Wednesday 30 November 2011

Pa. cardinal testifies in rape, endangerment case (AP)

PHILADELPHIA ? A retired Roman Catholic cardinal who suffers from cancer and dementia testified behind closed doors for about three hours Monday as lawyers prepare for a groundbreaking priest abuse trial.

Prosecutors deposed 88-year-old former cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua in case he cannot appear for the March trial of three priests, an ex-teacher and a church administrator. The three priests and the former teacher are charged with raping boys. The administrator is the first Roman Catholic church official charged in the U.S. for his administrative actions.

Bevilacqua's deposition was set to resume Tuesday at the cardinal's residence at St. Charles Borromeo Seminary, just outside Philadelphia.

Church lawyers fought to block Bevilacqua's testimony. However, Common Pleas Judge M. Teresa Sarmina deemed him competent Monday after reviewing his medical records and meeting with him Monday morning, her office said.

The church administrator, Monsignor William Lynn, Bevilacqua's longtime secretary for clergy, is charged with felony child endangerment and conspiracy. He's accused of transferring predator priests without warning new parishes.

Defense lawyers argue that Lynn was following orders from Bevilacqua, who led the archdiocese from 1988 to 2003. Lynn, 60, served as secretary for clergy from 1992 to 2004.

More than a dozen prosecutors, defense lawyers, defendants and court staff were on hand for Bevilacqua's deposition. Given his health problems, it's unclear how much his testimony helped city prosecutors who had sought it. A gag order prevents the parties from publicly discussing the case.

Less than a decade ago, they had grilled Bevilacqua in his 10 appearances before the grand jury investigating credible complaints filed against 63 priests in the Philadelphia area.

Bevilacqua's testimony is seen as a key element of the trial, which is set for March 26 and expected to take several months.

Another key pretrial issue is the scope of evidence that will be allowed. Prosecutors want to include Lynn's handling of a broad swath of child abuse complaints against priests, to try to show a pattern of wrongdoing. Lynn's lawyers want to limit the evidence to the three priests on trial with him.

They are the Rev. Charles Engelhardt, 64, the Rev. James Brennan, 48, and former priest Edward Avery, 69, along with former teacher Bernard Shero, 48. All of them have denied the charges.

Engelhardt, Avery and Shero are accused of raping the same child, starting when he was a 10-year-old altar boy in northeast Philadelphia, according to the February grand jury report. Brennan is charged with raping a 14-year-old boy from a suburban parish.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111129/ap_on_re_us/us_priest_abuse_charges

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Judge denies Blagojevich request to hear new tapes (AP)

CHICAGO ? The federal judge who will sentence Rod Blagojevich had harsh words for the former Illinois governor's attorneys as he denied a request Monday to play new federal wiretap tapes in court.

Blagojevich was convicted at two separate trials on 18 corruption counts, including allegations he tried to sell or trade President Barack Obama's vacated U.S. Senate seat. Blagojevich will be sentenced next week, and his lawyers last week submitted a list of 180 secret tape recordings the FBI made of the governor and others.

Parts of some recordings were played during his trials, but Blagojevich has long argued that authorities should "play all the tapes." He says some of the recordings hold evidence demonstrating his innocence.

But Judge James Zagel said Blagojevich's attorneys hadn't said what they specifically wanted to prove and what sections of the tapes they wanted to use, echoing complaints made by federal prosecutors.

"What this motion requests is my blind approval of the use of whatever excerpts it decides are relevant to `lack of ill intent' and admissible ... at sentencing," Zagel said. "That request is denied."

Zagel also derided the timing of Blagojevich's motion, which was filed Thanksgiving Day. He said the federal courts were closed except for emergencies both Thursday and Friday, and there was no reason for Blagojevich ? who was convicted on 17 of 20 counts in June ? to wait this long.

He also pointed out that the motion was dated Monday, Nov. 28, even though it was filed Thursday, and that his attorneys did not notify the judge when they filed it.

"This practice is difficult to defend under any circumstances and made more so because of the nature of the motion," Zagel said.

Blagojevich attorney Sheldon Sorosky did not return messages seeking comment. Randall Samborn, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney's office, declined to comment.

Blagojevich's first trial ended deadlocked with jurors agreeing on just one of 24 counts ? that Blagojevich lied to the FBI. Jurors at his recent retrial convicted Blagojevich on 17 of 20 counts, including bribery and attempted extortion related to his handling of a U.S. Senate seat once held by President Barack Obama.

Most legal observers expect the 54-year-old former governor to receive about 10 years in prison, though he technically faces up to 305 years in prison. Both sides are expected to file their suggestions on sentencing this week.

Judges generally frown on felons who continue to maintain their innocence at sentencing, Chicago-based federal defense attorney Gal Pissetzky said last week.

"At sentencing, you need to accept the jury verdict and then fight for your innocence later on appeal," he said. "If you continue to shove it in the judge's face by fighting your innocence at sentencing, it takes away from your goal of less time in prison."

The judge scheduled a Friday hearing on another Blagojevich request related to a government witness, John Wyma. Blagojevich's attorneys are questioning whether Wyma helped the government "in exchange for a government benefit." Prosecutors denied that allegation at trial.

___

Associated Press writer Michael Tarm contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111128/ap_on_re_us/us_blagojevich_trial_sentencing

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Will poo-powered lights get you in the mood?

Philips

Soft-glowing bioluminescent lights powered by methane gas harvested from the human waste stream could help set the mood in your living room.

By John Roach

Soft-glowing lights powered by energy harvested from human waste could soon set the mood everywhere from nightclubs to living rooms, according to an electronics company.

The lights, designed by Philips, are hand-blown glass cells filled with a culture of bioluminescent bacteria that are fed via silicon tubes connected to a source of methane gas harvested from food and body waste.?


The system, called the Bio-Light,?is part of what Philips calls the Microbial Home, a project to recycle waste and reduce environmental impact.

The company notes that the bioluminescent lighting is too low-intensity for functional illumination, but says the system could light up the edge of the road at night or power signs pointing to the bathroom at movie theaters and nightclubs.

Another potential use offered by Philips is "new genres of atmospheric interior lighting with, for example, possible therapeutic and mood-enhancing effects."

Though it might take a little getting used to mood lighting powered by poop and wilted lettuce, the concept is another example of how to live more sustainably on a planet with finite resources.?

"Energy-saving light bulbs will only take us so far," Clive van Heerden, Senior Director of Design-led Innovation at Philips Design, notes on the company website.

"We need to push ourselves to rethink domestic appliances entirely, to rethink how homes consume energy, and how entire communities can pool resources."?

[Via Discovery News and Gizmag]

More on poop to power technology:


John Roach is a contributing writer for msnbc.com. To learn more about him, check out his website. For more of our Future of Technology series, watch the featured video below.

Kids' play has moved to tablets and PCs. In this new age, toy makers and researchers alike are sorting out the benefits ? and detriments ? of playful educational interaction in virtual space.

?

?

Source: http://futureoftech.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/11/29/9094928-will-poo-powered-lights-get-you-in-the-mood

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Tim Gunn's "The Revolution" gets premiere date (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) ? "Project Runway" mentor Tim Gunn and "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition" dream-builder Ty Pennington will officially throw their hats into the crowded daytime talk-show ring Monday, January 16 at 2 p.m. ET, with the premiere of "The Revolution," ABC announced Monday.

The one-hour gab-fest will feature Gunn, Pennington, celebrity trainer Harley Pasternak, women's health expert Dr. Jennifer Ashton and relationship expert Dr. Tiffanie Davis Henry sharing "life changing tips and essential tools" to help viewers "transform all areas of their life from the inside out," according to the network.

Each week the show will also focus on one particular woman and her "personal journey" over the course of five months.

"The Revolution" will replace soap opera "One Life to Live," which ends its 43-year run January 13.

3 Ball Productions, the people who brought the world "The Biggest Loser" and "Extreme Makeover: Weight Loss Edition," will produce the show, with 3 Ball's JD Roth and Todd A. Nelson serving as executive producers.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tv/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111128/tv_nm/us_timgunn

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Tuesday 29 November 2011

Tiffany sees holiday gains, but profit view misses (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? Tiffany & Co (TIF.N) gave a holiday quarter profit outlook that missed Wall Street expectations, and fears that its gross margin could slip further and the pace of sales gains is slowing sent shares down nearly 7 percent.

The upscale jeweler reported higher-than-expected quarterly earnings, helped by sales of more expensive jewelry and said that its sales gains would continue in the holiday season.

But that pricier jewelry also hurt gross margins, and the fear the gross margins could slip further worried investors, Morningstar analyst Paul Swinand said.

Also worrisome for investors is that Tiffany left unchanged its full year forecast for a high-teens increase for the full year, which ends in late January, he said.

"The worry is that there is a turn in the margin and slowing down of the pace of sales growth," Swinand said.

Tiffany said it expects fourth quarter earnings per share of $1.48 to $1.58, below the $1.63 Wall Street analysts were expecting, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Tiffany's gross margin, a measure of the profitability of jewelry sold, edged down 0.6 point to 57.9 percent, largely because it sold pricier jewelry, which the company said has lower margins.

The upscale jeweler expects sales to rise at a low-teens percentage rate for the holiday quarter.

Still, Tiffany's sales, excluding the effect of currency translations, rose 17 percent globally to $821.8 million in the third quarter ended on October 31, while sales at stores open at least one year rose 16 percent.

Despite volatile stock markets, sales grew in every region. The fastest growth came from Asia where they rose 40 percent in the quarter, taking into account the effect of currency. China, the fastest growing luxury market, was a standout.

At Tiffany's famed Fifth Avenue flagship in Manhattan, sales rose 24 percent, helped by the record number of tourists visiting New York.

The results echo those of upscale department stores Saks Inc (SKS.N), Neiman Marcus (NMRCUS.UL) and Nordstrom (JWN.N), which all recently reported that high end shoppers are still spending.

Even in Europe, where leaders are trying to manage fears about the future of the euro, sales rose 15 percent.

Tiffany reported net income of $89.7 million, or 70 cents per share, for the quarter, up from $55.1 million, or 43 cents per share, a year earlier and above the 61 cents a share that analysts were expecting, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

(Reporting by Phil Wahba; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn, Dave Zimmerman)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111129/bs_nm/us_tiffany

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Stocks soar after big holiday shopping weekend (AP)

NEW YORK ? A strong start to the U.S. shopping season and fresh proposals for a far-reaching solution to Europe's debt crisis sent stocks sharply higher Monday. The Dow Jones industrial average soared 260 points in afternoon trading, making up nearly half of the ground it lost last week.

Initial reports show a record number of shoppers hit the mall or bought gifts online during the holiday weekend. Thanksgiving weekend is a make-or-break time for many retailers. For the past six years, Black Friday has been the biggest sales day of the year.

The retail numbers add to a growing set of indicators, including steady drops in the number of applications for unemployment, that suggest the U.S. is far from the second recession economists had begun to fear in August.

"This goes in stark contrast to the gloom and doom that had been over markets," said Rob Lutts, president of Salem, Ma.-based investment firm Cabot Money Management. "A lot of the stocks I follow have been more oversold than any time I can remember in the last few years."

Markets in Europe also rose sharply as leaders there discuss new approaches for containing the region's debt troubles. One plan calls for Europe's most stable economies jointly sell bonds to provide assistance to the region's most indebted members, like Greece and Portugal.

Investors are hoping that the recent signs of deterioration in the debt crisis will finally get Europe's leaders to agree on a package of measures that can ease market concerns over whether the euro currency itself can survive.

Stock indexes in Italy and Germany rose 4.6 percent while France's index rose 5.5 percent. The euro and commodities prices also rose.

The Dow jumped 264 points, or 2.4 percent, to 11,495 as of 3 p.m. Eastern. The index plunged 564 points last week on fear that Europe's debt crisis was spreading to large countries like Spain and even Germany. Alcoa Inc. jumped 5.7 percent, the most of the 30 stocks in the Dow.

The Standard & Poor's 500 rose 30, or 2.6 percent, to 1,189. The rally lifted stocks across the board. Only four stocks in the S&P 500 index fell.

The Nasdaq composite rose 76, or 3.1 percent, to 2,518.

Banks had some of the biggest gains as investors became less fearful of an imminent freeze-up in Europe's financial system. Morgan Stanley jumped 3.9 percent and JPMorgan Chase & Co. rose 2.4 percent. Retailers also rose sharply. Macy's Inc. rose 4.9 percent and Best Buy Co. rose 3.5 percent.

A record 226 million shoppers visited stores and websites during the four-day holiday weekend starting on Thanksgiving Day, up from 212 million last year, according to early estimates by The National Retail Federation released on Sunday. They spent more, too: The average holiday shopper spent $398.62 over the weekend, up from $365.34 a year ago.

It's still unclear whether retailers' will be able to hold shoppers' attention throughout the remainder of the season, which can account for 25 to 40 percent of a merchant's annual revenue.

Questions also remain about the situation in Europe.

Credit rating agency Moody's warned on Monday that the "rapid escalation" of Europe's financial crisis is threatening the creditworthiness of all euro zone governments, even the most highly rated. Only six of the euro zone's 17 countries have the top rating ? Germany, France, Austria, the Netherlands, Luxembourg and Finland.

The crisis in Europe will likely be the focus as President Barack Obama hosts European leaders for a summit Monday.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111128/ap_on_bi_st_ma_re/us_wall_street

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In Response To FTC Privacy Settlement, Facebook Splits The Chief Privacy Officer Role In Two

Screen Shot 2011-11-29 at 10.57.42 AMIn a blog post regarding today's FTC settlement, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg also announced that the company has officially split the Chief Privacy Officer role into two parts, to be filled by existing Facebook employees Erin Egan and Michael Richter. Richter, who will be taking the CPO -- Product role, was Facebook's Chief Privacy Counsel on its legal team and now will be focused on the product side of Facebook's privacy policy, serving as a key figure in Facebook's internal privacy review program.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/mjiCRNWsPFo/

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Pressure mounts on Europe as finance ministers meet (Reuters)

BRUSSELS (Reuters) ? Euro zone finance ministers are to agree on Tuesday the details of bolstering their bailout fund to help prevent contagion in bond markets, under pressure from the United States and ratings agencies to staunch a two-year-old debt crisis.

President Barack Obama pressed European Union officials on Monday to act quickly and decisively to resolve their sovereign debt crisis, which the White House said was weighing on the American economy.

Underlining the threat to tottering European economies, ratings agency Moody's warned on Tuesday it could downgrade the subordinated debt of 87 banks across 15 countries on concerns that governments would be too cash-strapped to bail them out.

Rival Standard & Poor's could downgrade the outlook on France's top-level triple-A credit status within the next 10 days, signaling a possible ratings cut, a newspaper reported. The news briefly hit the euro.

White House spokesman Jay Carney said Obama's message, delivered to top EU officials behind closed doors in Washington, was that: "Europe needs to take decisive action, conclusive action to handle this problem, and that it has the capacity to do so.

Poland's Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski made a dramatic appeal in Berlin on Monday for Germany to show more leadership in the euro zone crisis.

"You know full well that nobody else can do it," he said in a speech in the German capital, referring to efforts to save Europe's monetary union.

"I will probably be the first Polish foreign minister in history to say so, but here it is: I fear German power less than I am beginning to fear German inactivity. You have become Europe's indispensable nation."

Tuesday's meeting of the Eurogroup, which brings together finance ministers from the 17 euro-zone members, was set to fix details of leveraging the European Financial Stability Fund (EFSF) so it can help Italy or Spain should they need aid.

They are also likely to approve the next tranche of emergency loans for Greece and Ireland.

Hopes that signs of concrete action could ease strains on the euro zone boosted markets, with Asian equities and the euro rising for a second day on Tuesday.

DETAILED PLANS

Documents obtained by Reuters on Sunday showed the detailed guidelines for the EFSF were ready for approval, opening the way for new operations and multiplying the fund's effective size.

The documents spell out rules for EFSF intervention on the primary and secondary bond markets, for extending precautionary credit lines to governments, leveraging its firepower and its investment and funding strategies.

"I would expect we will be in a position to approve the guidelines at a political level," a euro-zone official involved in the preparations for the ministers' meeting said.

The EFSF guidelines will clear the way for the 440 billion euro facility to attract cash from private and public investors to its co-investment funds in coming weeks.

The European Central Bank (ECB), which is now buying bonds of Spain and Italy on the market to prevent their borrowing costs running out of control, has been urging euro zone ministers to finalize the technical work on the EFSF quickly.

Officials have told Reuters that the leveraging mechanisms could become operational in January, but that may be too late.

With Germany rigidly opposed to the idea of the ECB providing liquidity to the EFSF or acting as a lender of last resort, the euro zone needs a way of calming markets, where yields on Spanish, Italian and French government benchmark bonds have all been pushed to euro lifetime highs.

ECB ROLE

The OECD rich nations' economic think-tank said on Monday the ECB should cut interest rates and abandon its reluctance to step up purchases of government bonds in order to restore confidence in the euro area.

The ECB shows no sign of doing so yet. It bought 8.5 billion euros of euro-zone government debt in the latest week, at a time of acute turmoil, in line with its previous activity but well short of what economists say is necessary to turn market sentiment around.

Sources have said the Obama administration has also urged Europe to allow the ECB to act as lender of last resort as the U.S. Federal Reserve does.

Germany and France stepped up a drive on Monday for coercive powers to reject euro zone members' budgets that breach EU rules, alarming some smaller nations who fear the plans by-pass mechanisms for ensuring equal treatment.

Berlin and Paris aim to outline proposals for a fiscal union before an EU summit on December 9 that is increasingly seen by investors as possibly the last chance to avert a breakdown of the single currency area.

"We are working intensively for the creation of a Stability Union," the German Finance Ministry said in a statement. "That is what we want to secure through treaty changes, in which we propose that the budgets of member states must observe debt limits.

Rumors about the threat to France's credit rating, which have circulated for several months, illustrate how the crisis has moved inexorably from indebted peripheral nations such as Greece and Portugal to the heart of Europe.

Economic and Financial daily La Tribune reported on its website that S&P's was preparing to change its outlook on France's sovereign rating from "stable" to "negative".

"It could happen within a week, perhaps 10 days," La Tribune quoted a source as saying.

The news coincided with the warning on subordinated debt from Moody's, which said the greatest number of ratings to be reviewed were in Spain, Italy, Austria and France, and knocked the euro a third of a cent before the currency recovered.

"Moody's believes that systemic support for subordinated debt in Europe is becoming ever more unpredictable, due to a combination of anticipated changes in policy and financial constraints," the agency said in a report.

Holders of subordinated debt are further back in the queue than owners of senior debt when it comes to a claim on a bank's assets, thus making it a riskier class of debt.

Mario Monti, Italy's prime minister and finance minister, will attend Tuesday's Eurogroup meeting to explain the reforms Italy plans to undertake to regain the confidence of markets.

Saddled with debt equal to 120 percent of GDP and soaring borrowing costs, Italy has been battling to avoid financial disaster, which analysts say would endanger the whole euro zone.

Italy must balance its budget by 2013 and offer immediate fiscal measures worth 11 billion euros if it wants to regain its credibility, according to a document on Italy that will be presented to the Eurogroup, Italy's La Repubblica newspaper said.

In a sign of intense market stress, short-term Italian yields last week climbed above those of longer-dated issues. Both are higher than the 7 percent level widely seen as unsustainable for the country's public finances.

The funding pressure is set to be underlined on Tuesday, when investors are expected to demand more than 7 percent at auction to buy three- and 10-year Italian debt.

(Additional reporting by Erik Kirschbaum in Berlin; Writing by Alex Richardson; Editing by Neil Fullick)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111129/bs_nm/us_eurozone

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1965 shooting shows pitfalls of closing old cases (AP)

PELAHATCHIE, Miss. ? On a late-fall evening 46 years ago, gunfire shattered the revelry at a nameless juke joint in this rural crossroads. When the smoke cleared, Joseph Robert McNair, a black father of six, lay at the feet of the community's white constable.

That McNair was dead, and that Luther Steverson had killed him are about the only details on which folks around here agree.

Five months ago, the U.S. Department of Justice ? which has been looking into scores of civil rights-era deaths ? closed a reinvestigation of McNair's shooting and informed family members that there was nothing to prosecute. But The Associated Press has found a number of people whose eyewitness accounts conflict with the official finding that Steverson fired just once in self-defense.

In response, the FBI made some more inquiries, but the agency insists that the witness accounts it has are "irreconcilably inconsistent," and that the case remains unprosecutable. Local authorities, saying they trust the bureau's judgment, consider the case closed.

But it's far from solved, say others, including McNair's three surviving children.

In their minds, crucial questions ? such as exactly where McNair was hit, and by how many bullets ? remain unresolved. The only way to reconcile the conflicting stories, they agree, would be to exhume the body.

"I would like to know," says Patsy Morrow-Whitfield, who was just 10 when neighbors led her and her siblings to the field where her stepfather lay. Still, she added, "It's almost moot to me. Because the people that would get the great satisfaction out of this, other than my brother there and me and my sister, has already passed."

The dispute over McNair's death illustrates the challenges ? and high stakes ? of seeking the truth so long after the fact.

___

McNair's was one of 124 civil rights-era deaths that the Justice Department has reviewed since launching its "Cold Case Initiative" in 2006. Congress turned up the heat in 2007 with the Emmett Till Unsolved Civil Rights Crime Act, setting aside millions of dollars "to ensure timely and thorough investigations in the cases involved."

His case was among more than six dozen the Southern Poverty Law Center referred to the DOJ in Febrary 2007.

Steverson shot McNair on Nov. 6, 1965, as he said he was attempting to serve a warrant on the 27-year-old laborer for nonsupport of his and his wife Myrtle's six children.

In a recent phone interview, the 84-year-old Steverson, who lives in nearby Pearl, told the AP that he had driven out to Pelahatchie ? about 20 miles east of the state capital of Jackson ? with town Marshal Cooper Stingley and Night Marshal Pat Wade to serve his warrant. He said he was riding in the back seat, the warrant in his shirt pocket and his .38-caliber service revolver in its holster on the seat beside him, when they came across McNair at the juke joint off Highway 80.

"I jumped out," the former constable said. "And I didn't have time to grab my regular service gun."

Steverson said he pulled out his "safety piece" ? a two-shot, .22 Magnum derringer ? and ran after McNair. When he caught up with him in a field of waist-high grass, he said, McNair wheeled and knocked him down.

"He said, `You've tried to kill me. I'm going to kill you,'" Steverson said. "And he started down on me. It looked like he had a knife. Of course, I was laying on my back trying to get up, had the gun in my hand and I shot him."

He said the bullet struck McNair square in the chest.

"It blowed him backwards," Steverson said.

He and the others searched for a knife, he said, but never found one.

Soon afterward, Steverson was cleared in a hearing before a justice of the peace.

In late May of this year, the case became one of about 80 officially closed by the Justice Department following reconsideration.

"After careful review of this incident, we have concluded that the federal government cannot now bring a prosecution against the officer," Paige M. Fitzgerald, deputy chief in charge of the cold-case effort, wrote in a letter to McNair's family. "Again, please accept our sincere condolences."

But after obtaining a copy of the FBI letter through a Freedom of Information Act request, the AP went in search of potential witnesses. Reporters located six people who say they were present when the shooting occurred, or in its immediate aftermath, and who dispute Steverson's version of events.

While varying in some significant details, their accounts converge on some key points: Two say they saw McNair fleeing, not lunging, and at least four remember hearing multiple gunshots, not one.

"That man was shot down in the back like a damn dog!" Connie Harris, 63, told the AP in a late October telephone interview from her home in Pelahatchie. "I'm not telling you what people say; I'm telling you what my two eyes seen."

Harris, who was 14 at the time, said she and some friends were on their way to the high school for a "record hop" when she saw Steverson and McNair, both of whom she knew.

"Why you doing this? I ain't did nothing," she remembered McNair saying. When his pleading did no good, she said, McNair "broke out running."

Harris said Steverson fired two shots, and McNair "fell on his face."

Annie Hoard, 62, who was with Harris, said she also heard McNair pleading, then heard two distinct gunshots ? though she did not see the shots fired.

John Lee Hoard, 72, described a different perspective. He and McNair were drinking at the bar, he said, when Steverson arrived and told McNair that he was under arrest.

"Joseph told him he hadn't did nothing," Hoard, McNair's third cousin and Annie Hoard's brother, told the AP in a telephone interview.

John Hoard said McNair ran out the back door, with Steverson in pursuit. He said he saw the constable fire at McNair's back, then watched his cousin fall.

The FBI said it had interviewed "no less than 11 civilian witnesses" before its initial decision to close the case. None of the people the AP found and spoke with had been contacted by agents.

In its letter, the FBI told the family that it had located one person who claimed to have been there that evening. That man, who was not identified, told agents that he heard two gunshots.

These accounts echo a contemporary report located by the AP in the files of Mississippi Sovereignty Commission, the organization through which the state spied on its own citizens as part of its effort to resist desegregation.

According to the 1965 memo, outlining an unnamed informant's statement to the commission, a witness said Steverson "shot McNair once in the back, and then in the head as he was lying on the ground." The informant said the FBI was investigating. But the letter to the family said agents had been unable to locate a file on the decades-old case.

During the reinvestigation, Steverson told agents that he had been "charged, tried and acquitted of murder," which, if true, would mean he couldn't be retried on the state level. But the FBI told the family it could find no public records or news reports of any formal charges.

In a local library, The AP found documentation of a coroner's inquest and a justice of the peace hearing, however. In a Nov. 8, 1965, article, the AP quoted Jackson funeral home director Fred Banks, who was black, as saying that McNair "was shot in the front only. Two inches down from the collar-bone and slightly to the left of center."

Banks' son Karl, now a county supervisor, said his late father would not have been intimidated despite the charged racial atmosphere of the time. "He would have called it just like he saw it."

The late Coroner Dempsey T. Amacker, who was white, said the same thing as Fred Banks during a hearing before Justice of the Peace Walter Ratcliff the following week. Public records of the hearing are unavailable and may have been destroyed, local officials said.

"J.P. Court Here Rules `Justifiable Homicide' in Shooting of Negro," read the headline in the Nov. 11, 1965, edition of the weekly Rankin County News.

The hearing concluded that no crime had occurred. But conviction after conviction in these old cases has proven that such results cannot always be taken at face value, said historian David T. Beito.

"There are certainly many examples that you could point to in Mississippi in that period of deception by authorities, of authorities circling the wagons to protect each other," said Beito, a professor at the University of Alabama.

But an attempt to weigh the evidence today, as the FBI did, presents its own obstacles.

The two other officers who were with Steverson that night are dead. Those who say they witnessed the gunfire, most of whom have lived in this rural community all of their lives, vary in some notable details about what the shooting scene revealed.

Harris said she walked right up to the body and saw two bullet holes in McNair's back. But both Annie Hoard and a fourth person who was at the juke joint, Dorothy McNair, 66, recalled seeing a hole in McNair's forehead.

"He was shot in the hand," said Dorothy McNair, also a cousin of the dead man. "He might have throwed his hand up to keep him from shooting him in the head."

When she reached him, Morrow-Whitfield said her stepfather was lying on his back. She saw only the hole in his chest.

"It wasn't bleeding or anything," she said. "There was like a little circle around it."

But she and her sister, Katherine McIntyre-Lee, are adamant that they heard more than one shot. "That's one thing I do vividly remember," Morrow-Whitfield said. "I was thinking that it was firecrackers."

FBI officials have hinted that the death certificate would support Steverson's version of events. The AP has not yet been able to obtain a copy from the agency or others.

But Beito, the historian, said doubts would not be dispelled even if the document backed up the single-shot, self-defense finding.

"That wouldn't be enough in and of itself. I'd need much more than that," said Beito, whose writing on civil rights history includes research on the lynching of Emmett Till, the 14-year-old Chicago boy whose 1955 slaying in Mississippi helped spark the modern civil rights movement. In 2005, authorities opened his grave and performed an autopsy to quell doubts that the body inside the glass-topped coffin was really that of Till.

But McNair wasn't a visitor from the North or, as with other deaths at the time, a civil rights activist plucked from a jail cell. Those who felt they knew the truth in his case were too frightened to speak up in 1965.

"I wasn't going to get shot," John Lee Hoard told the AP. "Back then, a colored man had no chance around here."

But times have changed, and they are willing to speak now.

When first contacted by the AP, Harris said, "I would sit up in the biggest church, the biggest courtroom, the biggest jailhouse, and repeat it over and over."

She permitted the AP to pass along her contact information to the FBI. But after the bureau spoke to her, she declined a request for a follow-up interview. "I can't talk to you all," she said. "I just said the same thing I said to you."

The FBI said the information obtained in that and several other interviews "does not change our conclusion that this matter is not prosecutable.

"Rather, these recent interviews revealed accounts that are materially and irreconcilably inconsistent," the agency said in a statement to the AP.

In several cases where federal charges were ruled out, the FBI has turned over findings to local officials for possible state prosecution.

Rankin County District Attorney Michael Guest said he wasn't aware there was a cold-case probe in his jurisdiction until contacted by the AP. The FBI insists it had contacted his office. In any event, agents did call Guest following the AP's inquiries and discussed the bureau's findings for half an hour, said Heath Hall, Guest's spokesman.

"We trust the FBI and the Department of Justice...," Hall told the AP. "I'm telling you that this case is closed. Period."

For his part, Steverson told the AP he was never worried. When the agents who visited his home asked if he still had the gun with which he shot McNair, he said he produced the derringer and even let agents photograph it.

Regardless of what some witnesses have claimed, he said his conscience is clear.

"I know what happened," he said. "It was a necessary thing. If it had been my brother, I would have had to done the same thing."

McNair's stepdaughter, Morrow-Whitfield, said her mother never got over the killing. Still, she wonders if pursuing the case is even worth it.

"It would be like an empty victory, you know," she said. Steverson "has lived his life. He's an old man now. And all it is, is going to be just facts."

___

Mohr reported from Pelahatchie. Breed is a national writer, based in Raleigh, N.C. He can be reached at features(at)ap.org.

Follow Allen G. Breed on Twitter at http://twitter.com/(hash)!/AllenGBreed

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111126/ap_on_re_us/us_cold_case_conundrum

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Gary Speed Dead: Wales Manager, Premier League Star Dies Of Apparent Suicide

LONDON -- Gary Speed was smiling and relaxed, talking on national television about the day's upcoming soccer matches. A few hours later, the Wales manager and former English Premier League star was found dead at his home at 42, an apparent suicide.

Speed was the first man to play 500 games in the Premier League and the youngest member of the midfield that carried Leeds to its most recent league title in 1992. He overhauled Wales' ailing national team and coached a young squad to four wins in its last five matches.

"Twenty minutes before we went on air on Saturday, he was the normal Gary Speed to me," said Gary McAllister, a former teammate who also appeared on the BBC program "Football Focus." "He was very excited about the prospects of the Welsh national team and was upbeat, looking class, immaculately presented. He was a movie star in my eyes.

"There were no signs, nothing to suggest he was troubled. He looked well and things are going well for him at the moment. I could never have thought that 10-12 hours after I saw him I'd be getting that news. It's a nightmare."

Citing unidentified police sources, British media widely reported that Speed was found hanged Sunday morning in the garage of his home in Huntington, England, where he lived with wife Louise and two sons.

While officials scheduled an inquest into Speed's death Tuesday, police said there were no suspicious circumstances ? a statement commonly made in instances of suicide.

There was online speculation that Speed was the subject of an upcoming newspaper story. The British tabloids The Sun and The Daily Star denied on their official Twitter accounts that they had been preparing to publish revelations about Speed's private life.

Speed's agent, Hayden Evans, issued a statement outside the family house Monday. He asked that the family be "given the respect of some privacy to just grieve on their own."

Fans left shirts and homemade banners adorned with Speed's name outside the stadiums of each of his five former clubs. British Prime Minister David Cameron said he watched highlights of those same matches Speed had talked about on TV.

"I think it has been incredibly moving," Cameron said. "I was watching Match Of The Day last night and watching people, crowds, absolutely silent and footballers revering his memory. I know he meant an enormous amount to people and people feel very, very sad on his behalf and on his family's behalf."

Former teammates, coaches and colleagues spoke at length about a man they knew as a dedicated player, considerate friend and an immensely promising coach.

"He was an amazing, talented player, a player that had such a glittering career and just began a great career in management as well," former England captain David Beckham said. "It is a sad time to lose a man like this."

FIFA President Sepp Blatter wrote the Wales soccer federation, calling Speed a "hugely talented player and a great servant for both club and country."

"He will always be remembered as a model professional and a fantastic ambassador for the game," Blatter said. "It was clear to all there that he was a man who exuded enthusiasm and passion for the game."

Added fellow Leeds midfielder Gordon Strachan: "People have problems in football and you have an indication that you need to keep an eye on someone, but this was right out of the blue. It's hard for us as friends to understand."

Football Association of Wales chief executive Jonathan Ford said he had no idea why this happened.

"I don't know if we ever will know," he said. "I am no further forward in my thoughts, when you hear the news you ask yourself why?"

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/11/28/gary-speed-dead-soccer-startled-by-death-suicide-wales_n_1117850.html

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Monday 28 November 2011

German police, demonstrators clash at nuke protest

Police used water cannons to disperse about 300 protesters hurling rocks and fireworks during an attempt to disrupt a shipment of nuclear waste in northern Germany on Saturday, officials said.

Some 50 activists also tried to sabotage the rail tracks that will be used by a train this weekend to transport the nuclear waste to the storage facility near the northern town of Gorleben, police spokesman Stefan Kuehm-Stoltz said.

Several thousand protesters gathered in the town of Dannenberg to hold a peaceful protest rally, police said. Organizers put the figure at 23,000.

Northeast of Dannenberg at least 700 people later broke through police ranks and staged a sit-in on rail tracks in an area of dense forest. Several hundred officers were deployed to carry the protesters away, which was expected to take several hours, police spokesman Martin Ackert said.

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The train carrying the shipment of 11 containers of nuclear waste reprocessed at France's La Hague facility entered western Germany on Friday after delays in France, where activists damaged railway tracks in an attempt to halt the cargo.

The shipment is expected to reach its destination sometime over the weekend. Some 20,000 German police officers are on hand.

Nuclear energy has been unpopular in Germany since fallout from the 1986 Chernobyl disaster in Ukraine drifted over the country. The annual shipment from France has been a traditional focal point for protesters.

This is the first shipment, however, since Chancellor Angela Merkel decided to speed up shutting down all of Germany's nuclear plants, with the last one scheduled to go offline by 2022, following safety questions raised after the disaster at the Fukushima plant in Japan.

Activists in Germany say the waste containers, and the temporary storage facility near Gorleben, are not safe.

Germany has not yet decided where such waste, which remains radioactive for thousands of years, should be stored permanently.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45443901/ns/us_news-environment/

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Sunday 27 November 2011

European court says ISPs don't have to filter content (Digital Trends)

European Court of Justice

The European Court of Justice has ruled (PDF) that Internet service providers cannot be required to install filtering systems designed to block downloads of illegal content, finding that such broad filtering violates the EU?s E-Commerce Directive and could impede legal uses of the Internet and legitimate file transfers.

The case dates back to 2004 when the Belgian company SABAM (which handles authorizing third-party rights to music) found that customers of a local ISP, Scarlet, were downloading music files illegally using peer-to-peer networking services. SABAM brought the case to court, and the Brussels Court of First Instance ordered Scarlet to prevent its customers from sending and receiving any file in SABAM?s catalog.

Scarlet appealed the ruling and now?seven years later?the European Court of First Instance has agreed. The court notes that content providers can request ISPs block access to specific third parties that are infringing on their rights. However, a requirement to filter all users? online activity to block potentially-illegal content transfer?such as that requested by SABAM?violates the EU E-Commerce Directive, which prevents member states from requiring ISPs to generally monitor the information that traverses their networks.

?Such an injunction could potentially undermine freedom of information since that system might not distinguish adequately between unlawful content and lawful content with the result that its introduction could lead to the blocking of lawful communications,? the court said in a statement.

The court also noted that a general filtering system would be ?liable to infringe on the fundamental rights of its customers,? including the right to protect their personal data and receive or impart information?both of which are ensured by the EU?s Charter of Fundamental Rights.

Consumer rights and Internet freedom advocates have generally welcomed the ruling.

?The alternative would have been a decision which would ultimately have put all European networks under permanent surveillance and filtering. This would have had major negative consequences for both fundamental rights and the online economy in Europe,? wrote the advocacy group European Digital Rights, in a statement.

When the case was initially filed, the music industry (along with film, television, and other media) had been looking seriously at requiring ISPs to install filtering software to block illegal transfer of copyrighted material. However, filtering systems represent a tremendous (and costly) technical challenge European countries have expressed a strong reluctance to engage in deep filtering of everyday Internet users? activities. More recently, the music industry had focused on the path approved by the European Court of Justice: working with ISPs to get specific sites blocked for distributing infringing content.

This article was originally posted on Digital Trends

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/digitaltrends/20111124/tc_digitaltrends/europeancourtsaysispsdonthavetofiltercontent

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Saturday 26 November 2011

Bahrain hints at evidence of Iran protest links

A Bahraini woman walks down a narrow street in the western Shiite village of Malkiya, Bahrain, on Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011, painted and repainted with anti-government graffiti and hung with religious banners for the Islamic month of Muharram, a time of Shiite mourning for Imam Hussein, grandson of Islam's founding prophet Mohamed. (AP Photo/Hasan Jamali)

A Bahraini woman walks down a narrow street in the western Shiite village of Malkiya, Bahrain, on Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011, painted and repainted with anti-government graffiti and hung with religious banners for the Islamic month of Muharram, a time of Shiite mourning for Imam Hussein, grandson of Islam's founding prophet Mohamed. (AP Photo/Hasan Jamali)

A Bahraini boy plays in a narrow street in the western Shiite village of Malkiya, Bahrain, on Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011, painted with graffiti urging political prisoners to be freed. (AP Photo/Hasan Jamali)

A Bahraini child peers from a home in the western Shiite village of Malkiya, Bahrain, on Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011. Graffiti on the side of the building reads: "For sure, victory is coming." (AP Photo/Hasan Jamali)

(AP) ? In a 500-page report detailing widespread abuses in Bahrain's crackdowns, it's a brief section on Iran that has brought the strongest pushback Thursday in the Gulf kingdom ? authorities clinging to their claims that Tehran had a role in the Shiite-led uprising despite the report's findings.

Bahrain suggested it may have classified intelligence of Iranian links to the 10-month-old unrest, though independent investigators said they found nothing to back the allegations.

The report's short reference to Iran touches some of the most powerful Arab Spring narratives among the Gulf's Sunni leaders. Accusations about plotting by Shiite giant Iran have been used to justify crushing measures, such as sending Saudi-led military forces to reinforce Bahrain's embattled monarchy.

It also reflects the bolder political strategies by Gulf nations to get involved in uprisings elsewhere ? such Saudi's leaders mediating a possible exit for Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh ? while keeping unwavering pressure on suspected Iran-leaning dissent at home. Saudi's Interior Ministry said at least four people have been killed this week in clashes in the heavily Shiite city of Qatif.

The findings by a special commission that investigated Bahrain's turmoil were a direct slap at fears by the Western-allied Gulf states that Iran seeks to use Bahrain as a foothold to try to undermine the region's Sunni regimes. The commission released a major report Wednesday.

The official Bahrain News Agency said national security concerns prevented sharing all intelligence on Iran with the commission. Officials in Iran have sharply denounced the crackdowns on Bahrain's Shiite majority, but they insist Iran has no direct ties to the conflict.

The news agency also repeated statements by Bahrain's king that Iranian propaganda has fueled bloodshed and clashes on the strategic island, which is home to the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet. Earlier this month, Bahrain claimed it dismantled an Iranian-linked terror cell that plotted attacks on high-profile targets including the Saudi Embassy.

Mustafa Alani, a regional analyst at the Geneva-based Gulf Research Center, said Bahraini officials are in a "difficult position" by their claims of protecting sensitive intelligence while openly accusing some Shiite activists of working with Iranian agents.

The special commission's report ? authorized by Bahrain's rulers in a bid to ease tensions ? highlighted details of abuses, including torture, excessive force and legal shortcomings under a special security court.

At least 35 people have been killed in violence related to the uprising, including several members of the security forces.

Bahrain's Shiites comprise about 70 percent of the island nation's 525,000 citizens. They have complained of widespread discrimination, such as being blocked from top government or military posts. The monarchy has offered some concessions but refused to bow to protest demands to surrender control of top positions and main policies.

Many of the report's conclusions had been previously noted by rights groups and opposition activists.

The burden fell on Bahrain's authorities to prove their charges of Iranian links to the protests.

The report said evidence presented by Bahrain's government "does not establish a discernible link between specific incidents" during the time period studied from February and March.

The commission noted that most of the government's claims on Iranian involvement related to alleged intelligence operations, making them impossible to independently investigate "due to security and confidentiality considerations."

Bahrain's king, Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa, lashed back at the findings, insisting Tehran's role was clear to "all who have eyes and ears."

He pointed to Iran's Arabic-language broadcasts that "fueled the flames of sectarian strife," but gave no details on the extent of possible secret intelligence that was not shared.

Bahrain is a critical U.S. ally, and Washington has taken a cautious line: Urging Bahrain's leaders to open more dialogue with the opposition, but avoiding too much public pressure.

In Washington, the White House on Wednesday commended the king for appointing the commission and said in a statement that it is "incumbent upon the government of Bahrain to hold accountable those responsible for human rights violations and put in place institutional changes to ensure that such abuses do not happen again."

A statement by the European Union's foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton, urged Bahraini authorities to "open a new chapter ... of national reconciliation."

___

Murphy reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Associated Press writer Adam Schreck in Dubai contributed to this report.

___

Online: http://files.bici.org.bh/BICIreportEN.pdf

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-11-24-ML-Bahrain/id-de4a11229e9b4d2983f5cc463b5f2cc8

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Growing up Geek: Chris Pirillo

Welcome to Growing Up Geek, an ongoing feature where we take a look back at our youth and tell stories of growing up to be the nerds that we are. Today, we have a special guest: internet entrepreneur, tech support blogger, media personality and geek, Chris Pirillo

Before I begin, let me just say: I'm not a slave to your mental delusions of who you think I am.

I have to get that out of the way largely because I've been "doing things" publicly for so long that some people have already formed opinions about me and what they believe I stand for. That's their problem, not mine.

I don't know if there was ever a specific moment I found myself attracted to electronic objects? I certainly recall playing with my cousin's Merlin and watching with wonder as my brother fiddled with his Alphie. I was certainly mesmerized by calculators, but that didn't lead me to develop advanced math skills.

Continue reading Growing up Geek: Chris Pirillo

Growing up Geek: Chris Pirillo originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 23 Nov 2011 16:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/23/growing-up-geek-chris-pirillo/

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Friday 25 November 2011

Metabolic defects in mice corrected with transplanted embryonic neurons

Metabolic defects in mice corrected with transplanted embryonic neurons [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 24-Nov-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Natasha Pinol
npinol@aaas.org
202-326-7088
American Association for the Advancement of Science

Researchers take a step toward neuronal replacement therapy

This release is available in Polish.

A new study has revealed that immature neurons taken from healthy mouse embryos can repair damaged brain circuitry and partially normalize metabolism when transplanted into adult mice that have grown morbidly obese due to a genetic deficiency. This proof-of-principle discovery represents one step down a long road toward neuronal replacement therapy, which researchers hope might one day be used to repair brains that have been injured by trauma or disease.

Artur Czupryn and colleagues took the immature neurons from the hypothalamus of wild-type mouse embryos and transplanted them into the hypothalamus of adult mice lacking a receptor for the hormone, leptin, which is known to regulate body weight. The researchers observed that the donor neurons were able to differentiate into four distinct neuronal types that then formed functional connections in the brains of the obese mice.

Their study appears in the 25 November 2011 issue of the journal Science, which is published by AAAS, the nonprofit science society.

"We chose this problem not because, even for a moment, we would pursue the idea of neuron transplantation for the treatment of obesity," explained Jeffrey Macklis from Harvard University, a corresponding author of the report. "What we did was take this very complicated circuitry in the hypothalamus that has a very clear, measurable outcomenot only obesity in the mice, but changes in their serum glucose (like diabetic human beings have), changes in their insulin levels and changes in their fat vs. lean body weightsand we used that complex circuitry as a test case for whether precisely selected and controlled neuron transplants could really rewire the brain."

The transplanted neurons did apparently restore leptin signaling in the brains of the obese mice because the rodents slimmed down and their metabolism began returning to normal levels, according to Czupryn and his colleagues.

"What we found is that these neurons not only turned into the right kinds of cells, but that they sent signals to the recipients' brain and received signals from the recipients' brain," said Macklis.

Although the researchers say that neuronal replacement is certainly not a practical approach to treating obesity, their study nonetheless provides evidence that the transplantation of donor neurons at the appropriate stage of development can promote functional recovery of a brain region that controls a complex phenotype.

###

This report by Czupryn et al. was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the Jane and Lee Seidman Fund for Central Nervous System Research, the Emily and Robert Pearlstein Fund for Nervous System Repair, the Picower Foundation, the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), the Nancy Lurie Marks Family Foundation, the Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education and the Foundation for Polish Science.

The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) is the worlds largest general scientific society, and publisher of the journal, Science (www.sciencemag.org) as well as Science Translational Medicine (www.sciencetranslationalmedicine.org) and Science Signaling (www.sciencesignaling.org). AAAS was founded in 1848, and includes some 262 affiliated societies and academies of science, serving 10 million individuals. Science has the largest paid circulation of any peer-reviewed general science journal in the world, with an estimated total readership of 1 million. The non-profit AAAS (www.aaas.org) is open to all and fulfills its mission to advance science and serve society through initiatives in science policy; international programs; science education; and more. For the latest research news, log onto EurekAlert!, www.eurekalert.org, the premier science-news Web site, a service of AAAS.


[ 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.


Metabolic defects in mice corrected with transplanted embryonic neurons [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 24-Nov-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Natasha Pinol
npinol@aaas.org
202-326-7088
American Association for the Advancement of Science

Researchers take a step toward neuronal replacement therapy

This release is available in Polish.

A new study has revealed that immature neurons taken from healthy mouse embryos can repair damaged brain circuitry and partially normalize metabolism when transplanted into adult mice that have grown morbidly obese due to a genetic deficiency. This proof-of-principle discovery represents one step down a long road toward neuronal replacement therapy, which researchers hope might one day be used to repair brains that have been injured by trauma or disease.

Artur Czupryn and colleagues took the immature neurons from the hypothalamus of wild-type mouse embryos and transplanted them into the hypothalamus of adult mice lacking a receptor for the hormone, leptin, which is known to regulate body weight. The researchers observed that the donor neurons were able to differentiate into four distinct neuronal types that then formed functional connections in the brains of the obese mice.

Their study appears in the 25 November 2011 issue of the journal Science, which is published by AAAS, the nonprofit science society.

"We chose this problem not because, even for a moment, we would pursue the idea of neuron transplantation for the treatment of obesity," explained Jeffrey Macklis from Harvard University, a corresponding author of the report. "What we did was take this very complicated circuitry in the hypothalamus that has a very clear, measurable outcomenot only obesity in the mice, but changes in their serum glucose (like diabetic human beings have), changes in their insulin levels and changes in their fat vs. lean body weightsand we used that complex circuitry as a test case for whether precisely selected and controlled neuron transplants could really rewire the brain."

The transplanted neurons did apparently restore leptin signaling in the brains of the obese mice because the rodents slimmed down and their metabolism began returning to normal levels, according to Czupryn and his colleagues.

"What we found is that these neurons not only turned into the right kinds of cells, but that they sent signals to the recipients' brain and received signals from the recipients' brain," said Macklis.

Although the researchers say that neuronal replacement is certainly not a practical approach to treating obesity, their study nonetheless provides evidence that the transplantation of donor neurons at the appropriate stage of development can promote functional recovery of a brain region that controls a complex phenotype.

###

This report by Czupryn et al. was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the Jane and Lee Seidman Fund for Central Nervous System Research, the Emily and Robert Pearlstein Fund for Nervous System Repair, the Picower Foundation, the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), the Nancy Lurie Marks Family Foundation, the Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education and the Foundation for Polish Science.

The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) is the worlds largest general scientific society, and publisher of the journal, Science (www.sciencemag.org) as well as Science Translational Medicine (www.sciencetranslationalmedicine.org) and Science Signaling (www.sciencesignaling.org). AAAS was founded in 1848, and includes some 262 affiliated societies and academies of science, serving 10 million individuals. Science has the largest paid circulation of any peer-reviewed general science journal in the world, with an estimated total readership of 1 million. The non-profit AAAS (www.aaas.org) is open to all and fulfills its mission to advance science and serve society through initiatives in science policy; international programs; science education; and more. For the latest research news, log onto EurekAlert!, www.eurekalert.org, the premier science-news Web site, a service of AAAS.


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

?


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


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-11/aaft-mdi112111.php

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Scientists working hard to build a better turkey

The great majority of today's domesticated turkeys may not be able to fly, but their ancestors sure got around. The quintessential New World bird, Meleagris gallopavo, was already an Old World favorite by the time colonists in North America first celebrated any Thanksgiving feasts. Today's turkey researchers are investigating the big bird's genetic heritage and biology as part of an effort to improve several aspects of its cultivation.

In 2010, a team of researchers from numerous labs in the United States announced the sequencing of more than 90 percent of the turkey genome. This represented a big step in turkey research, but efforts continue.

"Once you identify genes, the next step is to figure out what they do," said Rami Dalloul, a poultry and immunology researcher at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in Blacksburg.

"What we've been doing for the past almost year is building upon that sequence and trying to figure out, are there traits in the original [wild] bird that might be useful for today's bird?" said Julie Long, a poultry researcher at the research arm of the U.S. Department of Agriculture in Beltsville, Md.

The researchers have been working with the genetic material from the most popular domesticated commercial breed, the broad breasted white turkey. It is descended from turkeys domesticated in modern Mexico by predecessors of the Aztecs. The birds were well-established as a food source by the time the Conquistadors arrived. The Spanish took the birds back to Europe, and they quickly spread across the continent.

"Very quickly the domesticated turkey became, as far as I could tell, the real first New World food to be adopted in Europe," said Andrew F. Smith, a food historian and the author of "The Turkey: An American Story."

"When the Pilgrims and when the Jamestown colonists arrived, they had already eaten turkey," Smith said.

Smith said that by the 1550s, turkeys were already popular at Christmas dinners in England. When colonists came to the New World, they found large populations of wild birds that provided a reliable food source.

Colonists eventually began raising turkeys, but did not domesticate the wild birds.

"The commercial birds that we eat today were actually developed in the United States," said Long. "But they were developed on stocks that came from Europe that originally came from Mexico."

A whole different breed
After hundreds of years of breeding, today's commercial turkeys are far removed genetically from the wild turkeys from Mexico, which were already isolated from any of the five subspecies of wild turkeys found in the United States today.

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The genetic sequence of the domestic turkey differs from its wild turkey relatives, and can be used to illustrate differences between the animals.

"Once you have the baseline, which is the domestic turkey, then you have a good reference genome to come back to and then make a valid comparison," said Dalloul.

Wild turkeys have a gene that makes them resistant to a type of toxic fungus sometimes found in corn and soybeans. This toxin can be deadly on its own or lower a turkey's resistance to other infections and cause death that way.

The domestic breed no longer carries that resistant genetic trait.

"If you can bring back that gene into the domestic population, then you can have these birds again more resistant to [the toxin]," said Dalloul.

No natural mating
Even the intended consequences of commercial turkey breeds have introduced complications. Breeders developed birds with more white meat. The resulting turkeys, such as the broad breasted white, grow muscle quickly, and, as the name suggests, that muscle is concentrated in the breast area.

"[The breast] protrudes quite a bit and physically gets in the way when the birds need to reproduce," said Long. "In the commercial turkey industry there are no birds that naturally mate."

The great majority of turkey farmers must therefore depend upon artificial insemination, said Long. She suggested that there may be rare exceptions among small farms raising older breeds of turkeys, called heritage breeds, which may reproduce naturally. Artificial insemination is a laborious job in turkey facilities, as the sperm from male toms must be collected and female hens inseminated weekly.

"The amazing thing about the turkey hen is she's capable of keeping viable sperm cells for up to ten weeks after a single insemination," said Long. "The best we can do and still maintain high levels of fertility is about six hours."

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If turkey researchers could find a way to increase the amount of time that they can store sperm for later use, it might make the process of artificial insemination easier and less time-consuming. This is a primary area of research for Long, who hopes that further study of molecular DNA may help explain other reproductive issues as well, including why some hens lay more eggs than others.

More Thanksgiving science:

Chris Gorski is a writer and editor for Inside Science News Service. This report was originally published as "The Globe-Trotting Turkey" on the InsideScience.org website.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45422952/ns/technology_and_science/

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Thursday 24 November 2011

Aviation Insurance Resources Offers Insurance Consumers Multiple ...

Aviation-Insurance-ResourcesAviation Insurance Resources is making communication a two-way street through consistent updating of the agency?s Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn profiles as well as its interactive blog.
These social media connections make it easy for customers, and those looking for information, to be kept up-to-date about insurance matters quickly and easily.

Customers can now request an insurance quote or service forms, get one-stop information about Aircraft Insurance, access an employee directory and pinpoint locations directly from the agency?s Facebook page. Social media is a great way to connect immediately with a trusted agent at Aviation Insurance Resources in the event of a disaster, after hours, or on the go; providing multiple ways to get information or request a quote.

Social networking services offer clients instant access to information from Aviation Insurance Resources that might otherwise be difficult to get in the event of a disaster or emergency. Claim information, weather alerts, disaster warnings and breaking news are now at the customer?s fingertips.

Clients can easily get in touch with the agent, especially if they do not have the agency?s direct contact information within reach.

Aviation Insurance Resources? blog offers an opportunity for people to have an open dialogue with their agent about topics such aircraft, aviation, or airport insurance. Blog entries create a conversation filled with valuable information from knowledgeable agents about community and insurance news. It also includes tips and tricks for making the best insurance decisions.

Blog discussions are especially helpful for those with general insurance questions. Users can also find insurance information by downloading Free Reports from Aviation Insurance Resources? website.

Consumers now have a simple way to communicate, collaborate, find expert advice, and share information using any of the social networking links found on the agency?s website.

Source: http://eyugoslavia.com/featured/23/aviation-insurance-resources-offers-insurance-consumers-multiple-ways-to-stay-connected-2231483/

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