Saturday, December 31, 2011

Spain king's son-in-law subpoenaed in graft probe (AP)

MADRID ? A judge subpoenaed the son-in-law of Spain's King Juan Carlos on Thursday to testify as a suspect in a corruption case, deepening a public relations nightmare for the royal family at a time of acute economic crisis for everyday people.

The case surrounding Inaki Urdangarin, husband of the king's daughter Cristina, has been front-page news for weeks. But it went a big step further Thursday when Judge Jose Castro on the Mediterranean island of Mallorca named Urdangarin as a formal suspect in a criminal probe.

The Balearic Islands Superior Court of Justice said in a statement that Urdangarin has been called to testify Feb. 6 in Palma, the capital of the archipelago. The one-page document did not mention allegations.

But Spanish media say Urdangarin, 43, is suspected of siphoning money from public contracts awarded from 2004 to 2006 to a nonprofit foundation he then headed. He has not been charged with a crime.

An official at the Royal Palace declined comment Thursday other than to say it "respects the decisions of judges."

Spain has nearly 22 percent unemployment, a stagnant economy, mountains of debt and many other woes, so alleged shady business dealings by a member of the royal family look terrible for the Spanish monarchy.

On Dec. 12 the Royal Palace shocked the country by announcing Urdangarin would for the time being stop taking part in official ceremonies involving the royal family.

And in an unprecedented show of transparency, the palace this week made public the details of the stipend the royal family receives from the national budget. It said, for instance, that King Juan Carlos earns euro292,552 ($382,597) a year in salary and expenses and his son, Crown Prince Felipe, roughly half that amount.

In his yearly Christmas Eve speech, the king expressed concern over what he described as the declining confidence among Spaniards in public institutions, a remark seen as a reference to the scandal surrounding his son-in-law, a commoner who used to be a professional handball player.

Judge Castro's order Thursday made public an until-now sealed case file that the newspaper El Pais said contains 2,700 pages.

Spanish newspapers have quoted investigators as saying Urdangarin is suspected, among other things, of having taken some of about euro6 million ($8 million) his nonprofit foundation received from the regional governments in Valencia and the Balearic Islands for organizing events such as sports seminars and diverting it to for-profit companies Urdangarin ran.

The case is part of a broader, long-running corruption probe involving the regional government in the Balearic Islands.

Since 2009 Urdangarin, the princess and their four children have lived in Washington, D.C., where Urdangarin works for the Spanish telecommunications company Telefonica, S.A.

King Juan Carlos and Queen Sofia have three children. Crown Prince Felipe is the youngest, Princess Cristina is the middle child and the eldest is Princess Elena.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111229/ap_on_re_eu/eu_spain_royal_family

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Nanoparticles Could Let You Wear a Computer Made Out of Cotton (Mashable)

Tablets and ereaders are so 2011 -- a global group of material scientists have found a way to turn cotton into transistors and electrical circuits. In the (not so distant) future, Apple's newest product might just be a t-shirt. That might be a bit of fantasy but the science is very real. The group of scientists -- from top universities in Italy, France and America -- created two kinds of transistors, an organic field-effect transistor (OFET) similar to those found in a computer's CPU and a lower-voltage organic electrochemical transistor (OCET), ExtremeTech reported.

[More from Mashable: Social Network for Robots Lets You Talk to Your Roomba]

To create the transistors, the group coated cotton threads with gold nanoparticles and a variety of conductors. The process creates cotton that is stiffer than that found in your standard shirt, but more elastic and with ability to carry a current. Best of all, according to the group's research paper, the coating process is not time-consuming and is much like dyeing standard fabrics.

Apparel companies have tried putting electronics into clothing for a long time, whether its light-up graphics or even a functional mini-amp. The paper takes those concepts light-years forward by turning the actual material into a computing matrix. As ExtremeTech points out, most cotton clothing is made of hundreds and hundreds of interconnected threads. The computing possibilities for these transistor threads is off the charts. The real trick will be making sure you keep your wardrobe charged.

[More from Mashable: 10 Best Sports Games for iPhone]

Is computerized cotton the clothing of the future or just a fantasy? Let us know your thoughts in the comments.

Image courtesy of Flickr, blakespot

This story originally published on Mashable here.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/applecomputer/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/mashable/20111229/tc_mashable/nanoparticles_could_let_you_wear_a_computer_made_out_of_cotton

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Poverty Report 2011: Factories didn?t prepare workers for jobs of today

It stands to reason that new jobs, paying decent wages and benefits, are necessary to help a region battle poverty. Some factors that contribute to poverty here may also hinder economic development. It?s a conundrum with which officials at the Galesburg Regional Economic Development Agency are familiar.

Population Loss

GREDA President Tom Schmidt said population loss has to be taken into consideration. Knox County?s population peaked at more than 61,000 people in the 1960s. Today, it stands at about 51,000.

?We seem to be at a level consistent with what it was in the 1930s,? Schmidt said.

That means 10,000 fewer people buying food, clothes and other merchandise, eating at local restaurants, shopping at stores here, etc.

?The sheer magnitude of the drain of human resources has an impact on the economic health of a community,? he said.

Using figures from the Healthy Communities study commissioned by the Knox County Health Department, Oliver Ferguson, director of the Knox County Development Corp., said in 2008, 57 percent of the population in Knox County had only a high school education or slightly more.

Part of the problem is area young people who leave for college often do not return after completing their studies.

?We?re not retaining those who have the higher skill sets. It makes it more difficult to attract the high-tech jobs,? Schmidt said.

Citing additional figures from the Healthy Communities study, Ferguson said the demographics of the area tell an interesting story. Twenty percent of the population in Knox County is younger than 18, while 20 percent is 65 and older. He said the most productive earning years are 45-54. He said people between the ages of 35 and 44 ?are really kind of building their careers.? Fourteen percent of Knox County?s population is in the 45-54 age range, with 11.9 percent 35 to 44.

?It?s not just the education level, there?s a key demographic of workers we are lacking,? Ferguson said.

A Tipping Point

Manufacturing, along with the railroads, was the area?s economic engine for many years. The last factories employing large numbers of workers left in 2004 and 2005, when Maytag and Butler pulled up stakes. Those companies were the end of a trend.. Ferguson said the report commissioned by the Health Department revealed that the population loss was greater in the 1990s than from 2000-2010.

?Whatever problems that emerged from the Maytag and Butler closings were already here,? he said. ?That was more of a tipping point.?

Schmidt said the departure of the factories after all those years left another void.

?We?re dealing now with the consequences of several generations of people living in this area who didn?t have to be entrepreneurs,? Schmidt said. ?They were working for others, rather than for themselves.?

They were trained specifically for the jobs at the factories, which, for the most part, didn?t translate well into the jobs of today. Retraining thus became necessary.

From 2000-2008, Knox County had a net loss of about 5,000 jobs, with 4,139 of those in manufacturing. Some job categories, such as information technology and education-health, added jobs.

?The actual form of employment available in this area, the bones have been broken and are being reset,? Schmidt said of the changing job picture in the area.

Schmidt said there needs to be more discussion of the reasons for the area?s economic/poverty problems.

?I?m bothered by the fact we don?t talk about this enough,? he said.

Ferguson said the Healthy Communities study is a good place to start.

?Every elected official and people who care about these questions should try to get a hold of that? report, he said.

Schmidt said the Healthy Communities study identified strengths that can help with job attraction, such as affordable housing. He said there are many other factors needed to bring in more jobs, such as better broadband connection.

Help Wanted: Entrepreneurs

A year ago, GREDA pledged to help improve education here.

?We believe the improvement to Galesburg and Knoxville schools leads the framework to economic revival,? Schmidt said.

He said GREDA is trying to work more with the city, as well.

?The time is right for us to move in that direction,? Schmidt said. ?The city is on the right track. There?s now a re-emphasis on entrepreneurs, encouraging people to go back into the arena of taking risks themselves.?

The former president of Carl Sandburg College said the school can be a valuable resource.

?Sandburg has been rated among the top tech-savvy community colleges in the nations the last five to seven years,? he said. ?We have capital to produce young men and women and retrained adults to work in the area of IT.?

While jobs that pay more money are needed, the conclusion was there are many diverse issues to be addressed if poverty is to be reduced.

?Clearly our role is limited,? Ferguson added. ?None of us here (at GREDA) are social workers. It?s our obligation to try to convince owners of capital to risk it here.?

?

Source: http://www.galesburg.com/news/x1569730634/Poverty-Report-2011-Factories-didn-t-prepare-workers-for-jobs-of-today

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Friday, December 30, 2011

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?

Source: http://www.feedhuntplaza.nl/index.php?action=pagina&id=65&id2=6036

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Tornado claims paid by insurers at least $2.2B

The Alabama Department of Insurance said insurers have paid at least $2.2 billion in claims arising from the April tornado outbreak in Alabama, and more than 2,500 claims are still pending eight months after the storms.

According to the Birmingham News, the figures include amounts that insurance companies regulated by the state have paid for homes, cars, businesses and other property damaged on April 27.

The figures do not include claims paid by companies such as Lloyd's of London, which insure some Alabama property but are not regulated by the state.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/vertical_13/~3/C5S49JWnMSs/tornado-claims-paid-insurers-least-22b.html

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Lawyer says soldier shooting client was attacked (AP)

SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. ? The lawyer for the California man charged with the attempted murder of an Afghanistan war veteran said his client was under attack when gunfire rang out.

Ruben Ray Jurado, 19, was charged Tuesday with attempted murder and multiple sentencing enhancements for using a firearm in the shooting that critically wounded Christopher Sullivan, 22, a Purple Heart recipient. Jurado was scheduled to be arraigned by video conference call Wednesday afternoon but that was postponed until Thursday morning when Jurado asked to attend the hearing in person.

Sullivan was home for the holidays at a homecoming party when a fight began over football, authorities said. When Sullivan moved to break it up, gunfire broke out, police said.

Defense attorney Michael J. Holmes said Tuesday that he wanted to talk to his client and the district attorney before commenting further on the case.

"It appears that he was being attacked and he was on the ground and was being kicked in the back, stomach, the head, and that is consistent with the injuries that I observed," Holmes said. "It is alleged at that point that Mr. Sullivan was shot."

Authorities said Jurado, who had played football with Sullivan in high school, began arguing with Sullivan's brother over football teams at the party Friday night and then punched him. Sullivan intervened and Jurado pulled a gun and fired multiple shots, hitting Sullivan in the neck, police said.

Sullivan remains in critical condition. His relatives said the gunfire shattered his spine and left him paralyzed from the neck down.

"He's opening his eyes more," his 20-year-old brother, Brandon Sullivan, told The Associated Press. "We're just waiting day by day."

Sullivan was wounded in a suicide bombing attack last year while serving with the military in Afghanistan. He suffered a cracked collarbone and brain damage in the attack and had been recovering in Kentucky, where he is stationed, before coming home for the holidays.

Sullivan was a wrestler and football player in high school in San Bernardino, about 60 miles east of Los Angeles. He had nine months to go in the military and then planned to become a firefighter or police officer. He always liked to help people, his brother said.

"Say there was a person at school who never had friends or nothing ? Chris would be the person who would go up to him and try to be his friend. He didn't like people to feel alone," Brandon Sullivan said. "He always had a smile on his face."

___

Associated Press writer Kristin M. Hall in Nashville, Tenn., contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111228/ap_on_re_us/us_soldier_shot

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

wvillustrated: Check out full #Bucknell postgame interviews with Coach Mike Carey and select #Mountaineers http://t.co/dqLIOzIQ

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Check out full #Bucknell postgame interviews with Coach Mike Carey and select #Mountaineers bit.ly/slRbzP wvillustrated

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

It was a special Christmas for the family of a 21-year-old University of Arizona...

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.facebook.com/7NEWS/posts/10150657484528332

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Could Romney 'train' be derailed by Gingrich? Perry? Someone new?

The word 'inevitable' is getting tossed around these days when it comes to Mitt Romney and the GOP nomination. But Newt Gingrich remains a real rival, and it's even still possible for a newcomer to enter the contest.

The scenario looks increasingly plausible: Republican voters will ultimately hand their party's presidential nomination to Mitt Romney, even though many of them aren't excited about doing so.

Skip to next paragraph

But if the word "inevitable" is getting used a fair amount by political analysts these days, the nomination is hardly a sure thing for the former governor of Massachusetts.

His big assets are that his campaign is well organized, he has had no major missteps, and his rivals have foibles or flaws in the eyes of Republican voters.?So it's entirely possible that the train called "Mitt for president in 2012," which essentially left the station after his 2008 candidacy ended, will roll steadily to the nomination.

?The dynamics couldn?t be better for us,? a senior Romney strategist told New York Magazine. ?I don?t see any scenario where we?re not the nominee.?

But in a campaign that has been volatile for several months, calling the race over before voting begins may be premature.?

Another scenario, for example, includes a protracted "Newt versus Mitt" battle that pits Mr. Romney against former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, who is now Romney's main rival in polls.?

Another is that one or more candidates who are now further behind catch some momentum in Iowa or New Hampshire, and voters take a second look. That's what Rick Perry, Rick Santorum, and Michele Bachmann are hoping. If things get really complicated, the result could be a "brokered convention" in which no candidates has amassed the needed support before GOP delegates arrive to formally select the nominee.

A third scenario, conceivable if Romney looks vulnerable coming out of Iowa and New Hampshire, is that a new candidate enters the race in time to compete in later primaries. Here again, the outcome could then be drawn-out suspense in the primaries and at the convention.

Here's what one prominent poll shows now.

According to Gallup, Mr. Gingrich is ahead of Romney among registered Republicans nationwide, but just barely. Support for the former House speaker surged last month after the candidacy of businessman Herman Cain collapsed, but over the past three weeks has ebbed to 26 percent.

Some 23 percent of GOP voters say they'd go with Romney, 12 percent with Rep. Ron Paul of Texas, 8 percent with Texas Governor Perry, 6 percent with Representative Bachmann of Minnesota, 3 percent with former Senator Santorum of Pennsylvania, and 1 percent with former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr.

The idea of a late-entry candidate is surely a wild card, but it's been getting some buzz lately.?In a new issue of The Weekly Standard, conservative commentator William Kristol makes a direct appeal to potential candidates now on the sidelines.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/wemVYdw6paQ/Could-Romney-train-be-derailed-by-Gingrich-Perry-Someone-new

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

1 Florida Lotto player wins $50 million jackpot

One ticket matched all six Florida Lotto numbers to win a jackpot worth $50 million, lottery officials said Sunday.

The winning ticket was bought in Tallahassee, lottery officials said.

A total of 80 tickets matched five numbers to win $3,932; 5,184 tickets matched four numbers for $50 each; and 90,817 tickets matched three numbers for $5 each.

The winning Florida Lotto numbers selected Saturday: 2-11-15-19-24-26.

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/12/25/2561471/1-florida-lotto-player-wins-50.html

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Japanese designer of arty kichenware Yanagi dies (AP)

TOKYO ? Sori Yanagi, whose designs for stools and kitchen pots brought the simplicity and purity of Japanese decor into the everyday, has died. He was 96.

The pioneer of Japan's industrial design died of pneumonia in a Tokyo hospital Sunday, Koichi Fujita of Yanagi Design Office said Monday.

Yanagi's curvaceous "butterfly stool," evocative of a Japanese shrine gate, won an award at La Triennale di Milano in 1957 and helped elevate him to international stature.

The work later joined the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Louvre museum in Paris.

Another typical Yanagi design was the stackable plastic stool, humorously called the "elephant stool," because of its resemblance to the animal's chunky feet.

The lines and curves of Yanagi designs were as distinctly Japanese as they were universal, winning him fans ? and a place in homes not only in Japan but around the world ? for his tea pots, ceramic cups and even the lowly whisk, which became artwork with his touch.

Yanagi chose design for his career after falling in love with the work of architect Le Corbusier while studying at a Tokyo fine art university.

Credited with paving the way on the international stage for younger Japanese designers, Yanagi also took up more monumental pieces, such as bridges and the Olympic torch, as well as a motorcycle and toys.

He supported Japanese traditional art throughout his life, and he served as head of the Japan Folk Crafts Museum in Tokyo, which his philosopher father founded.

Funeral arrangements were not being disclosed as the ceremony is for family and close friends. He is survived by his wife Fumiko and four children, Fujita said.

___

Follow Yuri Kageyama on Twitter at http://twitter.com/yurikageyama

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obits/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111226/ap_on_re_as/as_japan_obit_yanagi

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Obesity Linked to Higher Esophageal Cancer Death Rates (HealthDay)

FRIDAY, Dec. 23 (HealthDay News) -- Obese people who have had surgery to treat esophageal cancer are twice as likely to have a recurrence of the disease or die from cancer within five years as patients of normal weight, according to a new study.

In the study, published in the Dec. 1 issue of the Journal of Clinical Oncology, researchers from the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., suggested their findings could change the way some doctors treat obese patients with this type of cancer.

The investigators followed 778 people who had surgery for esophageal cancer and found that those who were classified as obese (a body mass index of 30 or higher) had a five-year survival rate of 18 percent. That survival rate jumped to 36 percent among people who were not overweight.

"Obesity is considered a risk factor in the development of this cancer, which is known to be both highly lethal and increasingly common," the study's lead investigator, Dr. Harry Yoon, an oncologist at the Mayo Clinic Comprehensive Cancer Center, said in a Mayo news release. "But prior to this study, we did not really understand the impact of obesity in this upper gastrointestinal cancer."

The study authors pointed out that their findings applied only to nonsmokers who had their esophagus removed. Yoon added that previous research has linked obesity to greater risk for cancer as well as increased risk of death from other types of tumors because extra weight results in a chronic inflammatory state.

The researchers noted their findings could change the approach they take with obese patients with esophageal cancer.

"As an oncologist, I did not typically speak to my patients about excess body weight as part of their care, because we are more often concerned about weight loss and maintaining proper nutrition, but that may change," said Yoon. "It would be helpful to be able to offer patients some measures that they can take to possibly impact their prognosis."

More information

The U.S. National Cancer Institute has more about obesity and cancer.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/health/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111224/hl_hsn/obesitylinkedtohigheresophagealcancerdeathrates

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Rampaging wild elephant kills Indonesian farmer (AP)

BANDA ACEH, Indonesia ? A rampaging wild elephant has trampled a farmer to death on Indonesia's Sumatra island.

Nyak Cut, a paramedic, says three farmers in Geumpang village in Aceh province were trying to drive away a herd of wild elephants from their fields Saturday when one of the animals charged, sending the men fleeing.

Cut says one of the farmers, 60-year-old Muhammad Amin, was trampled to death after he stumbled and fell.

He says villagers have threatened to kill the elephants if authorities fail to protect their farms.

Only 3,000 Sumatran elephants are believed to remain in the wild. They're threatened by their shrinking habitat, with jungles being cleared for commercial farming or felled for lumber. The elephants sometimes venture into inhabited areas in search of food.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111225/ap_on_re_as/as_indonesia_elephant_attack

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Video: Holidays with hardships

October 30: Plouffe, roundtable

Nearly a year away from the 2012 election, we?ll talk to the president?s 2008 campaign manager, now White House Senior Adviser, David Plouffe. Then author of the definitive new biography on the late Apple CEO, Steve Jobs, Walter Isaacson; Author of the new book ?The Time of Our Lives,? NBC News Special Correspondent, Tom Brokaw; Former Governor of Michigan, Jennifer Granholm; and Republican strategist, Mike Murphy.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3032608/vp/45787120#45787120

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BLSLibrary: IP rights in China: Still inscrutable - Mozilla Firefox http://t.co/Aq69YzMC

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Cadenza Showcase Boxing Day Special - Electric Brixton, London, GB

Reboot / Robert Dietz / Mirko Loko (live) / Cesar Merveille

?

This Boxing Day Arkitekt & LWE?join forces with Cadenza Records for a showcase set to spark the imaginations of even the most underground minimal and house heads. A meeting of minds that will make your festive season fresher than ever before...

Luciano?s groundbreaking label Cadenza Records has been at the forefront of underground house music since its launch in 2003, and on December 26th Cadenza hooks up with Arkitekt for showcase event at Pulse, on London's South Bank ? for Arkitekt ?& LWE Presents? Cadenza Showcase Boxing Day Special.

Bringing together some Cadenza favourites, this event features Reboot, Robert Dietz, Mirko Loko (live) and Cesar Merveille ? a stunning lineup for a very special night.

Headlining the event, Frankfurt?s Reboot (aka Frank Heinrich), whose star has really been on the rise in the last year. Having secured his place in the underground with his debut Cadenza release ?Be Tougher? in 2008 ? which was the standout track on Luciano?s Fabric mix ? Reboot has continued to push boundaries, has established himself at the top of the DJ tree and carved out his own niche within electronic music.?

Another Frankfurt techno head, Robert Dietz has had a busy 2011. Releases on esteemed imprints Cecille and Running Back, as well as much-vaunted releases on Cadenza, have made him one of the most sought-after artists in the underground house scene. Solid yet inventive, his sets have an old school vibe, laced with intricately woven hooks to really hype an audience. Who better to back up Reboot for this party?

Mirko Loko will be bringing his live show to town as part of this Boxing Day bonanza! Expect exclusive cuts and unreleased productions from this Detroit vs house maestro. And London house scene favourite Cesar Merveille completes the lineup. Cesar has been tearing up parties across the capital and worldwide, and his production is on the rise? He is guaranteed to bring something special to the decks for this one.

?

Tickets:

Early birds SOLD OUT?/ First release ?16 / Second release ?20 / more on the door

Source: http://londonwarehouseevents.ticketabc.com/events/cadenza-showcase-box/

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Rhapsody soars past a million paying customers, president Jon Irwin shaves his head in celebration

Whatever Spotify can do, Rhapsody can do better? Not quite, but it's getting there. While the former cruised past 2.5 million paying customers last month, Rhapsody has just announced that it has "gone platinum." It's now serving a cool million paying subscribers, right on the heels of its ten-year anniversary. The company's delivering around ten million songs per day, while making itself available on over 60 devices. What's next? Well, president Jon Irwin has to grow his locks back (seriously!), and we're guessing it'll try to lock down a few more carrier partnerships as the months drag on. When pinged for comment, Billy Corgan said: "I'm on vacation."

Continue reading Rhapsody soars past a million paying customers, president Jon Irwin shaves his head in celebration

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Researchers identify previously unknown gene fusion event in lung cancer

Smoking is a well-known risk factor for lung cancer, but nearly 25% of all lung cancer patients have never smoked. In a study published online today in Genome Research (www.genome.org), researchers have identified a previously unknown gene fusion event that could explain a significant proportion of lung cancer cases in never-smokers, and might serve as a target for new therapies.

Recent strides have been made to identify gene mutation events driving cases of lung adenocarcinoma in never-smokers, but the underlying genetic events leading to these lung cancers still remain unknown in a large number of cases. In this report, using a combination of genome sequencing and RNA sequencing, a team of researchers in South Korea has characterized a previously unknown gene fusion event in a case of lung adenocarcinoma striking a 33-year-old Korean male with no history of smoking or cancer within his family.

The group sequenced and compared the genome of the patient's cancer and normal tissue (blood), but they found no mutations in known-cancer related genes, such as EGFR, KRAS, and EML4-ALK mutations, that were likely to explain this case. Delving deeper, they also sequenced RNA isolated from the cancer cells, which when analyzed, can reveal gene rearrangement events that are difficult to detect by genome sequencing and may be driving the cancer.

Source: http://www.news-medical.net/news/20111223/Researchers-identify-previously-unknown-gene-fusion-event-in-lung-cancer.aspx

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Friday, December 23, 2011

The World's Longest Sushi Roll Spans an Absurd 1.5 Miles [Food]

Sushi is great because it's one of those foods that you can't get enough of. But English Russia found a Japanese restaurant in the city of Yekaterinburg (wherever that is) that measures its rolls not in pieces, but in football fields. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/KI6INtA6Jeg/

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Oracle sales miss forecasts, shares plunge (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? Technology giant Oracle Corp's profit and sales missed Wall Street forecasts, sending its shares plunging 9 percent and raising concerns that a global economic slowdown will hurt tech spending.

The company also posted an unexpected sequential decline in the revenue it gets for providing maintenance on its software products -- one of the most lucrative parts of its business.

That hasn't happened to Oracle since the fall of 2008 when the financial crisis began with the collapse of Lehman Brothers, said Cowen & Co analyst Peter Goldmacher.

"Tech spending is more under pressure than people thought," Goldmacher said. "IT budgets have been relatively flat; when you have issues like you do in Europe, people naturally pull back."

Oracle, the world's No. 3 software maker, reported profit, excluding items, of 54 cents per share in its second quarter ended November 30, missing the average analyst forecast of 57 cents, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

"Every technology company is going to get hit. This is just the start," said Global Equities Research analyst Trip Chowdhry.

New software sales rose 2 percent from a year earlier to $2 billion during the quarter. Analysts, on average, were expecting new software sales of $2.2 billion, according to StreetAccount.

Oracle also reported that hardware product sales fell 14 percent to $953 million, below the average Street account forecast of $1.06 billion.

Its software maintenance revenue fell to $3.99 billion during the second quarter from $4.02 billion in the first quarter.

Oracle's shares fell to $26.55 in extended trade after closing on Nasdaq close at $29.17.

(Additional reporting by Nicola Leske in New York and Poornima Gupta in San Francisco; Editing by Richard Chang)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/software/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111220/bs_nm/us_oracle

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

New method of infant pain assessment from Oxford published in JoVE

New method of infant pain assessment from Oxford published in JoVE [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 21-Dec-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Katherine Scott
katherine.scott@jove.com
617-820-1817
The Journal of Visualized Experiments

Recently, the accuracy of current methods of pain assessment in babies have been called into question. New research from London-area hospitals and the University of Oxford measures brain activity in infants to better understand their pain response.

As every parent knows, interpreting what a baby is feeling is often incredibly difficult. Currently, pain in infants is assessed using the premature infant pain profile (PIPP), which is based on behavioral and physiological body reactions, such as crying and facial expression. Though this is a useful measure, it is largely dependent on unconscious reflexes and may not be reliably linked to central sensory processing in the brain.

The new pain assessment technique, published in the unique video-based publication, the Journal of Visualized Experiments (JoVE), evaluates the electrical activity in skeletal muscles and uses electroencephalography (EEG) to detect activity in the areas of the brain where unpleasant sensations are processed.

"We want to help work out how effective pain treatments are," said study author Dr. Rebeccah Slater. " We also want to understand the effects of prematurity on pain, and whether prematurity on pain, and whether prematurity has long-term implications on the pain response."

The researchers gathered the data while the infants were undergoing a medically necessary heel lance, a routine method of collecting blood from newborns. Babies born with severe medical conditions may have to undergo painful medical procedures frequently, and research has shown that this can cause long-term harm on a baby's nervous system.

Over-exposure to pain in infancy can lead to feeding and sleep problems, chronic pain problems and learning and behavioral disorders.

Because a poor understanding of pain in infants can lead to severe health consequences, Slater and her colleagues decided to publish in JoVE, the first and only peer-reviewed video journal indexed in PubMed and MEDLINE. The video-article makes it easier for other researchers and clinicians to learn this method.

"It's quite hard to measure brain activity in premature infants," said Slater about the decision. "The methods are quite complicated and we wanted people to be able to do this technique."

###

About The Journal of Visualized Experiments:

The Journal of Visualized Experiments (JoVE) is the first and only Pubmed and Medline indexed academic journal devoted to publishing research in the biological sciences in video format. Using an international network of videographers, JoVE films and edits videos of researchers performing new experimental techniques at top universities, allowing students and scientists to learn them much more quickly. As of September 2011 JoVE has released 55 monthly issues including over 1300 video-protocols on experimental approaches in developmental biology, neuroscience, microbiology and other fields.



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

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


New method of infant pain assessment from Oxford published in JoVE [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 21-Dec-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Katherine Scott
katherine.scott@jove.com
617-820-1817
The Journal of Visualized Experiments

Recently, the accuracy of current methods of pain assessment in babies have been called into question. New research from London-area hospitals and the University of Oxford measures brain activity in infants to better understand their pain response.

As every parent knows, interpreting what a baby is feeling is often incredibly difficult. Currently, pain in infants is assessed using the premature infant pain profile (PIPP), which is based on behavioral and physiological body reactions, such as crying and facial expression. Though this is a useful measure, it is largely dependent on unconscious reflexes and may not be reliably linked to central sensory processing in the brain.

The new pain assessment technique, published in the unique video-based publication, the Journal of Visualized Experiments (JoVE), evaluates the electrical activity in skeletal muscles and uses electroencephalography (EEG) to detect activity in the areas of the brain where unpleasant sensations are processed.

"We want to help work out how effective pain treatments are," said study author Dr. Rebeccah Slater. " We also want to understand the effects of prematurity on pain, and whether prematurity on pain, and whether prematurity has long-term implications on the pain response."

The researchers gathered the data while the infants were undergoing a medically necessary heel lance, a routine method of collecting blood from newborns. Babies born with severe medical conditions may have to undergo painful medical procedures frequently, and research has shown that this can cause long-term harm on a baby's nervous system.

Over-exposure to pain in infancy can lead to feeding and sleep problems, chronic pain problems and learning and behavioral disorders.

Because a poor understanding of pain in infants can lead to severe health consequences, Slater and her colleagues decided to publish in JoVE, the first and only peer-reviewed video journal indexed in PubMed and MEDLINE. The video-article makes it easier for other researchers and clinicians to learn this method.

"It's quite hard to measure brain activity in premature infants," said Slater about the decision. "The methods are quite complicated and we wanted people to be able to do this technique."

###

About The Journal of Visualized Experiments:

The Journal of Visualized Experiments (JoVE) is the first and only Pubmed and Medline indexed academic journal devoted to publishing research in the biological sciences in video format. Using an international network of videographers, JoVE films and edits videos of researchers performing new experimental techniques at top universities, allowing students and scientists to learn them much more quickly. As of September 2011 JoVE has released 55 monthly issues including over 1300 video-protocols on experimental approaches in developmental biology, neuroscience, microbiology and other fields.



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

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-12/tjov-nmo122111.php

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Former 2nd Mile board members: We needed to know (AP)

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. ? Former board members of Jerry Sandusky's charity say its CEO never told them about a 2002 shower incident that is the focus of child sexual abuse charges against the retired Penn State assistant coach. If they knew Sandusky had been banned from bringing kids on campus, they say they could have taken steps to better protect children a decade ago.

"Not one thing was said to us," said Bradley P. Lunsford, a Centre County judge who served on the Second Mile board between 2001 and 2005. "Not a damn thing."

If more information had been given to board members, they "would have asked the follow-up question: Why? You don't know? Who knows? Who can we talk to? Has this been reported to the police?" Lunsford said. "I guarantee you there would have been a competition among all those people to be the first to ask the question, `Why is he not allowed on campus?'"

Lunsford and four other former board members at The Second Mile point the finger at Jack Raykovitz, a close friend of Sandusky's who ran the charity until resigning following the former coach's Nov. 5 arrest.

A former prosecutor, Lunsford said Raykovitz had an obligation to tell the board. "There are a number of people around that table who have been involved with children's charities for years and there's a very good chance that if given accurate information about what the allegation was, there's a lot of people around that table who could have done something about it."

One of Raykovitz's vice presidents said Raykovitz also shared little information with his managers about a 2008 sexual abuse complaint that led to the current criminal charges against Sandusky.

And the head of Clinton County's child welfare agency, where the 2008 investigation began, said he told Raykovitz's wife in November 2008 that Sandusky had been spoken to about getting "too close" to children involved with the charity. Gerald Rosamilia said Raykovitz's wife, Katherine Genovese, who helped run The Second Mile, did not define what was meant by "too close" or give a timeframe.

Raykovitz defended himself in a telephone interview, saying he acted appropriately at all times. "There have always been steps in place to protect kids," he said.

The grand jury that charged Sandusky with 52 sexual abuse-related counts involving 10 boys said the former coach "found his victims" through The Second Mile and committed many of his offenses inside Penn State football buildings.

The nonprofit had thrived since its creation in 1977 because of Sandusky's prominence as a defensive coach at Penn State, its close ties to university donors and leaders, and its use of Penn State's athletic fields for its camps serving at-risk children. Then-coach Joe Paterno often served as master of ceremonies at The Second Mile fundraisers.

Paterno, 84, led Penn State football for more than 45 years until early November, when the sexual abuse charges against Sandusky shook the entire university and claimed the jobs of major college football's winningest coach and the school's president, Graham Spanier.

Now, with The Second Mile's future in doubt, it is unclear whether Raykovitz properly handled the charity's response to the 2002 case.

Penn State athletic director Tim Curley testified that a graduate assistant had told him in 2002 only that he had seen "inappropriate conduct" that made him feel uncomfortable, and nothing of a sexual nature. But Mike McQueary, now an assistant coach, testified to the grand jury that he told Curley he saw what he believed to be Sandusky raping the boy, who he said was about 10.

Curley, who has been charged with perjury and failure to report a sex crime, testified he told Raykovitz of inappropriate conduct and that Sandusky was prohibited from bringing youth onto the Penn State campus.

Asked what Curley told him, Raykovitz cited a Nov. 6 Second Mile statement that referred only to inappropriate conduct: "At no time was The Second Mile made aware of the very serious allegations contained in the Grand Jury report."

The statement also said Curley, who has been placed on leave, told Raykovitz the shower incident "had been internally reviewed and that there was no finding of wrongdoing."

But Lunsford said the charity's board couldn't take action in 2002 that might have prevented other assaults of children "if there's a cover-up from the source."

Even if Raykovitz had only limited information, he still should have acted more aggressively in 2002 when contacted by Curley and should have viewed Curley's ban on Sandusky bringing Second Mile kids to campus as "a red flag," Lunsford said.

As the person in charge, Raykovitz was legally required to provide the board all available information whether he believed it was true or suspected it was false, Lunsford said.

"We still need to know. That's our job," he added. "By not telling us, it essentially rendered us ineffective and we had no chance to help those children."

Informed of Lunsford's comments, Raykovitz said, "He can feel anything he wants to feel."

Charles Markham, retired president of Uni-Marts Inc. and a Second Mile board member from the late 1990s until about 2004, said that Raykovitz never discussed the 2002 case with him personally or at board meetings. "If I'd known anything in 2002, I would have had a hard time keeping it under my hat," Markham said.

Two other former board members ? Larry Snavely, who runs a State College-based higher education marketing firm, and Donald Cross, a retired Centre County school employee ? said Raykovitz never mentioned the 2002 allegation. Another former member said he was not told, but asked that he not be publicly identified.

David Woodle, acting CEO, refused to address concerns raised by board members about Raykovitz's handling of information regarding the 2002 shower incident, saying to do so would be a distraction from the goal of helping serve children.

The board of directors of a children's charity is responsible for making sure that it operates under reasonable policies and procedures to protect children, according to Daniel Borochoff, president of Chicago-based Charity Watch. Individual board members can face lawsuits for failing in their oversight duties, and The Second Mile insures its board members against such claims.

The Second Mile has been named in two civil complaints, including one that seeks to preserve the charity's assets.

David Marshall, a Washington, D.C., lawyer who represents other accusers, said: "It may have been only Sandusky who laid his hands on these children, but it is clear that a number of other individuals and agencies placed the children in harm's way by knowingly taking actions that allowed the abuse to continue even after they became fully aware of it."

Raykovitz also is facing questions about his handling of the 2008 complaint.

Rosamilia, the Clinton County youth services chief, said he had informed Raykovitz's wife in November 2008 that his office was terminating its relationship with The Second Mile because of an abuse complaint. He said he had not identified the target of that complaint, but that Genovese eventually guessed correctly that it was Sandusky.

Rosamilia, who said he mentioned his conversation with Genovese to investigators working on the current prosecution, also recalled Genovese saying that a member of The Second Mile board planned to speak with Sandusky about staying away from Second Mile events involving children.

Raykovitz said Rosamilia's description of the conversation with his wife is incorrect. He would not elaborate. Attempts to reach Genovese were unsuccessful.

Raykovitz referred questions about what he did in 2008 to a prior statement, which said that when Sandusky told The Second Mile he was being investigated because of allegations made "by an adolescent male," the organization separated him from "all of our program activities involving children." The Second Mile statement makes no mention of the sexual nature of the 2008 complaint.

He said in the interview last week some staff at The Second Mile were informed in 2008 that the complaint was the reason Sandusky was not participating in programs serving children, but only on an "as-needed basis."

Bonnie Marshall, the charity's vice president for development, said Raykovitz described the 2008 complaint to her and other senior staff as a general abuse complaint, not one of a sexual nature.

She said Raykovitz explained that Sandusky would be taking a break from programs with children but would continue fundraising.

She said she also was unaware of Genovese's conversation with Rosamilia, and was not aware that anyone at the charity had ever spoken to Sandusky about getting too close to The Second Mile children.

In 2009, when Sandusky left the charity's board, Raykovitz told the staff that child welfare officials had issued a finding of abuse against Sandusky, Marshall said. But, she added, Raykovitz described it only as a general complaint being pursued by an angry mother who had accused Sandusky of wrongdoing, not a complaint of sexual abuse.

"I thought he would have told me that this was something really bad," Marshall said. "And he didn't."

___

AP National Writer Jeff Donn and AP researchers Judith Ausuebel and Monika Mathur contributed to this report.

___

The AP National Investigative Team can be reached at investigate(at)ap.org

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111219/ap_on_sp_ot/us_penn_state_the_second_mile

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