Thursday, January 31, 2013

I lip-synced at the '96 Super Bowl, admits Vanessa Williams

Vanessa Williams in 1996 as she sang the National Anthem. (Getty Images)Beyonce, you?re not alone. Vanessa Williams has got your back!

In a new interview from New Orleans on Thursday, Williams tells ?omg! Insider?s? Kevin Frazier that she too lip-synced the National Anthem when she performed at the 1996 Super Bowl, which some have called one of the top renditions ever.

Vanessa Williams and omg! Insider's Kevin Frazier in New Orleans.
?Whitney [Houston] had done hers before me and the network wants you to pre-record, so you pre-record with your orchestra,? the former ?Desperate Housewives? star explained. ?You lay down the track. Then when it?s time to perform you lip sync, because you?ve got flyovers with the jets, you?ve got pyrotechnics behind you and you want to make sure that the sound is consistent. And that?s what the network asks of you. So, there?s no ?Can she sing it? Can she not? Is it live or is it not?? There?s no way you?re gonna get a live orchestra on the field at the same time and that?s part of what they want as a network.?

Williams? performance that day ? just before the Dallas Cowboys beat the Pittsburgh Steelers 27-17 ? also honored the astronauts of the Challenger space shuttle, which had exploded 10 years earlier, killing all aboard. ?It was one of the highlights of my life," she says. "And when you walk out on that field, it?s a sea of color and people. It?s surreal and an honor too!"

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Source: http://omg.yahoo.com/blogs/celeb-news/vanessa-williams-lip-synced-1996-super-bowl-192437399.html

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VIDEO GAME REVIEW: Dishonored: a clever ... - Bowden Gaming

VIDEO GAME REVIEW: Dishonored: a clever blend of action and stealth ? The MIT Tech | Bowden Gaming 13 visitors online now
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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

PFT: Patriots could target Ed Reed

tim-brownGetty Images

We agree wholeheartedly with the opinions expressed by Peter King in his latest Monday Morning Quarterback and elsewhere regarding the merit (or more accurately lack thereof) of former Raiders receiver Tim Brown?s non-allegation allegation that former Raiders coach Bill Callahan ?sabotaged? a 10-year-old Super Bowl.? But some questions remain as the latest Super Bowl week commences.

First, will 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh be asked about the situation at one of his many media availabilities this week?? Harbaugh, who was a first-year offensive assistant with the Raiders in 2002, wasn?t asked about it on Sunday night when the team arrived.? And given the extent to which the story has faded in recent days, he may not be asked about it at all.

Second, did the Raiders? game plan change two days before the game?? Brown?s ludicrous opinion of sabotage comes from his belief, as a factual matter, that Callahan changed the game plan.? So did he?? There has been no definitive answer provided to that question.

Third, did the Raiders fail to change audibles and line calls?? It has been presumed for nearly a decade that the Raiders didn?t account for the fact that former Oakland coach Jon Gruden knew the code words that would be used at the line of scrimmage on offense.? But Peter King?s dismantling of the sabotage theory in the latest Monday Morning Quarterback extends to the notion that the Bucs knew what the Raiders were planning to do.? The game broadcast, however, contained strong evidence to the contrary.

Tampa Bay safety John Lynch wore a microphone, and he plainly can be heard telling former Bucs defensive backs coach Mike Tomlin after the Raiders fell behind 20-3 late in the first half, ?Mike, every play they?ve run, we ran in practice.? It?s unreal.?

Said Tomlin, ?I know.?

Whatever the reason, the Buccaneers? dominance was enough, we?re told, to prompt Raiders receiver Jerry Rice to rip the microphone he was wearing during the game from his pads and flush it down a toilet at halftime.

Fourth, given that King believes Brown?s assertion is ?utterly preposterous? and that King is one of the voters for induction into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, will this mess keep Brown out for another year?? The voters will swear that they don?t consider anything other than what happens on the field, in accordance with the Hall of Fame?s bylaws.? But as we explained in our one-time-and-one-time-only PFT season preview magazine (which apparently made a cameo appearance several months ago in an episode of Mike & Molly on CBS), the human beings who cast the votes are influenced by the things that tend to influence the decisions made by human beings.

If it?s a close call between Brown and someone else as a given voter makes the excruciating descent from 15 modern-era finalists to up to five modern-era enshrinees, Brown?s assertions could be viewed, consciously or otherwise, as reflecting the kind of disrespect for and misunderstanding of the game that could be the factor pushing that person one way or the other.

There would be no hard proof of it, and none of the voters will risk their vote by proclaiming publicly that they sabotaged Brown?s candidacy in part because of his claim of sabotage.? But it definitely could, in a close case, be a factor ? and we?d never know that it was.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/01/28/ed-reed-could-be-targeted-by-the-patriots/related

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Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Apple Earnings Preview: It's All About The iPhone ... - Yahoo! Finance

Provided by Business Insider's Jay Yarow

Apple's (AAPL) earnings are coming today after the market closes.

We will have the results as soon as they hit at this page, so tune in. In the meanwhile, here's what to expect.

After a sustained 30% drop in Apple's stock since September, this earnings report is the most anticipated we can remember. There are a lot of questions surrounding Apple right now. (As The Daily Ticker's Aaron Task and Henry Blodget discuss in the accompanying video)

In particular, investors want to get a true read on the state of the iPhone business. There have been multiple reports that Apple cut iPhone orders for this quarter. The severity of those cuts, and the reasons for them, vary from place to place, but it seems confirmed the cuts happened.

This led analysts to start slashing their March quarter iPhone estimate and their full-year revenue and EPS outlook. As they've cut back their estimates, Apple's stock has crashed.

And yet, despite paring back their March quarter expectations, many analysts have been bumping their iPhone estimates for the December quarter.

Which makes this earnings report, as anticipated as it is, somewhat anticlimactic. Everyone is already focused on the March quarter. And Apple's guidance game makes it very hard to figure out what's really happening this quarter. Multiple analysts have called for Apple to deliver classic low-ball guidance.

Unlike in the past, if Apple delivers super low guidance, the market could react negatively as the low guidance would confirm its fears that the iPhone business is in trouble.

So, if you're an Apple bull, here's what you want tonight: A strong iPhone beat and guidance that isn't ridiculously low. On the earnings call, you're hoping Tim Cook comments on the reports coming from the supply chain and puts the rumors to bed.

If you get just an iPhone beat, or just good guidance, we're not sure you're going to be happy.

Before we wrap this up, there is one thing to note: This quarter is 13 weeks long. Last year's quarter was 14 weeks long. Therefore, year over year comparisons aren't going to be perfect.

Further, last year Apple sold the iPhone 4S only in the holiday quarter. This year, the new iPhone, the iPhone 5 was out for a week before the quarter started. And it was also released in China for part of the quarter. So, comparisons between this quarter and the next are going to be messy.

Here, via Piper Jaffray's Gene Munster, is what the buy-side is expecting from Apple:

  • March quarter revenue: $46.9 billion
  • March quarter EPS: $12.10
  • March quarter gross margin: 41.5%

Again, we'll have the numbers as soon as they hit right here, so tune in.

Source: http://finance.yahoo.com/blogs/daily-ticker/apple-earnings-preview-iphone-guidance-151911442.html

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Monday, January 21, 2013

Chasing Balance in Motherhood | Attachment Matters

Balance, as in balance between family and personal time, is an elusive component in parenthood. I, as well as any mother I know, have been chasing the perfect balance since my first trimester of my first pregnancy. I have learned many lessons through the years on how to balance parenthood, career, marriage, and me time. But still, it seems that any formula for balance that I find only works for a few weeks before something ? illness, car needs repair, a giant work project, and so on ? forces me to throw all up in the air again and re-organize.

I am a stay-at-home mom, for the most part. I work from home, and when I do go elsewhere to work, I am fortunate to be able to bring my youngest child with me while the other two are in school. Another of the principles of Attachment Parenting asks parents to ensure that their child is receiving consistent and loving care with a single caregiver for the first two or three years of life. For some parents, this caregiver is a parent; for others, the caregiver is a childcare provider. I choose to piece together multiple jobs and freelance work that allows me to remain with my children, although be assured work-outside-the-home mothers that working from home is not that glamorous and has its own set of challenges: In some ways, it?s nice to be able to skip the commute and work in my pajamas, but then again, when work is also home, it takes a bit more effort to tuck me time in the day.

The grass is always greener on the other side? I think this saying is fitting in any part of life, including mothers? stay-at-home versus work-outside-the-home decision. It?s human nature to never be quite satisfied with our circumstances. It?s both a curse and blessing; fulfillment can be fleeting, but it also pushes us to improve our situation. That constant push and pull between career and family life ? because both are very fulfilling in themselves ? can take its toll on women.

That?s what I read between the lines of this summary of ForbesWoman and TheBump.com?s ?Parenthood and Economy 2012? Survey. Basically, the survey shows that whether mothers stay at home or work outside the home, they?re not content with their role: Stay-at-home moms feel as if they?re not fully contributing to their family?s financial position or resentment for giving up a career, and working mothers miss their kids and feel resentment that their partners don?t make enough money to allow them the choice to stay at home. Both groups say, the recession is to blame.

This restlessness among mothers isn?t going away, and not just because the nation?s economy is still recovering. Much of how mothers view their lives results from our unique hormones: We?re programmed to want to spend as much time with our children as possible, and yet we definitely need balance; we also get a lot of satisfaction from our careers. We?re complex creatures. Fathers, for the most part, won?t feel quite the pull that women do between children and career because they just don?t have the same chemical makeup. Certainly, the recession contributes but the core of the problem isn?t money ? it?s that continual, constant, never-ending search for balance and peace.

The survey results came to one alarming conclusion: Mothers, no matter their stay-at-home or working status, are unhappy. They are not balanced. They feel guilty when working but they crave me time when with their children. What?s the solution here? I?m not sure, but it probably has something to do with learning how to be more content with your choices and making informed decisions. At least that?s what helps me.

Regardless, balance is vital when it comes to parenting. Attachment Parenting, especially, demands that parents give so much of their attention and energy and presence to their children. And this can only be done if a parent feels balanced. So, whether you?re a working mother or a stay-at-home mom, it?s important that you feel peace and fulfillment. This often means making a change ? sometimes a major life change like a new job, or perhaps just carving out a little more me time, cutting out an activity in your life that seems more headache than not, playing with your children a little more, sitting down for a family meal, slowing down and reconnecting with yourself, your spouse, your children.

Rita Brhel is a Breastfeeding Peer Counselor for the Community Action Partnership of Mid-Nebraska's Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infant, and Children (WIC) in Hastings, Nebraska, USA. She is also the Publications Director for Attachment Parenting International and Managing Editor for Attached Family magazine, as well as the News Editor for Postpartum Support International . Rita and her husband have three children. Contact her at rita@attachmentparenting.org.

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APA Reference
Brhel, R. (2013). Chasing Balance in Motherhood. Psych Central. Retrieved on January 21, 2013, from http://blogs.psychcentral.com/attachment/2013/01/chasing-balance-in-motherhood/

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Source: http://blogs.psychcentral.com/attachment/2013/01/chasing-balance-in-motherhood/

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Sunday, January 20, 2013

Solid Advice For People Thinking About Homeschooling | How to ...

Lots of people don't trust their local public schools. And many of these same people don't have the resources for private education. Homeschooling can be an excellent answer to this problem. Homeschooling your children provides a great education at low cost. Continue reading for more information.
Designate a space in your home for schooling. Students that go all over your house can easily be distracted. A designated work area will ensure that your children concentrate on their studies and have a specific area to keep their supplies.
Become familiar with laws governing homeschooling in your particular state. You can find lots of state-specific information on the website of the HSLDA. Also, you can join a homeschooling organization, which can help with credibility. The help you get will be well worth the cost of joining.
You should realize that it's not always going to be tons of fun homeschooling your children. You need to realize that this is work for both of you since you are teaching them new ideas, and it is not always going to be fun and games. Remind your children that you are doing this for their benefit because you love them.
Network with homeschooling families nearby to plan excursions. Doing this will introduce your children to kids their own age. It keeps costs down due to bulk rates, too!
You should always carry out thorough research before you consider engaging in homeschooling. The Internet has an abundance of helpful information to help you make this huge decision. Regardless of your interest in homeschooling, you must make certain to have enough time, money and energy to educate your kids at home.
If your child is having difficulty in public school, homeschooling may be a good option. It can greatly reduce your child's stress. It is also an excellent bonding experience for parents and children. Homeschooling can be a great alternative to stranding your child in a situation that he or she finds challenging and uncomfortable.
Decide how you will manage your younger children while you are teaching the older ones. For example, the younger child will only be allowed to stay in the classroom if she can play quietly without interrupting your lesson. Don't have unrealistic expectations of your toddler. Take frequent breaks in which you can give your toddler some attention and engage in fun activities. This can keep your frustration levels down.
Put your reasoning on paper. Although you may wish to homeschool your child, it may be hard for you to convince other members of your family that homeschooling is the best idea if you do not write any logical reasoning down on paper. This gives you a resource to reference when others ask what you're doing. This will help you deal with it easier.
There are many different homeschooling methods that can be employed to help your child succeed. Learn all you can from the above tips to help you plan your child's education. You can become the best teacher your child ever had if you are ready to apply yourself. Your children are lucky to have you.

Source: http://homeforschool.blogspot.com/2013/01/solid-advice-for-people-thinking-about.html

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Things To Know Before You Get A Payday Loan - Finance Analysis

Cash advances don?t have to be scary. You can get a payday loan and not have to have a lot of worries in the future, just as long as you are informed on the subject. Continue reading to eliminate any fears about payday advances.

Make sure you are ready for the terms of a payday loan before you sign on the dotted line. You may feel a serious financial crunch, but if repayment is likely to be difficult in the short term, you might incur massive fees and costs that will exacerbate your problems.

Payday Loan

A reputable payday lender will not usually approve a payday loan using only the phone. An online submission of the application is the general procedure these days. After the application is approved, you can finish the transaction by telephone. Any payday loan company should have a phone number for their customer service team.

You might want to ask your boss for an advance on our paycheck. Some employers allow paycheck advances, and that can save you a lot of money and future headaches. Ensure you find out about this before you go ahead and sign for a loan.

Research the fees before you sign payday loan contracts. Sometimes, the fees could run up to 25 percent of the money that you borrow. Over just a few weeks, this means you are paying an annual interest rate of nearly 400 percent. The fees increase if you do not pay the lender back the next time you are paid.

Payday loans are usually a last resort when you are in dire straits. It is okay to use this resource occasionally, but it should never be a consistent means of obtaining funding. Find a solution to prevent the financial issue before it happens in the first place.

There are some online sites that claim they can help you get a loan that are fraudulent. Make sure that you do all of your research. See if the lenders you are considering are on these sites before taking out loans from them. It is important that you borrow from a legitimate, established company that is not attempting to rip you off.

Payday Loan

Do not apply for a payday loan before considering other, less expensive options. Even if you take a cash advance on a credit card, your interest rate will be significantly less than a payday loan. Consider asking for an advance at work or borrowing money from a family member or close friend.

Research any company that you are considering using for your payday loan, as many have hidden fees or extremely high interest rates. Make sure the company has a good track record and has a business history spanning at least 60 months. Educating yourself before accepting a loan can keep you from losing time and money to unscrupulous companies.

A quick check at the website of the BBB (Better Business Bureau) is always a good idea before you finalize your choice of payday loan provider. There are a lot of sketchy companies out there scamming individuals who are really in need of help. It is vital that you take responsibility to learn all that you can about any lender you?re thinking of doing business with.

Look into any guarantees offered by loan companies. They may be withholding part of the truth from you. They know you can?t pay off the loan, but they lend to you anyway. Look for the fine print on any promise that your lender makes to you.

A great way to choose which payday loan you should apply for is to look on various forum and review sites to see which lenders are the most reputable and easy to work with. This way, you can tell which companies it?s safe to trust and which you should avoid.

With all that you read about cash advance loans you should now feel differently about the subject. There is no need to avoid obtaining a payday loan, as doing so is perfectly legal. With any luck, you now have more confidence in dealing with cash advances.

This article has all the blue widget information you require. As you continue learning about stock quotes, your opportunities will also increase. By learning all you can about stock quotes, you can soon become an expert on the topic.

Source: http://eftanalysis.com/2013/01/18/things-to-know-before-you-get-a-payday-loan/

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Saturday, January 19, 2013

How Do You Fend Off The Flu?

Copyright ? 2013 National Public Radio. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

FLORA LICHTMAN, HOST:

This is SCIENCE FRIDAY, from NPR. I'm Flora Lichtman. The flu came on fast and furious this year. Deaths from flu so far are slightly above epidemic levels, according to the CDC. Besides getting the flu shot, is there anything you can do to avoid the virus? It seems like everybody has their own strategy, right?

Do you hold your breath as you walk past a cougher nearby? An informal poll found that SCIENCE FRIDAY employees are likely to do this. Are you that person that brings a napkin into the train rather than touching the subway poll? Maybe you go the hand sanitizer route. We want to know your rules for flu avoidance and your thoughts on flu etiquette.

What do you think? Do you think it's rude to get up if someone is coughing nearby, or just good judgment? We'll find out if there's a better way than moving your seat to avoid getting the flu, as well. Are new, speedier vaccines in the works? Call and tell us your flu story. Like, did you guilt someone into getting a flu shot this year? Are you secretly wishing your sniffly co-workers would stay home?

Give us a call: 1-800-989-TALK. That's 1-800-989-8255. Or tweet us @scifri. And we'll find out how well these strategies really work, because we have a flu expert in our studio with us to vet your flu avoidance tactics. Dr. Nicole Bouvier is an assistant professor in the Division of Infectious Diseases at Mount Sinai School of Medicine here in New York. She joins us in our New York studios. Welcome to SCIENCE FRIDAY, and thanks for coming in.

NICOLE BOUVIER: Thanks for having me.

LICHTMAN: Now tell us - introduce us to the flu. Let's do some basic flu biology first. What makes this virus different?

BOUVIER: So, influenza - the disease influenza is actually caused by, in humans, mainly three different strains. There's two strains of what we call influenza A. So there's the H1N1, which caused the pandemic a few years ago. You may remember hearing that. And then there's also H3N2, which is what's circulating right now. And then the third one is Influenza B. So any of those three viruses can cause what we know as clinical influenza.

Now, right now, what's circulating in most of North American is the H3N2 virus. And the reason this season is a bit unusual is partly because it's hit a little bit early. So we - usually, we don't see this many people getting the flu this early in the season. And it also - historically, the H3N2 strain has been associated with more what we call morbidity and mortality, basically more illness and more death.

And why that is, we actually don't know. But if you look back at seasons' worth of data from the CDC, years in which H3N2 predominates tends to be the years in which more people get into the hospital and more people die.

LICHTMAN: And what about that early onset this year? First of all, where does it go the rest of the year? And what explains an early presence this year?

BOUVIER: So, flu is actually in humans worldwide. There's also flu in animals. So, you know, we can occasionally get a pandemic from an animal source. But, in general, flu that's adapted to humans is circulating around the globe all year around. So when we're in the summer and not seeing a lot of flu, the Southern Hemisphere is actually in their winter, and they're seeing a lot of flu.

So when we're up here, you know, going to the beach, Australians are having the flu. So it continually circles around from hemisphere to hemisphere. And then, of course, in the tropics, it tends to be either a year-round phenomenon or, you know, there's more than one annual epidemic. So places like Hong Kong will see often two epidemics per year that are separated by months.

So it depends on, really, what climate you're in and what time of the year it is.

LICHTMAN: Well, what climate does flu like?

BOUVIER: So, it seems to not mind the tropics, because it's there. But what we've seen in the lab, at least, is that in temperate climates, it seems to like winter conditions - so, basically, cold and dry. And there's been some work done in animal models in - actually at Mount Sinai, showing that flu transmits between guinea pigs, which is a model that we use to study flu transmission, much better in a cold, dry environment than when you turn up the humidity or turn up the heat.

LICHTMAN: And how - what's its favorite way to travel?

BOUVIER: That's a good question, also, and it's something we don't fully have the answer to. Now, you can imagine many different ways for a respiratory virus like flu to transmit. It can transmit through the air, either because somebody coughs or sneezes a bunch of - you know, sprays on you, or because once the droplet dries out, it can hang in the air for hours and hours and hours, and you can maybe breathe it in later.

You could also imagine that if somebody rubs their nose and either shakes your hand, and then you touch your nose, or if they touch a doorknob that you subsequently touch and then touch your nose, that's a contact transmission. And probably, it transmits by all of these routes, but we actually don't know which one is the most important and which one is most common among humans.

LICHTMAN: Did you just say that it hangs in the air for hours and hours and hours?

BOUVIER: So we don't actually know, all right. That is a known method of transmission for something like measles or tuberculosis. So it's theoretically possible for flu. The thing about flu is that it's actually a quite delicate virus. It doesn't live forever. It's got a structure that, if it dries out, it dies. So it either has to be in some sort of, you know, viscous substance that's going to keep it sort of moist and alive, or if it desiccates, it dies.

So how long flu can survive hanging in the air is actually not really known.

LICHTMAN: Does that mean if the subway poll feels a little moist, I should avoid that part of it?

BOUVIER: Well, that's actually another interesting question, because, you know, there was some scientific study looking at how long flu lasts on different kinds of surfaces. And under lab conditions, if you put a droplet of flu on a stainless steel surface, it could be cultured - live virus could be cultured from swabs of that spot for up to 72 hours.

LICHTMAN: Wow.

BOUVIER: Now, that - take that with a grain of salt, because that was probably a whole lot more virus, and in a different consistency of medium than you would get if somebody rubbed their nose and touched the subway pole. What I can say is that studies that have been done in households, where one person has flu and then gives it to other people in the household, researchers have gone into those houses and swabbed various surfaces that you think would be touched frequently: doorknobs, phones, refrigerator handles, things like that.

And really, the results have not been very good. They can't really culture live flu viruses off of those surfaces. The one surface that seems to have a lot of flu virus, as you might imagine, are children's toys. So, you know, I wouldn't go putting your kids' toys near your nose. But, you know, the subway pole, I would say, is probably not the most likely place to get it, but use some hand sanitizer after you're holding onto it, and you can be extra sure.

LICHTMAN: Well, let's go to the phones. Gabe in Hadley, Massachusetts, welcome to SCIENCE FRIDAY.

GABE: Hi. Thank you.

LICHTMAN: Do you have a question?

GABE: My question is: I'm a cashier at a supermarket, and I make contact with lots of people day in and day out. I recall, previously on this program, hearing something about ants and them licking each other if one ant is sick or an ant is dead. And I'd be curious to know, maybe it's surprising that I'm not getting sick more than I am, and if that may be attributed to my exposure to so many people on a daily basis and strengthening of the immune system.

BOUVIER: That could be the case. You know, if you're an otherwise healthy person, you are going to be more resistant to getting the flu than somebody else who has underlying health conditions or is older or, you know, younger, like less than two.

An interesting study that was done a while back was looking at swabbing flu from bank notes in Europe. And actually, you can swab live flu from bank notes. So it's possible you're exposing yourself to a lot of flu viruses by handling money. But because, if you have a healthy immune system, and you're not really inoculating yourself with enough to come down with a, you know, a case of the flu, you may actually be strengthening your immune system without even realizing it.

LICHTMAN: A sort of alter-vaccination. Thanks for calling, Gabe.

GABE: Thank you.

LICHTMAN: Let's go to Gary in Wichita, Kansas.

GARY: Hi. I got the stomach flu on Christmas Day because I was on the naughty list this year. But I'm curious - I've gotten it before where I couldn't even tolerate liquids, even clear liquids. But I'm curious, because I hear so much about this flu, but the symptoms are much different than the stomach flues I've gotten. What are the scientific - what are the differences between the two? And I'll take my answer off the air.

LICHTMAN: Thank you.

BOUVIER: I'm really glad you asked that question, because stomach flu is a bit of a misnomer. Most viruses - well, in fact, all viruses that cause a typical kind of gastroenteritis like you had are not actually influenza viruses. So stomach flu is just a nickname that has nothing to do with influenza viruses.

So influenza viruses specifically are respiratory viruses. They only cause respiratory symptoms, except in children. Sometimes children do have vomiting or diarrhea with typical respiratory flu. But generally, adults don't have gastrointestinal symptoms. So you had a different virus, not a flu virus.

LICHTMAN: Norovirus is going around this year, right?

BOUVIER: Yeah, that's probably - it sounds like a norovirus, based on what you're describing. It sort of hits hard and fast and doesn't really make you feel bad for a long time. But that's what it sounds like.

LICHTMAN: Is sneezing a symptom of influenza?

BOUVIER: So, not as much as you might think. So, flu tends to be more coughing than sneezing. Common cold viruses, which are different from influenza viruses - they're things like rhinoviruses, coronaviruses, adenoviruses - which are different families and classes of viruses, cause the common cold. And they tend to be associated more with sneezing, which is sort of a nose phenomenon. In fact, rhinovirus comes from the word rhino, which means nose. Flu viruses tend to cause more sort of lower respiratory tract symptoms - things like coughing, sore throat, feeling like you've got, you know, a frog in your throat, that sort of thing. Sneezing - it's not to say it can't happen, but it's not as common with the flu as it would be with the common cold viruses.

LICHTMAN: Let's talk a little bit about the vaccine. It seemed to be a pretty good match this year, I read.

BOUVIER: Yeah. It's a very good match this year. I think of all of the flu isolates from around the country that the CDC has tested, 91 percent of them so far have been a very good match to the current flu vaccines. So it's a well-matched year.

LICHTMAN: How do they decide which viruses or virus fragments to put in a vaccine?

BOUVIER: It is part surveillance and part guessing. So what they tend to do is when they're looking at the Northern Hemisphere formulation, they'll look at what's circulating in the Southern Hemisphere during our summer. So, you know, they will be sampling viruses from Australia, from New Zealand, from South Africa and try to make an educated guess as to which of those strains are most likely to come up here at our hemisphere during the winter. And often, they get it right, like this year, and sometimes, they get it wrong. And that's the kind of season we have when we have a poorly match vaccine.

LICHTMAN: This year, there was news about a new vaccine that wasn't made with eggs or live virus. It was insect cells. Can you tell us a little bit about it?

BOUVIER: So the traditional flu vaccine is, basically, they take whatever strain they think is the best virus candidate and inoculate it into eggs - which, as you can imagine, you need a lot of hens laying a lot of eggs to make millions of vaccine doses. So this new technology is - relies on an insect virus called a baculovirus. And what you do is you engineer this virus to have the gene for the hemoglutinin protein of flu, and that's the protein that the flu uses to attach to cells that it wants to infect.

And it's the most immunogenic protein of flu, meaning it's the one that provokes the largest immune response. So what they do is they put the gene for the hemoglutinin protein into this insect virus. Then they use the insect virus to infect insect cells. And in the process of making its own proteins, the insect virus will also, as a byproduct, make the flu protein. Then they purify it out, and that becomes your vaccine.

LICHTMAN: Is it easier or faster to produce?

BOUVIER: It is faster because the insect cells, you can keep them in the freezer until you need them. And then you just take them out and you thaw them, and you do what we call expand them. You basically let them grow for a while, until you have a lot of them, then you just put a lot of cells with the insect virus in lots of vats and let - just let it go. So you don't have to worry about having lots of hens hanging around, just waiting to lay your eggs in the case of a pandemic.

LICHTMAN: You're listening to SCIENCE FRIDAY, on NPR. I'm Flora Lichtman talking with Dr. Bouvier about the flu. Let's go back to the phones, because people have some interesting things to say - Amy in Manhattan.

AMY: Hi.

LICHTMAN: Hi.

AMY: Well, in addition to all these other things, I try to keep a rule that, you know, my germs on one hand, and my - and other people's germs on the other hand, like the right hand. So I'll shake hands with my right hand, and I try not touch my face with my right hand. But, you know, if I need to scratch my nose or something, I'll use my left. And...

LICHTMAN: What do you think about that strategy?

BOUVIER: It's actually part of what has been studied under the heading of non-pharmaceutical interventions, and that's basically things you can do that are not drugs or vaccines to prevent yourself from getting the flu. And so what they've done is - in studies, you take a group of people who are told to just go about their normal lives and a group of people who are told, you know, wash your hands frequently. Do what we call hand awareness, meaning think about where your hands are and try not to touch your face. Do things like cover your sneezes with your elbow instead of with your hand, and sometimes even wearing facemasks. And of those studies, hand awareness and hand hygiene usually turns out to be one of the most effective ways of not giving yourself the flu. So...

AMY: A sense of ill-at-ease.

(LAUGHTER)

BOUVIER: Yes, it has been.

LICHTMAN: Thanks for calling, Amy.

AMY: Thank you.

LICHTMAN: What about the universal flu vaccine, the holy grail of seasonal influenza vaccines? How far are we from that?

BOUVIER: It's a little bit hard to say. I think we're inching closer. So one of the problems with the flu virus is that, for reasons that are kind of complicated, they're very good at subtly changing themselves year after year so that it doesn't affect how they infect or how they replicate, but it does affect how your immune system recognizes them sort of the second time around. And that's why we need to get annual flu vaccines. So it turns out that there are very few parts of the flu virus - we call them epitopes - which are so crucial, that their function is so important, that they cannot change.

If this part of the protein changes, it's going to result in a dead virus. And, you know, we have identified a couple of those, but it turns out that these epitopes do not stimulate a really good immune response when you get either a regular vaccine or when you get the flu. So what researchers are doing now, including my group at Mount Sinai, are looking at how we can alter these epitopes so we present them to the immune system in a different way, almost forcing the immune system to recognize these constant epitopes, make the antibodies against it.

And then, if you get infected with the flu, you have the antibodies to this constant region that can't change. So it's hard to say. There's a lot of strategies that are sort of underway, but I think it's possible. It's just we need some more work.

LICHTMAN: In about the minute we have left, do you have other tips for people who want to avoid getting flu? Let's say they've already gotten their flu shot. What should they do?

BOUVIER: OK. I have to say, if you haven't gotten your flu shot, get it, because I'm a doctor and I have to say that.

(LAUGHTER)

BOUVIER: But it depends on who you are. If you're someone who has certain comorbidity, certain diseases, if you're pregnant, you must get vaccinated. But other than that, I think the things that have shown to work best are things like hand-washing. And if you don't have access to a sink, you can use an alcohol-based sanitizer. You just have to put enough on so your hands are really wet, and you have to let it dry, and then that'll kill the flu virus on your hands.

You have to be aware of where your hands are. If you sneeze or cough, do it into your - in the crook of your elbow instead of in your hand. Try to avoid sharing utensils with people. If you know someone sick, try not to be in their orbit, because the closer you are to them, the more likely you can get flu from them. And they're mostly just commonsense things. But to various degrees, they have been shown to be effective.

LICHTMAN: You know, the hand sanitizer thing is interesting, and we really have like 15 seconds, because I - a cold, it doesn't work as well on, right?

BOUVIER: It does some of them, but some of them it doesn't. So flu, it does kill.

LICHTMAN: Good to know. Thank you for joining us today.

BOUVIER: Thanks for having me.

LICHTMAN: Dr. Nicole Bouvier is an assistant professor in the Division of Infectious Diseases at Mount Sinai School of Medicine here in New York. And stay with us, because we have some astronomy news coming up.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

LICHTMAN: This is SCIENCE FRIDAY, from NPR.

Copyright ? 2013 National Public Radio. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to National Public Radio. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/01/18/169708755/how-do-you-fend-off-the-flu?ft=1&f=1007

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B Vitamins May Reduce Risk of Colorectal Cancer

Involving a total of 88,045 postmenopausal women who were recruited between 1993 and 1998; The Women's Health Initiative Observational Study covers the time period in which the United States introduced mandatory fortification of grain products with folic acid (a bioavailable form of folate).? Stefanie Zschabitz, from Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center (Washington, USA), and colleagues analyzed the diagnosis of 1,003 incident colorectal cancer cases in the study group that were ascertained as of 2009. The researchers observed that women with the highest average intakes of riboflavin (vitamin B2, over 3.97 mg per day) were at a 20% lower risk of colorectal cancer (as compared to women with the lowers average intakes at less than 1.8 mg).? Additionally, the highest intakes of pyridoxine (Vitamin B6, over 3.88 mg per day) were found to lower the risk by 20%? (as compared to women with the lowers average intakes at less than 1.52 mg).? The study authors conclude that: ?Vitamin B-6 and riboflavin intakes from diet and supplements were associated with a decreased risk of [colorectal cancer] in postmenopausal women.?

Stefanie Zschabitz, Ting-Yuan David Cheng, Marian L Neuhouser, Yingye Zheng, Roberta M Ray, Joshua W Miller, et al.? ?B vitamin intakes and incidence of colorectal cancer: results from the Women's Health Initiative Observational Study cohort.?? Am J Clin Nutr., December 19, 2012.

Health Headlines MORE ?

When coupled with an energy-restricted diet, calcium and vitamin D supplementation helps people to lose significantly more body fat.

Despite spending more on healthcare, Americans die sooner and experience more illness than people in other high-income countries.

Beneficial effects on expression of the cell adhesion molecule P-selectin are observed in men who consume white chocolate.

Older adults who drink sweetened beverages, and artificially sweetened diet drinks in particular, are at increased risk for depression.

Increased intakes of riboflavin (vitamin B2) and pyridoxine (vitamin B6) associate with significant reductions in the risk of colorectal cancer, among women.

Bisphenol A (BPA) associates with increased levels of albumin in the urine, potentially signaling renal impairment and kidney disease.

Americans are eating 10 grams less fat per day today, as they were in the 1970s.

An international study reports a link between passive smoking and syndromes of dementia.

Amidst growing concerns about health and eating right, fresh fruit is the top snack food consumed in the United States.

A cocktail of three specific genes can reprogram cells in the scars caused by heart attacks into functioning muscle cells.

Source: http://www.worldhealth.net/news/b-vitamins-may-reduce-risk-colorectal-cancer/

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Friday, January 18, 2013

A bounce-house addition to the International Space Station?

NASA and Bigelow Aerospace plan to add a $17.8 million inflatable room to the International Space Station. The Bigelow Expandable Activity Module, or BEAM, will house astronauts, and is built to withstand heat, radiation, debris and other assaults.

By Hanna Dreier,?Associated Press / January 17, 2013

An artist's rendering of a Bigelow inflatable space station. NASA is partnering with this private space company to test an inflatable room that can be compressed into a 7-foot tube for delivery to the International Space Station. NASA is expected to install the module by 2015.

(AP Photo/Bigelow Aerospace)

Enlarge

NASA is partnering with a commercial space company in a bid to replace the cumbersome "metal cans" that now serve as astronauts' homes in space with inflatable bounce-house-like habitats that can be deployed on the cheap.

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A $17.8 million test project will send to the International Space Station an inflatable room that can be compressed into a 7-foot tube for delivery, officials said Wednesday in a news conference at North Las Vegas-based Bigelow Aerospace.

If the module proves durable during two years at the space station, it could open the door to habitats on the moon and missions to Mars, NASA engineer Glen Miller said.

The agency chose Bigelow for the contract because it was the only company working on inflatable technology, said NASA Deputy Administrator Lori Garver.

Founder and President Robert Bigelow, who made his fortune in the hotel industry before getting into the space business in 1999, framed the gambit as an out-of-this-world real estate venture. He hopes to sell his spare tire habitats to scientific companies and wealthy adventurers looking for space hotels.

NASA is expected to install the 13-foot, blimp-like module in a space station port by 2015. Bigelow plans to begin selling stand-alone space homes the next year.

The new technology provides three times as much room as the existing aluminum models, and is also easier and less costly to build, Miller said.

Artist renderings of the module resemble a tinfoil clown nose grafted onto the main station. It is hardly big enough to be called a room. Miller described it as a large closet with padded white walls and gear and gizmos strung from two central beams.

Garver said Wednesday that sending a small inflatable tube into space will be dramatically cheaper than launching a full-sized module.

"Let's face it; the most expensive aspect of taking things in space is the launch," she said. "So the magnitude of importance of this for NASA really can't be overstated."

The partnership is another step toward outsourcing for NASA, which no longer enjoys the budget and public profile of its heyday. The agency has handed off rocket-building to private companies, retired it space shuttles in 2011 and now relies on Russian spaceships to transport American astronauts to and from the space station.

Astronauts will test the ability of the bladder, known as the Bigelow Expandable Activity Module, or BEAM, to withstand heat, radiation, debris and other assaults. Some adventurous scientists might also try sleeping in the spare room, which is the first piece of private real estate to be blasted into space, Garver said.

Bigelow said the NASA brand will enable him to begin selling Kevlar habitats several times the size of the test module.

"This year is probably going to be our kickoff year for talking to customers," he said. "We have to show that we can execute what we're talking about."

Bigelow, who launched a small prototype of the module in 2006 after licensing the patent from NASA, will rely on Boeing Co. and Southern California rocket developer Space Exploration Technologies to provide transportation.

A 60-day stay will cost $25 million, which doesn't include the $27.5 million it costs to get there and back.

Bigelow predicted that the primary customers will be upwardly mobile countries including Brazil, Singapore and the United Arab Emirates that "have a difficult time getting their astronauts into orbit" and could use a private space station to barter and build up prestige.

The biggest technological challenge will be transporting the collapsed module through the sub-zero temperatures of space without tearing or cracking any part of it, Miller said.

When it arrives at the space station in 2015, scientists will blow it up and let it sit for a few days to test for leaks. If it does not hold as promised, NASA will take back a portion of the already bargain basement price it paid Bigelow.

Standing beside scale models of research stations on Mars and the moon, Miller said the project will encourage commercial ventures to follow the path NASA blazes into space.

He added that it could also help achieve the holy grail of space exploration: missions that send astronauts out of orbit for more than a year.

"The only way to do that is to expand it out and voila you have living space for three people to go to Mars," he said. "You can get three times the volume of a metallic can, and you can go up in the same ferry."

___

Hannah Dreier can be reached at http://twitter.com/hannahdreier .

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/6jBqIgHR49Q/A-bounce-house-addition-to-the-International-Space-Station

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Thursday, January 17, 2013

Quinton ?Rampage? Jackson is so over the UFC

Quinton "Rampage" Jackson will fight Glover Teixiera at UFC on Fox 6. If Jackson stays true to his word, it will be his last fight in the UFC. He has complained about being a part of the UFC time and time again. He reiterated on a pre-fight press call that he is done, done, done with the UFC. This is the last fight of his contract, and he has no plans to renegotiate with them.

"I think the UFC don't know how to treat the athletes, in my opinion," he said. "I feel like the fighters do a lot for the sport and I feel like we're not taken care of well enough. I feel like they're getting rich off all of us."

His cries are starting to sound like the lyrics to a Taylor Swift song. Jackson and the UFC are never ever ever getting back together. But if he doesn't fight for the UFC, his options for high-level MMA are limited. He said he could try other combat sports like kickboxing or boxing. Bellator could be an option, but one of Jackson's beefs with the UFC has been their matchmaking. The tournament set-up could be tough for him to deal with.

Either way, enjoy Jackson in the UFC while you can, because it's over for real this time.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/quinton-rampage-jackson-over-ufc-141342206--mma.html

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Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Pentagon chief Panetta meets Pope Benedict

Pope Benedict XVI greets U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta after the pontiff's weekly general audience in Paul VI Hall at the Vatican, on Wednesday, Jan. 16, 2013. Panetta was in the front row at Wednesday's weekly general audience in the Vatican auditorium. Panetta, a staunch Catholic, is in Rome as part of a weeklong swing across Europe, meeting with defense ministers to talk about ongoing conflicts in Afghanistan and Mali. This is expected to be Panetta's last overseas trip as Pentagon chief, as he long has planned to step down once his replacement is confirmed. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

Pope Benedict XVI greets U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta after the pontiff's weekly general audience in Paul VI Hall at the Vatican, on Wednesday, Jan. 16, 2013. Panetta was in the front row at Wednesday's weekly general audience in the Vatican auditorium. Panetta, a staunch Catholic, is in Rome as part of a weeklong swing across Europe, meeting with defense ministers to talk about ongoing conflicts in Afghanistan and Mali. This is expected to be Panetta's last overseas trip as Pentagon chief, as he long has planned to step down once his replacement is confirmed. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

Pope Benedict XVI greets U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta after the pontiff's weekly general audience in Paul VI Hall at the Vatican, on Wednesday, Jan. 16, 2013. Panetta was in the front row at Wednesday's weekly general audience in the Vatican auditorium. Panetta, a staunch Catholic, is in Rome as part of a weeklong swing across Europe, meeting with defense ministers to talk about ongoing conflicts in Afghanistan and Mali. This is expected to be Panetta's last overseas trip as Pentagon chief, as he long has planned to step down once his replacement is confirmed. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

(AP) ? U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, the leader of the world's largest military, met Pope Benedict XVI, the world's best known advocate for peace, at the Vatican on Wednesday.

Panetta was in the front row at Wednesday's weekly general audience in the Vatican auditorium. About 1,000 people were crowded into the room.

After the Pope addressed the gathering, Panetta and several staff members lined up to meet the pontiff, who gave them rosaries.

Panetta kissed the Pope's hand, and the Pope said, "Thank you for helping to protect the world."

The Pentagon boss responded, "Pray for me."

Panetta, a staunch Catholic, is in Rome as part of a weeklong swing across Europe, meeting with defense ministers to talk about ongoing conflicts in Afghanistan and Mali. This is expected to be Panetta's last overseas trip as Pentagon chief, as he long has planned to step down once his replacement is confirmed.

The pontiff has been outspoken in pressing for peace, issuing urgent appeals to end the violence in Syria and urging the international community to spare no effort in seeking a political settlement to the conflict. Most recently he used his annual New Year's speech at the Vatican to call for an end to Syria's civil war. He has also pushed for peace in the Middle East, saying he hopes Jerusalem will one day become "a city of peace and not of division."

Wednesday's Vatican visit is Panetta's third papal audience.

The Italian-American Panetta, who was born in California, made the first trip to Italy in the 1950s, traveling with his parents to visit his grandparents. During that trip, Panetta made his first visit to St. Peter's Basilica.

Panetta made subsequent trips to Rome as a member of Congress, and had an audience with Pope John Paul II when he traveled to Rome with then-President Bill Clinton. He later had a second audience with Pope John Paul II in Washington.

While director of the CIA, Panetta visited the Vatican, but did not see the Pope.

On his overseas trips, Panetta often will go to Catholic mass at a local church.

Panetta, who often works his Italian ancestry into his speeches, told reporters traveling with him that this visit to Italy has a "lot of tremendous personal meaning for me, since I'm the son of Italian immigrants." He often talks about his parents' decision to come to America so that they could provide a better life for their children.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-01-16-Panetta-Pope/id-824500bc3c904b92bc2bb3fe1660e2e5

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Sony exec hints PlayStation announcement date

A Sony executive has hinted the company?s next-generation PlayStation will be revealed some time around May.

Speaking to Chilean news agency El Mercurio, Hiroshi Sakamoto ? Sony Home Entertainment?s vice president ? confirmed the company has big news coming around the mid-way point of the year.

?It's still a big secret, but our Sony PlayStation friends are getting ready,? he says, ?I only can say that we're focused on the games related E3 event, booked for June. The announcement can take place there or even before, in May.?

?We plan to release big news for this date, but we have to wait at least until May.?

3 News

Source: http://www.3news.co.nz/Sony-exec-hints-PlayStation-announcement-date/tabid/418/articleID/283134/Default.aspx

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Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Lutheran college opens the door to same-sex wedding

When Eric Palmer came to Augustana College four years ago, he wasn't expecting to fall in love. And he certainly wasn't expecting to be a pioneer when he requested to use the chapel to declare his devotion to his fiance.

But his betrothed is Ethan Tarvin, also a senior at the liberal arts college, which is affiliated with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. When the Rock Island, Ill., school recently decided to allow its chapel to be used for the blessings of same-sex unions, another barrier quietly fell.

"I didn't have to wrestle with this. ... It was a matter of integrity," said President Steve Bahls, citing the school's anti-discrimination policy. "If you say you don't discriminate based on sexual orientation but you can't use our chapel, then you're a hypocrite."

A decade ago, Bahls said he would have rejected such a request. Even if he did agree, he would have faced swarms of angry alumni ? instead of the overwhelming support he received for what is believed to be the first of 26 ELCA colleges nationwide to take such a stand, he said.

Still, the issue of religiously affiliated colleges opening their facilities to same-sex weddings and commitment ceremonies can be tricky for administrators. Some Christian denominations don't recognize gay marriage while others require permission from higher authorities, such as local bishops.

Then, there's the issue of what to even call these rituals. Augustana is a 10-minute drive from Iowa, where same-sex couples can legally tie the knot. Illinois doesn't recognize such unions, though legislation has recently gained momentum and could be taken up in Springfield during the spring session.

For Palmer and Tarvin, their choice of venue for a fall 2013 wedding wasn't about activism, but deep ties to the campus where many life-changing experiences occurred.

"Augustana is just a very sentimental place for us," said Palmer, who met Tarvin in 2011, when he registered him to vote. The two hit it off and got engaged last April Fools' Day.

Said Tarvin: "I met Eric on campus, proposed on campus and it seemed only logical to have the ceremony in the chapel. ... It really represents my personal, professional and religious life."

They took the request to their college pastor, the Rev. Richard Priggie, who was cautiously optimistic, but who said he needed approval from higher up ? which is how the request landed on the president's desk.

In a 2009 statement, the churchwide assembly acknowledged that consensus on this matter doesn't exist in the ELCA and allowed congregations that choose to do so to find ways to recognize and support same-sex, monogamous relationships, according to the Rev. Mark Wilhelm, program director for ELCA colleges.

"The statement acknowledges that members of our church hold various convictions ? and Augustana is reflecting one angle on this," Wilhelm said.

Because the college is affiliated with the ELCA, but not a congregation, the final decision rested with the 58-year-old Bahls. "I asked myself: Is this consistent with church doctrine? Yes. Is it consistent with Augustana's doctrine. Yes. So, to give life to our anti-discrimination policy, I had to make it available to all."

Bahls informed the local bishop and the board of trustees, but did not issue a press release. The news leaked out in November and he braced himself for a firestorm ? which never happened.

"That was probably the biggest surprise is how this has been overwhelmingly accepted ? not unanimously, but for every negative comment, I received a dozen that were positive," said Bahls, who called each critic to discuss his verdict.

It's a far cry from an earlier era at religious colleges, where Scripture-quoting staff made sure that even heterosexual dancing was discouraged and curfews were strictly enforced. Some see Augustana's action as a sign that the pendulum has swung too far in the other direction.

"It's clear that Augustana and the ELCA has made a decision about this that most Christians in the world wouldn't agree with, although you wouldn't know it from this country," said the Rev. Paul Ulring of Lutheran CORE, a conservative umbrella organization.

It's not that the third-generation pastor is against change. In fact, he led the battle for social dancing ? and lost ? at his alma mater, Waldorf College, in 1967. But the lack of outcry over the legitimacy of same-sex unions is "telling," he said.

"It's a sad reality ... those who have objected have left the denomination," Ulring said.

For the newlyweds-to-be, however, the future holds nothing but joy. They'll graduate in May ? Palmer in political science and economics, Tarvin in music education ? and the world is a more welcoming place today than just a few years ago.

Palmer came out at age 15 in a small town in western Illinois. He was routinely ridiculed and one friend's mother even took him to an exorcist, he said.

Life wasn't much easier for Tarvin in suburban Milwaukee. He was raised in the Missouri Synod Lutheran Church, a traditional branch of Lutheranism, and waited until he arrived in Rock Island to live openly gay.

"I was very self-conscious of my sexuality and felt that I would not be welcome in my home congregation," Tarvin said. "I was genuinely surprised at the openness of the Augustana community."

"And now to have our ceremony here is just perfect," Palmer said.

Bahls says other leaders of ELCA-affiliated colleges could follow suit.

"I was first to make this decision because we had a request, but I'd like to think many of my colleagues would make the same decision," he said. "Our society and our colleges are changing and for that, I'm proud to be a symbol."

brubin@tribune.com

Source: http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-met-gay-marriage-religious-colleges-20130114,0,5732812.story?track=rss

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Smoking intensity and cancer markers predict seriousness of bladder cancer

Jan. 9, 2013 ? Smoking not only causes bladder cancer -- it also affects its course, in that people who smoke more have greater likelihood of developing more aggressive and deadly disease. That is one of the conclusions of a new study published early online in Cancer, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society. The study also found that a panel of bladder cancer markers can predict which particular cases are at the highest risk for a fatal outcome.

Researchers have known that smoking is one of the most common causes of bladder cancer, but they've wondered whether it also affects how the disease progresses. To investigate, Richard J. Cote, MD, of the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, and Anirban Mitra, MD, PhD, of the Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California, led a team that analyzed bladder tumors and smoking history in 212 multi-ethnic patients recruited through the Los Angeles County Cancer Surveillance Program between 1987 and 1996.

The researchers found that the bladder cancers that developed in individuals who smoked intensely were more likely to be deadly than bladder cancers that developed in those who never smoked, or who smoked less. The study also revealed that changes in particular proteins are often present in bladder cancers that have become deadly. "We have identified a panel of nine molecular markers that can robustly and reproducibly predict bladder cancer prognosis independent of standard clinical criteria and smoking history," said Dr. Mitra. Patients with alterations in six to nine markers had a very poor outcome, raising the hypothesis that these individuals could have benefited from more aggressive treatments.

Because the number of changes in these proteins was directly proportional to patients' health outcomes in a progressive fashion, the findings confirm the theory that an accumulation of changes is more important than individual changes in determining the characteristics of a given cancer. The link between smoking intensity and prognosis found in this study points to the incrementally harmful effects of smoking.

"The study's findings are extremely clinically relevant as bladder cancer is one of the most expensive malignancies to treat," said Dr. Cote, who is Director of the Genitourinary Malignancies Program at University of Miami's Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center. "Personalized patient management is urgently needed for this disease as current clinical stratification cannot predict outcomes of individual patients."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Wiley.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Anirban P. Mitra, Jose E. Castelao, Debra Hawes, Denice D. Tsao-Wei, Xuejuan Jiang, Shan-Rong Shi, Ram H. Datar, Eila C. Skinner, John P. Stein, Susan Groshen, Mimi C. Yu, Ronald K. Ross, Donald G. Skinner, Victoria K. Cortessis, Richard J. Cote. Combination of molecular alterations and smoking intensity predicts bladder cancer outcome. Cancer, 2013; DOI: 10.1002/cncr.27763

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/yBp5hP-orKs/130114092559.htm

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Sunday, January 13, 2013

Brian Kelly staying at Notre Dame: NFL interest means payday

Kelly becomes the latest college coach to turn down the Eagles.

We'll never know whether Brian Kelly truly had interest in the NFL or whether it was merely a negotiating tactic, but regardless, the coach will return to Notre Dame -- likely with some added incentive from the university.

Kelly had interviewed with the Philadelphia Eagles just days after losing the national championship game, but eventually didn't take the job, instead deciding to stay with the Fighting Irish, a school official confirmed on Saturday.

Kelly had just received a two-year contract extension a year ago after going 8-5 in his first two seasons. That extension kept Kelly at Notre Dame through 2016, although the details of the contract were undisclosed, as Notre Dame is a private university.

There's no doubt Kelly has been great for the Fighting Irish: after Ty Willingham and Charlie Weis flamed out, the Irish had strong seasons in Kelly's first two years before going 12-0 and earning a national championship berth this year, although they were crushed by Alabama in that appearance. They haven't had a consistently successful coach since Lou Holtz and, in three years under Kelly, Notre Dame has gone to three bowl games.

There's a slight cost to Kelly's decision to interview with the NFL, as four-star linebacker commit Alex Anzalone switched schools for a second time, leaving the Irish for Florida.

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Source: http://www.sbnation.com/college-football/2013/1/12/3865404/brian-kelly-notre-dame-contract-nfl-rumors

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Shooting threat made on Facebook, BHS students on alert

Students at Bakersfield High School were on alert Friday, after the Gang Unit with the Bakersfield Police Department found a suspicious post on Facebook. That prompted extra officers on campus and dozens of parents to pick up their students. Police say the post on Facebook stemmed from a fight on campus Thursday.?After the fight, rumors of a possible shooting quickly spread through text messaging and social media. The post said Eastsiders would possibly show up to the school with guns. "We've had about 20 to 30 kids that have gone home, but other than that we have 2,700 kids that are still here," said Principal David Reese. Reese says the Gang Unit found the post and notified school officials immediately. "There's a lot of gang violence and there's been a lot of shootings in the area. There are a lot of copycats that would do the same thing, so I wouldn't be surprised if it happened," said Vanessa Ward, a BHS student. As word spread of what was going on, dozens of parents showed up to the school and picked up their kids. Jeanie Bornstein has two kids that go to BHS and said sometimes a rumor turns out to be true. "In light of Thursday's school shooting in Taft, I'm very concerned. I really don't want to take any chances," said Bornstein. She said with the latest school shootings, assault weapons should be better regulated. "I think that we need to have some serious national discussion and some serious action to control this," she continued. Bakersfield police are investigating the Facebook post and looking into whether it's gang-related. Extra police officers were?on hand after school to make sure students and faculty were safe. If you have information regarding the Facebook post, call the BPD at 327-7111.

Click here to read this story on www.kget.com

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/50439229/ns/local_news-bakersfield_ca/

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Wednesday, January 9, 2013

The Zivix Jamstik Is An Absolutely Amazing Portable MIDI Guitar For Beginners And Pros

Screen Shot 2013-01-08 at 5.26.30 PMThe surprisingly small and light Jamstik is, in short, one of the coolest things I've seen at CES Today. It is a MIDI guitar that is actually a musical controller. By playing and plucking the strings you can play music using synthesized sounds and it recognizes chords, notes, and nuances including bends and hammers.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/tGWhzfGl_-s/

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Sunday, January 6, 2013

Definitive Technology Sound Cylinder First Listen: A Spectacular, Portable Sound System for Your Tablet or Laptop

The built-in speakers on gadgets are nearly always garbage, and tablets and laptops are the worst of the worst. No one uses the built-in crap if they can avoid it, but portable speakers are either inconvenient or terrible, and so most of us are banished to a life of headphones. Well the new Bluetooth Sound Cylinder from Definitive Technology is the most elegant portable sound system we've ever used. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/AmuC-zUl-2I/definitive-technology-sound-cylinder-first-listen-a-spectacular-portable-sound-system-for-your-tablet-or-laptop

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