সোমবার, ৩১ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

Frontier Communications Third Quarter Earnings Sneak Peek | Wall ...

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S&P 500 (NYSE:SPY) component Frontier Communications (NYSE:FTR) will unveil its latest earnings on Thursday, November 3, 2011. Frontier Communications provides telecommunications services to rural areas and small and medium-sized towns and cities.

Frontier Communications Earnings Preview Cheat Sheet

Wall St. Earnings Expectations: The average estimate of analysts is for profit of 6 cents per share, a decline of 25% from the company?s actual earnings for the same quarter a year ago. During the past three months, the average estimate has moved down from 7 cents. Between one and three months ago, the average estimate moved down. It has been unchanged at 6 cents during the last month. For the year, analysts are projecting net income of 24 cents per share, a decline of 35.1% from last year.

Past Earnings Performance: The company has fallen in line with estimates the last two quarters. In the second quarter, it reported profit of 6 cents per share and two quarters ago booked net income of 6 cents.

Investing Insights: Here?s Why Chipotle?s Stock Keeps Winning.

Wall St. Revenue Expectations: On average, analysts predict $1.3 billion in revenue this quarter, a decline of 7.1% from the year ago quarter. Analysts are forecasting total revenue of $5.25 billion for the year, a rise of 38.2% from last year?s revenue of $3.8 billion.

Analyst Ratings: Analysts are bullish on this stock with seven analysts rating it as a buy, one rating it as a sell and five rating it as a hold.

A Look Back: In the second quarter, profit fell 8.1% to $32.3 million (3 cents a share) from $35.1 million (11 cents a share) the year earlier, meeting analyst expectations. Revenue rose more than twofold to $1.32 billion from $516.1 million.

Key Stats:

The company has enjoyed double-digit year-over-year percentage revenue growth for the past four quarters. Over that span, the company has averaged growth of more than twofold, with the biggest boost coming in the third quarter of the last fiscal year when revenue rose more than twofold from the year earlier quarter.

The decrease in profit in the second quarter broke a streak of two consecutive quarters of year-over-year profit increases. Net income rose 28.5% in the first quarter and 944.6% in the fourth quarter of the last fiscal year.

The company upped its gross margin by 6.3 percentage points in the in the second quarter. Revenue rose 156.2% while cost of sales rose 63% to $146.9 million from a year earlier.

Competitors to Watch: AT&T Inc. (NYSE:T), Iowa Telecommunications Services, Inc. (IWA), Windstream Corporation (NASDAQ:WIN), Sprint Nextel (NYSE:S), Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE:VZ), Telephone & Data Systems, Inc. (NYSE:TDS), Warwick Valley Telephone Co. (NASDAQ:WWVY), Otelco, Inc. (NASDAQ:OTT), Cbeyond, Inc. (NASDAQ:CBEY), Cincinnati Bell Inc. (NYSE:CBB), and CenturyLink, Inc. (NYSE:CTL).

Stock Price Performance: During September 1, 2011 to October 28, 2011, the stock price had fallen 85 cents (-11.9%) from $7.13 to $6.28. It saw one of its worst periods between August 31, 2011 and September 9, 2011 when shares fell for seven-straight days, falling 6.4% (-47 cents) over that span. The stock price saw one of its best stretches over the last year between January 28, 2011 and February 8, 2011 when shares rose for eight-straight days, rising 4% (+34 cents) over that span. Shares are down $2.77 (-30.6%) year to date.

(Source: Xignite Financials)

Investing Insights: Here?s Why Chipotle?s Stock Keeps Winning.

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Source: http://wallstcheatsheet.com/earnings-trading-markets/frontier-communications-third-quarter-earnings-sneak-peek.html/

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Hard Rock: Asteroid Lutetia May Be an Intact Leftover from Planetary Formation

News | Space

A 2010 flyby by the Rosetta spacecraft showed Lutetia to be dense and dusty, a probable member of the planetesimal population that coalesced to form Earth and other planets


Asteroid 21 Lutetia from the ESA Rosetta spacecraftDENSE AS CAN BE: Asteroid Lutetia appears to be a battered but mostly intact planetesimal from early solar system history. Image: ? ESA 2010 MPS for OSIRIS Team MPS/UPD/LAM/IAA/RSSD/INTA/UPM/DASP/IDA

A brief encounter between a European spacecraft and a large asteroid has revealed that the space rock is likely a mostly intact leftover from the planetary formation process. But the flyby raised more questions than it answered, providing tantalizing but somewhat puzzling hints about the asteroid's makeup and internal structure.

The spacecraft, a European Space Agency probe called Rosetta, flew by Asteroid Lutetia in July 2010. The spacecraft is on its way to a planned encounter with Comet Churyumov?Gerasimenko in 2014; Rosetta shut down most of its systems and entered communication hibernation this past June to conserve power during its a 2.5-year cruise toward that rendezvous. Rosetta scientists have now analyzed the imagery and other data from the asteroid flyby; the results appear in a trio of studies in the October 28 issue of Science.

The researchers' main conclusion is that Lutetia looks to be an ancient planetesimal of the type that merged to form the planets in the first millions of years of solar system history. That contrasts with some smaller bodies visited by spacecraft, such as the asteroids Itokawa and Mathilde, which look not to be single, solid leftovers but rather looser, more porous assemblages of planetary odds and ends.

Lutetia, however, is too dense to have much porosity. Rosetta scientists derived a density estimate for the asteroid from visual assessments of Lutetia's irregular physical dimensions (121 by 101 by 75 kilometers), as well as from a mass measurement produced by tracking Rosetta's radio signals back to Earth. Even at a flyby distance of 3,170 kilometers, the asteroid's gravitational tug on the passing spacecraft was enough to deflect Rosetta's trajectory and Doppler-shift the spacecraft's radio transmissions. The magnitude of that Doppler shift reflected the strength of Lutetia's gravitational pull and therefore its mass.

At 3.4 grams per cubic centimeter, Lutetia rivals the larger Vesta for the densest known asteroid. "It's something like 20 percent denser than granite, so it's really dense material there," says Holger Sierks, a planetary researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research in Katlenburg?Lindau, Germany, lead author of one of the new studies. The implication is that Lutetia must be solid, or very nearly so, with a composition that should have survived from the dawn of the solar system to today. "It has significant strength, so you'd need a lot of energy to hammer it to pieces," he says.

Planetesimals such as Lutetia hold important clues to the planetary formation process. "It's really huge, so it's very interesting to see a very large remnant that really survived from the early days," Sierks says.

That is not to say that Lutetia has had it easy; the asteroid's ancient surface bears the scars of billions of years of impacts from smaller objects. Its surface is pocked with more than 350 craters sized at least 600 meters in diameter, including a whopper of a crater, called Massilia, some 55 kilometers across. "Certainly a lot of material was shaved off to what we see today," Sierks says. "But it didn't see an impact that shattered it to pieces."

The cratering record and photographic evidence of landslides reveal that a deep layer of dusty, lunarlike soil, or regolith, coats the asteroid. "We know that we are looking at several hundreds of meters, if not a kilometer-thick, layer of regolith with very low density," Sierks says.

That low-density exterior material, which resembles that of primitive meteorites known as chondrites, is tough to reconcile with the asteroid's high overall density, which exceeds that of most chondrites. "It's a head-scratcher," says Erik Asphaug, a planetary scientist at the University of California, Santa Cruz, who did not contribute to the new studies. In the absence of a mass measurement, one might naively assume a porosity of about 20 percent for a similar-looking asteroid, Asphaug says. "Suddenly you have this asteroid, Lutetia, where one has to assume that you have a porosity of essentially zero, which doesn't fit at all with this dusty surface, heavily cratered, that's been bashed around for a long time," he says. "Trying to figure out what it's all about is really baffling."

One possibility is that Lutetia is partially differentiated, meaning that it has a metallic core, like a half-baked mini planet. A differentiated structure would help explain Lutetia's overall high density, especially if impacts carved away some of the less dense material after heavier metals had coagulated in the core. "I see a body which has a really beat up mantle, and probably deep beneath that mantle an iron core," Asphaug says. "Unfortunately, we'll probably never know." At least, Rosetta never will return there so it could deliver the data to clear up the mystery.

That is the fundamental problem with flybys, which are essentially add-ons to a spacecraft's primary mission and rarely deliver as much science as the main event. A fleeting rendezvous, lasting just hours in the case of Rosetta's 55,000-kilometer-per-hour pass at Lutetia, gives some clues to the target object but no opportunity for detailed follow-up investigation.

"It's a pity that we didn't stay for long enough," Sierks says. "If we had stayed for awhile, we would have been able to tell more about the interior of the body, and of course about the surface." As Rosetta zooms farther and farther beyond the Asteroid Belt to get a close look at Comet Churyumov?Gerasimenko, Sierks hopes that an asteroid-lander mission will not be far behind. "It's a good argument for the next generation of missions going out into the Asteroid Belt," he says, "because they really have to land there and...not just scratch the surface, but really get into the pristine material and find out what's there."

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=21740a47602122e5da0a1da2a42c6d4f

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Source: http://www.londonsportscouncil.org/general/automotive-locksmith-las-vegas-all-days-attainable-for-enable/

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Fitch: Greek rating likely stays "junk" after deal (AP)

LONDON ? Greece's credit grade will remain low, probably still in "junk" status, even after its debt load is cut as part of a European plan to fight the financial crisis, Fitch ratings agency said Friday.

The EU plan asks Greece's private creditors to take losses of 50 percent on their holdings of the country's bonds. Along with new loans and other measures, that is meant to bring Greece's debt down to 120 percent of economic output by 2020.

Fitch welcomed the broad outline of the plan, but said it would likely still leave the country's rating in the 'B' category, only a few notches up from its current CCC grade. Most B ratings are in so-called "junk" status, meaning non-investment grade.

"Greece would still have a large amount of debt outstanding, its growth prospects are weak and its willingness to implement structural reforms may dissipate," the agency said in a report.

Private creditors accepting the EU plan would swap their bonds with new ones of half their value. Fitch noted that the amount of debt Greece would be able to cut depends on the creditors' participation rate and further details on the deal that have yet to be ironed out.

Fitch said the deal would constitute a default for the country, as widely expected. All major ratings agencies had already said so this summer, when a similar deal had been proposed. They call it a selective default to differentiate it from a messier form of default in which losses are forced on the private creditors.

EU leaders made the current deal a voluntary one for the private creditors because forcing losses on them could have triggered huge insurance payments on the bonds. Such payments are what helped plunge the global economy into recession after U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers collapsed in 2008.

The agency expects Greece's debt to peak at 142 percent of economic output in 2013 before easing again.

Fitch said the broader EU deal to fight the debt crisis ? which also included a plan to increase the capital buffers of the continent's big banks and measures to boost the firepower of the bailout fund ? were a step toward stabilizing the eurozone.

It warned, however, that a real improvement in the currency bloc's prospects and its sovereign credit ratings will depend on an economic recovery and lowering debt. Most analysts expect economic growth to remain weak in coming months.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111028/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_europe_financial_crisis

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শনিবার, ২৯ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

Thousands of Iraqis protest Baathist arrest campaign (Reuters)

FALLUJA, Iraq (Reuters) ? Thousands of Iraqis blocked a highway in western Anbar province Friday to protest against a campaign to arrest former military officers and members of Saddam Hussein's banned Baath Party.

In neighboring Salahuddin province, demonstrators took to the streets to support a symbolic move by the provincial council to declare the area autonomous, partly in protest of the Baathist round-up that has angered minority Sunnis across Iraq.

Some Iraqi officials said the arrests of scores of ex-Baathist former army officers this week were triggered by a specific plot against the government, while others said it was a precautionary move before the U.S. troop withdrawal.

"We are determined to get our message across to the central government. Our demand is the release of innocent detainees. said Ramadi farmer Mohammed al-Dulaimi, 45, one of some 3,000 protesters who blocked the highway linking Anbar with Jordan and Syria.

"These arrests will lead to increased sectarianism and tension," he said.

Thousands demonstrated in towns and cities across Salahuddin province, including Samarra, Shirqat and Tikrit, Saddam's hometown.

The Salahuddin provincial council's symbolic decision on Thursday was designed to send a message to the central government in Baghdad. Provinces need a public referendum and parliamentary approval to attain autonomy.

"I served Iraq more than 20 years," said Samarra resident Jassim Mohammed Hussein, a former soldier in Saddam's army. "I haven't received any salary since the occupation in 2003."

"I have come out today strongly in favor of autonomy because it is our only way to get rid of this unjust government," said Hussein, a jobless father of seven.

Authorities say more than 200 ex-Baathists and former high-ranking army officers have been arrested since the start of the round-up this week including dozens in Salahuddin, Diyala, Kirkuk, Basra, Nassiriya and Babil provinces.

Security and police officials said the government issued arrest warrants for around 350 former Baath Party members.

Government officials have long expressed concern that Baathists would try to retake power when U.S. troops depart. The party was banned after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam, who was later tried and executed.

The ban was criticized by those who saw it as leaving an administrative vacuum in the aftermath of the invasion.

Military leaders have expressed concern that violence will rise as Washington withdraws the 39,000 remaining U.S. troops in Iraq by year-end.

(Additional reporting by Ghazwan Hassan; Writing by Muhanad Mohammed; Editing by Jim Loney and Angus MacSwan)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iraq/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111028/wl_nm/us_iraq_protests

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শুক্রবার, ২৮ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

Occupy Wall St. Sanctioned for Public Masturbation (Powerlineblog)

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Obama adviser says president best for middle-class

WASHINGTON (AP) ? A presidential campaign adviser says that Barack Obama can tap into the frustrations typified by the Occupy Wall Street movement better than any Republican rival in 2012.

Former White House press secretary Robert Gibbs tells NBC's "Today" show Obama "is out there fighting for the middle class."

Gibbs says "we're seeing now a lot of anxiety and frustration" across the country because of income disparity.

Asked if this economic unrest will mostly likely benefit Obama in next year's election, Gibbs said Obama has a better record than the GOP in defending the middle class. Gibbs also said that "every one" of the Republican presidential candidates want to roll back Wall Street regulation.

He said the lack of sufficient rules to govern Wall Street is what "got us into this mess."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2011-10-27-Democrats-2012/id-7f750fe9774b45cda315f0790a8492d7

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৭ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

Beware the Digital Disruptors: They're Coming for Your Industry (Mashable)

James L. McQuivey, Ph.D. is a Vice President and Principal Analyst at Forrester Research serving Consumer Product Strategy professionals. Follow him on Twitter at @jmcquivey. Growing up in the '70s, I was the world?s biggest fan of The Bionic Man. Every Sunday night at 7 p.m. you could find me glued to our Trinitron TV to watch Steve Austin battle every villain from Bionic Sasquatch to the evil Dr. Dolenz. The appeal of the show was simple: Amplified by technology, the Bionic Man is better, stronger, and faster than his enemies.

[More from Mashable: How to Time Your Facebook Posts to Reach the Most Fans]

It turns out to be a morality tale for our own day. But you are not the bionic man in the drama I?m unfolding -- you are his target. Because while you were carefully planning your business strategy, hundreds -- if not thousands -- of individuals and competitors have been exploiting technology to make themselves better, stronger, and faster than you.

We call these people digital disruptors. And they?re coming right for you.

[More from Mashable: Startup Success: How 7 Top Angel Investors Do Business]

No matter what industry you are in, you are their target. Where you could once dismiss digital disruption as the sole province of the music or other media industries where it destroyed billions in value, digital disruption has now expanded. These disruptors employ technologies -- and the platforms they enable -- to build better products than you can, establish a stronger customer relationship than you have, and deliver it all to market faster than you ever thought possible.

Oh, and it doesn?t cost anywhere close to six million dollars for them to get started. I offer Lose It! as one of many case studies worth considering. Targeting the weight loss and fitness business -- one of the most analog industries on the planet -- Lose It! is disrupting the more than $40 billion Americans spend on weight loss each year. It?s a costly industry to enter -- think of Jenny Craig?s marketing budget alone, then add its hundreds of physical locations, prepared meals, and all the infrastructure to support the entire enterprise. So while franchises like The Biggest Loser have succeeded in entering this business recently, they have done so at great cost.

Meanwhile, a single app that helps dieters keep track of the calories they consume on their smartphones has gone from 0 to 7 million downloads in just a few years. FitNow, the company behind the app, pulled this off with four employees, establishing an unheard of customer-per-employee metric of 1.75 million.

This is digital disruption at its finest: better, stronger, faster. The app got to market quickly, partly because as a digital disruptor, FitNow could afford to launch something that didn?t try to solve all the problems in the weight-loss world. As Charles Teague, CEO, told me recently, ?Let?s not pretend that we know the endgame here. Let?s do the least amount of features to know if it will work. Then improve it if people use it.? And improve it they have, adding fitness tracking and more recently a robust social community of like-minded dieters.

Because it sounds so easy, a CEO I shared this with asked me why, if digital is so quick and dirty, his company?s website redesign was over time and over budget. I told him it was precisely because he staffed up his business under assumptions about design and functionality that were true in 2005 but are no longer the case. Digital disruption has even disrupted the digital businesses that preceded them.

While digital disruptors are better, stronger, and faster, they are not untouchable. Their ease of entry comes from the fact that traditional barriers have fallen to zero. That means your direct cost to emulate their practices can also be low.

That?s why I recommend you steal the digital disruptor?s handbook. Use the iPad, the Kinect, and whatever platform is next to build a digital bridge to your customers. Like with Lose It!, your bridge must engage customers more often than your current product can, packaging and delivering benefits that you didn?t realize were part of your consumer contract because before now, they weren?t. You have to change your understanding of your product so you can then change your customer?s understanding of it as well. This will require better thinking than you currently do ? I previously explained how digital disruptors take advantage of a type of thinking called "innovating the adjacent possible." It?s crucial to generating more ideas more quickly so that you can find the nearby opportunities that will succeed while quickly culling those that will fail.

There?s more to do, but before you can even begin, you have to know: Are you ready to do this? Does your company have the energy, skills, and policies to turn into a disruptor or are you more likely to be displaced by the digital disruptor nearest you?

Image courtesy of iStockphoto, Nikada

This story originally published on Mashable here.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/mashable/20111027/tc_mashable/beware_the_digital_disruptors_theyre_coming_for_your_industry

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UPS reports higher profit, affirms outlook (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? United Parcel Service reported a higher quarterly profit as margins improved in the face of flat domestic shipping volume dulled by a sluggish economy, and it affirmed its outlook for record 2011 results.

UPS has forecast record earnings per share of $4.15 to $4.40 this year on the back of cost cuts and higher shipping rates in the face of a slowly expanding global economy.

"UPS produced another solid quarter of earnings growth against the backdrop of a deceleration in exports from Asia and a challenging global economic environment," Chief Executive Officer Scott Davis said in a statement.

The company's shares declined 1.4 percent to $69.89 in premarket trading.

Domestic shipping volume averaged 12.74 million packages a day, little changed from 12.73 million a year ago. Operating margins improved on higher yields, or revenue per package, as well as on more efficient networks, the company said.

International shipping volume averaged 2.34 million a day, up from 2.24 million.

Revenue in this segment rose more than 14 percent, twice the rate in the domestic segment, driven by 6.5 percent growth in export volume.

UPS and FedEx Corp are considered economic bellwethers because of the sheer volume of packages they handle.

The value of packages handled by UPS's trucks and planes each year is equivalent to about 6 percent of U.S. gross domestic product and 2 percent of global GDP.

The world's largest package delivery company said third-quarter net income rose to $1.04 billion, or $1.06 per share, from $991 million, or 99 cents a share, a year earlier.

Analysts on average were expecting $1.05 per share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Revenue rose 18 percent to $13.17 billion, matching the analysts' average forecast.

(Reporting by Lynn Adler in New York; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/earnings/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111025/bs_nm/us_ups

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বুধবার, ২৬ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

Turkey quake kills more than 260, hundreds missing (Reuters)

ERCIS, Turkey (Reuters) ? Rescuers pulled survivors from beneath mounds of collapsed buildings and searched for the missing on Monday after a major earthquake killed at least 264 people and wounded more than 1,000 in mainly Kurdish southeast Turkey.

Hundreds more were feared dead after Sunday's 7.2 magnitude quake, Turkey's most powerful in a decade, toppled remote villages of mud brick houses.

As desperate survivors cried for help beneath mounds of smashed concrete and twisted metal, some using mobile phones, earth-moving machines and troops joined rescue efforts in the city of Van and the town of Ercis, some 100 km (60 miles) to the north.

"Be patient, be patient," rescuers in Ercis told a whimpering boy pinned under a concrete slab with the lifeless hand of an adult, a wedding ring on one finger, visible just in front of his face.

A Reuters photographer saw a woman and her daughter being freed from beneath a concrete slab in the wreckage of a six-storey building.

"I'm here, I'm here," the woman, named Fidan, called out in a hoarse voice. Talking to her regularly while working for more than two hours to find a way through, rescuers cut through the slab, first sighting the daughter's foot, before freeing them.

In Van, an ancient city of one million on a lake ringed by snow-capped mountains, cranes shifted rubble from a collapsed six-storey apartment block where 70 people were feared trapped.

One woman, standing beside a wrecked four-storey building, told a rescue worker she had spoken to her friend, Hatice Hasimoglu, on her mobile phone six hours after the quake trapped her inside it.

"She's my friend and she called me to say that she's alive and she's stuck in the rubble near the stairs of the building," said her friend, a fellow teacher. "She told me she was wearing red pajamas," she said, standing with distraught relatives begging the rescue workers to hurry.

Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan flew swiftly to Van to assess the scale of the disaster, in a quake-prone area that is a hotbed of activity for Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) militants.

Erdogan said he feared for the fate of villages with houses made of mud brick, saying: "Almost all buildings in such villages are destroyed."

The broadcaster NTV quoted Interior Minister Idris Naim Sahin as saying the death toll had reached 264. Deputy Prime Minister Besir Atalay, speaking in Van, said more than 1,300 were injured. The interior minister said hundreds more were unaccounted for, many believed buried under rubble.

TORMENTED SOUTHEAST

The quake brought fresh torment to impoverished southeast Turkey, where PKK militants fighting a decades-long insurgency against the state killed 24 Turkish soldiers in Hakkari, south of Van, last week.

The area it struck, near the border with Iran, is remote and mountainous, with long distances between villages and hamlets and people living off stock-raising, arable farming and trading.

The hardest-hit town was Ercis, a town of 100,000, where 55 buildings crumpled, including a student dormitory.

At one collapsed four-storey building, firemen from the major southeastern city of Diyarbakir were trying to reach four missing children. Aid workers carried two large black bags, one apparently containing a child's body, to an ambulance. An old woman wrapped in a headscarf walked alongside sobbing.

A distressed man paced back and forth before running toward the rescue workers on top of the rubble. "That's my nephew's house," he sobbed as workers tried to hold him back.

ARMY BATTALIONS

Thousands of people made homeless by the quake were forced to spend Sunday night on the streets, wrapped in blankets and huddled round open fires. The government has sent four army battalions to Ercis and two to Van to help in the rescue work, but some residents complained of a lack of assistance.

The Red Crescent has said some 5,000 tents and 11,000 blankets have been sent and a tent city has been set up at Ercis stadium. But residents said tents were being given only to relatives of police and soldiers, a possible source of tension.

"The villages have not received any help yet. Instead of making a show, politicians should be visiting them. The Turkish military says they sent soldiers, where are they?" said a municipality official in Van who did not want to be named.

Ibrahim Baydar, a 40-year-old tradesman from Van, accused the government in Ankara of holding back aid. "All the nylon tents are in the black market now. We cannot find any. People are queuing for them. No tents were given to us whatsoever," Baydar said.

"All the police were at the airport waiting for the prime minister yesterday. On a normal day, there are more police on the streets when two kids throw stones at them."

Rescue efforts were hampered by power outages after the quake toppled electricity cables to towns and villages. It also damaged the main Van-Ercis road, CNN Turk reported.

More than 200 aftershocks have jolted the region since the quake struck for around 25 seconds at 1041 GMT on Sunday.

"I just felt the whole earth moving and I was petrified. It went on for ages. And the noise, you could hear this loud, loud noise," said Hakan Demirtas, 32, a builder who was working on a construction site in Van at the time.

"My house is ruined," he said, sitting on a low wall after spending the night in the open. "I am still afraid, I'm in shock. I have no future, there is nothing I can do."

The Red Crescent said about 100 experts had reached the earthquake zone to coordinate rescue and relief operations. Mobile kitchens were set up to feed the homeless. Sniffer dogs had joined the quest for survivors.

At Van airport, a Turkish Airlines cargo plane unloaded aid materials onto waiting military vehicles for distribution.

Dogan news agency reported that 24 people were pulled from the rubble alive in the two hours after midnight.

Erdogan later returned to Ankara for a cabinet meeting to discuss the response to the disaster. He said Turkey could cope by itself, but thanked nations offering help, including Armenia and Israel, which both have strained relations with Ankara.

Major geological fault lines cross Turkey, where small tremors occur almost daily. Two large quakes in 1999 killed more than 20,000 people in the northwest.

The quake had no impact on Turkish financial markets when they opened on Monday. Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek said Van benefit from tax exemptions.

In Van, construction worker Sulhattin Secen, 27, said he had first mistaken the rumble of the quake for a car crash.

"Then the ground beneath me started moving up and down as if I was standing in water. May God help us. It's like life has stopped. What are people going to do?"

(Additional reporting by Ece Toksabay in Istanbul; Writing by Ibon Villelabeitia, Simon Cameron-Moore and Daren Butler; Editing by Tim Pearce)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111024/wl_nm/us_turkey_quake

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মঙ্গলবার, ২৫ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

'First step' to perfect drug combinations

ScienceDaily (Oct. 23, 2011) ? Scientists at The University of Manchester have discovered a way of speeding up the creation of perfect drug combinations, which could help patients recovering from critical health problems such as stroke, heart attacks and cancer.

The researchers found a way of identifying ideal drug combinations from billions of others which would prevent inflammation from occurring.

The findings, published in Nature Chemical Biology, could be the first step in the development of new drug combinations to combat severe diseases and conditions.

Most non-infectious disease, such as cancer, stroke and Alzheimer's are worsened by inflammation, which is the body's natural defence mechanism.

Inflammation has evolved to help fight infection but can also be very damaging in long term disease, prolonging suffering and ultimately risking premature death.

After a stroke, the body reacts to the injury as if it were an infection, causing further damage. By blocking the inflammation, the chances of survival or higher quality of life following a stroke are thus greatly enhanced. This can be achieved by quickly and effectively identifying combinations of drugs which can be used together.

Existing 'clot-busting' stroke drugs are only effective if administered within three hours after the stroke -- often very difficult to achieve as people are often unaware they are having a stroke -- and even then do not completely solve the problem, often leaving sufferers with serious disabilities.

However, using ideal drug combinations the researchers suggest they can block inflammation and therefore greatly reduce the damage caused by non-communicable diseases such as stroke.

Although the researchers have initially concentrated on stroke, they believe the process can be applied to all drugs and for a huge variety of diseases.

The multi-disciplinary team of researchers, led by Professor Douglas Kell, Professor of Bioanalytical Science at The University of Manchester, developed an evolutionary computer programme which rapidly sifted through nine billion different combinations of potential drugs.

Sorting and testing 50 drug combinations at a time using robotics in the laboratory, the scientists were able to find effective combinations and then refine them as many times as necessary to find ideal combinations.

Ultimately, they hope this will lead to the development of tailored therapies for treating inflammation.

Professor Kell, who is also Chief Executive of the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council, said: "Most diseases have complex causes. This makes their analysis a problem of systems biology, and to find novel therapies multiple targets need to be attacked at once.

"We have devised a strategy, based on Darwinian evolution, to make this considerably easier. Although our immediate interest is inflammation and conditions such as stroke, our approach is universal and is thus applicable to all complex diseases."

Another advantage of choosing ideal drug combinations is that it allows patients to take smaller doses, which reduces potential toxicology concerns.

Professor Kell and his team worked with computer scientists at the University to create the programme. Professor Pedro Mendes explains: "Our experiments were guided by software that is based on an evolutionary algorithm. The algorithm suggests new drug combinations from previous ones by re-mixing their components -- much like the DNA of a child is a mix of that of their parents.

"The new drug combinations are then tested and the best are selected to continue generating new ones. In each experiment we tested 50 drug combinations, then the software would tell us which new ones to test in the next experiment."

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Journal Reference:

  1. Ben G Small, Barry W McColl, Richard Allmendinger, J?rgen Pahle, Gloria L?pez-Castej?n, Nancy J Rothwell, Joshua Knowles, Pedro Mendes, David Brough, Douglas B Kell. Efficient discovery of anti-inflammatory small-molecule combinations using evolutionary computing. Nature Chemical Biology, 2011; DOI: 10.1038/nchembio.689

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/u1dKr3PQuTQ/111023135655.htm

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Anil Kapoor finally makes it to the MI4 trailer

When the debut trailer of the much-awaited ?Mission Impossible 4?was launched, Anil Kapoor was no where to be seen. None of the frames in the trailer had even a glimpse of the actor which immediately gave rise to speculation if he has a sort of blink-and-miss role in the movie. But the new official worldwide [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/newslatest/~3/IMxNcjelXWY/3280.html

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সোমবার, ২৪ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

Civil rights icon Shuttlesworth to be buried (AP)

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. ? The Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth, often eclipsed by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. in life, was scheduled to be laid to rest Monday after a weekend of remembering the way he catalyzed the civil rights movement in Birmingham and launched King into immortality.

Those who knew him best urged others to continue the tireless example he set, working long after victory in the 1963 campaign to liberate the segregated Southern city he called home. Fellow preachers, foot soldiers from the movement and members of his family told a crowd gathered Sunday at the historic 16th Street Baptist Church that for all of his heroic efforts, the fiery minister's work remains undone.

Attorney General Eric Holder, the first African-American to hold the position, told the audience: "Without him, there would be no me."

"We are bound by more than sorrow," Holder said. "We are united by our shared admiration of Reverend Shuttlesworth, by our deep appreciation of his legacy, and perhaps most importantly by our collective responsibility to carry on his critical work, and to live up to the example of service that he left to us."

A parade of clergy lined up to give Shuttlesworth his due at the memorial, which lasted nearly three hours. Five decades ago, when a little-known black Baptist preacher named Martin Luther King took the helm of the Montgomery, Ala., bus boycott in 1955, Shuttlesworth was already in Birmingham trying to start a movement, but hardly anyone was paying attention.

Shuttlesworth was from a small church. His credentials and pedigree made it easy for local whites to dismiss him as a radical. Until King came to Birmingham, Shuttlesworth couldn't get the national press to recognize his city as the embodiment of the horrors of the segregated South.

He was just another black preacher getting beat up, said former Atlanta mayor, congressman and United Nations ambassador Andrew Young, who worked alongside King and Shuttlesworth in the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. All three men helped establish the organization in 1957.

"They were sued together, they helped organize SCLC together," Young said of King and Shuttlesworth. "He wanted the spotlight very much, but there wasn't but one Martin Luther King."

It was King who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964 and went on to become the icon of the civil rights movement. Shuttlesworth, who was overshadowed in life by his comrade in the movement, was again eclipsed by King in death.

Though he died nearly three weeks ago, Shuttlesworth is only now being buried Monday. The reason for the delay: The dedication of the King Memorial on the National Mall, sending most of Shuttlesworth's civil rights colleagues to Washington last weekend.

Had they not been there, they would have likely been in Birmingham remembering Shuttlesworth.

"His friends and Martin's friends were the same," Young said. "But you don't have two memorials at the same time if you want your friends to come."

Among the events held in Shuttlesworth's honor was a public viewing of his body at the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute and a panel discussion at the Birmingham Museum of Art.

In tribute, many at the 16th Street Baptist Church ? where four black girls were killed in a bombing before Sunday services on September 15, 1963 ? recalled Shuttlesworth's courage but also called on those left to mourn him to be courageous. Holder said Shuttlesworth was a warrior for justice and advocate for peace who has left behind a legacy for the country to follow.

The attorney general used the occasion to point out Alabama's strict new immigration law, considered the toughest crackdown in the nation. He said too many in Alabama "are willing to turn their backs on our immigrant past" and he would not let that happen. The Obama administration is among the parties suing the state to block the law.

There was also a candlelight vigil for Shuttlesworth across the street in Kelly Ingram Park, made famous when news footage of policemen and firemen unleashing dogs and blasting water hoses on defenseless civil rights marchers was broadcast to a shocked international audience.

Long before the television cameras arrived, Shuttlesworth was there, organizing many such nonviolent protests.

Shuttlesworth survived a Christmas 1956 bombing that destroyed his home, an assault during a 1957 protest, chest injuries when Birmingham authorities turned the hoses on demonstrators in 1963 and countless arrests. He moved to Ohio to pastor a church in the early 1960s, but returned frequently to Alabama for key protests. He came back to live in the Birmingham area after he retired a few years ago.

"He was able to see how the civil rights struggle kept reinventing itself in different forms," said Diane McWhorter, author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning book, "Carry Me Home: Birmingham, Alabama, the Climactic Battle of the Civil Rights Revolution."

"He was always there to make it clear that this was a continuous struggle."

McWhorter said she never got the sense Shuttlesworth was bitter about King overpowering the narrative of the movement, and that he never badmouthed King to her.

"He had a huge ego ... but he never said anything like, `Oh, I should've been the leader of the movement,'" she said. "He kind of recognized that he couldn't have done what King did. But he was just such a key ingredient that it couldn't have happened without him, either."

Quoting from his book, "My Soul Is Rested: The Story of the Civil Rights Movement in the Deep South," former New York Times Executive Editor Howell Raines, a Birmingham native, said at Sunday's panel: "King's name would've never touched immortality had it not been for Birmingham."

After Shuttlesworth's death on Oct. 5 ? the same week the Rev. Joseph Lowery turned 89 and the Rev. Jesse Jackson turned 70 ? Alabama lowered its state flags to half-mast.

"I really do feel like he has sort of gotten his due more and more over the last number of years," McWhorter said. "Partly because he's outlasted everybody, with distinction and class."

Young agreed that Shuttlesworth ultimately received his due, and is recognized as one of the true heroes of the movement. Besides, he pointed out, attention is no substitute for longevity.

"Yes, Martin overshadowed him," Young said of Shuttlesworth. "But he got to live to 89. Martin didn't make it to 40."

___

Follow Errin Haines on Twitter at www.twitter.com/emarvelous

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111024/ap_on_re_us/us_shuttlesworth_remembered

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রবিবার, ২৩ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

Caribbean islands struggling to dismantle gangs (AP)

BASSETERRE, St. Kitts ? When Dudley Williams was a police commander in the mid-1980s, law enforcement in St. Kitts and Nevis was a leisurely occupation. Violent crime was rare on the sleepy specks of land in the eastern Caribbean.

"If fellows got into a heated dispute at a rum bar, things were settled with fists, a piece of stick, a knife at the worst," said Williams, now 79. "You'd get a shooting once every five years."

Times have changed here and for many islands across the Caribbean, where an escalating arms race among criminal gangs has turned once-peaceful neighborhoods into battle zones.

St. Kitts and Nevis, a two-island federation of nearly 50,000 people, has tallied 31 homicides so far in 2011, already making it the bloodiest year on record. Police blame gangs with names like Killer Mafia Soldiers and Tek Life for the escalating violence.

Usually far from the view of sunbathing tourists, tit-for-tat shootings by trigger-happy gangsters have become common in the Caribbean, according to a new report on global homicides by the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime.

Alarmed citizens are putting pressure on politicians throughout the region to attack the problem. In Trinidad and Tobago, which is off Venezuela's coast along a prime drug shipment route, the government has declared a state of emergency, imposing nightly curfews and giving police and soldiers broad powers to conduct searches and seizures.

Little of the violence so far has affected tourists to the Caribbean, where about 6 million Americans visit each year. Many stick to all-inclusive resorts, and those who don't rarely stray into the gritty slums where the violence flares up.

Still, there are isolated cases: A vacationing U.S. Army sergeant was killed during a robbery in Trinidad last year. A Welsh couple was butchered in an Antigua vacation cottage on the last day of their two-week honeymoon in 2008. In St. Kitts, bandits held up a small bus of tourists last year, prompting two cruise lines to briefly suspend stops there. Two British women were raped on a remote beach in St. Lucia earlier this year.

Drug traffickers have helped drive up the crime rates by introducing firearms and narcotics with a street value exceeding the size of the Caribbean's legal economy.

Although the islands remain near-perfect conduits for drug shipments, with their numerous unpoliced islets and barely monitored coasts, the U.N. crime office says Caribbean drug seizures actually diminished 71 percent between 1997 and 2009 as more contraband shifted to Central American routes.

According to the agency, the increase in the Caribbean's lethal violence can partly be traced to frenzied competition between underworld groups fighting for turf in a diminished drug smuggling market.

Caribbean experts worry a culture of violence has become entrenched on the islands, where nearly 70 percent of homicides are committed by firearms.

"Until fairly recently, we had an innocence about ourselves in the Caribbean, but that's been lost. This thing is a Pandora's Box and I'm not sure you can ever close it again," said Marcus Day, director of the Caribbean Drug & Alcohol Research Institute in St. Lucia.

Comparisons with other parts of the world can be stark. Jamaica, an island of roughly 3 million people that has been hit hard by drug and extortion gangs for years, chalked up 1,428 killings in 2010. Chicago, a city of nearly 3 million, reported 435 homicides last year.

Statistics from the U.N. crime office show homicide rates nearly doubling in a number of Caribbean countries since 1995. In St. Kitts and Nevis, slayings have increased sixfold since 2002, when there were just five killings.

Ivelaw Griffith, an expert on Caribbean security at City University of New York, said outmaneuvered and outgunned law enforcement agencies on the islands have a limited ability to cope with the problem on their own.

He said the spread of cable television and popular music has raised expectations among youths by depicting the easy life even as the rough global economy is making pockets of poverty grow deeper and wider. It's "really creating a very unholy and unhealthy recipe for these small societies," Griffith said.

To counter the gang culture, the Bahamas is toughening crime and bail laws, building more courts, trying to round up unlicensed guns and funding programs to steer at-risk youth away from crime.

The archipelago off Florida's east coast has seen 104 people killed so far this year, easily topping the previous full-year record of 94 set just last year.

Norelle Scott, a 19-year-old college student who lives on the most populous island of New Providence, said she is now fearful of leaving home at any time of day and is pessimistic about the chances for change.

"Criminals are getting bold these days. I'm ashamed to know that my people are killing each other over small things, material things, and it's getting worse," she said.

Prime Minister Hubert Ingraham is urging Bahamians to join neighborhood watch programs and help police identify criminals.

"Community engagement and service will be more effective in combating crime than iron bars and gated communities," Ingraham said during a recent televised address.

Trinidad and Tobago's emergency decree, imposed in August and expected to extend through December, angered some young people, but others applauded the move.

"We don't mind living under curfew conditions if it makes the country safer," said Zana Ramdial, a fortysomething mother of three in the capital of Port-of-Spain.

Many Caribbean islands have been known for feeble local enforcement. In St. Lucia, drug smugglers know immediately when the maritime police are on patrol, making evasion nearly effortless, said Day, the crime researcher in St. Lucia.

"We don't really have enough fuel to pay for the police boats so we can only run them at certain times. And the criminals know when they go out," Day said.

Some of the poor, developing islands have reached out to Scotland Yard and the FBI for help, or brought in foreign police and security consultants.

St. Kitts recruited a new police commissioner, Celvin G. Walwyn, who is a native islander with long experience as police officer in Texas and Florida. He has warned street gangs he plans to eradicate them and has special teams of police and soldiers to patrol crime hotspots together. A tough new law can put people away for 20 years if they are convicted of recruiting for the gangs.

"Rumors on the street are that the gangs have an arsenal. But if push comes to shove, we can wipe them out," Walwyn told The Associated Press.

He said employment and other services will be available for young people who wish to leave gangs.

Dale Watley, a 31-year-old who served three years in an overcrowded St. Lucia prison for a shooting, says youths can be lured away. He turned his back on the underworld life he had known since childhood and now runs his own barber shop.

"The young guys, they want a movie kind of life, like 'Scarface,'" he said. "But once they get a chance to survive in the real world with respect, they don't want to shoot anyone anymore. They want to live."

_____

Associated Press writer Megan Reynolds in Nassau, Bahamas, contributed to this story.

___

David McFadden on Twitter: http://twitter.com/dmcfadden

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111022/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/cb_caribbean_drug_war

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Beyond The Battlefield: A Reporter's Reflections On The Plight Of Severely Wounded Veterans

"Beyond The Battlefield" is a 10-part series exploring the challenges that severely wounded veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan face after they return home, as well as what those struggles mean for those close to them. Learn how you can help here. Other stories in the series can be found here. Listen to reporter David Wood discuss "Beyond The Battlefield" with NPR's Terry Gross here. Wood and wounded veteran Bobby Henline will hold a live video chat this afternoon. See more details and send them questions.

In the dusty desert village of Jigjiga, in Ethiopia, I once watched a man die.

He'd been caught in fighting between Ethiopians and Somalis, in one of those senseless wars that go nowhere and settle nothing.

The Somalis had routed Ethiopian forces after a brief battle between their pre-World War II tanks. Now the Ethiopians were counterattacking. Airstrikes by a couple of aging American and British fighter-bombers, flown by Ethiopians, had us pinned down. Bombs tore into the village health clinic, a modest, green tin building. Rockets splintered crude shacks in the market, pulverized the mud wattle huts where most people lived. Strafing rounds of .50-cal bullets caught the unlucky who were trying to flee.

I didn't see the young man get hit, but he crawled toward me and collapsed where I was huddled against a low wall. His wound was horribly obvious: shrapnel had ripped open his chest and stomach. Blood soaked his clothes, matted his beard. His eyes were glazed.

Neither of us could move safely, but I managed to snag a gray wool blanket from a few yards away to try to stanch the blood. The air strikes seemed to go on forever, the concussive blasts, the sizzling sleet of shrapnel, the billowing smoke, the cries of the wounded. The man, in his late teens or early twenties, lay on his back beside me. The blanket became black with blood.

He moaned once and writhed. He mouthed the Swahili word for water, maji. Then flies began to settle on his open eyes. He was dead.

That's the fate of so many of those wounded in battle: they die. By design, battlefields are deadly places, and I've seen plenty of them in 35 years of covering conflict around the world. Sometimes the wounds are small but the injured person bleeds to death, quickly or slowly. Minor wounds left untreated can get infected and become mortal wounds. And in many wars, the wounded often are not reached by competent medical treatment promptly, or at all. These are preventable deaths, but deaths nonetheless.

That's why I leaped at the chance to explore and write about the American wounded of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The numbers are heartening and astonishing, a sharp departure from the grim reality I have known.

Of the 2.3 million men and women who served in the current war zones, there are 53,000 U.S. casualties, of whom 46,747 were treated and saved, as of Oct. 17, 2011. Among them, there are perhaps 16,000 severely wounded, many rescued from the very edge of death.

In this decade of brutal combat, we are also seeing a historically low -- but still tragic -- number of battle dead: fewer than 5,000.

It may seem unremarkable that most Americans now come home from combat alive. It is not.

It is the gift of the heroic medics and corpsmen, battlefront surgeons and nurses, the reconstructive surgeons and rehabilitation therapists and ward nurses and technicians here at home. It is the gift of those who designed and fought to get the Pentagon to adopt advanced body armor, blast-resistant vehicles, personal tourniquets, flameproof gloves, and enhanced first aid training for the troops.

It is the legacy of medical researchers whose work, over the years, has given us on-board resuscitation and intensive care on helicopter and strategic airlift, and new medical techniques in emergency surgery, blood transfusion, skin and muscle grafting and organ transplants. It is the unending support and love of families of the wounded that is essential to recovery.

What their work means is this: If you were an American casualty in World War II, with pretty good medical care nearby, your chances of dying from your wounds were roughly one in three. You're with two guys in a foxhole, all of you wounded, one of you dies.

Today, if you are wounded in Afghanistan, you chances of dying are less than one in 10, statistically speaking. Ten Marines wounded on patrol by an IED, you all live.

Even so, the wounds of these survivors can be catastrophic, profoundly changing the lives of young men and women who have valued physical exertion, adventure, sports and the challenges of leadership. Small wonder that so many of the severely wounded struggle with anxiety, anger and depression even without a formal diagnosis of post traumatic stress disorder or traumatic brain injury. Small wonder that they often struggle with the temptations of drugs and alcohol.

Before I started to meet these severely wounded Americans and their families, the question did weigh on me: if they are so badly wounded -- if they will never regain the lives they once had -- is it a good thing that they were saved?

To speak plainly: Would they be better off dead?

It's a common question. A U.S. official once came back from the Walter Reed amputee center and told me that he'd been watching a quadruple amputee doing torso exercises on a floor mat. "No legs, no arms, he couldn't even kill himself!" he said with a tone of pity.

Certainly the young man who died beside me in Jigjiga was better off dead. With no medical care within a two-day walk, he faced a long and painful decline in his final hours or days, an agonizing postponement of the inevitable. At least, that was my judgment.

"Better off dead? Oh, I hear that all the time, always from people who don't have an injury," says Dr. Paul Pasquina, chief of Orthopedics and Rehabilitation at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.

Working with the severely injured, he told me, "you clearly see the value of life. Nothing replaces life. How do you put a price on being able to see your child graduate from high school, or get married, or see your wife deliver your first baby? No matter whether you can or can't walk, or bathe yourself, or can't do all those functions, these are life-changing moments that you cannot replace."

That's easier to say in the sparkling, state-of-the-art medical facilities at Walter Reed, where no expense is spared to tend to the wounded. So I put the question to Beth Dameron, an RN and brain rehabilitation specialist at the VA Polytrauma Center in Richmond, Va. Many of her brain-injury patients are nearly helpless, and she bustles brightly among them with humor and tenderness.

During a pause in her rounds, I asked her, If it's pretty clear a severely wounded person is dying and has a minimal chance at a normal life -- if that person is always going to be in a vegetative state -- should you try to save that person anyway, right there on the battlefield when seconds count?

"In that moment, if you can, you do," says Dameron. "Because you don't know what the outcome will be. That person may not have the quality of life we have been used to, but he can be happy and, outside his injuries, healthy and able to be with and for his family."

Is that true of a triple or quadruple amputee with genital injury and brain trauma? Can that life be worth living? She chided me gently. "The quality of life is very personal," she says. "It's something that belongs to that person and his family."

Many of the severely wounded tend to be upbeat about their new status in life; their answer to the live-or-let die question is implicit. "I realized in Germany that I'm not gonna have any legs, but that's okay," Marine Sgt. Johnny Jones tells me. He's a 24-year-old from Dalton, Ga., who was blown up by an IED in Afghanistan and woke up in the U.S. military hospital in Landstuhl, Germany.

How did he feel about having no legs? He thought for a second as he practiced stepping up stairs with his two prosthetic legs, in the Walter Reed amputee center gym. He reached back to his school days to explain how it could have been a lot worse. "If you think you're gonna get a D, and you end up getting a C, that's okay," he says. "I was walking at six months after I got blown up. I know four quadriplegic amputees. Three years ago they wouldn't have been alive. Now they're walking."

Such buoyant optimism is infectious. We all love to hear stories of such success. Eric Shinseki, the retired Army four-star general who runs the VA and who lost a foot while fighting in Vietnam, likes to tell the story of an Army Ranger who was badly wounded, had a leg amputated, and eventually through unimaginable pain and hard work managed to return to active duty, and has completed several combat tours with the Rangers.

But the fact is that most of the severely wounded do not recover. Most do not go back on active duty with the Rangers.

Many are coping. Others are living lifetimes of difficulty and pain, struggling with shattered or missing limbs, badly scarred faces and traumatic brain injury or post-traumatic stress injuries, wounds that can be insurmountable barriers. In the course of six months of talking to the wounded and their families, I came across several who had considered suicide.

"It requires an incredible amount of strength and courage to get through this," says Steven Davis, a psychiatrist at Walter Reed. "Many of them are people with severe psychiatric issues, severe depression, anxiety disorders ..."

The severely wounded and their families celebrate each anniversary of their wounding as "Alive Day," the day they were lucky enough to go on living.

However we come to assess why the United States waged war in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the gains and losses from that fighting, we also might pause to acknowledge the service and sacrifice of all those who have kept our wounded warriors from suffering the same fate as the young man who died beside me, in a distant, dusty place.

Huffington Post Impact has compiled a list of organizations that seek to help veterans like the ones featured in "Beyond The Battlefield." You can read more about those groups, and ways you can help, here. Other stories in this series can be found here.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/10/21/beyond-the-battlefield-david-wood-notebook_n_1021532.html

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Calorie count plus points based on added sugars, sodium, and saturated and trans fats recommended as new front-of-package nutrition labeling system

ScienceDaily (Oct. 20, 2011) ? Federal agencies should develop a new nutrition rating system with symbols to display on the front of food and beverage packaging that graphically convey calorie counts by serving size and a "point" value showing whether the saturated and trans fats, sodium, and added sugars in the products are below threshold levels.This new front-of-package system should apply to all foods and beverages and replace any other symbols currently being used on the front of packaging, added the committee that wrote the report.

"Our report offers a path to develop an Energy Star? equivalent for foods and beverages," said committee chair Ellen Wartella, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani Professor of Communication, professor of psychology, and director, Center on Media and Human Development, School of Communication, Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill."A successful front-of-package nutrition rating system would enable shoppers to instantly recognize healthier products by their number of points and calorie information.It would encourage food and beverage producers to develop healthier fare and consumers to purchase products that are lower in calories and food components that contribute to chronic disease."

The report envisions a rating system in which foods and beverages earn points if their amounts of nutrients of concern -- saturated and trans fats, sodium, and added sugars -- are at or below levels considered acceptable based on qualifying criteria.The more points a food or beverage has, the healthier it is.A product could earn up to three points, one each for having sodium and added sugars that do not exceed threshold amounts and one for having saturated and trans fats below designated levels.For example, 100 percent whole wheat bread could qualify for all three points while graham crackers could earn two points for having levels of sodium and saturated and trans fats below the thresholds.Points would be graphically displayed on packaging as check marks, stars, or some other icon to be determined by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Foods and beverages should pass a separate set of criteria to determine if they are eligible to earn points at all, the report adds.If a product exceeds the eligibility criteria for any one of the nutrients of concern, it would not be able to display any points.For example, a sugar-sweetened soda could not earn points for having low sodium and no saturated or trans fats because its added sugar content is too high.

Whether a food or beverage qualifies for points or not, it should prominently display the amount of calories per serving with servings described in familiar measurements, such as per slice or per cup.The front-of-package icons should also direct shoppers to the Nutrition Facts Panel on the reverse to get additional information about the healthfulness of products.

Although the committee's phase 1 report concluded that calories, saturated fat, trans fat, and sodium should be the focus of a new front-of-package system because they are most strongly associated with chronic disease, the phase 2 report says that added sugars should also be included.The 2010 Dietary Guidelines for Americans, which were issued since the release of the first report, strongly recommend that people reduce their consumption of products that contain added sugars.The U.S. Department of Agriculture puts several products that are high in added sugars in a category called Sugars, Sweets, and Beverages; products in this group are automatically ineligible to earn points in the committee's recommended approach.

The new symbols representing products' calories and point values should appear on all grocery products so that shoppers can readily compare food choices within categories, such as breakfast cereals, as well as across categories, such as fresh produce, frozen vegetables, and canned soups, the committee said.Food manufacturers and retail outlets should display the symbols in consistent locations.

The report offers examples of what representative symbols and displays could look like purely for illustrative purposes.The committee does not endorse any particular graphic nor has it tested any of the examples in this report to determine their effectiveness.Likewise, the committee did not evaluate and assign points to all foods and beverages or categories of products.FDA will need to conduct these evaluations and develop and test potential icons and displays.Moreover, the agency should launch a consumer awareness and education campaign to promote the rating system and its graphic representation when they are finalized.Promotion, along with universal display on all products, is key to helping shoppers understand and take advantage of the new rating system, the committee said.

The study was sponsored by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Food and Drug Administration, and U.S. Department of Agriculture Center for Nutrition Policy and Promotion.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/Pip8H-QOWaQ/111020122325.htm

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Reading a book versus a screen: Different reading devices, different modes of reading?

ScienceDaily (Oct. 20, 2011) ? A book or a screen ? which of these two offers more reading comfort? There are no disadvantages to reading from electronic reading devices compared with reading printed texts.

This is one of the results of the world's first reading study of its kind undertaken by the Research Unit Media Convergence of Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (JGU) in cooperation with MVB Marketing- und Verlagsservice des Buchhandels GmbH. "E-books and e-readers are playing an increasingly important role on the worldwide book market. However, readers in Germany are particularly skeptical when it comes to e-books and electronic reading devices. The objective of the study was to investigate whether there are reasons for this skepticism," says the initiator of the study, Professor Dr. Stephan F?ssel, chair of the Gutenberg-Institute of Book Studies and spokesperson for the Media Convergence Research Unit at Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz. "This study provides us with a scientific basis for dispelling the widespread misconception that reading from a screen has negative effects," explains F?ssel. "There is no (reading) culture clash ? whether it is analog or digital, reading remains the most important cultural technology."

However, the result of the study stands in stark contrast with the participants' subjective reaction. "Almost all of the participants stated that they liked reading a printed book best. This was the dominant subjective response, but it does not match the data obtained from the study," specifies Professor Dr. Matthias Schlesewsky, Head of the Research Group Neurocognition of Language Universals of the Department of English and Linguistics at Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, who designed and conducted the study together with Professor F?ssel. In fact, tablet PCs actually provide an advantage over e-ink readers and the printed page that is not consciously perceivable: the information is processed more easily when a tablet PC is employed. Furthermore, while there were no differences between the three media employed in terms of rates of reading by the younger participants, the older participants exhibited faster reading times when using the tablet PC.

Similarly, the participants' subjective perceptions did not match the results of a comparison of e-ink readers and printed paper texts. Almost all participants stated that reading from paper was more comfortable than from an e-ink reader despite the fact that the study actually showed that there was no difference in terms of reading performance between reading from paper and from an e-ink reader. "We have thus demonstrated that the subjective preference for the printed book is not an indicator of how fast and how well the information is processed," concludes Professor Schlesewsky.

The co-initiator and cooperating partner institution of the study is MVB Marketing- und Verlagsservice des Buchhandels GmbH, operator of the e-book platform libreka!. "We are pleased to have had the opportunity to work with and support Mainz University in this one-of-a-kind study. As a subsidiary of the German Publishers and Booksellers Association (B?rsenverein des Deutschen Buchhandels e.V.), we have established the prerequisites for publishing companies and bookstores to adapt to the digital age by setting up the libreka! platform. Shaping the market is important to us, and that also includes understanding the readers' needs," states Ronald Schild, CEO of MVB, explaining the reasons for the organization's participation in the study.

The study analyzed the differences in reading from various kinds of media (e-book, tablet PC, paper) in two sample groups, young and elderly adults. Each participant read various texts with different levels of complexity on an e-book reader (Kindle 3), on a tablet PC (iPad), and on paper. The reading behavior and the participants' corresponding neural processes were assessed by means of concurrent measures of eye movements (eye tracking) and electrophysiological brain activity (EEG). The criteria that were taken into account and analyzed were changes in the theta frequency band power, reading behavior, text comprehension, and information recall as well as the participants' preferences for the respective medium.

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Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/10/111020094337.htm

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