and some believe the fourth euro crisis cycle of panic has officially begun. But private business activity in the euro zone in February was not as bad as feared. Some believe that Spain still has a long way to fall. Since 2008, Somali pirates operating in the Gulf of Aden have cost the shipping industry $900 million to $3.3 billion per year. A plague of locusts descends upon Egypt. Swiss voters approve limits on executive pay. This is why Auntie Anne?s Pretzels failed in China. Tim Fernholz claims that America is terrible at globalization. iYogi makes a big small-business bet in India.

    Social Media: Pronto!

    Facebook redesigns its news feed. Twitter kills TweetDeck. Mark Veverka warns that if your company or business does not have a social media strategy, it better get one pronto! A coming webinar features a social media expert who will explain how to use Facebook and LinkedIn for lead generation. Nick Bilton writes that it ?seems as if Facebook is not only promoting my links on news feeds when I pay for them, but also possibly suppressing the ones I do not pay for.? Hospitals with the most Facebook likes have lower death rates. Jeff Bullas explains how to use Pinterest?s group boards to get more exposure for your business. These are the basics of social media marketing for business-to-business companies. Here are nine amusing travel hacks, and the Raiders? Desmond Bryant is the target of a hilarious meme. An awkward British guy invites Mila Kunis out drinking.

    SXSW: Ten Austin Start-Ups

    Here are the 10 Austin start-ups you need to meet at South By Southwest this week. Pizza Hut plans to hold 140-second job interviews there. You can get a free ride in the SXSW TechCab by confessing your sins. An Austin entrepreneur shares his SXSW tips. Andrea Swensson explains why she?s not going this year.

    Marketing: Too Watery?

    Kelley Robertson says this is how not to use a referral. Derrick Daye shares seven ways to generate ideas from customers. Allison Carter warns you not to start content marketing if you are not willing to wait at least six months before seeing results. Online survey tools may be the most effective way to engage existing customers. Chris Robinson explains how business owners can increase site traffic through video. Here?s the only way to market with SnapChat. Wal-Mart introduces a program supporting businesses owned by women worldwide. This is how Budweiser responded to accusations that its beer was too watery.

    Cool Ideas: Forgive Us

    A company offers digitized magazine subscriptions for waiting rooms. A new type of silicone exhibits both viscous and elastic properties. A flexible battery stretches 300 percent. This video explains how 3-D printing will change the world, but this infographic shows how long the 3-D printing revolution will take. Apple is said to be planning an iWatch and a fingerprint-sensing iPhone, and it now seems that the latest fashion is wearable computers. An entrepreneur auctions off his name to the highest bidder. To predict trends before they happen, G.B. Oliver recommends keeping an eye on pop culture. A company regrets printing Bible quotations on toilet paper.

    Technology: Google Glass for Guys

    Evernote is hacked. Jon Xavier lists seven Apple products whose reality didn?t live up to the hype. Adriana Gardella wants to know how you handle laid-back technology vendors. These are four apps for getting rid of paperwork. A new case helps you get a better Wi-Fi signal on your iPhone. A programming error costs Microsoft 561 million euros. A survey shows that small businesses have heavy exposure to data breaches. A new backup tool will help manage your overstuffed Gmail account. And here?s how guys will be using Google Glass in the future.

    Tweet of the Week

    ?@alexia ? ?You going to SXSW(i)?? ? Everyone even vaguely related to tech, right now.

    The Week?s Best

    Bob Phibbs wants to know if you are too weak to become stronger: ?It isn?t so much what you decide to reach out for, but it is that moment of decision. Going from the weakness of I?m overwhelmed, I don?t need anyone else, it won?t work, etc. to one of strength ? this will allow me to work smarter, focus my attention, make my business competitive. That?s why I pay for my Web designers to carry out my vision. That?s why I paid for a one-day coaching with one of the smartest marketers around. That?s why I do a lot of things. And I know a lot of you do too.?

    This Week?s Question: Why aren?t you going to SXSW this year?

    Gene Marks owns the Marks Group, a Bala Cynwyd, Pa., consulting firm that helps clients with customer relationship management. You can follow him on Twitter.

    Source: http://boss.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/03/11/this-week-in-small-business-the-next-big-battle/

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    Monday, March 11, 2013

    Infiniti QX60 Hybrid scheduled for New York show debut

    infiniti qx60 hybrid

    The hybrid version of the Infiniti QX60 (n?e Infiniti JX), is scheduled to make its debut at the New York International Auto Show at the end of the month.

    The seven-seater luxury crossover will use Nissan?s new hybrid powertrain ? involving a supercharged 2.5 litre four-cylinder petrol engine, an electric motor and a CVT. Combined output is said to be around 250 hp.

    Because the system?s lithium-ion battery is located under the third row seats, Infiniti says cabin and cargo space will not differ from the non-hybrid QX60.

    The Infiniti?QX60 Hybrid is claimed to be capable of returning 9.1 litres per 100 km on the combined cycle ? that?s 24% more efficient than the regular V6-engined car. A price difference of around?US$3k (RM9.3k) is projected between the two.

    FWD and AWD versions will be available, as well as a host of tech including regenerative braking,?Back-Up Collision Intervention and Around View Monitor.

    Note that this is not to be confused with the full-size?Infiniti QX?(which will become the QX80 by decree of the?new naming scheme). Infiniti?s crossover models are now named as follows, in ascending order of position in the range: QX50, QX60, QX70 and QX80 (previously EX, JX, FX and QX).

    This will be Infiniti?s third hybrid model, after the Q70 Hybrid and Q50 Hybrid?(previously M35h and G sedan). 15 new hybrids by 2016? You?d better believe it.

    ?

    Source: http://paultan.org/2013/03/10/infiniti-qx60-hybrid-ny/

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    Even Mummies Had Heart Disease

    Long thought to be a modern disease related to contemporary lifestyles, atherosclerosis was common among ancient people as well, a new study found.

    Whole body CT scans of 137 mummies from four different ancient populations revealed heart and vascular calcifications consistent with atherosclerosis, reported Dr. Randall Thompson of St. Luke's Mid America Heart Institute in Kansas City, Mo., and colleagues.

    "We were most surprised to find atherosclerosis among hunter-gatherers, whose varied diet and active lifestyle would presumably place them at low risk," he told MedPage Today.

    Read this story on www.medpagetoday.com.

    The findings were reported online in The Lancet and at the American College of Cardiology meeting in San Francisco.

    "The presence of atherosclerosis in premodern human beings suggests that the disease is an inherent component of human aging and not associated with any specific diet or lifestyle," the researchers concluded.

    "What makes this so exciting is the sample size from four different regions of the ancient world," said Dr. Miguel Quinones of Weill Cornell Medical College.

    While atherosclerosis has been found in mummies before, this is the largest study of its kind, said Quinones, who is scientific chair of the meeting.

    For example, calcification consistent with atherosclerosis was identified by CT scanning in arteries of the naturally mummified "Iceman" from 3,000 BCE who was discovered in modern Italy.

    And Thompson and colleagues have previously found evidence of atherosclerosis on CT scans of Egyptian mummies from several dynasties.

    Quinones said he believes that ancient people probably had a more benign form of atherosclerosis.

    "The modern diet and lifestyle may have changed it into a more aggressive form," he said.

    The current study sought to determine whether something inherent to the Egyptian culture, such as a rich, high-fat diet, predisposed them to atherosclerosis, or whether atherosclerosis was common in other ancient societies as well.

    For the study, dubbed HORUS for an ancient Egyptian deity, the researchers obtained whole-body CT scans of 137 mummies from four geographic regions or populations spanning more than 4,000 years: ancient Egypt, ancient Peru, the Ancestral Puebloans of southwest America, and the Unangan of the Aleutian Islands in current-day Alaska.

    Atherosclerosis was regarded as definite if a calcified plaque was seen in the wall of an artery and probable if calcifications were seen along the expected course of an artery.

    As determined by a panel of seven cardiovascular imaging physicians, probable or definite atherosclerosis was noted in 47 (34%) of the mummies overall: 25 had definite and 22 had probable disease.

    Moreover, the scans detected evidence that then -- as now -- the disease spanned continents: 29 of the 76 Egyptian mummies, 13 of the 51 Peruvian mummies, two of five Ancestral Puebloans, and three of the five Unangan hunter gatherers.

    Atherosclerosis was present in the aorta in 28 mummie (20 percent), iliac or femoral arteries in 25 (18 percent), popliteal or tibial arteries in 25 (18 percent), carotid arteries in 17 (12 percent), and coronary arteries in six (4 percent).

    Of the five vascular beds examined, atherosclerosis was found in one to two beds in 34 (25 percent) mummies, in three to four beds in 11 (8 percent), and in all five beds in two (1 percent).

    The scans also revealed that the mean age of death was 43 for those with atherosclerosis, compared with 32 for those without it.

    Source: http://abcnews.go.com/Health/HeartHealth/mummies-heart-disease-study-finds/story?id=18702609

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    Legal scholarship highlight: A clinic's place in the Supreme Court ...

    As most readers of this blog are well aware, the past several years have witnessed the emergence of a new phenomenon: clinics in law schools that litigate cases in the Supreme Court. (I co-direct one at Stanford.) Although some commentators have written about the pedagogical goals and benefits of such clinics, no one yet has written about their public interest mission. This Article takes up that task.

    It begins by empirically testing, for the first time in modern literature, the clinics? foundational assumption: that litigants in the Court who are represented by inexperienced (and often under-resourced) counsel instead of Supreme Court specialists are generally at a distinct disadvantage.? To do so, the Article surveys 356 merits cases from October Term 2004 through October Term 2010 in which clinics might plausibly have represented an individual against a governmental or corporate entity.? In about 44% of those cases, Supreme Court specialists (as that term is defined by Richard Lazarus in his 2008 article about the modern Supreme Court bar) represented the individuals; nonspecialists represented the individuals in the remainder of the cases.? Litigants represented by specialists fared much better. They won 67% of their cases as petitioners and 32% as respondents, while individual litigants represented by nonspecialists won only 48% of their cases as petitioners and 14.5% as respondents.? And the subset of cases handled by clinics is consistent with this differential: clinics? clients prevailed 70% of the time as petitioners and 35% as respondents.

    None of these statistics is meant to suggest that Supreme Court specialists, much less clinics, ought to handle every Supreme Court case.? There are undoubtedly many highly skilled lawyers across the country who can, and do, provide excellent representation in such cases. But my empirical analysis does indicate that lawyering matters a great deal in the Supreme Court ? notwithstanding the perception of many that ?the law is the law? and that the Court?s view of, say, the Fourth Amendment or the Fair Labor Standards Act will not be affected by advocacy.? Indeed, according to the numbers in this Article, the outcome in perhaps as many as one in five cases turns on the identities of the lawyers.? That is no small matter in a system in which the Court?s decisions determine not only the rights or obligations of the parties before it but also dictate the course of the law and the resolution of untold disputes for years to come.? Moreover, although I do not attempt to statistically analyze differences in outcomes at the cert. stage, my instinct is that they are likely to be even more influenced by lawyering than merits outcomes.

    Accordingly, many litigants who would otherwise be represented by trial or local counsel may well stand to benefit from the expertise and resources that a Supreme Court clinic can offer.? First and foremost, clinics can level the representational playing field to the benefit of traditionally underserved litigants. Clinics can also aid the Justices and help bring balance to certain areas of the law that otherwise might tend to be skewed by inequalities in lawyering. Both of these things serve the public interest.

    At the same time, the fact that Supreme Court cases generate reverberations far beyond the specific parties involved ? indeed, sometimes beyond the courts themselves ? means that operating a Supreme Court clinic presents special challenges and responsibilities. ?In particular, insofar as clinics have control over which cases they bring to the Court and can cause the Court to hear cases that it might not otherwise have heard, the clinics? work can implicate sometimes latent tensions between client-centered representation and cause-based advocacy. The Article is forthright that when it comes to selecting (and, to lesser extent, handling) cases in the Court, there are not always easy ways to navigate these competing approaches to public interest lawyering. But it explores the ethical, practical, and normative issues that operating a Supreme Court pro bono practice raises.

    Posted in Academic Round-up, Featured

    Recommended Citation: Jeffrey Fisher, Legal scholarship highlight: A clinic?s place in the Supreme Court bar, SCOTUSblog (Mar. 11, 2013, 2:01 PM), http://www.scotusblog.com/2013/03/legal-scholarship-highlight-a-clinics-place-in-the-supreme-court-bar/

    Source: http://www.scotusblog.com/2013/03/legal-scholarship-highlight-a-clinics-place-in-the-supreme-court-bar/

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    Sunday, March 10, 2013

    Mandela hospitalized for scheduled checkup

    Elmond Jiyane / AFP - Getty Images file

    A handout photo provided on May 16, 2011 by the South African government shows former South African President Nelson Mandela posing with his wife Graca Machel.

    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Nelson Mandela was hospitalized Saturday in South Africa for what was called a ?scheduled medical check-up.? It was the second time in three months that the country?s former president was hospitalized.

    Mandela was admitted to the hospital ?for a scheduled medical check-up to manage existing conditions in line with his age,? presidential spokesman Mac Maharaj told NBC News. ?Doctors are conducting tests and have thus far indicated that there is no reason for any alarm.?

    The government did not reveal other details about the prominent anti-apartheid leader?s treatment in a Pretoria hospital on Saturday.

    Mandela spent nearly three weeks in the hospital in December for treatment of a lung infection and gallstone surgery. The leader?s December hospitalization was his longest since being released from captivity as a political prisoner in 1990.

    He has mostly removed himself from public life over the last decade.

    NBC's Rohit Kachroo joins Lester Holt with more on Nelson Mandela's health.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/09/17250517-mandela-hospitalized-for-scheduled-checkup?lite

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