Thursday, October 25, 2012

Critique Speaking Writing Contest ? Creative Writing Contests

The Critique Speaking Contest is not only your opportunity to share your experience, but get a short video made of that experience!

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????????? All submissions will be read.

????????? In February 2013, 25 will be chosen to receive a reading live by the Avatar Repertory Theater on the virtual world, Second Life, produced by The Sanity Patrol Players.

????????? Recordings of these readings will be posted on The Sanity Patrol website.

????????? For the month of March, anyone and everyone will vote for their favorites.

????????? The Sanity Patrol Players will produce videos of the top 3-5 pieces on Second Life. (see examples of the videos)

????????? Videos will be posted on YouTube and The Sanity Patrol Press website in May 2013.

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Submission Guidelines

1.??? Submissions must be 500-1000 characters in length.

2.??? Entries must be a monologue for Tikka or a dialogue between Tikka and Arthur (see character photos).

3.??? The point of view must be that of Tikka.

4.??? Submissions can be real, fictional, speculative, or anything in between.

5.??? Do not include stage directions unless absolutely necessary.

6.??? Submit entries in an email to: contest@thesanitypatrol.com

7.??? Maximum of 5 entries per person

8.??? Winning writers maintain copyright and license The Sanity Patrol for noncommercial use of the material

9.??? DEADLINE: December 31, 2012

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About Tikka. Tikka loves literature, plays, movies and games. She also loves authors ? they possess a magic that transports her into alternative realities. From her own efforts at writing, she has learned that developing a new work requires she not only understand the rudimentary elements of story, but learn ways to best communicate with authors.

About Arthur. Arthur identifies himself as an author. Like most authors, one minute he?s articulate and profound, and the next he?s self indulgent and goofy. Sometimes he?s earnest and open to feedback, and others he?s smug and cynical. He recognizes he needs help and establishes a relationship with Tikka.

About Second Life. Second Life is a virtual world that anyone with a computer and online access can access for free. Participants select (or design) an avatar they can maneuver through the many environments built by other participants, attend live concerts and theater, shop for all kinds of dazzling fashion and role play under a wide range of circumstances.

About The Sanity Patrol Players. Since 1998, The Sanity Patrol Players have produced live theater, industrial theater, virtual theater and mixed reality theater.

About Avatary Repertory Theater (ART). Founded in 2008, ART is a troupe of actors, graphic artists, pro?gram?mers, musicians and sound eng?ineers from all over the globe to produce virtual theater on Second Life.

About Critique Speak. Critique Speak is an upcoming comprehensive graphic ebook on the language of constructive feedback. Tikka and Arthur serve as the main characters.

JOIN THE CONVERSATION

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Tags: fiction contests, short fiction contest, short video contests, Writing contest

Source: http://writingcontests.wordpress.com/2012/10/25/critique-speaking-writing-contest/

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As U.S. election nears, efforts intensify to misinform, pressure voters (reuters)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/257828178?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Heard sexual harassment complaint is coming? Immediately launch ...

When HR receives a complaint about sexual or some other form of harassment, immediately put your investigation machinery in motion. Start gathering information before you even meet with the complaining employee.

That way, you can?t be accused of ignoring the problem, and you?ll have a better chance of getting any lawsuit dismissed quickly.

Recent case: When Sam was a freshman at Southern Illinois Uni??ver??sity, he got a campus job in the chemistry stockroom. That room was located across the hall from an elderly, retired professor?s office.

The professor, a respected chemistry instructor before retiring, had donated millions of dollars to the university. As professor emeritus, he had full campus and office privileges.

Sam got upset when the professor commented that he had beautiful hair, giggled and squeezed Sam?s buttocks. A few days later, the prof again commented on Sam?s hair. That?s when Sam and his mother went to the administration and complained. Immediately, an investigation began.

HR then met with Sam and his mom to discuss the matter. They were asked if there were any witnesses and were told that the professor was ?an old man with a compromised mental state? who had been much admired in his day and who had contributed heavily. They took this as an effort to get them to drop their complaint.

Meanwhile, the investigation had uncovered another incident in which a female employee complained she had also been touched. The professor was ordered off campus and had to be escorted out several times over the next few months.

Meanwhile, Sam sued, alleging sexual harassment and a hostile environment. (The professor also sued, but his case was quickly dismissed.)

The court tossed out Sam?s case. It reasoned that, despite the university?s apparent reluctance to act on just Sam?s word?and what Sam and his mother could have perceived as the university?s reluctance to act?the uni??versity had in fact acted. The investigation was already under way when the initial meeting with Sam and his mom took place. Plus, once the investigation showed prior objectionable conduct, the university removed the pro??fessor from campus despite his donations and stature. (Milligan v. Board of Trustees of Southern Illinois University, No. 10-3862, 7th Cir., 2012)

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Wednesday, October 24, 2012

M&M South Africa top stories for Tuesday: Live Biz Takeouts radio broadcast at...

Live Biz Takeouts radio broadcast at Bookmarks 2012

www.bizcommunity.com

Biz Takeouts, Bizcommunity's marketing & media radio show, will be doing its first live outside broadcast on Thursday, 1 November 2012, at The Bookmarks 2012 awards ceremony in Cape Town. This non-profit initiative by the Digital Media & Marketing Association (DMMA) recognises and rewards those who...

Source: http://www.facebook.com/Bizcommunity/posts/422730297792428

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Medical recommendations should go beyond race, scholar says

Medical recommendations should go beyond race, scholar says [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 23-Oct-2012
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Contact: Andy McGlashen
andy.mcglashen@cabs.msu.edu
517-355-5158
Michigan State University

EAST LANSING, Mich. Medical organizations that make race-based recommendations are misleading some patients about health risks while reinforcing harmful notions about race, argues a Michigan State University professor in a new paper published in the journal Preventive Medicine.

While some racial groups are on average more prone to certain diseases than the general population, they contain "islands" of lower risk that medical professionals should acknowledge, said Sean Valles, assistant professor in MSU's Lyman Briggs College and the Department of Philosophy.

For instance, government dietary guidelines recommend lower salt intake for African-Americans, based on their elevated risk of hypertension. However, foreign-born blacks have substantially lower rates of cardiovascular diseases, partly because of lifestyle factors.

Similarly, while Caucasians are far more likely than other racial groups to have cystic fibrosis, only one in 25,000 people of Finnish descent are born with the usually fatal disease, a rate 10 times lower than among Caucasians generally.

By glossing over the varying degrees of health risk within a racial group, medical recommendations imply that all members of each race are biologically the same as one another and different from others a view that promotes prejudice and discrimination, according to Valles.

"There's something a little bit dishonest about not recognizing low-risk groups when we know they're there," he said. "I'm not trying to say that we should change the course of science to be politically correct. I'm saying we know this stuff. Let's take it seriously."

In the paper, Valles urges health agencies to simply add the phrase "non-Finnish" to recommendations about whether Caucasians should undergo screening for the recessive cystic fibrosis gene. Likewise, he says dietary salt recommendations for African-Americans should include the phrase "U.S.-born."

"Of all the levels of specificity to choose, we've been fixated on the one that has the most negative repercussions," he said. "There are very serious problems that come with giving the misleading impression that races have some sort of very deep and intrinsic biological meaning. You don't get that with the term non-Finnish Caucasians."

Valles said race does have some practical value for identifying at-risk populations, but he hopes his two specific recommendations demonstrate that health organizations could be more effective and socially responsible by being more specific.

"It's not even clear whether the term African-American includes black immigrants," Valles said. "The census form kind of implies yes. Some members of African-American or immigrant communities might say no. It's a mess."

###


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


Medical recommendations should go beyond race, scholar says [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 23-Oct-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Andy McGlashen
andy.mcglashen@cabs.msu.edu
517-355-5158
Michigan State University

EAST LANSING, Mich. Medical organizations that make race-based recommendations are misleading some patients about health risks while reinforcing harmful notions about race, argues a Michigan State University professor in a new paper published in the journal Preventive Medicine.

While some racial groups are on average more prone to certain diseases than the general population, they contain "islands" of lower risk that medical professionals should acknowledge, said Sean Valles, assistant professor in MSU's Lyman Briggs College and the Department of Philosophy.

For instance, government dietary guidelines recommend lower salt intake for African-Americans, based on their elevated risk of hypertension. However, foreign-born blacks have substantially lower rates of cardiovascular diseases, partly because of lifestyle factors.

Similarly, while Caucasians are far more likely than other racial groups to have cystic fibrosis, only one in 25,000 people of Finnish descent are born with the usually fatal disease, a rate 10 times lower than among Caucasians generally.

By glossing over the varying degrees of health risk within a racial group, medical recommendations imply that all members of each race are biologically the same as one another and different from others a view that promotes prejudice and discrimination, according to Valles.

"There's something a little bit dishonest about not recognizing low-risk groups when we know they're there," he said. "I'm not trying to say that we should change the course of science to be politically correct. I'm saying we know this stuff. Let's take it seriously."

In the paper, Valles urges health agencies to simply add the phrase "non-Finnish" to recommendations about whether Caucasians should undergo screening for the recessive cystic fibrosis gene. Likewise, he says dietary salt recommendations for African-Americans should include the phrase "U.S.-born."

"Of all the levels of specificity to choose, we've been fixated on the one that has the most negative repercussions," he said. "There are very serious problems that come with giving the misleading impression that races have some sort of very deep and intrinsic biological meaning. You don't get that with the term non-Finnish Caucasians."

Valles said race does have some practical value for identifying at-risk populations, but he hopes his two specific recommendations demonstrate that health organizations could be more effective and socially responsible by being more specific.

"It's not even clear whether the term African-American includes black immigrants," Valles said. "The census form kind of implies yes. Some members of African-American or immigrant communities might say no. It's a mess."

###


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


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-10/msu-mrs102312.php

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James Cameron Eyes The Informationist

James CameronRemember when James Cameron said he was only going to make Avatar sequels from here on out? Yeah, scratch that.

THR reports that Cameron has picked up the film rights to Taylor Stevens? novel The Informationist,?and that he will direct and produce the feature. The book focuses on an African woman who grew up around mercenaries and later becomes an ?information dealer? for wealthy clients. Her latest customer sends her on a quest to find his missing daughter, which sends the main character back to her homeland.

Early comparisons describe the novel?s main character as a ?cross between Lisbeth Salander and Sherlock Holmes," and given Cameron?s penchant for strong female leads, this could turn out to be an interesting new franchise.

Stevens has already published two books about the character, so there?s certainly a chance we might see these books become Cameron?s next big project. Of course, the question is when will see this movie? With the filmmaker committed to Avatar 2,?3?and 4 (rumored to be a prequel) for the foreseeable future, we might not see The Informationist start to take shape until much closer to 2020.

Despite that potential delay, Cameron and company currently have a call out for writers. We?ll keep you updated on this one as the story develops. Here's the book's trailer ...

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Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1926133/news/1926133/

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Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Otago University manager jailed for fraud

Updated at 10:50 pm on 23 October 2012

A former Otago University accounts manager who stole $238,846 has been jailed for more than two-and-a-half years.

Graeme Pettitt, 61, pleaded guilty last month to paying himself the money by using 72 false invoices over the past eight years to feed alcohol and gambling addictions.

In the Dunedin District Court on Tuesday Judge Michael Crosbie said Pettitt had been a senior and trusted manager of Otago University and the sentence had to denounce increasingly sophisticated computer fraud.

Pettitt's lawyer argued he had already lost his job, house and signed over his superannuation to the university in reparation for his crime, and home detention would be the appropriate sentence.

But Judge Crosbie said the reparation would cover less than a quarter of what Pettitt stole, and sentenced him to two years and seven months imprisonment.

Source: http://www.radionz.co.nz/news/regional/118956/otago-university-manager-jailed-for-fraud

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Elkhart Police Department union members and Elkhart fire union members have some...

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

Source: http://www.facebook.com/TheElkhartTruth/posts/259335897522852

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Mountain Biking, an Excellent form of Recreation and Sports ...

http://bit.ly/SZzwdD
Given mntain biking is a recreational hobby wherein riders ride bicycles off-road on tough terrains. The bicycles used for these hobby is specifically manufactured to suit these kind of terrains which are generally tough and patchy. Such bikes are favoredly regarded as mntain bikes. These mntain bikes are especifically suitable for these kinds of environments. These forms of bikes look very similar to any other bike, but they are fitted with exclusive features to greatly enhance and improve the ride, consolation and most importantly performance on such terrains.Terrain biking are of different categories such as hybrid country, dirt jumping and trails to name a few. The most favored forms of mntain biking is the recreational and trail driving categories. One can perform mntain biking anywhere like on country back rds, off-road trails, zigzag rds thtough forests, on hills or mntains, areas and on roads. considering mntain biking involves journeyling on your own and most of the time being away from the civilization, the rider needs to be self-reliant in the hobby. The rider is expected to carry a backpack and be equipped with essential items like water, instruments expected for repairs, a first aid kit, and some crisis food packets in case of need arising from any unfortunate incident like accidents. mntain biking thtough clubs or in teams is very common on long treks. This hobby has received in favoredity after the year 1990 and is acknowledged as a form of recreational hobby.Some of the equipments one needs for mntain biking are, a good bike specifically made for performance on terrains which are tough. They have sure exclusive features like dual suspension, broader tires, and flat and raised treat for consolationable driving posture giving good control for the rider. These make of bikes come fitted with disc brakes and gears to assist in climbing hills which are steep and journey thtough bumpy surfaces. Due to these exclusive capabilities such bikes are heavier as compared to the regular tour bicycles. A rider also needs to carry sure accessories like helmets, gloves, first aid kit, GPS device, pumps to fill flat tires, a good shoe, instruments for the bike etc.hybrid country is the most favored form of off-road biking all over the earth. This involves journeyling from one point to another involving some climbs and descents on different forms of terrains. Trails involve jumping the bikes over obstacles without the rider's foot touching the land. It is generally performed off-road and needs good balance from the rider. just about just about every hobby has its risks and mntain biking also involves some risks. Without the use of any protective gears a rider can be susceptible to minor as well as some really serious accidents to head or spine especifically in downhill biking. With a protective gear one can avoid such really serious accidents.Australia has some excellent terrain biking tours which are eco certified, these tours come with instructions for just about just about every kind of biking practical experience be it the rainforest tours or the coastal tours on bikes. They cater to all kinds of rider amateur as well as seasoned. practical experience the adventures involved in mntain biking like any other hobby and also enjoy dynamics at its best. Such form of biking is a great stress buster.

#

Source: http://pzaracza82p.skyrock.com/3120700349-Mountain-Biking-an-Excellent-form-of-Recreation-and-Sports.html

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Monday, October 22, 2012

Nigeria opens museum to "Afrobeat King" Fela Kuti

LAGOS (Reuters) - When he was alive, Fela Kuti electrified Nigerians and many music lovers the world over with his hip-shaking and strangely hypnotic blend of jazz, funk and West African folk rhythms.

His legendary sexual exploits with dozens of women, marijuana smoking and fearless critiques of Nigeria's then corrupt and oppressive military regime only served to heighten the mystique.

This week Nigeria opened a new museum to the King of Afrobeat, at the start of a week-long annual "Felabration" to mark his 74th birthday on Monday, in the commercial hub Lagos.

"Everybody has a piece of Fela in him. He touched everybody," said the Theo Lawson, the architect who converted Fela's old family house into the government-funded museum.

The house is also a boutique hotel, with a bar and stage.

"We didn't want a museum that closes at night and the life source leaves the building," Lawson explained.

Inside, decorations include brightly colored murals, chic African art, photos from his life and performances, and a wall devoted to the different flamboyant shoes he wore.

His bedroom remains as has been since he died of HIV/AIDS in 1997: a bed, clothes, more shoes, colorful underpants -- often they were all he wore. His electric keyboard has been mounted.

The 'Afrobeat' sound that Fela Kuti concocted in the 1960s mixes bass groves with jazz organ and traditional West African drumming, punctuated by a cacophony of horns and shrill backing vocals by gyrating women in colorful beads.

It still resonates across Lagos from nightclubs, bars and roadside eateries selling grilled meat.

In the late 1970s Fela became a symbol of the struggle against successive military dictators.

"Fela was frustrated. He came back from America full of ideas of Africanism and African unity, but he was talking to a bunch of military despots who just didn't listen," Lawson said.

In 1977 his smash hit "Zombie" infuriated the military by accusing soldiers of being violent, brainless automata. In the same year, around 1,000 soldiers descended on his commune in a rampage in which they burned down the house, cracked his skull and threw his septuagenarian mother out of a window.

Fela's fondness for smoking massive, cone-shaped marijuana "spliffs" on stage and his rejection of Nigeria's two monotheistic religions -- Christianity and Islam -- in favor of traditional Yoruba gods did not endear him to its conservative elites. Neither did the stories of Fela's 27 wives and his free love sex commune.

Even today, "The Shrine", a nightclub where his sons Femi and Seun carry on the tradition of working up eclectic crowds into fits of dancing, are considered risqu? by many.

"This (museum) is a chance for everyone to see for themselves, not follow the myths that being in Fela's house meant you're a hooligan, or a prostitute or all we do is smoke weed," Seun told Reuters in an interview before the opening.

"I grew up here. This house was a house of education."

Fela's sons believe his message -- a call to peaceful rebellion against corrupt elites -- still resonates.

"Corruption is now like a cancer in our society," his eldest son Femi said from the museum's rooftop bar. "Everything will take time. The youth will see this is not the way to go."

(Writing and additional reporting by Tim Cocks, editing by Paul Casciato)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nigeria-opens-museum-afrobeat-king-fela-kuti-100154237.html

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How a fish broke a law of physics

How a fish broke a law of physics [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 21-Oct-2012
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Contact: Hannah Johnson
hannah.johnson@bristol.ac.uk
0044-117-928-8896
University of Bristol

Reflective surfaces polarize light, a phenomenon that fishermen or photographers overcome by using polarizing sunglasses or polarizing filters to cut our reflective glare. However, PhD student Tom Jordan from the Bristol Centre for Complexity Sciences and his supervisors Professor Julian Partridge and Dr Nicholas Roberts in Bristol's School of Biological Sciences found that these silvery fish have overcome this basic law of reflection an adaptation that may help them evade predators.

Previously, it was thought that the fish's skin which contains "multilayer" arrangements of reflective guanine crystals would fully polarize light when reflected. As the light becomes polarized, there should be a drop in reflectivity.

The Bristol researchers found that the skin of sardines and herring contain not one but two types of guanine crystal each with different optical properties. By mixing these two types, the fish's skin doesn't polarize the reflected light and maintains its high reflectivity.

Dr Roberts said: "We believe these species of fish have evolved this particular multilayer structure to help conceal them from predators, such as dolphin and tuna. These fish have found a way to maximize their reflectivity over all angles they are viewed from. This helps the fish best match the light environment of the open ocean, making them less likely to be seen."

As a result of this ability, the skin of silvery fish could hold the key to better optical devices. Tom Jordan said: "Many modern day optical devices such as LED lights and low loss optical fibres use these non-polarizing types of reflectors to improve efficiency. However, these man-made reflectors currently require the use of materials with specific optical properties that are not always ideal. The mechanism that has evolved in fish overcomes this current design limitation and provides a new way to manufacture these non-polarizing reflectors."

###

Paper

'Non-polarizing broadband multilayer reflectors in fish' by T.M. Jordan, J.C. Partridge and N.W. Roberts in Nature Photonics



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


How a fish broke a law of physics [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 21-Oct-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Hannah Johnson
hannah.johnson@bristol.ac.uk
0044-117-928-8896
University of Bristol

Reflective surfaces polarize light, a phenomenon that fishermen or photographers overcome by using polarizing sunglasses or polarizing filters to cut our reflective glare. However, PhD student Tom Jordan from the Bristol Centre for Complexity Sciences and his supervisors Professor Julian Partridge and Dr Nicholas Roberts in Bristol's School of Biological Sciences found that these silvery fish have overcome this basic law of reflection an adaptation that may help them evade predators.

Previously, it was thought that the fish's skin which contains "multilayer" arrangements of reflective guanine crystals would fully polarize light when reflected. As the light becomes polarized, there should be a drop in reflectivity.

The Bristol researchers found that the skin of sardines and herring contain not one but two types of guanine crystal each with different optical properties. By mixing these two types, the fish's skin doesn't polarize the reflected light and maintains its high reflectivity.

Dr Roberts said: "We believe these species of fish have evolved this particular multilayer structure to help conceal them from predators, such as dolphin and tuna. These fish have found a way to maximize their reflectivity over all angles they are viewed from. This helps the fish best match the light environment of the open ocean, making them less likely to be seen."

As a result of this ability, the skin of silvery fish could hold the key to better optical devices. Tom Jordan said: "Many modern day optical devices such as LED lights and low loss optical fibres use these non-polarizing types of reflectors to improve efficiency. However, these man-made reflectors currently require the use of materials with specific optical properties that are not always ideal. The mechanism that has evolved in fish overcomes this current design limitation and provides a new way to manufacture these non-polarizing reflectors."

###

Paper

'Non-polarizing broadband multilayer reflectors in fish' by T.M. Jordan, J.C. Partridge and N.W. Roberts in Nature Photonics



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

?


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


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-10/uob-haf101712.php

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Sunday, October 21, 2012

Former Sen. George McGovern dies at age 90

George McGovern, who ran for president in 1972, died at the age of 90 at Dougherty Hospice House in Sioux Falls, S.D.. NBC's John Yang reports.

By M. Alex Johnson, NBC News

New in this version: statement from President Barack Obama

Updated at 12:36 p.m. ET:?George McGovern, the unabashedly liberal Democratic senator whose outsider campaign against President Richard Nixon led to a landslide defeat and the eventual reformation of the Democratic Party as a more centrist organization, died early Sunday, his family said in a statement. He was 90 years old.

McGovern died at a hospice in?Sioux Falls, S.D., where he had been admitted Monday.

Kelly O'Donnell of NBC News contributed to this report. Follow M. Alex Johnson on Twitter and Facebook.

Steve Hildebrand, a spokesman for the family, said in a statement to NBC News: "At approximately 5:15 am CT [6: 15 a.m. ET] this morning, our wonderful father, George McGovern, passed away peacefully at the Dougherty Hospice House in Sioux Falls, SD, surrounded by our family and life-long friends.

"We are blessed to know that our father lived a long, successful and productive life advocating for the hungry, being a progressive voice for millions and fighting for peace.

"He continued giving speeches, writing and advising all the way up to and past his 90th birthday, which he celebrated this summer."


Senior Democrats praised McGovern on Sunday as a visionary whose political sacrifices opened up the party to women and minority groups.

Although McGovern was ridiculed for many years for having led the Democrats to an overwhelming defeat against Nixon, former Sen. Gary Hart of Colorado, his 1972 campaign manager, argued Sunday that McGovern "helped save the Democratic Party."

In 1968, McGovern headed a committee that reformed the party's nominating process. In a column for Politico remembering McGovern on Sunday, Hart wrote:

Those rules were designed to open party participation, especially in nominating candidates, to women, minorities, and young people. The reforms succeeded and the Democratic Party opened itself up to democratic participation. The control of power-brokers and party bosses was broken. Decrepit political machines largely collapsed. ...?We will never know the nature of a McGovern presidency. But someday the American Democratic Party will find a way to honor him as it should.

Watch US News videos on NBCNews.com

President Barack Obama called McGovern "a statesman of great conscience and conviction," saying in a statement that "this hero of war became a champion for peace. And after his career in Congress, he became a leading voice in the fight against hunger."

Among the most prominent Democrats to get their political starts on McGovern's insurgent 1972 campaign were former President Bill Clinton and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton. In a statement Sunday, they lamented the passing of a "friend" and a "tireless advocate for human rights and dignity":

We first met George while campaigning for him in 1972. Our friendship endured for 40 years. As a war hero, distinguished professor, Congressman, Senator and Ambassador, George always worked to advance the common good and help others realize their potential. Of all his passions, he was most committed to feeding the hungry, at home and around the world. The programs he created helped feed millions of people, including food stamps in the 1960s and the international school feeding program in the 90's, both of which he co-sponsored with Senator Bob Dole.

In 2000, Bill had the honor of awarding him the Medal of Freedom. From his earliest days in Mitchell to his final days in Sioux Falls, he never stopped standing up and speaking out for the causes he believed in. We must continue to draw inspiration from his example and build the world he fought for. Our thoughts and prayers go out to his family and friends.

Ed Widdis / AP

The life of former Democratic Sen. George McGovern, who lost the 1972 presidential election to Richard Nixon and gained fame throughout his career for his devotion to fighting hunger and opposing war.

George Stanley McGovern was bomber pilot who?flew 35 combat missions?in World War II, earning the Distinguished Flying Cross. He became a history and political science professor after the war and was elected to Congress in 1958. He won the first of three Senate terms in 1962.?

McGovern became an early critic of the Vietnam War and a leader of the Democrats' liberal wing, propelling him to a campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1968 as an anti-war candidate.

Four years later, McGovern emerged at the top of the heap after a fractious campaign that divided the party between his corps of young, idealistic supporters and the more establishment organization of Sen. Edmund Muskie of Maine, who was the losing vice presidential candidate on the ticket with Hubert Humphrey in 1968.

McGovern lost to Nixon in one of the biggest landslides in history, winning only Massachusetts and the District of Columbia ? Nixon even won McGovern's own state, South Dakota.?

Many factors contributed to McGovern's defeat: the dirty tricks of the Nixon campaign, which soon exploded into the Watergate scandal that led to Nixon's resignation in 1974; unresolved differences with key Democratic leaders after the bitter campaign, including Humphrey and Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts; and the successful tarring of McGovern as a far-left fringe candidate by Republicans, which was summed up most succinctly in Vice President Spiro Agnew's dismissal of McGovern as the candidate of "amnesty, abortion and acid."

Particularly damaging was McGovern's failure to win the endorsement of organized labor, despite his strong pro-labor voting record. McGovern publicly feuded with AFL-CIO President George Meany, who strongly supported the war in Vietnam.?

But the biggest blow probably was the Democrats' mishandling of the selection of Sen.. Thomas Eagleton of Missouri as their vice presidential nominee. In a 1986 interview on C-SPAN, McGovern said that party leaders were divided among several higher-profile possibilities, including Kennedy, and that he eventually settled on Eagleton because he was "everybody's second choice."

Within two weeks, it became public that?Eagleton suffered from severe depression, having been hospitalized several times and, on at least one occasion, having undergone electroshock therapy. By Juy 31, 1972 ? less than three weeks after he had been nominated, Eagleton witrhdrew and was replaced by Sargent Shriver, former director of the Peace Corps and a member of Nixon's administration as ambassador to France.

Nixon walked to victory, collecting 520 electoral votes to?McGovern's 17.?

He returned to the Senate, only to be defeated by Republican James Abdnor in the 1980 Reagan landslide. But over time, his reputation was rehabilitated, and he made a creditable showing ? finishing fifth ? in the 1984 Democratic presidential primaries, in which he ran as a peace candidate.?

Through the years, McGovern insisted that his biggest mistake hadn't been taking such liberal stances ? it was not having stuck to his liberal beliefs fiercely enough.

"If anything, I don't think the Democrats have been strong enough in clinging to their principle," he said in a 2011 interview with the Argus-Leader of Sioux Falls, S.D.

"You can say they were too ideological. Well, I don't think you hold political convictions just to be able to spout out a complicated philosophy or ideology. You try to support what you think is in the best interests of the country. My qualms with the Democrats in recent decades is they aren't strong enough in dissenting from policies that they should be able to see are against our best interest."

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Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/10/21/14592769-former-senator-george-mcgovern-dies-aged-90?lite

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Farrell will benefit from Valentine's 2012 fiasco

BOSTON (AP) ? When John Farrell is announced as the new manager of the Boston Red Sox, he will take over a last-place team reeling from 13 months of player revolt.

He has Bobby Valentine to thank for that.

Valentine didn't accomplish much in his 10 months as Red Sox manager, but he certainly made it easier for his successor. Instead of taking over for two-time World Series champion Terry Francona, Farrell inherits a team with nowhere to go but up.

"I have empathy for what's going on (in Boston) because we've dealt with probably an equal number of injuries to marquee players, to a rotation," Farrell said in September when he visited Fenway Park with Toronto as manager of the Blue Jays. "And, as a result, you have to always deal with change."

Farrell became the change in both clubhouses on Saturday night when he decided to leave Toronto and agreed to a three-year deal to take over in Boston. The Red Sox will send infielder Mike Aviles to the Blue Jays as compensation, according to a baseball official who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the deal had not been announced.

Farrell's hiring is expected to be announced on Sunday or Monday. The teams worked out the deal late Saturday night, but the announcement was delayed because of the unusual logistics of hiring a manager under contract with another team, according to another baseball official familiar with the negotiations.

Red Sox spokeswoman Pam Kenn said the team had no announcement to make on Saturday and did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Sunday. Blue Jays spokesman Jay Stenhouse did not respond to a voice mail seeking comment.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/farrell-benefit-valentines-2012-fiasco-164557486--mlb.html

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Saturday, October 20, 2012

Three of The Easiest Ways to Manipulate People into Doing What You Want

Three of The Easiest Ways to Manipulate People into Doing What You WantYou can do a lot of things to be more persuasive, from learning better ways to communicate to more shady manipulation techniques. Here are some of the easiest (and possibly evil) ways to get someone to say "yes."

Scaring The Hell Out of You: The Fear-Then-Relief Procedure

What it is: Arguably the most evil manipulative technique is what psychologists call the "fear-then-relief technique." The technique preys on a person's emotions. Here, the manipulator causes someone a great deal of stress or anxiety and then abruptly relieves that stress. After this sudden mood swing, the person is disarmed, less likely to make mindful or rational decisions, and more likely to respond positively to various requests.

Examples: The book The Science of Social Influence details a few experiments that showed this in action. In one, shoppers in a mall were scared by a stranger touching their shoulder from behind. When they turned around, the shoppers found that their assailant was a (supposed) blind man who just wanted to ask the time. After that deflection and relief, someone else?the fake blind man's confederate?asked the targets if they would buy and sign postcards for a political charitable cause. Those who had met the blind man and experienced the fear-then-relief rollercoaster were more likely to do so than the control group which wasn't manipulated.

Three of The Easiest Ways to Manipulate People into Doing What You WantThis fear-then-relief manipulation technique is most popularly portrayed in the classic bad cop/good cop routine: one person scares the hell out of you, another saves you, and then you're more willing to talk. You see this in everyday life, too?from the fear tactics of insurance agents to bad managers who suggest your job is on the line, backtrack, and then ask you to work overtime. Photo by jabneyhastings

Making You Feel Guilty: Social Exchange

What it is: One strategy con artists and unethical marketers use is simply called "social exchange." The book The Dynamics of Persuasion describes it as:

an interpersonal persuasion strategy in which Person A provides Person B with a tangible or psychological reward; in exchange, when Person A approaches B with a request for compliance, B feels pressure to comply.

Exchanging favors and doing things for others is a basic part of human society, but this can be manipulated by aggressive people.

Three of The Easiest Ways to Manipulate People into Doing What You WantExamples: A co-worker could remind you about that time they bailed you out big time in the past, then use that as leverage every time he/she needs something. Or someone who loaned you money or knows a secret of yours could continually blackmail you into doing what they want (a subject we've covered extensively). Photo by Jhayne

Priming You With a Small Request: The Foot-in-the-Door Technique

What it is: This manipulation technique is evil because it's so tricky, subtle, and simple. With the foot-in-the-door method, someone asks you to do a very small and easy request and then follows up with the real request.

Three of The Easiest Ways to Manipulate People into Doing What You WantExamples: NPR gives an example of a panhandler who asks you for the time, then asks you to spare a buck. By getting you to say yes to one request, you're more likely to say yes to a second one. Photo by clarity

Avoiding These Manipulations

Just knowing about manipulative techniques can help you avoid falling victim to them. For the fear-then-relief technique, for example, be on the lookout whenever you feel a surge in negative and then positive emotions. You're more vulnerable at that time to do things mindlessly and at the suggestion of others. Watch out for statements that follow this general formula: [Something terrible] could have happened to you, but it [didn't/won't]. [Now do this]. These aren't the only ways someone could trick you into saying yes, of course, but they are some of the more common?just keep an eye out, stay on your toes, and you should be able to spot when someone's trying to pull a fast one.

This post is part of our Evil Week series at Lifehacker, where we look at the dark side of getting things done. Knowing evil means knowing how to beat it, so you can use your sinister powers for good. Want more? Check out our evil week tag page.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/ZgqFJguTf7k/three-of-the-most-evil-ways-to-manipulate-people-into-doing-what-you-want

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CIA found militant links a day after Libya attack

FILE - In this Sept. 13, 2012 file photo, a Libyan man investigates the inside of the U.S. Consulate, after an attack that killed four Americans, including Ambassador Chris Stevens on the night of Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012, in Benghazi, Libya. U.S. officials tell The Associated Press that the CIA station chief in Libya reported to Washington within 24 hours of last month?s deadly attack on the U.S. Consulate that there was evidence it was carried out by militants, not a mob upset about an American-made, anti-Muslim movie. It is unclear whether anyone outside the CIA saw the cable at that point or how high up in the CIA the information went. (AP Photo/Mohammad Hannon, File)

FILE - In this Sept. 13, 2012 file photo, a Libyan man investigates the inside of the U.S. Consulate, after an attack that killed four Americans, including Ambassador Chris Stevens on the night of Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012, in Benghazi, Libya. U.S. officials tell The Associated Press that the CIA station chief in Libya reported to Washington within 24 hours of last month?s deadly attack on the U.S. Consulate that there was evidence it was carried out by militants, not a mob upset about an American-made, anti-Muslim movie. It is unclear whether anyone outside the CIA saw the cable at that point or how high up in the CIA the information went. (AP Photo/Mohammad Hannon, File)

(AP) ? The CIA station chief in Libya reported to Washington within 24 hours of last month's deadly attack on the U.S. Consulate that there was evidence it was carried out by militants, not a spontaneous mob upset about an American-made video ridiculing Islam's Prophet Muhammad, U.S. officials have told The Associated Press.

It is unclear who, if anyone, saw the cable outside the CIA at that point and how high up in the agency the information went. The Obama administration maintained publicly for a week that the attack on the diplomatic mission in Benghazi that killed U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans was a result of the mobs that staged less-deadly protests across the Muslim world around the 11th anniversary of the 9/11 terror attacks on the U.S.

Those statements have become highly charged political fodder as the presidential election approaches. A Republican-led House committee questioned State Department officials for hours about what GOP lawmakers said was lax security at the consulate, given the growth of extremist Islamic militants in North Africa.

And in their debate on Tuesday, President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney argued over when Obama first said it was a terror attack. In his Rose Garden address the morning after the killings, Obama said, "No acts of terror will ever shake the resolve of this great nation, alter that character or eclipse the light of the values that we stand for."

But Republicans say he was speaking generally and didn't specifically call the Benghazi attack a terror attack until weeks later, with the president and other key members of his administration referring at first to the anti-Muslim movie circulating on the Internet as a precipitating event.

Now congressional intelligence committees are demanding documents to show what the spy agencies knew and when, before, during and after the attacks.

The White House now says the attack probably was carried out by an al Qaida-linked group, with no public demonstration beforehand. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton blamed the "fog of war" for the early conflicting accounts.

The officials who told the AP about the CIA cable spoke anonymously because they were not authorized to release such information publicly.

Congressional aides say they expect to get the documents by the end of this week to build a timeline of what the intelligence community knew and compare that to what the White House was telling the public about the attack. That could give Romney ammunition to use in his foreign policy debate with Obama on Monday night.

The two U.S. officials said the CIA station chief in Libya compiled intelligence reports from eyewitnesses within 24 hours of the assault on the consulate that indicated militants launched the violence, using the pretext of demonstrations against U.S. facilities in Egypt against the film to cover their intent. The report from the station chief was written late Wednesday, Sept. 12, and reached intelligence agencies in Washington the next day, intelligence officials said.

Yet, on Saturday of that week, briefing points sent by the CIA to Congress said "demonstrations in Benghazi were spontaneously inspired by the protests at the U.S. Embassy in Cairo and evolved into a direct assault."

The briefing points, obtained by the AP, added: "There are indications that extremists participated in the violent demonstrations" but did not mention eyewitness accounts that blamed militants alone.

Such raw intelligence reports by the CIA on the ground would normally be sent first to analysts at the headquarters in Langley, Va., for vetting and comparing against other intelligence derived from eavesdropping drones and satellite images. Only then would such intelligence generally be shared with the White House and later, Congress, a process that can take hours, or days if the intelligence is coming only from one or two sources who may or may not be trusted.

U.S. intelligence officials say in this case the delay was due in part to the time it took to analyze various conflicting accounts. One official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to discuss the incident publicly, explained that "it was clear a group of people gathered that evening" in Benghazi, but that the early question was "whether extremists took over a crowd or they were the crowd."

But that explanation has been met with concern in Congress.

"The early sense from the intelligence community differs from what we are hearing now," Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., said. "It ended up being pretty far afield, so we want to figure out why ... though we don't want to deter the intelligence community from sharing their best first impressions" after such events in the future.

"The intelligence briefings we got a week to 10 days after were consistent with what the administration was saying," said Rep. William Thornberry, R-Texas, a member of the House Intelligence and Armed Services committees. Thornberry would not confirm the existence of the early CIA report but voiced skepticism over how sure intelligence officials, including CIA Director David Petraeus, seemed of their original account when they briefed lawmakers on Capitol Hill.

"How could they be so certain immediately after such events, I just don't know," he said. "That raises suspicions that there was political motivation."

National Security Council spokesman Tommy Vietor declined comment. The Office of the Director of National Intelligence did not respond to requests for comment.

Two officials who witnessed Petraeus' closed-door testimony to lawmakers in the week after the attack said that during questioning he acknowledged that there were some intelligence analysts who disagreed with the conclusion that an unruly mob angry over the video had initiated the violence. But those officials said Petraeus did not mention the CIA's early eyewitness reports. He did warn legislators that the account could change as more intelligence was uncovered, they said, speaking on condition of anonymity because the hearing was closed.

Beyond the question of what was known immediately after the attack, it's also proving difficult to pinpoint those who set the fire that apparently killed Stevens and his communications aide or launched the mortars that killed two ex-Navy SEALs who were working as contract security guards at a fallback location. That delay is prompting lawmakers to question whether the intelligence community has the resources it needs to investigate this attack in particular or to wage the larger fight against al-Qaida in Libya or across Africa.

Intelligence officials say the leading suspected culprit is a local Benghazi militia, Ansar al-Shariah. The group denies responsibility for the attack but is known to have ties to a leading African terror group, al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb. Some of its leaders and fighters were spotted by Libyan locals at the consulate during the violence, and intelligence intercepts show the militants were in contact with AQIM militants before and after the attack, one U.S. intelligence official said.

But U.S. intelligence has not been able to match those reported sightings with the faces of attackers caught on security camera recordings during the attack since many U.S. intelligence agents were pulled out of Benghazi in the aftermath of the violence, the two U.S. intelligence officials said.

Nor have they found proof to back up their suspicion that the attack was preplanned, as indicated by the military-style tactics the attackers used, setting up a perimeter of roadblocks around the consulate and the backup compounds, then attacking the main entrance to distract, while sending a larger force to assault the rear.

Clear-cut answers may prove elusive because such an attack is not hard to bring about relatively swiftly with little preplanning or coordination in a post-revolutionary country awash with weapons, where the government is so new it still relies on armed militants to keep the peace. Plus, the location of U.S. diplomat enclaves is an open secret for the locals.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-10-19-US-Libya/id-68990bf166834492b8008cb444a19fe9

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Google to Verizon Android clients: carrier billing coming to Play store

DNP Google tweet to Verizon clients 'Pay for Google Play apps on your phone bill'

If you're on Verizon and don't feel like racking up your plastic when you buy Play store apps or content, the carrier will soon give you the option of putting it on your phone bill, according to a recent Google tweet. Mountain View's had the option for a while now, with T-Mobile, Sprint and AT&T having already jumped on the app-billing bandwagon, which left Verizon as the final major to climb aboard. Other than saying that you'll be able to bill apps and music that way, details are scant -- but considering Big Red's whopping Android lineup, it's about time.

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Google to Verizon Android clients: carrier billing coming to Play store originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 19 Oct 2012 07:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/Qmm4V3eYDqg/

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Friday, October 19, 2012

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Week in political misses: West Wing cast reunites for an ad

Politically Foul

You know it's been a bruising political season when a candidate would rather have an endorsement of a fake president than a real one.

The cast of "The West Wing" reunited?in a video to endorse Michigan Supreme Court candidate Bridget Mary McCormack. Of course, it's only by complete coincidence that McCormick is the sister of actress Mary McCormack, who played the role of national security adviser Kate Harper on "The West Wing."

The endorsement video reminds Michigan voters to fill out the nonpartisan portion of their ballots that includes Supreme Court candidates.

Republican vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan isn't afraid to field tough questions on Medicare and Social Security, but he found himself stuck between a rock and a swing state on the subject of football this week. Ryan's a well-known University of Wisconsin fan, but when asked who he thinks will win in an upcoming football match-up between the Badgers and the Ohio State Buckeyes, Ryan?shied?away from endorsing his favorite team.

"It really depends on who has the better record," Ryan told NBC's Matt Lauer, who then pressed Ryan for an answer, but he dodged the follow-up.

"It always depends on who has the better record," Ryan said. "If we're doing better, they will beat us and if they have a better record they will beat them. That's how it always goes between the Badgers and the Buckeyes."

Ryan may have avoided upsetting Ohio voters in his answer, but Lauer was not too pleased. "That's a terrible answer," Lauer said after Ryan answered.

But Ryan doubled down on his Ohio suck-up when he visited the Cleveland Browns at their training center along with former Secretary of State and wanna-be NFL commissioner Condoleezza Rice.

"You were really fun to watch at OSU," Ryan said to former OSU player Brandon Weeden as he talked to the team.

The only problem was, Ryan wasn't talking to Weeden. Instead, he was looking directly at Colt McCoy. ?Condi corrected Ryan by pointing out the real Weeden.?The team broke out in laughter as Ryan tried to patch up his mistake, "Oh yeah there you are, sorry, you always had a helmet on."

When you're running for president, you have to have a solid ground game, but you can't forget about your air game. Mitt Romney was reminded to keep an eye on the skies this week in Virginia when a helicopter flew overhead during a speech.?As Romney was discussing the serious struggles of a single mom, ?he stopped mid-sentence to remark on the passing chopper.

"It's the sound of freedom like a helicopter going by," Romney said. "That's probably not a military helicopter, but I appreciate them when I hear them. Smile you guys we're on TV. I'm just kidding; I have no idea whose helicopter that is."

Check out this week's Political Foul to see all of the week's top political bruises.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/power-players-abc-news/martin-sheen-west-wing-cast-reunite-little-known-112305441.html

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Thursday, October 18, 2012

'Normal' form of mad cow disease may actually make you smarter ...


There's a fine line between genius and madness. Now scientists studying the pathogen responsible for mad cow disease have proven this old adage to be as poignant as ever. They have discovered that the same protein that causes the devastating neurological disease may improve brain function when in its "normal" form, according to MedicalXpress.

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By learning how to manipulate this protein, scientists may one day be able to use it to make us smarter. A cure for diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's could also be in the offing.

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Mad cow disease, or bovine spongiform encephalopathy, is a fatal neurodegenerative disease that infects cattle. It is highly infectious and can be spread to other species, including humans, through ingestion of infected tissue. In humans it is more commonly referred to as Creutzfeldt?Jakob disease. When the disease was first identified, researchers were puzzled about how it was transmitted since it was not linked to any known viruses, parasites, or bacterial or fungal infections. This led to the profound discovery of a new form of pathogen: the prion.

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Prions are proteins that have become "misfolded," according to the prevailing Prion Hypothesis. In the case of diseases like mad cow disease, they spread by inducing healthy proteins in the brain to convert into the disease-associated form. Since their discovery, prions have been heavily studied, but less research has been performed on the "normally folded" forms of the proteins which exist in healthy brains. This made scientists at the University of Leeds curious.

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In a study recently published in the journal Nature Communications, researchers found that "normal" prion proteins play a major role in the absorption of zinc in the brain, a function crucial to our ability to learn and to the well-being of our memory. For instance, it is well known that high levels of zinc between neurons are linked to diseases like Alzheimer's and Parkinson's.

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"Zinc is thought to aid signaling in the brain as it's released into the space between brain cells. However, when there's too much zinc between the brain cells it can become toxic," explained lead researcher, Dr. Nicole Watts. "High levels of zinc in this area between the brain cells are known to be a factor in neurodegenerative diseases, so regulating the amount of absorption by the cells is crucial."

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In other words, when prion proteins are folded properly, they appear to help brain function by cleaning up excess zinc. Theoretically, the more efficiently these proteins do their job, the better our memory and other cognitive faculties should operate. It could therefore be possible to one day manipulate these "smart cow" proteins to ?improve our cognitive capacities.

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"By studying both their roles in the body, we hope to uncover exactly how prion and zinc affect memory and learning. This could help us better understand how to maintain healthy brain cells and limit the effects of aging on the brain," explained Nigel Hooper from the University of Leeds.

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Source: http://www.mnn.com/health/fitness-well-being/stories/normal-form-of-mad-cow-disease-may-actually-make-you-smarter

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Day Two Story? (talking-points-memo)

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Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Cardinals chase the rain, then the Giants

Carpenter's two-run homer stands up after 3 1/2 hour rain delay

Image: Matt Carpenter runs the basesAP

Fans celebrate after St. Louis Cardinals' Matt Carpenter, foreground, hit a two-run home run against the San Francisco Giants during the third inning on Wednesday.

By Jim Salter

updated 11:52 p.m. ET Oct. 17, 2012

ST. LOUIS - Carlos Beltran limped to the trainer's room, taking the St. Louis Cardinals' biggest clutch October bat with him.

Turns out they had the perfect substitute.

Matt Carpenter hit a two-run homer after subbing for Beltran and the Cardinals chased Matt Cain before a 3 1/2-hour rain delay in the seventh inning of a 3-1 victory over the San Francisco Giants on Wednesday night for a 2-1 NL championship series lead.

Beltran strained his left knee running out a double-play ball in the first innings and the Cardinals said he was day to day.

Kyle Lohse worked around a season-worst five walks in 5 2-3 innings. Mitchell Boggs struck out Hunter Pence and Brandon Belt with two on to end the seventh. Jason Motte earned the first two-inning save of his career to reward what remained of a sellout crowd of 45,850 - perhaps a third - that stuck around for a game that lasted 3 hours, 2 minutes, about a half-hour shorter than the delay.

"They said if we didn't score I was going to go out there. I was in the clubhouse running around, I've never really had to sit around like that," Motte said. "It was probably the most nervous I've ever been."

Giants second baseman Marco Scutaro had two hits and a clean game in the field, two days after Matt Holliday rammed him breaking up a double-play ball. Manager Bruce Bochy had said there would be no retaliation, and Game 3 was collision-free.

The big winners in a delay that featured about a half-hour without rain while officials awaited a second, smaller front: Beer vendors, by a single out. Alcohol sales are cut off after the seventh inning in all stadiums.

Cain lost for the second time this postseason, giving up three runs on five hits in 6 1-3 innings. The Giants, who entered the game batting just .217 in the postseason, were 0 for 7 with runners in scoring position.

The Cardinals snapped the Giants' five-game road winning streak in the postseason, three of them this year. Game 4 is in St. Louis on Thursday night, with Adam Wainwright pitching for the Cardinals. Tim Lincecum will start for the Giants.

"He's a guy we want out there. He's been throwing the ball well," Bochy said. "We've got to bounce back."

Carpenter followed Jon Jay's two-out single with a homer off Cain in his first at-bat of the NLCS.

Beltran is batting .400 in the postseason with three homers and six RBIs, but Carpenter had big numbers against Cain. He was 4 for 4 for his career against Cain, all four of the regular-season hits for singles.

"He's a really good pitcher obviously," Carpenter. I've had some success. I just go up there and try to battle, get a good pitch to hit."

This one was a much bigger deal, a drive on a 2-2 count that soared over the Cardinals bullpen in right field and was estimated at 421 feet.

Carpenter entered the game 1 for 5 in the postseason, all five pinch-hit appearances. He had an RBI single in the wild-card playoff against Atlanta. He got 14 of his 46 RBIs in April as the primary sub at first base for injured Lance Berkman.

On Tuesday, Carpenter was among a group of seldom-used hitters trying to stay sharp by facing Jake Westbrook in a simulated game. The rest of the team had the day off.

Umpires called for the tarpaulin right after the Cardinals made it 3-1 on a run-scoring single by Shane Robinson and Cain was lifted.

It was the third game delayed by rain this postseason and a fourth, Game 4 of the Yankees-Tigers ALCS, was postponed later Wednesday night. Two games between the Yankees and Orioles in Baltimore began late because of inclement weather.

The rain intensified less than 10 minutes after the field was covered, chasing most fans who had remained in their seats up to that point. Spotters for the National Weather Service reported 60 mph winds in nearby St. Charles County.

A highlight of the delay was a Pac-Man style chase. Ushers pursued and finally apprehended a fan who jumped out of the stands to get a baseball near the warning track in left field, and then jutted in and out of aisles to elude several ushers who had been closing in.

The storm had been widely anticipated. Some forecasts called for a 70 percent chance of rain. Both managers fielded questions Tuesday and Wednesday about whether the probability of precipitation would affect their selection of the starting pitcher.

Both said they couldn't worry about the weather, and the starters combined for 208 pitches.

"I've been caught before where you try to predict what's going to happen with the rain and started," Bochy said. "Just a couple years ago I started a pitcher thinking the same thing and it didn't rain for four or five innings. Then I put my starter in and then it started raining, and so it came back to bite me."

Lohse is 2-1 with a 1.96 ERA this postseason despite uncustomary control woes. He was among the majors' best control pitchers this season, averaging 1.62 walks per nine innings.

The Giants entered 70-22 when scoring first, including the postseason, and took the lead in the third on Pablo Sandoval's run-scoring groundout after leadoff hits by Angel Pagan and Scutaro, whose legs looked just fine on an opposite-field double flared just over first baseman Allen Craig's glove.

Beltran leads all players with eight extra-base hits in the 2012 playoffs and is a career .375 hitter in the postseason, highest ever among players with a minimum of 100 at-bats.

NOTES: Danny Cox, who pitched for Cardinals World Series teams in 1985 and 1987, threw a perfect strike on the first pitch. ... According to STATS LLC, Lohse walked two batters in the same inning four times in 2012. ... Jay, who was hit by a pitch to start the game, was plunked 15 times in the regular season. ... Matheny had 122 lineups during the regular season but has stuck with the same eight throughout the postseason. ... The Cardinals are 9-2 in Game 3 of the NLCS, the lone losses coming in 2004 and '05 at Houston. This win ended a streak of scoring at least six runs in the last eight postseason victories dating to Game 3 of the World Series last year, the longest streak of its kind in postseason history. St. Louis entered averaging 7.6 runs in 16 wins the last two postseasons and just 2.3 runs in the 10 losses. ... The Cardinals have played in eight best-of-seven series in which they were tied 1-1 and played Game 3 at home, and have won all of them. They won six of the previous seven series, according to STATS LLC

? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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HBT: Beltran could play in Game 4

According to FOX Sports? Ken Rosenthal, the knee injury that Carlos Beltran suffered in first inning of Wednesday?s NLCS Game 3 is ?not serious? and the veteran outfielder ?could play tomorrow.?

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/49457129/ns/sports-baseball/

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