Sunday, 31 March 2013

India's top court to deliver Novartis judgment

FILE ? In this Jan. 29, 2007 file photo, Indian police officers block demonstrators protesting against Swiss drugmaker Novartis AG's case against the Indian government on drug patents in New Delhi, India. India's Supreme Court is to rule Monday, April 1, 2013, whether to deny a patent to Novartis AG for its cancer treatment in a landmark case that would allow Indian companies to continue producing cheaper versions of many lifesaving medicines. (AP Photo/Saurabh Das, File)

FILE ? In this Jan. 29, 2007 file photo, Indian police officers block demonstrators protesting against Swiss drugmaker Novartis AG's case against the Indian government on drug patents in New Delhi, India. India's Supreme Court is to rule Monday, April 1, 2013, whether to deny a patent to Novartis AG for its cancer treatment in a landmark case that would allow Indian companies to continue producing cheaper versions of many lifesaving medicines. (AP Photo/Saurabh Das, File)

FILE - In this Dec. 21, 2012 file photo, an Indian activist from a health group holds a placard while participating in a protest against Swiss drugmaker Novartis AG outside their office in Mumbai, India. India's Supreme Court is to rule Monday, April 1, 2013, whether to deny a patent to Novartis AG for its cancer treatment in a landmark case that would allow Indian companies to continue producing cheaper versions of many lifesaving medicines. (AP Photo/Rajanish Kakade, File)

(AP) ? India's Supreme Court is to rule Monday on a landmark patent case involving Swiss drugmaker Novartis AG that focuses on demands by major companies that their investments be protected, against Indian companies that say they should be allowed to continue producing cheaper generic versions of many lifesaving medicines.

A decision in the seven-year legal battle is keenly awaited by the two most interested parties? big pharma companies and health aid groups ? with both sides saying the outcome will set a precedent with far-reaching consequences for the future availability of the drugs.

"Across the world, people rely on India for supplies of affordable versions of expensive patented medicines," said Leena Menghaney of Doctors Without Borders. "This case will have fundamental consequences."

The case goes back to 2006 when Novartis' application for a fresh patent in India for its cancer drug imatinib mesylate was rejected by the Indian patent office.

The patent authority cited a legal provision in India's 2005 patent law aimed at preventing companies from getting fresh patents for making only minor changes to existing medicines ? a practice known as "evergreening."

The drugmaker has argued that its leukemia drug Gleevec, known in Europe and India as Glivec, was a newer, more easily absorbed version that qualified for a fresh patent.

The company filed an appeal, but India's patent appeals office turned it down in 2009 on the grounds the company was unable to show significant increase in efficacy of the drug.

Novartis then approached the Supreme Court in August 2009, which heard arguments seeking to challenge the interpretation and application of India's patent law in the case.

Gleevec, used in treating chronic myeloid leukemia and some other cancers, costs a patient about $2,600 a month. Its generic version was available in India for around $175 per month.

"The difference in price was huge. The generic version makes it affordable to so many more poor people, not just in India, but across the world," said Y.K. Sapru, of the Mumbai-based Cancer Patients Aid Association.

The case once again pits big pharmaceutical companies against health activists and aid groups with both sections arguing that the judgment would be an important milestone for the future of the pharmaceutical industry worldwide.

"The Novartis verdict is important because it will determine whether India gets to limit patents to genuine new drugs, or whether drug companies get to "evergreen" their patents until eternity, simply by re-patenting a slightly modified version of a known substance," said Ellen 't Hoen, a pharmaceutical law and policy consultant.

Western pharmaceutical companies have warned that a rejection of Novartis' application would discourage investment in research and innovation, and would hobble drugmakers' efforts to refine and improve their products.

The international drug majors have been pushing for stronger patent protection in India to regulate the country's $26 billion generic drug industry, which they say often flouts intellectual property rights.

In a statement sent to The Associated Press late last year, Novartis said patent protection was important to ensure effective protection for innovation.

"Knowing we can rely on patents in India benefits government, industry and patients because research-based organizations will know if investing in the development of better medicines for India is a viable long-term option," the company said.

Groups such as Doctors Without Borders say cheaply made Indian generics are a lifesaver for millions of patients in poor countries who cannot afford to pay Western prices to treat diseases such as cancer, malaria and HIV.

India, which has emerged as the world's pharmacy for the poor, has come under intense scrutiny from pharmaceutical giants who say India's 2005 Patent Act fails to guarantee the rights of investors who finance drug research and development.

The country's recent decision to allow a local manufacturer to produce a generic version of Bayer's patented cancer drug Nexavar, to make the drug available to the public at a reasonably affordable price, has also not gone down well with Western pharmaceutical companies.

Health and aid groups were clearly nervous before the top court rules on the Novartis case.

"Generic companies depend on the freedom to operate. If there are too many intellectual property-related challenges, then the companies very quickly withdraw from making that drug," said Menghaney.

The groups fear that a ruling in favor of Novartis would lead to a proliferation of patents ? some based on a minor tweaking of formulation and dosages ?on dozens of other generic medicines that Indian companies have been producing and supplying to needy nations at far lower costs than those charged by Western drug manufacturers.

And the fallout of the judgment will be felt across the world, says Menghaney. "It's not just about India."

"If generic competition on many crucial medicines ends, then prices for these medicines will increase, both in India and across the developing world. This would be devastating for millions who rely on India for affordable medicines."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-03-31-India-Patent%20Battle/id-9299251350894549ac0c2d134052ebb5

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'Walking Dead' pics: Rick, others prep for battle

By Drusilla Moorhouse, TODAY contributor

We know "The Walking Dead's" third-season finale will be a bloodbath. The only question is how many main characters will be lost in the battle between The Governor's Woodbury forces and Rick Grimes' new democracy.

Gene Page / AMC

Will Michonne embrace the prison gang's all-for-one-and-one-for-all fightin' spirit? In one of several shots from "Welcome to the Tombs," exclusive to The Clicker, the sword fighter has returned to the prison, and clearly she and Rick have a lot to chat about. Although we bet he'll do most of the talking -- Ricky has some 'splainin' to do after nearly sacrificing her to the gubernatorial torture chamber.?

Gene Page / AMC

And even as the Walkers roam the prison yard, Carl draws strength from the family picture he fought so desperately to retrieve from the Grimes' old house (with help from Michonne).

Gene Page / AMC

Related content:

Source: http://theclicker.today.com/_news/2013/03/28/17503170-walking-dead-finale-exclusives-see-rick-and-others-prepare-for-battle?lite

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Baby Giraffe Stands Up For the First Time, Melts Hearts

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Ki-Suck Han Family Sues MTA Over NYC Subway Shoving Death

NEW YORK -- The family of a man who died after allegedly being pushed into the path of a New York City subway train has filed a lawsuit against the city's transit authority.

The lawsuit filed Friday by the family of Ki-Suck Han seeks unspecified damages stemming from his December 3 death. It accuses the Metropolitan Transportation Authority of negligence.

Police say a homeless man admitted pushing Han onto the tracks but said Han was drunk and instigated the confrontation.

Naeem Davis has been charged in Han's death and is being held without bail. His attorney has said Han went after his client.

Earlier on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/30/ki-suck-han-family-sues-mta-nyc-subway-shoving-death_n_2985934.html

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Saturday, 30 March 2013

BOWLING SCORES - The Sports Desk

AMF FREDERICKSBURG

Rappahannock men?s league

Tony Arnold 269, 299, 258, 826; John Oliver 267, 243, 300, 810; Dave Edwards 289, 247, 268, 804; Paul Rumbaugh 237, 289, 246, 772; Jim Einhorn 246, 257, 239, 742; Bryan Gallahan 247, 269, 741; John Zentner 279, 258, 736; Scott Sanders 266, 246, 736; Tomm Brady 248, 241, 243, 732; Rick Coulson 256, 255, 720; Ricky Wallace 247, 237, 233, 717; Jimmy Ruby 267, 241, 711; Jeff Leonard 248, 264, 711; Josh Jefferies 289, 710; Eric Schaarschmidt 257, 709; Frankie Weaver 255, 236, 705; Donnie Norton 243, 256, 703; Jim Wolfe 252, 258, 702; David Armstrong 234, 253, 696; Tom Marinari 236, 235, 693; Bruce White 259, 685; Aaron Lewis 264, 684; Jim Murray 249, 684; Mike Zemore 268, 683; Fuzzy Fox 255, 269, 681; Scott Smith 279, 679; Chris Burton 236 676; Doug Patterson 246, 675; Tony Rakes 245, 671; Robert Kline 233, 667; Jamie Dalton 261, 666; Gene Vest 256, 665; Pete Gunn 237, 665; Kevin Austin 268, 664; Troy Kelly 241, 248, 664; Brannon Hardin 235, 233, 659; Daryl Perdue 233, 658; Rino Biello 245, 657; Dave Wollstein 247, 656; Cory White 264, 651; Stan Cieslewitz 235, 648; Eric Brown 648; Justin Powers 265, 647; Sean Rhea 259, 646; Don Monroe 242, 636; D.J. Johnson 630; Jeff Smith 233, 629; Tony Krehbiel 628; Richard Bergey 626.

Bill Hagerman 255; Wayne Ferrell 246; Jerry Goodman 246; Bobby Phillips 235; Jeff Lavin Jr. 233.

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Merchants mixed league

Richard Hailstalk 238, 267, 267, 772; Jeter Holloway III 289, 261, 737; Michael Paige 267, 257, 720; Larry Roath 238, 236, 234, 708; Richard Jaco 258, 244, 703; Les Williams 236, 235, 231, 702; Thomas Moore 249, 234, 674; Charles Smith 673; Michael Lamb 268, 658; Charles Hubbard 269, 656; Dennis Alwine 654; Cecil Franklin 237, 649; Larry Crawfod 646; Barry Robinson 235, 641; Dave Heatherly 242, 637; Eugene Mildling 248, 620; Breton Bridges 246; Steven Pittman 245; Mark Jones 244; Norfleet Bonds 241; Daniel Resio 236; Wiley Coon 233; Jimmy Durante 233; Robert Resio 230; Douglas Richey 230.

Kathryn White 240, 210, 644; Connie Gourdine 214, 200, 224, 638; LaTonia Livingston 221, 212, 627; Pong Cobb 221, 211, 593; Geri-Lynn Copeland 200, 204, 592; Denise Lanier 222, 202, 580; Kathy Shepherd 203, 580; Mary Hand 219, 210; Pamela Payne 217; Andrea Sharp 216; Nancy Crawford 200, 214; Brenda Chambers 207; Tina Sebak 207; Sharon Moore 204; Sherry Schaarschmidt 204; Brittany Hand 202; Hannah Jenkins 201; Judith Turlington 200.

Steve?s trios

Les Williams 237, 300, 255, 792; Brian Chew 258, 246, 708; Bobby Phillips 234, 246, 707; Jim Martin II 234, 247, 694; Rick Marvin 258, 234, 686; Art Prescott 268, 685; Jay Bowling 679; Rick Gilmore 248, 675; John Greer 231, 663; Robert Bradley Jr. 263, 657; Jeff Crouch 246, 656; Jim Meredith 256, 650; Wes Reynolds 232, 642; Justin Story 237, 639; Ryan Sirna 247, 633; Rob Lawrence 231, 628; Glenn Hogeland 621; Wade Cropp 242.

Michelle Livingston 212, 220, 222, 654; Sandy Badilo 201.

Goodtimers (seniors)

Bob Resio 198, 237, 258, 693; Bobby Philips 224, 265, 675; Chuck Husted 197, 231, 216, 645; Jimmy Durante 254, 202, 641; Paul Barnette 195, 215, 215, 625; Bob McGann 214, 200, 596; Dick Jaco 204, 200, 586; Bill Tinsley 225, 584; Joe Plummer 199, 194, 578; Glenn Hogeland 234, 577; Jay Bowling 202, 571; Robert Epp 199, 193, 567; Tom Weetman 212, 565; Rino Biello 194, 565; John Bailey 196, 200, 559; Walter Baker 220, 540; Rich Strickland 213; Howard Collins 210; Bill Blanchard 203; Kevin Lunsford 195; Bill Hitchings 196, 194; Lloyd Messner 190.

Ellen Pentland 194; Penny Young 181.

Doc?s angels (seniors)

Butch Mims 244, 226, 190, 660; Willey Coon 217, 235, 639; Bobby Phillips 201, 203, 202, 606; Morris Antwine 227, 204, 595; Bill Tinsley 213, 195, 590; Glenn Hogeland 211, 191, 586, Bill Hichings 224, 578; Harold Haggerty 224 578; Marc Hubbard 225, 562; John Bailey 203, 190, 558; Bob Resio 197, 204, 556; Albert Walker 198, 546; Rich Strickland 206; Richard Miller 204; John Rourke 194; Bob McCann 192; Joe Kusina 191; Ed Horn 190.

Billie Mitchem 196, 528; Jean Criss 191, 494.

Guys and dolls (seniors)

Dave Brady 286, 253, 688; Jason McDonald 298, 674; Anthony Brown 223, 212, 207, 642; Henry Wolfe 220, 214, 630; Mark Britton 235; Warren Cooper 226; Carl Gray 207.

Jenni Brady 193, 551; Robin Allison Jones 206.

Burnopp?s kids (seniors)

Paul Zornacki 205, 217, 581; Wade Haney 182, 537; Dick Coleman 188; Leroy Hicks 188.

Lucille Mestre 188, 501.

LIBERTY LANES

Wednesday night men?s league

Googie Thompson 257, 246, 732; Josh Tabony 267, 707; Gene Vest 232, 257, 695; Cory White 252, 692; Paul Rumbaugh II 247, 244, 683; Noah Green 237, 255, 682; Tony Rose 243, 237, 682; Bill Symonowski 243, 682; Jim Murray 269, 247, 681; Danny Sanders 237, 673; Matt Leonard 246, 237, 660; Richard Hailstalk 237, 654; Daniel Yeagley 233, 652; Jeff Smith 651; Jon Blanton 649; Bobby Phillips Jr. 235, 646; Mark Britton 234, 641; Jason Zitzelberger 247, 640; Kenny Merryman 238, 638; Jerry Branscome 635; Steve Allen 628; Brandon Blanton 625; Daniel Pittman 625; Robbie Jarrell Jr. 623; Mark Henderson 246; Ace Midling 243; Donnie Nave 232; Ed Mills 230.

Tuesday night mixed league

Jim Mayer 257, 249, 719; Don McElheny 258, 701; Wes Wiseman III 256, 698; Thomas Bellinger 278, 673; John Heard 244, 672; Larry Shoemaker Sr. 233, 669; Daniel Pittman 258, 649; Chuck Allen 256, 638; David Henningsen 232, 638; Bob Jones 631; Cary Bailey 264, 624; Daril Godinez 622; Murray Soland 245; Jacob Capra 235; Scott Russell 233; Paul Terebesi 23; Ken Greene 231.

Shauna Bailey 205, 218, 601; Diane Godinez 203, 201, 586; Kathie Dillon 204; Vivian Bellinger 202.

Liberty eagles

Bryan Gallahan 238, 279, 238, 755; Steve Brown 255, 254, 733; Donnie Nave 233, 255, 702; Allen Chambers 232, 244, 701; Edgar Yates 244; Mark Perryman 230.

Jet setters

William Michaud 257, 233, 700; Don McElheny 257, 685; Daniel Pittman 258, 676; Angelo Allen 244, 655; Todd Altermose Jr. 246, 637; Wallace Jarvis 231, 634; Kenneth Vestal 233.

Dolores Michaud 216.

Green pin

Chuck Allen 258, 690; T.J. Altermose 277, 665; Jacob Capra 240, 650.

Emily Watters 207; Gayle Bracy 202.

Ladies? night out

Brenda Chambers 209; Susan Barber 208.

Permalink: http://news.fredericksburg.com/sports/2013/03/28/bowling-scores-68/

Source: http://news.fredericksburg.com/sports/2013/03/28/bowling-scores-68/

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Outrage, sadness as Americans barred from adopting Russian children

NBC News

Sonia greets her new parents, Kristina and Rich England.

By Jim Maceda, Correspondent, NBC News

BRYANSK, Russia --?Kristi and Rich England of Marshall, Minn., shook with nerves and joy on their fourth and last trip to an orphanage in Bryansk, in?rural Russia. ?

They were finally taking Sonia, a partially blind and hyperactive 3-year-old, home with them.?The tearful Feb. 12 meeting, punctuated by Sonia?s screams of ?mama? and ?dada,? was all the more emotional because the Englands knew that they were the last lucky couple to leave Russia with an adopted child.?

?So many other families have seen their children and have loved their children and can?t bring them home,? said Kristi England, 34, a family doctor. ?It?s so unfair in so many ways.?

Those already undergoing the costly process of adopting a child from Russia found out Russian president Vladimir Putin signed a law barring any future adoptions, canceling the ones in progress. NBC's Kerry Sanders reports.

The process wasn?t easy ? the Englands endured multiple background checks and spent at least $50,000 to ensure that Sonia, now called Sophia, could go home with them.

But the ban signed into law on Dec. 28 barring all U.S. adoptions ? which numbered more than 60,000 over the past two decades ? has marooned hundreds of families in the middle of adopting, and stranded thousands of children in orphanages throughout Russia.??

"We should do all we can so that orphaned children find a family in our country, in Russia," President Vladimir Putin said in defense of the ban.

Fueling the outrage in Russia over the fate of children adopted by Americans, Russian media reported earlier this week that Alexander Abnosov, 18, showed up in the Volga River port town of Cheboksary saying his adoptive family had mistreated him. He had left Russia five years earlier, having been adopted by a family outside Philadelphia, but said he fled after suffering from verbal abuse by his adoptive mother. ?

"She would make any small problem big and always try to find a reason to shout at you," he told Russia?s state-owned Channel 1.

While UNICEF estimates there are about 740,000 children not in parental custody in Russia, only about 18,000 Russians are on the waiting list to adopt.?

But while Putin denies any direct connection, Kremlin-watchers say the ban is really about geopolitics and not about protecting kids.

NBC News

Russian child psychologist Valentina Rakova Valentina (left) stands with Kristina and Richard England and newly adopted Sonia in an orphanage in Bryansk, rural Russia.

They say it was retaliation by Moscow for an American law banning any Russian human rights violators from U.S. soil, enacted after the suspicious death in prison of Sergey Magnitsky, a Russian lawyer working for Heritage Fund, an American private equity firm.?

Russian media didn't hesitate to bolster the official line. ?

Despite the negative reports, child psychologist Valentina Rakova, who has worked in the Bryansk orphanage for 30 years, says the ban is terrible for children.?

?Here in Russia we have many examples of bad parents -- even worse than these American cases -- where kids are just tossed out,? she said as she coiffed Sonia, who requires special medical attention.

?A child like Sonia, no Russian would accept her,? Rakova said. ?Before the ban, orphans were offered to Russian families but no one took them in.??

Rakova's experience confirms the U.N.'s statistics. As far as she has seen, Americans are far more likely to adopt children who are ill or suffer from a disability.

Becky Preece, a housewife from Nampa, Idaho, is one such American. ?

She was finally able to take home 4-year-old Gabe, who has Down syndrome, in February, after years of filling out paperwork and a court battle. ?

Preece, who like the Englands beat the ban by days but was then delayed by red tape, said she saw a complete disconnect between the horrors of Russia?s adoption ban and the kindness and hospitality of the Russians themselves.?

NBC News

Becky Preece from Nampa, Idaho, adopted 4-year-old Gabe just days before the ban on Americans adopting Russian orphans went into force.

?It?s not a matter of the people,? she said while walking with the little boy in the thick Moscow snow.

?It?s politically charged and it?s something that is hard for us to understand because it?s so different from the experience that we?ve had here.?

Preece said she was excited to get Gabe into school back home, and watch him bond with his new brother who also has Down syndrome.?

?They need the infrastructure, they need the kind of support that we get at home for our children,? she said.?

But for the hundreds of American families who missed the cut and are now unable to bring their adoptive children home, the future could mean months -- even years -- of waiting and praying that the two superpower rivals find common ground before more of society?s most vulnerable pay the price.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Jim Maceda is a London-based correspondent who has covered the Soviet Union and Russia since the 1980s.?

Related:

Boy's Christmas wish: Adoption of little brother caught in US-Russia spat

Thousands march in Moscow to protest Russian adoption ban

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Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653387/s/2a273b3e/l/0Lworldnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A30C30A0C1750A4450A0Eoutrage0Esadness0Eas0Eamericans0Ebarred0Efrom0Eadopting0Erussian0Echildren0Dlite/story01.htm

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Pageonce (for Android)


In times of financial panic, like when you realize your credit card payment is overdue, the Pageonce mobile app (free) proves its worth. The free app, available for Android (the focus of this review), iPhone, Windows Phone 7, and BlackBerry, lets you see a snapshot of all your account balances and upcoming bills, with bill-payment functionality included, too. You can manage payments to credit card companies, utility providers, lenders, and even small proprietors, such as your landlord.

Don't mistake Pageonce for a complete financial management tool, though. You won't find in it budgeting tools or detailed information about your spending habits, something Editors' Choice Mint.com (free, 5 stars) provides through a fully automated site and mobile app. If your goal is to get a handle on your money, I highly recommend dedicating yourself to Mint. Pageonce is more for checking in on your financial situation and making quick corrections when you need to pay bills. It has one or two other miscellaneous features thrown in, such as the ability to see at a glance many of your travel reward program balances, but the core Pageonce experience on Android is to answer the question, "Do I have enough money in the right places right now?"

Fully Free
It may be worth pointing out that Pageonce formerly locked some features behind a paid Gold membership, but the company has done away with this premium tier. All Pageonce's features and functionality are now totally free.

You can set up a Pageonce account either right on your Android device or from the full Pageonce.com website?and while we're on that subject, I should note that in my review of Pageonce, I point out that the mobile apps meet a need more than the website does. For setting up your accounts, it helps to have a full screen, keyboard, mouse, and additional browser tabs at the ready. But in actually getting use out of Pageonce, I wholly prefer the mobile app over the site. I think the former meets a consumer need better than the latter.

App Features
Inside the Android app, a plus sign at the top of the screen is your key to adding more accounts. Connect any kind of financial account?savings, checking, investment, retirement, loan?and the balance will be counted toward your Pageonce net worth (updated once daily, with a manual refresh option included). As mentioned, you can also connect to online accounts for bills, be they for insurance policies, Internet service, gas and electricity, or phone service. Whenever one of these bills or your credit card bill is near due, Pageonce will let you know via an alert, shown at the bottom of the screen.

The app's main dashboard shows totals for available cash, bills owed and minimum payment due, investment balances, credit card debt, offers (essentially, advertisements for financial services), and Credit Guard (an offer for a credit report and protection service). These six items appear as easy-to-access tiles on the main dashboard.

Other buttons at the top let you manage existing connected accounts, view reports, access your settings, and add new accounts.

The reporting section contains a few interesting bits of information, such as a "file cabinet" that houses previous bill statements, although in testing the app, only two of my connected accounts put any information here, even though I had at least two more accounts that generate a monthly statement.

Another sub-section to the Reports page shows "all your account transactions." This area proves useful when you need to quickly check to see what changed recently in an account if the balance seems off from what you expected it to be. Also under the Reports page is payment history, although it doesn't contain any information prior to the date you connected your financial accounts to Pageonce. And finally, there's "Where your money's going," the place you can actually find real reports. Pie charts and tables detail your expenditures into five simple categories: bills and utilities; insurance; credit cards; loans; and other. In my testing, I found the report just didn't accurately capture what I truly wanted to know about my spending habits, like if I spend much more than I realize eating out, and whether I might be able to cut back on that kind of unnecessary expense to fund something else I need or want. Mint not only has those features, but it does most of the work for me in terms of identifying different kinds of credit card charges.

Bill Pay
The bill pay function is what makes Pageonce worthwhile for some people, namely, those who forget to pay their bills until the day before they're due (or later). ?

You can pay a bill, right from within the app, but the very first time you do so, it isn't exactly a one-two-three process (it does become more streamlined afterward, though). Let's say you want to pay your upcoming credit card bill. First, you have to enter the full credit card account number, even if that card is already connected to Pageonce. Second, you have to enter the complete information, meaning account and routing numbers, from the checking account you want to use to pay. Also, it can take up to two business days for a payment to process. That's typically of any online payment you initiate, however, so it's the same results you'd see from making an online payment right from your service provider's website.

One minor problem: In my account, I had one bill payment already scheduled (which I did outside Pageonce), but Pageonce had no knowledge of it, so had I not been careful, I might have tried to pay the same bill twice and double-taxed my own checking account. One thing I've always appreciated about one particular credit card company's online user account experience is that it pops up a warning if I try to schedule a payment within three days of an existing scheduled payment. You wouldn't believe how often I try to pay my bills more than once.

Security
Pageonce has good security measures in place to keep your financial information safe. You can't transfer money using Pageonce, so no one else can move your money through this service either. All your account info is kept under lock and key. Similar to Mint.com, Pageonce doesn't store any information on the phone itself, and uses bank-level encryption.

The app has a four-digit PIN, which you enter every time you exit the app or your phone goes on standby. Furthermore, Pageonce is VeriSign Secured (i.e., tested and approved by Norton) and TrustE approved.

Pageonce in a Pinch
The Pageonce Android app delivers on its promise to quickly show you your account balances as well as set up a bill to be paid on the fly when you forget to do it ahead of time. If you're the kind of person always getting hit by late charges, give Pageonce a try. But if you're looking for real guidance about how to manage your money and debts, put yourself in the hands of Editors' Choice Mint.com.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/jOypLjNjNmk/0,2817,2409130,00.asp

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Americans back preparation for extreme weather and sea-level rise

Mar. 28, 2013 ? Images told the story: lower Manhattan in darkness, coastal communities washed away, cars floating in muck. Superstorm Sandy, a harbinger of future extreme weather intensified by climate change, caught the country off guard in October.

Unprepared for the flooding and high winds that ensued, the East Coast suffered more than $70 billion in property damage and more than 100 deaths.

Will Americans prepare and invest now to minimize the impact of disasters such as Sandy, or deal with storms and rising sea levels after they occur?

A new survey commissioned by the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment and the Center for Ocean Solutions finds that an overwhelming majority of Americans want to prepare in order to minimize the damage likely to be caused by global warming-induced sea-level rise and storms.

A majority also wants people whose properties and businesses are located in hazard areas to foot the bill for this preparation, not the government. Eighty-two percent of the Americans surveyed said that people and organizations should prepare for the damage likely to be caused by sea-level rise and storms, rather than simply deal with the damage after it happens.

Among the most popular policy solutions identified in the survey are stronger building codes for new structures along the coast to minimize damage (favored by 62 percent) and preventing new buildings from being built near the coast (supported by 51 percent).

"People support preventive action," said survey director Jon Krosnick, a senior fellow at the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment and professor of communication, "and few people believe these preparations will harm the economy or eliminate jobs. In fact, more people believe that preparation efforts will help the economy and create jobs around the U.S., in their state and in their town than think these efforts will harm the economy and result in fewer jobs in those areas. But people want coastal homeowners and businesses that locate in high-risk areas to pay for these measures."

The challenges posed by rising sea levels and increasingly severe storms will only intensify as more Americans build along the coasts. A National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration report released March 25 predicts that already crowded U.S. coastlines will become home to an additional 11 million people by 2020.

Survey questions were formulated to assess participants' beliefs about climate change and gather opinions about the impact of climate change, sea-level rise and storms on communities, the economy and jobs.

The survey also gauged public support for specific coastal adaptation strategies and how to pay for them. "People are least supportive of policies that try to hold back Mother Nature," Krosnick said. "They think it makes more sense to recognize risk and reduce exposure."

Among the survey's respondents, 48 percent favor sand dune restoration and 33 percent favor efforts to maintain beaches with sand replenishment, while 37 percent support relocating structures away from the coast and 33 percent support constructing sea walls.

Eighty-two percent of the survey's respondents believe that Earth's temperature has been rising over the last 100 years. However, even a majority of those who doubt the existence of climate change favor adaptation measures (60 percent).

"The question is, how does public support for preparation translate to action?" asked Meg Caldwell, executive director of the Center for Ocean Solutions. "Our impulse is to try to move quickly to put communities back together the way they were after devastation. But that impulse often leads to doubling down on high-risk investments, such as rebuilding in areas likely to experience severe impacts. To move toward long-term resiliency for coastal communities, we need to seize opportunities to apply new thinking, new standards and long-term solutions."

Krosnick presented the survey results this morning at a policy briefing hosted by the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C.

The survey was conducted via the Internet with a nationally representative probability sample of 1,174 American adults, 18 and older, conducted by GfK Custom Research March 3-18, 2013. The survey was administrated in both English and Spanish. The survey has a margin of error of +/-4.9 percent at the 95 percent confidence level.

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Friday, 29 March 2013

No vaginas please, it?s Idaho (Americablog)

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The Edge: McConnell Has a Fight On His Hands

The Edge is National Journal's daily look at today in Washington -- and what's coming next. The email features analysis from NJ's top correspondents, the biggest stories of the day -- and always a few surprises. To subscribe, click here.

McConnell Has a Fight On His Hands

Leading the charge against President Obama?s health care reform, a law that is deeply unpopular among Republicans, will likely burnish Sen. Mitch McConnell?s conservative credentials.

Creating a platform to campaign against Obamacare as it comes online, and people start to feel its effects, is smart politics, too?especially in deeply conservative Kentucky.

But it also underscores how hard McConnell is working to defend his seat.?

Despite the aura of inevitability his campaign is trying to create ? including a huge campaign war chest and the assimilation of leading Tea Partiers into his camp -- McConnell is vulnerable.

A recent Courier-Journal Bluegrass Poll showed that 34 percent plan to vote against McConnell while just 17 percent are supporting him.

So then it?s no surprise that McConnell and his team are aggressively working almost two years before the election to tell their story through ads, the media and grassroots messaging. After all, as Obamacare shows, McConnell?s never been known to shy away from a good political fight.

Chris Frates
cfrates@nationaljournal.com

TOP NEWS

BLOOMBERG GROUP FEATURES NEWTOWN FAMILIES IN ADS. Mayors Against Illegal Guns, the group founded by New York City?s Michael Bloomberg, is out with new ads featuring the families of victims of the Newtown, Conn., shooting, The Washington Post reports. The ads will run in Connecticut while the Legislature takes up gun-control legislation. ?Don?t let the memory of Newtown fade without doing something real,? says the mother of Lauren Rousseau, a teacher who died in the December shooting. Meanwhile, President Obama today said ?shame on us,? if America has forgotten about Newtown?s victims. Organizing for Action, the Obama campaign group, is holding a petition drive on gun control tonight. Read more

  • Two top Democratic donors have come forward to say they?ll never contribute to any Democrats who don?t support expanded background checks. (Washington Post)

BOEHNER HAILS ?TACTICAL PLAN? AGAINST OBAMA. In a memo he put out to his caucus today, House Speaker John Boehner said the GOP has enjoyed success in Obama?s second term, The Hill reported. He said the ?new tactical plan? to battle Democrats on spending had, in general, worked. ?Republicans may be the minority party in Washington?but because we forged a plan together and have stuck to it, our actions as a team over the past couple of months have made a difference for all Americans,? Boehner wrote. As an example he cited a maneuver that forced Democrats in the Senate to produce a budget for the first time in four years. Read more

OBAMA TO DELIVER BUDGET ON APRIL 10. Better late than never. The White House will release its budget, which was due in early February, on April 10, Politico reports. Read more

DEFENSE REDUCES CIVILIAN FURLOUGHS. The Defense Department has reduced the number of days its 700,000 civilian workers will be furloughed between now and the end of September from 22 to 14, The Washington Post reports. The reduction is permitted by the recently passed continuing resolution, which gives the Pentagon more flexibility in making sequester cuts. Read more

CANTOR: IMMIGRATION REFORM POSSIBLE, BUT A ?TALL ORDER.? House Majority Leader Eric Cantor told Fox News today that immigration reform is possible, but will be a ?tall order,? Politico reports. There was one area in which Cantor was more optimistic about getting a deal done: ?We?ve got an opportunity to come together on one point, and that is the kids,? he said. ?If a kid was brought here by his parents or her parents, unbeknownst to them, and knows no other place ? than America as home, why wouldn?t we want to give them a path to citizenship? And I think we should.? Read more

BOSTON MAYOR WILL NOT SEEK SIXTH TERM. Longtime Boston Mayor Thomas Menino will not seek reelection for a sixth term, The Boston Globe reported. Menino, who was first elected in 1993, had suffered a series of health setbacks in recent months. ?I know I could win but not on my terms,? Menino told tearful staffers, while reassuring them that the move would be ?good for Boston.? Read more

U.S. SENDS STEALTH BOMBERS OVER SOUTH KOREA. As the rhetoric from North Korea grows more bellicose, the U.S. Air Force has sent two B-2 stealth bombers on a practice bombing run over South Korea, The New York Times reports. The bombers flew nonstop from Missouri?s Whiteman Air Force Base in a move that signals the continuing U.S. commitment to protecting South Korea. Read more

MARION BARRY SORRY FOR 'MOFO' TWEET AIMED AT PARK SERVICE. Councilman and former D.C. MayorMarion Barry said a staff member with access to his Twitter account wrote that the National Park Service should be a nominee for ?DC Mofo of the Month,? The Washington Post reports. Barry has been critical of the National Park Service for a plan to kill deer that overpopulate Rock Creek Park, calling for a more humane solution. Barry reportedly told the staffer that the language used was inappropriate. Read more

  • ?The thrust of it was right, the thing that went too far was the MoFo.? ?Marion Barry, explaining the tweet.

TOMORROW

OBAMA TO VISIT MIAMI TO TALK ECONOMY. Obama will be at the Port of Miami on Friday to talk up the economy, but the visit is giving Republican Gov. Rick Scott an opening to blast the president and the federal government for not providing funding for ports. ?We could not wait for the federal government to come to the table with their share of the project,? Scott said today in a conference call with reporters, according to The Palm Beach Post. Read more

QUOTABLE

?There's two kinds of marriage, there's full marriage and then there's sort of skim-milk marriage? ?Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, during Wednesday's oral arguments on the Defense of Marriage Act (Huffington Post).

BEDTIME READING

FORMER KING OF RWANDA LIVES ON FOOD STAMPS IN D.C. BURBS. The last king of Rwanda lives on food stamps in a low-income Virginia housing complex outside the nation?s capital. It was in 1961 that a coup pushed out Kigeli V Ndahindurwa. ?Back then, the fate of an entire country and the future of a centuries-old dynasty hung in the balance,? writes Ariel Sabar in Washingtonian magazine. Five decades of exile later, Kigeli V (as in the Fifth) ?gets by on food stamps, a Section 8 housing subsidy, Medicaid, and private donations of cash and clothing, as well as the occasional sale of Rwandan knighthoods to jet-set strangers in search of novelty status symbols.? The children in his apartment complex see him as the friendly, 7-foot-2 ?King of Africa,? who hands out candy on their birthdays. But Kigeli V still sees himself as the once and future king of Rwanda. Read more

PLAY OF THE DAY

THE MANY VIEWS OF MARRIAGE. Marriage and relationships was a theme for comedians Wednesday evening. In a California speech this week, David Petraeus apologized for his extramarital affairs that ended his time as CIA Director, and NBC late-night hosts Jimmy Fallon and Jay Leno had jokes about his troubles. In Washington, the Supreme Court listened to arguments on the constitutionality of the Defense of Marriage Act. Conan O?Brien found low-hanging fruit in Bill Clinton?s recent comments on the subject, while Leno hit Texas Gov. Rick Perry and Jimmy Kimmel wants to see gay divorce court on TV. Fallon also had some news about George W. Bush?s presidential library and Obama?s appointment of Julia Pierson to head the Secret Service. Watch it here

OVERLOOKED

HOUSE GOP SILENT ON MARRIAGE LAW THEY PAY TO DEFEND. As attorney Paul Clement took to the Supreme Court to defend the Defense of Marriage Act on behalf of House Republicans, the lawmakers who hired him to do so stood by silently. It was the right thing to do, many Republican strategists say, to avoid distracting from the GOP?s core economic message. But some members of the House Republican Conference thought their leaders should have done more to publicly stand behind an effort that is important to social conservatives, National Journal?s Rebecca Kaplan reports. Read more

TWEETS

Subscribe to The EdgeSee The Edge Archive

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/edge-mcconnell-fight-hands-163349832--politics.html

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Thursday, 28 March 2013

'Battlefield 4' demo is a gorgeous looking short film

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

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Large robotic jellyfish could one day patrol oceans

Mar. 28, 2013 ? Virginia Tech College of Engineering researchers have unveiled a life-like, autonomous robotic jellyfish the size and weight of a grown man, 5 foot 7 inches in length and weighing 170 pounds.

The prototype robot, nicknamed Cyro, is a larger model of a robotic jellyfish the same team -- headed by Shashank Priya of Blacksburg, Va., and professor of mechanical engineering at Virginia Tech -- unveiled in 2012. The earlier robot, dubbed RoboJelly, is roughly the size of a man's hand, and typical of jellyfish found along beaches.

"A larger vehicle will allow for more payload, longer duration and longer range of operation," said Alex Villanueva of St-Jacques, New-Brunswick, Canada, and a doctoral student in mechanical engineering working under Priya. "Biological and engineering results show that larger vehicles have a lower cost of transport, which is a metric used to determine how much energy is spent for traveling."

Both robots are part of a multi-university, nationwide $5 million project funded by U.S. Naval Undersea Warfare Center and the Office of Naval Research. The goal is to place self-powering, autonomous machines in waters for the purposes of surveillance and monitoring the environment, in addition to other uses such as studying aquatic life, mapping ocean floors, and monitoring ocean currents.

Jellyfish are attractive candidates to mimic because of their ability to consume little energy owing to a lower metabolic rate than other marine species. Additionally, they appear in wide variety of sizes, shapes and colors, allowing for several designs. They also inhabit every major oceanic area of the world and are capable of withstanding a wide range of temperatures in both fresh and salt waters. Most species are found in shallow coastal waters, but some have been found in depths 7,000 meters below sea level.

Partner universities in the project are Providence College in Rhode Island, the University of California Los Angeles, the University of Texas at Dallas, and Stanford University. Priya's team is building the jellyfish body models, integrating fluid mechanics and developing control systems.

Cyro is modeled and named after the jellyfish cyanea capillata, Latin for Llion's Manemain jellyfishJellyfish, with "Cyro" derived from "cyanea" and "robot." As with its predecessor, this robot is in the prototype stage, years away from use in waters. A new prototype model already is under construction at Virginia Tech's Durham Hall, where Priya's Center for Energy Harvesting Materials and Systems is based.

"We hope to improve on this robot and reduce power consumption and improve swimming performance as well as better mimic the morphology of the natural jellyfish," Villanueva said, adding that the project also allows researchers such as himself to better understand aquatic creatures live. "Our hopes for Cyro's future is that it will help understand how the propulsion mechanism of such animal scales with size."

A stark difference exists between the larger and smaller robots. Cyro is powered by a rechargeable nickel metal hydride battery, whereas the smaller models were tethered, Priya said. Experiments have also been conducted on powering jellyfish with hydrogen but there is still much research to be done in that area.

In both cases, the jellyfish must operate on their own for months or longer at a time as engineers likely won't be able to capture and repair the robots, or replace power sources. "Cyro showed its ability to swim autonomously while maintaining a similar physical appearance and kinematics as the natural species," Priya said, adding that the robot is simultaneously able to collect, store, analyze, and communicate sensory data. This autonomous operation in shallow water conditions is already a big step towards demonstrating the use of these creatures."

How does the robot swim? Its body consists of a rigid support structure with direct current electric motors which control the mechanical arms that are used in conjunction with an artificial mesoglea, or jelly-based pulp of the fish's body, creating hydrodynamic movement.

With no central nervous system, jellyfish instead use a diffused nerve net to control movement and can complete complex functions. A parallel study on a bio-inspired control system is in progress which will eventually replace the current simplified controller. As with the smaller models, Cyro's skin is composed of a thick layer of silicone, squishy in one's hand. It mimics the sleek jellyfish skin and is placed over a bowl-shaped device containing the electronic guts of the robot. When moving, the skin floats and moves with the robot, looking weirdly alive.

"It has been a great experience to finally realize the biomimetic and bio-inspired robotic vehicles," Priya said. "Nature has too many secrets and we were able to find some of them but many still remain. We hope to find a mechanism to continue on this journey and resolve the remaining puzzles."

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


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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/kLqBg1DBw1g/130328124807.htm

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Family Resources Community Action's 8th Annual Golf Tournament ...

Man pleads not guilty to extorting A&M professor

HOUSTON (AP) ? James Arnt Aune was regarded as a fine scholar, mentor and friend by students and his fellow professors at Texas A&M University, where he headed the school's Department of Communication.

But Aune, who jumped to his death from the roof of a campus parking garage in January, battled depression in recent years. He struggled with the administrative duties of being a department head, and he was badly shaken by his 2007 battle with prostate cancer, which he survived but which forced him to face his own mortality, his widow said.

"He never really came all the way back," Miriam Aune said of his surviving cancer.

He began drinking heavily, and in December he started a sexually explicit online relationship with what he thought was an underage girl, according to prosecutors. He was soon contacted by a man purporting to be her outraged father, who threatened to expose Aune unless he paid him $5,000.

Aune paid the man $1,500, but he didn't know if he could come up with the rest, authorities say. He confessed to his wife, who pledged to stand by him, but about a week later, the 59-year-old Aune jumped to his death after sending a final text: "Killing myself now. And u will be prosecuted for black mail."

The man who got that text, according to prosecutors, pleaded not guilty Tuesday in a Houston federal courtroom to an extortion charge. The 37-year-old Metairie, La., resident was ordered to remain in jail without bail, and his trial is scheduled for May 28. If convicted, he faces up to two years in jail. His court-appointed attorney, Marjorie Meyers, declined to comment about the case.

Authorities allege that Aune was one of many victims of a scheme in which the man used his daughter to lure men into sexually explicit online relationships and later blackmailed them. The Associated Press isn't naming the man to protect the identity of his daughter.

In the criminal complaint, prosecutors contend that the man's daughter told authorities in Louisiana in 2011 that her father took naked photos and videos of her and used them "to scam men" through MocoSpace, a social networking website mainly for mobile devices.

On the site, "she would meet men, get their phone numbers and send them pictures and videos then (her father) would call them and say how she was his daughter and how she would need counseling and they had to pay for it."

At the time of that 2011 interview, her father was facing two counts of oral sexual battery and two counts of aggravated incest. The charges were dropped in February 2012 due to a lack of corroborating evidence, said Rachael Domiano, a spokeswoman for the 21st Judicial District Attorney's Office in Louisiana.

Federal prosecutors on Tuesday declined to comment about certain details of the alleged scheme, and it wasn't clear from the criminal complaint if prosecutors believe the defendant's daughter actually interacted with Aune, or if her image was used to allegedly dupe him.

Miriam Aune, 56, told The Associated Press that investigators told her that the defendant was the person who communicated with her husband and other men, pretending to be his daughter. She said her husband told her he began the online chats sometime in December and that by the third or fourth day after the chats began, the defendant reached out to him asking for money.

According to court records, undated texts show Aune scrambling to put money on prepaid credit cards for the defendant and asking for his forgiveness, saying "I am very sorry. It was a weak moment."

A week before his suicide, James Aune confessed to his wife. Miriam Aune said her husband never told her why he did it.

She pledged her support for him, but said he became despondent after his confession.

"I was just telling him there was nothing that we couldn't get through. We have two autistic children we have raised to adulthood. We've been through rough stuff. I thought we could get through this," Miriam Aune said.

According to a criminal complaint, the defendant continued bombarding Aune with profanity laced emails, texts and voicemails, including a Jan. 7 email in which he warned Aune that he had until noon the next day to pay or else "the police, your place of employment, students, ALL OVER THE INTERNET ...ALL OF THEM will be able to see your conversations, texts, pictures you sent ...."

On Jan. 8 at 9:21 a.m., the defendant texted, "3 more hours. If i don't hear from you the calls start," according the criminal complaint by FBI agent Nikki Allen.

At 10:29 a.m., Aune replied, "Killing myself now And u will be prosecuted for black mail."

He jumped from the parking garage roof about a minute later, shocking the A&M campus, which is about 100 miles northwest of Houston.

Miriam Aune doesn't excuse her husband's actions. She said it was his decision to go online and begin the conversations.

"It just shows you anybody can slip off the path. I know a lot of people are very surprised by this. He was very human with flaws, just like all of us," she said.

But she said it saddens her to know that some people will only remember her husband for what happened at the end of his life.

"To him, being a professor, it was a sacred duty to him. And he cared so much about his students," she said as she cried. "The people who know him, who loved him, they are not going to feel any differently about him."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/man-pleads-not-guilty-extorting-m-professor-004902354.html

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Wednesday, 27 March 2013

A Horizontal Rainbow Makes For Easier Trips to Oz

We've all seen our share of quadruple rainbows and rainbows from space, but it's not to often you catch on lying down one the job. A particularly lazy refraction showed up in Paris the other day, but it's not quite as it seems. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/R9zHi1royf0/a-horizontal-rainbow-makes-for-easier-trips-to-oz

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Lance Armstrong faces possible criminal case in Spain

Lance Armstrong is being investigated for possible criminal charges in Spain, ABC News has learned.

Sources both in the United States and Spain said the investigation relates to Armstrong's doping activities, which were spelled out in a U.S. Anti Doping Agency report.

READ MORE: Armstrong Admits to Doping

Spanish sources believe crimes may have been committed in Spain and they are currently investigating to decide if charges should be brought against Armstrong and Spanish associates who worked with him on the U.S. Postal Service cycling team, the sources told ABC News.

The investigation is ongoing in multiple regions of Spain -- Alicante, Valencia, Girona and Tenerife.

An attorney for Armstrong did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Armstrong was a resident of Girona, Spain, for several years during his reign as the Tour de France champ.

Spanish law does not make it a crime for an athlete to use performance enhancing drugs for personal use. In certain cases, athletes can be fined and have their licenses suspended.

However, if investigators can prove "trafficking, distribution and commercialization of doping drugs," that is a criminal offense carrying as many as two years in prison and fines of as much as 400,000 euros.

The investigation is described as being in a "very active and sensitive" phase.

In 2004, Armstrong lived in Spain with the singer Sheryl Crow. Floyd Landis, Armstrong's former cycling teammate, has told ABC News that during that period he babysat Armstrong's "blood fridge" in Spain "to make sure the temperature remained constant" when Armstrong traveled out of town with Crow.

Armstrong 'Left It All on the Table' With Winfrey

Spain is currently front and center on the world stage as it bids for the 2020 Olympics. The country has been seen as soft on sports doping in the past and has been working to change that image.

In an interview with a German television station, the director of Spain's anti-doping authority, Ana Munoz, said, "What I can tell you so far is that we are following up on the Armstrong case. Not only because we were involved in the investigation back then but also because we are really interested that every person, Spanish or not, who has committed a crime in our country be prosecuted."

Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lance-armstrong-faces-possible-criminal-case-spain-022407918--abc-news-topstories.html

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Tuesday, 26 March 2013

AP sources: SD Sen. Johnson won't seek re-election

FILE - In this Oct. 14, 2009 file photo, Sen. Tim Johnson, D-S.D., is seen on Capitol Hill in Washington. Democratic officials say Johnson intends to announce his retirement on Tuesday, March 26, 2013, a decision that gives Republicans a prime opportunity to pick up a seat in 2014. (AP Photo/Haraz N. Ghanbari, File)

FILE - In this Oct. 14, 2009 file photo, Sen. Tim Johnson, D-S.D., is seen on Capitol Hill in Washington. Democratic officials say Johnson intends to announce his retirement on Tuesday, March 26, 2013, a decision that gives Republicans a prime opportunity to pick up a seat in 2014. (AP Photo/Haraz N. Ghanbari, File)

(AP) ? Democratic U.S. Sen. Tim Johnson of South Dakota plans to retire at the end of his term, party officials said Monday ? a departure that gives Republicans a prime opportunity to pick up a seat as they attempt to win back control of the chamber in 2014.

Johnson, the chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, suffered a brain hemorrhage in 2006 but later returned to the Senate and won re-election in 2008. He has recovered significantly, though sometimes uses a motorized scooter.

The Democratic officials who described Johnson's plans spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity. They said they were not authorized to pre-empt a formal announcement expected Tuesday at the University of South Dakota in Vermillion.

Johnson's retirement announcement is the fifth by Senate Democrats. Sens. Carl Levin of Michigan, Tom Harkin of Iowa, Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia and Frank Lautenberg of New Jersey also say they won't run for re-election in 2014. Two Republican senators have also said they plan to retire.

Republicans must gain six seats to win a majority in the Senate, and South Dakota now leaps to the top of the party's list of most favorable states. Republican Mike Rounds, a popular former two-term governor, has been campaigning for the seat since last year, though he declined to comment Monday on Johnson's retirement.

Johnson is viewed as independent minded and reserved, having voted against the resolution to allow military action in Iraq but supporting the Keystone XL Pipeline. He also has about $1.2 million in his campaign account, a healthy nest egg for a state where advertising is relatively inexpensive, and a deep-pocketed fundraising network.

While those votes and fundraising make the former congressman, who has never lost an election, a formidable opponent, South Dakota's GOP-trending electorate could complicate the next election. His last term also has been physically demanding for the 66-year-old Johnson, whose speech remains compromised.

But Democrats rejected the notion that Johnson's retirement opens the door for a GOP senator. In last November's election, some Republican Senate candidates who appeared to be the heavy favorites ended up losing to Democratic rivals ? including Rick Berg, who lost to Heidi Heitkamp in neighboring North Dakota.

South Dakota Democratic Chairman Ben Nesselhuf noted Democrats' successes over the past 30 years, including former Senate Democratic Leader Tom Daschle.

"I reject the idea that somehow the Republicans has a lock on this state," Nesselhuf said. "By no means is this an impossible task, or even improbable."

Attempts by The Associated Press to reach Johnson through his top Senate staff were unsuccessful. Johnson aides would not confirm the retirement but said the senator would hold a news conference on his political future at University of South Dakota in Vermillion Tuesday afternoon.

Aware that Johnson might decide to retire, Democrats in South Dakota and nationally have discussed possible successors on the ticket, including Johnson's son Brendan, South Dakota's U.S. attorney. The younger Johnson Monday said in an interview that he was unaware of his father's decision and declined to discuss whether he would seek the office.

Former U.S. Rep. Stephanie Herseth Sandlin, a contemporary of Brendan Johnson and another heir to a South Dakota Democratic legacy, also is looking at running. A granddaughter of former South Dakota Gov. Ralph Herseth, Herseth Sandlin served six years in the U.S. House before being defeated for re-election in 2010.

Action within Johnson's party is expected quickly. An open Senate seat is rare in South Dakota, and Republicans have gained an upper hand in the state, controlling the governorship, the Legislature, its other Senate seat and its lone U.S. House seat.

Brendan Johnson, appointed U.S. attorney in 2009, has never held elected office and faced questions about his father's involvement in the confirmation process. Assets for the younger Johnson include his father's advisers and donor base.

Herseth Sandlin also has an in-tact network and following in South Dakota, but she could face some problems in a potential primary with Johnson. She opposed to the 2010 Affordable Care Act, a position that is out of step with a majority of party loyalists.

___

Espo reported from Washington.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-03-25-US-Senate-Retirement/id-5929c3ad99584c6f9d0379145426e774

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Havok introduces free 3D game development engine

ProjectAnarchy

Havok has announced that their 3D gaming Vision engine, Physics and Animation suites, and their award winning AI tools will now be free for "leading" mobile platforms under their new Project Anarchy initiative. If you play games, you already know about Havok. They're the folks who make the tools behind games like the Assassin's Creed, Halo, and Skyrim franchises, and are used by some of the biggest names in gaming, like EA, Bethesda, and Bungie.

The download also includes game samples and tutorials for mobile developers, and there will be a complete online community to "encourage free sharing and collaborative development of extensions and customizations by the community." Ross O’Dwyer, head of developer relations at Havok, says:

We’re really delighted to be able to offer these professional grade tools to mobile developers for free and we look forward to supporting the mobile game development community to make some stunning games with the technology over the next few years.

Project Anarchy will launch this spring. To keep up with things and sign-up for more information, follow the link below. The full press release is after the break.

More: Project Anarchy

read more



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/89P2IDbfdA4/story01.htm

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DNA damage occurs as part of normal brain activity, scientists discover

Mar. 24, 2013 ? Scientists at the Gladstone Institutes have discovered that a certain type of DNA damage long thought to be particularly detrimental to brain cells can actually be part of a regular, non-harmful process. The team further found that disruptions to this process occur in mouse models of Alzheimer's disease -- and identified two therapeutic strategies that reduce these disruptions.

Scientists have long known that DNA damage occurs in every cell, accumulating as we age. But a particular type of DNA damage, known as a double-strand break, or DSB, has long been considered a major force behind age-related illnesses such as Alzheimer's. Today, researchers in the laboratory of Gladstone Senior Investigator Lennart Mucke, MD, report in Nature Neuroscience that DSBs in neuronal cells in the brain can also be part of normal brain functions such as learning -- as long as the DSBs are tightly controlled and repaired in good time. Further, the accumulation of the amyloid-beta protein in the brain -- widely thought to be a major cause of Alzheimer's disease -- increases the number of neurons with DSBs and delays their repair.

"It is both novel and intriguing team's finding that the accumulation and repair of DSBs may be part of normal learning," said Fred H. Gage, PhD, of the Salk Institute who was not involved in this study. "Their discovery that the Alzheimer's-like mice exhibited higher baseline DSBs, which weren't repaired, increases these findings' relevance and provides new understanding of this deadly disease's underlying mechanisms."

In laboratory experiments, two groups of mice explored a new environment filled with unfamiliar sights, smells and textures. One group was genetically modified to simulate key aspects of Alzheimer's, and the other was a healthy, control group. As the mice explored, their neurons became stimulated as they processed new information. After two hours, the mice were returned to their familiar, home environment.

The investigators then examined the neurons of the mice for markers of DSBs. The control group showed an increase in DSBs right after they explored the new environment -- but after being returned to their home environment, DSB levels dropped.

"We were initially surprised to find neuronal DSBs in the brains of healthy mice," said Elsa Suberbielle, DVM, PhD, Gladstone postdoctoral fellow and the paper's lead author. "But the close link between neuronal stimulation and DSBs, and the finding that these DSBs were repaired after the mice returned to their home environment, suggest that DSBs are an integral part of normal brain activity. We think that this damage-and-repair pattern might help the animals learn by facilitating rapid changes in the conversion of neuronal DNA into proteins that are involved in forming memories."

The group of mice modified to simulate Alzheimer's had higher DSB levels at the start -- levels that rose even higher during neuronal stimulation. In addition, the team noticed a substantial delay in the DNA-repair process.

To counteract the accumulation of DSBs, the team first used a therapeutic approach built on two recent studies -- one of which was led by Dr. Mucke and his team -- that showed the widely used anti-epileptic drug levetiracetam could improve neuronal communication and memory in both mouse models of Alzheimer's and in humans in the disease's earliest stages. The mice they treated with the FDA-approved drug had fewer DSBs. In their second strategy, they genetically modified mice to lack the brain protein called tau -- another protein implicated in Alzheimer's. This manipulation, which they had previously found to prevent abnormal brain activity, also prevented the excessive accumulation of DSBs.

The team's findings suggest that restoring proper neuronal communication is important for staving off the effects of Alzheimer's -- perhaps by maintaining the delicate balance between DNA damage and repair.

"Currently, we have no effective treatments to slow, prevent or halt Alzheimer's, from which more than 5 million people suffer in the United States alone," said Dr. Mucke, who directs neurological research at Gladstone and is a professor of neuroscience and neurology at the University of California, San Francisco, with which Gladstone is affiliated. "The need to decipher the causes of Alzheimer's and to find better therapeutic solutions has never been more important -- or urgent. Our results suggest that readily available drugs could help protect neurons against some of the damages inflicted by this illness. In the future, we will further explore these therapeutic strategies. We also hope to gain a deeper understanding of the role that DSBs play in learning and memory -- and in the disruption of these important brain functions by Alzheimer's disease."

Other scientists who participated in this research at Gladstone include Pascal Sanchez, PhD, Alexxai Kravitz, PhD, Xin Wang, Kaitlyn Ho, Kirsten Eilertson, PhD, Nino Devidze, PhD, and Anatol Kreitzer, PhD. This research was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health and the S.D. Bechtel, Jr. Foundation.

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

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Journal Reference:

  1. Elsa Suberbielle, Pascal E Sanchez, Alexxai V Kravitz, Xin Wang, Kaitlyn Ho, Kirsten Eilertson, Nino Devidze, Anatol C Kreitzer, Lennart Mucke. Physiologic brain activity causes DNA double-strand breaks in neurons, with exacerbation by amyloid-?. Nature Neuroscience, 2013; DOI: 10.1038/nn.3356

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/3lJ_jfJlNac/130324152259.htm

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