Friday, May 31, 2013

Ky. man admits to secretly recording McConnell

FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) ? A Kentucky man has admitted to secretly recording a private campaign meeting between Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell and his aides earlier this year.

Curtis Morrison of Louisville made the admission Friday in a first-person account posted on Salon.com, where he also said an assistant U.S. attorney has notified his attorney that a grand jury will consider bringing charges next Friday.

A spokeswoman said the U.S. attorney's office in Louisville would not comment. It was unclear who was representing Morrison. Morrison declined to comment via email Friday.

Morrison, a former volunteer for the political group Progress Kentucky, also acknowledged in the story that he provided the recording to Mother Jones magazine, which posted audio from the McConnell meeting and a transcript online in April.

Mother Jones had previously said the recording came from a confidential source.

On the recording, McConnell and his aides talked about opposition research into potential Democratic challengers, including actress Ashley Judd, a former Kentucky resident who later decided to skip the race. Aides discussed Judd's past bouts with depression, previous political statements and religious beliefs and how the campaign might use that against her.

McConnell's campaign had asked the FBI to investigate how the recording was made.

Under federal law, it is illegal to electronically record people without their knowledge if the person recording it is not part of the conversation. Kentucky has a similar state law.

Generally, well-known public figures have an expectation of privacy when they speak in their homes or other private retreats. The law prohibits bugging a room, secretly monitoring telephone conversations or intercepting computer communications. However, the publishers, in this case Mother Jones, may disseminate illegally taped conversations if they didn't break any law in getting the recording.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ky-man-admits-secretly-recording-mcconnell-194417615.html

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Woman's jailing in Mexico highlights tourist risks

Yanira Maldonado, 42, left, accompanied by her husband, Gary, center, speaks to an official after being released from a prison on the outskirts of Nogales, Mexico late Thursday, May 30, 2013. Maldonado, jailed in Mexico on a drug-smuggling charge, was released after court officials reviewed her case. She was arrested by the Mexican military last week after they found nearly 12 pounds (5.4 kilograms) of pot under her seat on the commercial bus traveling from Mexico to Arizona. (AP Photo/Cristina Silva)

Yanira Maldonado, 42, left, accompanied by her husband, Gary, center, speaks to an official after being released from a prison on the outskirts of Nogales, Mexico late Thursday, May 30, 2013. Maldonado, jailed in Mexico on a drug-smuggling charge, was released after court officials reviewed her case. She was arrested by the Mexican military last week after they found nearly 12 pounds (5.4 kilograms) of pot under her seat on the commercial bus traveling from Mexico to Arizona. (AP Photo/Cristina Silva)

Yanira Maldonado, 42, center, accompanied by her husband, Gary, right, speaks to media after being released from a prison on the outskirts of Nogales, Mexico late Thursday, May 30, 2013. Maldonado, jailed in Mexico on a drug-smuggling charge, was released after court officials reviewed her case. She was arrested by the Mexican military last week after they found nearly 12 pounds (5.4 kilograms) of pot under her seat on the commercial bus traveling from Mexico to Arizona. (AP Photo/Cristina Silva)

In a photo provided by the Maldonado family Gary and Yanira Maldonado are shown in 2012. The arrest of Yanira Maldonado, 42, has prompted outrage in the U.S. among politicians and her family members, who say she was set up when her bus was stopped at a military checkpoint last week and authorities found nearly 12 pounds of marijuana under her seat. She was immediately sent to a Mexico prison. (AP Photo/Maldonado Family)

In a photo provided by the Maldonado family Gary and Yanira Maldonado are shown in 2012. The arrest of Yanira Maldonado, 42, has prompted outrage in the U.S. among politicians and her family members, who say she was set up when her bus was stopped at a military checkpoint last week and authorities found nearly 12 pounds of marijuana under her seat. She was immediately sent to a Mexico prison. (AP Photo/Maldonado Family)

Gary Maldonado speaks to the press after a court hearing in Nogales, Mexico Thursday May 30, 2013 where a video of he and his wife boarding a commercial bus in Mexico was shown. His wife, Yanira Maldonado, is accused of smuggling 12 pounds of marijuana on the bus headed to Phoenix. In the video, the couple was seen carrying only two blankets, a purse and two bottles of water. (AP Photo/Luis Castillo)

(AP) ? The weeklong detention of an American woman after Mexican authorities said they found 12 pounds of marijuana under her bus seat illustrates just one of the perils Americans face while traveling in Mexico.

Yanira Maldonado, 42, walked out of a prison on the outskirts of Nogales, Mexico, and into her husband's arms late Thursday after a judge dismissed drug-smuggling charges against her.

The judge determined Maldonado was no longer a suspect after viewing video that showed the couple climbing on the bus with just a purse, blankets and bottles of water.

"Many thanks to everyone, especially my God who let me go free, my family, my children, who with their help, I was able to survive this test," she said outside the jail before crossing through the Nogales port of entry into Arizona.

The governor of the Mexican state of Sonora, where Nogales is located, apologized for Maldonado's ordeal during a visit to Phoenix on Friday. He said he made sure she was safe and wasn't transferred to a federal prison and worked to ensure the court proceedings went quickly.

"In a few words I could say we're very sorry that she was in the wrong place in the wrong moment," Gov. Guillermo Padres Elias said. "But we're very glad that she's OK and she still says ... that she will continue visiting our country and she will continue going on tourism trips to Sonora.

"Because Sonora really likes the United States people and Arizonans to go down there. We welcome them with open arms with a big smile and we see you as a family, so we want to continue with that."

With kidnappings, drug cartel shootouts and other violent crime pervasive in parts of Mexico, the tourism industry has taken a hit, although popular destinations like Cancun are so well-protected that problems are rare.

Kidnappings and cartel violence are prominent among the U.S. State Department's lengthy set of warnings about travel in Mexico. But there are also warnings about getting caught up in drug smuggling, either by being used as a "blind mule" who doesn't know drugs have been put in their car or luggage, or by being strong-armed by smugglers who threaten harm if a person doesn't carry drugs.

Maldonado also may have been caught up in a shakedown by Mexican police who were seeking a bribe. Her husband said police sought $5,000 to let her go.

She may have just been randomly assigned the seat under which the smugglers hid the pot. Or she could have been put there on purpose by smugglers who hoped an American was less likely to be targeted for a search and to provide cover for the real smuggler.

Alonzo Pena, who retired as deputy director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in 2010 and was once stationed in Mexico, said someone else on the bus probably put the drugs under Maldonado's seat without her knowledge and watched her throughout the trip.

The U.S. State Department also warns that criminals are increasingly affixing drugs to the bottom of parked cars in Mexico, the removing them after the vehicle enters the U.S.

Those cases are rare, Pena said, because smugglers like to closely watch the drugs crossing the border.

Eric Vos, a lawyer with the U.S. Office of Defender Services who trains federal public defenders, agreed that slipping drugs into unsuspecting travelers' cars or luggage isn't all that common.

"There's just like a million reasons why the blind mule thing is a difficult angle," Vos said Friday.

It's more common, Pena said, for drug carriers to admit they knowingly smuggled because they or their families were threatened if they disobeyed.

A highly acclaimed architect who designed some of Tijuana's most prominent buildings was given an unusually light sentence of six months in prison in San Diego last year for trying to enter the U.S. with nearly 13 pounds of cocaine hidden in his minivan's battery.

Eugenio Velazquez, a dual citizen of the U.S. and Mexico, claimed drug traffickers threatened to kill him if he refused.

Another old smuggling tactic is to advertise work as security guards, housecleaners and cashiers in Mexican newspapers, telling applicants they must drive company cars to the U.S. They aren't told the cars are loaded with drugs.

There were 39 arrests at San Diego's two border crossings tied to the ads for seemingly legitimate jobs between February 2011 and April 2012, according to ICE, prompting the agency to take out ads in Mexican newspapers warning about the scheme.

An Arizona sheriff who has spent more than 40 years along the Mexican border said Maldonado's case probably was a shakedown.

"They've got some good, courageous law enforcement officers in Mexico," said Santa Cruz County Sheriff Tony Estrada. "Coupled with that, you've got really corrupt ones too. And that goes at all levels."

Estrada, whose territory includes Nogales, said finding drugs under the seat of a public bus should not have necessarily implicated Maldonado and wouldn't have been enough to arrest her in the U.S.

"Something underneath somebody's seat, anybody could have put it there," he said.

But having Americans on board the bus made it easy for police to either assume the Maldonados were the smugglers, or to target them for a bribe.

"It just looks funny. In my opinion, it was unreasonable based on what little that they had," Estrada said. "If you're an outsider, if you're an American, even a Mexican-American, you're a target. You stand out like a sore thumb."

The Maldonados were traveling home to the Phoenix suburb of Goodyear after attending her aunt's funeral in the city of Los Mochis when they were arrested.

All the passengers were ordered off the bus in the town of Querobabi and a soldier searched the interior. The soldier told his superiors that packets of drugs had been found under two seats, including Yanira Maldonado's.

Her husband, Gary Maldonado, said a man sitting behind them on the bus fled during the inspection and might have been the real smuggler.

Maldonado was held without bail for a week because under the Mexican judicial system, she had to prove she was innocent. The family's lawyer in Nogales, Mexico, Jose Francisco Benitez Paz, said the video of the couple boarding the bus did just that, although prosecutors are pursuing a routine appeal.

After spending the night in a hotel on the U.S. side of the border, the Maldonados left for Phoenix and arrived home late Friday afternoon to be reunited with their seven children. They entered without speaking to reporters but were expected to attend a news briefing later in the evening. After her release, Yanira Maldonado said she didn't blame her home country.

"It's not Mexico's fault. It's a few people who did this to me and probably other people, who knows?" Maldonado said near the jail after she was released. "I'm still going to go back."

___

Silva reported from Nogales, Mexico, and Spagat reported from San Diego. Associated Press writers Michael Weissenstein in Mexico City and Luis Castillo in Nogales, Mexico, contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-05-31-American%20Arrested-Mexico/id-9d0bd785b3434ae6b2295017db8ea412

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Angelina Pivarnick Stars in World's Worst Music Video

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Thursday, May 30, 2013

Redskins name change: Will Congress make team act?

Redskins name change is being pushed by 10 members of Congress, who say the football team's nickname is a slur. But it's also linked to a storied past, so don't hold your breath.

By Peter Grier,?Staff writer / May 29, 2013

Washington Redskins owner Dan Snyder looks on during a rookie minicamp practice session at Redskins Park on May 5 in Ashburn, Va.

Evan Vucci/AP/File

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Can Capitol Hill get the Washington Redskins to change their name? That?s a live question in D.C. Wednesday since 10 members of Congress have sent a letter asking for such a switch to Redskins owner Daniel Snyder, National Football League Commissioner Roger Goodell, Redskins sponsor FedEx, and all the other NFL franchises.

Skip to next paragraph Peter Grier

Washington Editor

Peter Grier is The Christian Science Monitor's Washington editor. In this capacity, he helps direct coverage for the paper on most news events in the nation's capital.

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The word ?redskin? is offensive to many native Americans, said the lawmakers in their missive.

?Native Americans throughout the country consider the ?R-word? a racial, derogatory slur akin to the ?N-word? among African Americans or the ?W-word? among Latinos,? the letter said.

Hmm. Will this be the push that finally gets Mr. Snyder to act? After all, this is a long-running issue. The nickname is already the subject of a legal challenge from a group that wants to strip the team of trademark protection. Native American groups themselves have complained that the team name is a slur that should not be allowed.

Furthermore, the politics of the group that sent the letter is pretty interesting. For the most part, it reflects the membership of the Congressional Native American Caucus. While most of the signers are Democrats, at least one ? Rep. Tom Cole of Oklahoma, an enrolled member of the Chickasaw nation ? is Republican, giving the effort a bipartisan tinge.

Plus, there?s a precedent. A Washington sports team changed its name in the mid-1990s in part due to worries that it had become offensive. That was the former Washington Bullets, whose owner, Abe Pollin, decided that the name spoke too much of violence, and changed it to Wizards in 1995.

But to be honest, we don?t think the Redskins are going to follow suit, at least not yet. Ten members of Congress do not really constitute a very big pressure group. There are 435 lawmakers in the House chamber, after all. That means 425 did not sign the letter.

And Daniel Synder is not Abe Pollin. He?s stubborn, and he grew up in the Washington area as a rabid fan, watching the Redskins in their Joe Gibbs glory days while eating off a TV tray in front of the set. He?s become a wealthy communications businessman, but the team is his toy. ?Redskin? may be his ?Rosebud," a word that evokes his past.

?We will never change the name of the team,? he told USA Today earlier this month.

That?s a vow he?s unlikely to break. This is a man who sued for libel after the Washington City Paper ran an article titled, ?The Cranky Redskins Fan Guide to Dan Snyder? (he later dropped the suit). This is a man who has banned fan signs from FedEx field. This is a man who lured Mr. Gibbs out of retirement for a second coaching stint, after Gibbs had been off the field for 11 years.

?I think that the Redskins fans understand the great tradition and what it?s all about and what it means, so we feel pretty fortunate to be just working on next season,? Snyder told USA Today.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/01YVsLJIZZM/Redskins-name-change-Will-Congress-make-team-act

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CSX: Md. train explosion caused by chemical cargo

A fire burns at the site of a CSX freight train derailment, Tuesday, May 28, 2013, in White Marsh, Md., where fire officials say the train crashed into a trash truck, causing an explosion that rattled homes at least a half-mile away and collapsed nearby buildings, setting them on fire. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

A fire burns at the site of a CSX freight train derailment, Tuesday, May 28, 2013, in White Marsh, Md., where fire officials say the train crashed into a trash truck, causing an explosion that rattled homes at least a half-mile away and collapsed nearby buildings, setting them on fire. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

This still taken from video provided by James LeBrun shows an explosion outside Baltimore on Tuesday, May, 28, 2013. Baltimore County fire officials say a train derailed in a Baltimore suburb on Tuesday and an explosion was heard in the area. A fire spokeswoman says the train derailed about 2 p.m. Tuesday in White Marsh, Md. (AP Photo/James LeBrun)

A fire burns at the site of a CSX freight train derailment, Tuesday, May 28, 2013, in White Marsh, Md., where fire officials say the train crashed into a trash truck, causing an explosion that rattled homes at least a half-mile away and collapsed nearby buildings, setting them on fire. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

A fire burns at the site of a CSX freight train derailment, Tuesday, May 28, 2013, in White Marsh, Md., where fire officials say the train crashed into a trash truck, causing an explosion that rattled homes at least a half-mile away and collapsed nearby buildings, setting them on fire. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

This image provided by WBAL-TV, shows a train derailment outside Baltimore on Tuesday, May, 28, 2013. A fire spokeswoman says the train derailed about 2 p.m. Tuesday in White Marsh, Md. (AP Photo/WBAL-TV) MANDATORY CREDIT

(AP) ? Train operator CSX Transportation on Wednesday pointed to a hazardous chemical in a rail car as the source of an explosion on a derailed train near Baltimore that sparked a fire, rattled homes and damaged buildings. A company spokesman said officials still weren't sure what caused the sodium chlorate to explode in the first place, but it ignited another chemical in a second car.

Authorities are continuing to look into the cause. Robert Sumwalt, a member of the National Transportation Safety Board, said investigators were examining evidence on the scene and reviewing train video that might show the collision with a garbage truck that set off the incident. But he said they had not reached any conclusions.

CSX spokesman Gary Sease said the sodium chlorate in a derailed car near the front of the train exploded, igniting terephthalic acid in another derailed car. Sodium chlorate is used mainly as a bleaching agent in paper production. Oklahoma State University chemist Nick Materer said it could make for a potentially explosive mixture when combined with an incompatible substance such as spilled fuel.

Another chemist, Darlene Lyudmirskiy, of Spectrum Chemical Manufacturing Corp. in Gardena, Calif., said such a mixture would be unstable and wouldn't need even a spark to cause a reaction.

"If it's not compatible, anything could set it off," she said.

On Wednesday afternoon, workers were using heavy cranes to move the damaged rail cars, and an excavator was picking up broken pieces of track. The mangled truck lay on its side on the side of the railroad tracks, its contents littering the ground. Next to the track, the corrugated metal walls of a warehouse were bent and warped.

Among the buildings that sustained the most damage was a training facility for a plumbers and steamfitters union a few hundred yards away from the explosion site. Only a handful of employees were in the building at the time of the blast, and all but one rushed outside to see what had happened. They heard the crash first, followed by the derailment, then saw a plume of smoke.

Al Clinedinst, the training director for the facility, said he and a colleague drove closer to the derailment scene before the explosion to see if they could help, but they were turned back by the overwhelming heat.

"It was paint-bubbling hot," he said.

Then the explosion shook their truck.

"The blast, the force, it took the wheel out of my hands," Clinedinst said. "It really took a shot."

Sumwalt said late Tuesday that the collision occurred at a private crossing where the only marking was a stop sign. He said it wasn't clear why the truck was crossing the tracks or whether it was authorized to be there.

The truck driver, 50-year-old John J. Alban Jr., remained in serious condition Wednesday at Shock Trauma in Baltimore, a hospital spokeswoman said. Two CSX workers aboard weren't hurt.

In addition to the NTSB, the Federal Railroad Administration is investigating the crash of the 45-car train, which was en route from Selkirk, N.Y., to Waycross, Ga.

Baltimore County spokeswoman Elise Armacost said it wasn't clear whether the truck driver would face charges.

Baltimore County's Public Safety Department said that county, city and CSX hazmat experts did not believe the burning chemicals would produce toxic inhalants. But a National Institutes of Health website says oxidizers such as sodium chlorate may produce irritating, corrosive and/or toxic gases when burned.

Toxic inhalation hazards are a worry when trains carrying hazardous materials derail. They include chemicals such as chlorine, which killed nine people after a derailment of a Norfolk Southern train caused a release of the toxic gas in South Carolina in 2005.

Following a November 2007 derailment involving a freight train carrying hazardous materials near Baltimore's Camden Yards, CSX agreed the following year to provide Maryland officials with real-time information on shipments of toxic inhalation hazards.

The fire was called under control late Tuesday just before midnight, and the fire department remained on scene only in a supporting role.

___

David Dishneau reported from Hagerstown.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-05-29-US-Train-Derailment-Maryland/id-7c1c216277f247749de369927a78eecc

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Mermaids: Are they real? NOAA says 'no,' but Mom and Animal Planet say ...

Mermaids, for the mom who wrote the book on them, spark the most amazing questions from people who should know better. Still, Mom and Animal Planet want to stretch childhood just a little longer.

By Lisa Suhay,?Correspondent / May 28, 2013

Are mermaids real? As real as you want to make one: Here is a mermaid coloring page from Lisa Suhay's book. Enlarge this image, save it to your computer, and print. Kids can color them, add sequins, glitter, and even feathers. Then cut it out and glue to a popsicle stick to make a mermaid puppet for summer fun.

Sam Hundley

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Ever since the first little mermaid sat on a rock to sing a scale, children have asked parents, ?are mermaids real??

Skip to next paragraph Lisa Suhay

Lisa Suhay, who has four sons at home in Norfolk, Va., is a children?s book author and founder of the Norfolk (Va.) Initiative for Chess Excellence (NICE) , a nonprofit organization serving at-risk youth via mentoring and teaching the game of chess for critical thinking and life strategies.

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Depending on our personal commitment to the maintenance of childhood innocence and the magic of TV, especially Animal Planet?s Mermaids docu-tales (documentary fairytales) we can make childhood stretch just a bit longer. However, be careful what you wish for, lest you end up with adults who find themselves, like Peter Pan, unable to grow up and face the music of real science on sirens.

Given the ocean of Titanic news events we must all slog through daily, it?s little wonder I ??who literally wrote the book on Mermaids ? meet so many adults as well as children who ask me, ?Are mermaids really real?? Over the past 10 years of living in Norfolk, Virg. where I have written two children?s books about merfolk and created a read and walk story trail from one larger-than-life-size mermaid sculpture to the next.

While I love science, I also have a household of men, four sons and a husband, who are all serious, logical, literal business 24-7. In response to that, I try to generate a little mommy magic and occasionally take a poke at science just to lighten things up for my sons and my sanity. Given the fact that science tends to flip-flop on everything from the value of fish oil in our diets to the shroud of Turin, I think it?s OK to have a little fun at its expense every now and then with a mermaid tale or two.

Last night, Animal Planet ?followed-up its science fictional, but photorealistic, ?Mermaids: the body found,? with ?Mermaids: The New Evidence.? The new mer-mentary asks us to keep on believing that mermaids are among us, if only through the some very fishy video.

Last year when the first ?documentary? came out in May, I was filling in as an editor at a local daily newspaper and had to call someone in a city office here for comment on a story about the how the broadcast was impacting tourism.

Norfolk is known as The Mermaid City because our city symbol is the mermaid and more than 300, 8-foot-long, 4-foot high, mermaid sculptures dot the landscape. More mermaid sculptures, mostly by local Artist Georgia Mason, are added to our streets by private collectors and businesses every year.

To my eternal shock, the city official asked to ?go off the record? asking me, ?Are mermaids really real? I swear never to tell another living soul, but I need to know because I?ve always believed and I know your books explain everything about them. I know you lived on a sailboat. You must know the truth.?

I suppose now is as good a time as any to admit to being the one behind Merwiki?which I began with my youngest son immediately after the first Animal Planet mockumentary and the NOAA (National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration) response debunking our girls came to light. The site regularly generates e-mail questions from around the globe on the legitimacy, history, and physicality of mermaids. I try to answer as many as I can each week.

Any time I am asked if mermaids are real, I tell the same story; and when that fails, I quote Shel Silverstein.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/vWCRWR7dacc/Mermaids-Are-they-real-NOAA-says-no-but-Mom-and-Animal-Planet-say

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Gene therapy gives mice broad protection to pandemic flu strains, including 1918 flu

May 29, 2013 ? Researchers at the Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania have developed a new gene therapy to thwart a potential influenza pandemic. Specifically, investigators in the Gene Therapy Program, Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, directed by James M. Wilson, MD, PhD, demonstrated that a single dose of an adeno-associated virus (AAV) expressing a broadly neutralizing flu antibody into the nasal passages of mice and ferrets gives them complete protection and substantial reductions in flu replication when exposed to lethal strains of H5N1 and H1N1 flu virus. These strains were isolated from samples associated from historic human pandemics -- one from the infamous 1918 flu pandemic and another from 2009.

Wilson, Anna Tretiakova, PhD, Senior Research Scientist, Maria P. Limberis, PhD, Research Assistant Professor, all from the Penn Gene Therapy Program, and colleagues published their findings online this week in Science Translational Medicine ahead of print. In addition to the Penn scientists, the international effort included colleagues from the Public Health Agency of Canada, Winnipeg; the University of Manitoba, Winnipeg; and the University of Pittsburgh. Tretiakova is also the director of translational research, and Limberis is the director of animal models core, both with the Gene Therapy Program.

"The experiments described in our paper provide critical proof-of-concept in animals about a technology platform that can be deployed in the setting of virtually any pandemic or biological attack for which a neutralizing antibody exists or can be easily isolated," says Wilson. "Further development of this approach for pandemic flu has taken on more urgency in light of the spreading infection in China of the lethal bird strain of H7N9 virus in humans."

At the Ready Influenza infections are the seventh leading cause of death in the United States and result in almost 500,000 deaths worldwide per year, according to the Centers for Disease Control. The emergence of a new influenza pandemic remains a threat that could result in a much loss of life and worldwide economic disruption.

There is also interest by the military in developing an off-the-shelf prophylactic vaccine should soldiers be exposed to weaponized strains of infectious agents in biologic warfare.

Human antibodies with broad neutralizing activity against various influenza strains exist but their direct use as a prophylactic treatment is impractical. Now, yearly flu vaccines are made by growing the flu virus in eggs. The viral envelope proteins on the exterior, namely hemagglutinin, are cleaved off and used as the vaccine, but vary from year to year, depending on what flu strains are prevalent. However, high mutation rates in the proteins result in the emergence of new viral types each year, which elude neutralization by preexisting antibodies in the body (specifically specific receptor binding sites on the virus that are the targets of neutralizing antibodies).

This approach has led to annual vaccinations against seasonal strains of flu viruses that are predicted to emerge during the upcoming season. Strains that arise outside of the human population, for example in domestic livestock, are distinct from those that normally circulate in humans, and can lead to deadly pandemics.

These strains are also not effectively controlled by vaccines developed to human strains, as with the 2009 H1N1 pandemic. The vaccine development time for that strain, and in general, was not fast enough to support vaccination in response to an emerging pandemic.

Knowing this, the Penn team proposed a novel approach that does not require the elicitation of an immune response, which does not provide sufficient breadth to be useful against any strain of flu other than the one for which it was designed, as with conventional approaches.

The Penn approach is to clone into a vector a gene that encodes an antibody that is effective against many strains of flu and to engineer cells that line the nasal passages to express this broadly neutralizing antibody, effectively establishing broad-based efficacy against a wide range of flu strains.

A Broad Approach The rational for targeting nasal epithelial cells for antibody expression was to focus this expression to the site of the body where the virus usually enters the body and replicates which is the nasal and oral mucosa. Antibodies are normally expressed from B lymphocytes so one challenge was to design vectors that could deliver antibody genes to the non- lymphoid respiratory cells of the nasal and lung passages and could express functional antibody protein.

Targeting the respiratory cells was achieved through the use of a vector based on a primate virus -- AAV9 -- which was discovered in the Wilson laboratory and evaluated previously by Limberis for possibly treating patients with cystic fibrosis. The team constructed a genetic payload for AAV9 that expressed an antibody that was showed by other investigators to have broad activity against flu.

Efficacy of the treatment was tested in mice that were exposed to lethal quantities of three strains of H5N1 and two strains of H1N1, all of which have been associated with historic human pandemics (including the infamous H1N1 1918).

Flu virus rapidly replicated in untreated animals all of which needed to be euthanized. However, pretreatment with the AAV9 vector virtually shut down virus replication and provided complete protection against all strains of flu in the treated animals. The efficacy of this approach was also demonstrated in ferrets, which provide a more authentic model of human pandemic flu infection.

"The novelty of this approach is that we're using AAV and we're delivering the prophylactic vaccine to the nose in a non-invasive manner, not a shot like conventional vaccines that passively transfer antibodies to the general circulation," says Limberis.

"There's a long history of using antibodies for cancer and autoimmune disease, but only two have been approved for infectious diseases," notes Tretikova. "This novel technique has allowed for the development of a prophylactic passive vaccine that is cost effective, easily administered, and quickly manufactured."

The team is working with various stakeholders to accelerate the development of this product for pandemic flu and to explore the potential of AAV vectors as generic delivery vehicles for countermeasures of biological and chemical weapons.

The research was supported in part by ReGenX, the Public Health Agency of Canada (#531252), the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (#246355) and the National Institutes of Health (GM083602).

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/TdOOUl4KLCw/130529144242.htm

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Elizabeth Taylor's first wedding dress set to fetch ?50,000

Columnist

The intricate gown worn by Elizabeth Taylor when she married her first husband Conrad Hilton will be auctioned at Christie's in London in June.

BY Bibby Sowray | 28 May 2013

The wedding dress Elizabeth Taylor wore to marry her first husband, Conrad Hilton, is to be sold at auction, and it's expected to fetch up to ?50,000.

The gown was created by legendary costume designer Helen Rose for the then-18-year-old bride as a gift from Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, the film studio under which Taylor was contracted.

IN PICTURES: Elizabeth Taylor: style icon

Formed of 25 yards of shell-white satin sprinkled with bugle beads and tiny seed pearls trailed by 15 yards of satin train, the dress has an inbuilt corset which cinched Taylor's waist to a tiny 20 inches on the wedding day. The matching veil is made of 10 yards of shimmering silk illusion net attached to a pearl-covered Juliet cap.

It is estimated to have taken 15 seamstresses two to three months to complete the gown, which is said to be so intricate that it could not be replicated. It will be sold at Christie's in London on June 26 as part of the auction house's 'Pop Culture' sale.


Elizabeth Taylor's first wedding dress. Photo: Christie's

The 1950 wedding was touted as the social event of the year with 700 guests invited. MGM, who said the wedding would see 'more stars than there are in heaven', even marketed Taylor's new film, Father of the Bride , to coincide with the much publicised real-life wedding.

IN PICTURES: Stylish brides through history

Photographs of the teenage Taylor wearing the dress were seen all over the world as it graced countless magazine covers.

Taylor and Hilton's marriage lasted only eight months and the actress went on to marry a further seven times, most memorably to Richard Burton twice. Rose went on to create Grace Kelly's iconic wedding dress for her marriage to Prince Rainier and is considered one of the finest costumiers of Hollywood's golden age.

Source: http://fashion.telegraph.co.uk/news-features/TMG10083490/Elizabeth-Taylors-first-wedding-dress-set-to-fetch-50000.html

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Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Scientists find mechanism that causes noise-induced tinnitus and drug that can prevent it

May 27, 2013 ? An epilepsy drug shows promise in an animal model at preventing tinnitus from developing after exposure to loud noise, according to a new study by researchers at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. The findings, reported this week in the early online version of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, reveal for the first time the reason the chronic and sometimes debilitating condition occurs.

An estimated 5 to 15 percent of Americans hear whistling, clicking, roaring and other phantom sounds of tinnitus, which typically is induced by exposure to very loud noise, said senior investigator Thanos Tzounopoulos, Ph.D., associate professor and member of the auditory research group in the Department of Otolaryngology, Pitt School of Medicine.

"There is no cure for it, and current therapies such as hearing aids don't provide relief for many patients," he said. "We hope that by identifying the underlying cause, we can develop effective interventions."

The team focused on an area of the brain that is home to an important auditory center called the dorsal cochlear nucleus (DCN). From previous research in a mouse model, they knew that tinnitus is associated with hyperactivity of DCN cells -- they fire impulses even when there is no actual sound to perceive. For the new experiments, they took a close look at the biophysical properties of tiny channels, called KCNQ channels, through which potassium ions travel in and out of the cell.

"We found that mice with tinnitus have hyperactive DCN cells because of a reduction in KCNQ potassium channel activity," Dr. Tzounopoulos said. "These KCNQ channels act as effective "brakes" that reduce excitability or activity of neuronal cells."

In the model, sedated mice are exposed in one ear to a 116-decibel sound, about the loudness of an ambulance siren, for 45 minutes, which was shown in previous work to lead to the development of tinnitus in 50 percent of exposed mice. Dr. Tzounopoulos and his team tested whether an FDA-approved epilepsy drug called retigabine, which specifically enhances KCNQ channel activity, could prevent the development of tinnitus. Thirty minutes into the noise exposure and twice daily for the next five days, half of the exposed group was given injections of retigabine.

Seven days after noise exposure, the team determined whether the mice had developed tinnitus by conducting startle experiments, in which a continuous, 70 dB tone is played for a period, then stopped briefly and then resumed before being interrupted with a much louder pulse. Mice with normal hearing perceive the gap in sounds and are aware something had changed, so they are less startled by the loud pulse than mice with tinnitus, which hear phantom noise that masks the moment of silence in between the background tones.

The researchers found that mice that were treated with retigabine immediately after noise exposure did not develop tinnitus. Consistent with previous studies, 50 percent of noise-exposed mice that were not treated with the drug exhibited behavioral signs of the condition.

"This is an important finding that links the biophysical properties of a potassium channel with the perception of a phantom sound," Dr. Tzounopoulos said. "Tinnitus is a channelopathy, and these KCNQ channels represent a novel target for developing drugs that block the induction of tinnitus in humans."

The KCNQ family is composed of five different subunits, four of which are sensitive to retigabine. He and his collaborators aim to develop a drug that is specific for the two KCNQ subunits involved in tinnitus to minimize the potential for side effects.

"Such a medication could be a very helpful preventive strategy for soldiers and other people who work in situations where exposure to very loud noise is likely," Dr. Tzounopoulos said. "It might also be useful for other conditions of phantom perceptions, such as pain in a limb that has been amputated."

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/dop4VTycjlo/130527153701.htm

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Man's Video Gaming Prompts Wife To Petition For Divorce - Kotaku

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

Source: http://kotaku.com/mans-video-gaming-prompts-wife-to-petition-for-divorce-509981651

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Syria fighting rages, more chemical attacks reported

By Erika Solomon

BEIRUT (Reuters) - Heavy fighting raged around the strategic Syrian border town of Qusair and the capital Damascus on Monday and further reports surfaced of chemical weapons attacks by President Bashar al-Assad's forces on rebel areas.

The Syrian military pounded eastern suburbs of Damascus with air strikes and artillery and loud explosions echoed around al-Nabak, 80 km (50 miles) north of the capital, where fighting has cut the highway running north to the central city of Homs, the pro-opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights group said.

Government offensives in recent weeks are widely seen as a campaign to strengthen Assad's negotiating position before a proposed international peace conference sponsored by the United States and Russia and planned for next month.

Opposition activists said Syrian troops backed by Lebanese Hezbollah fighters were pressing a sustained assault on Qusair, a town long used by insurgents as a way station for arms and other supplies from Lebanon.

For Assad, Qusair is a crucial link between Damascus and loyalist strongholds on the Mediterranean coast. Recapturing the town, in central Homs province, could also sever connections between rebel-held areas in the north and south of Syria.

Each side gave conflicting accounts of the fighting.

The Homs branch of the National Defence Forces, formed of pro-Assad militiamen, said on its Facebook page that government forces had now divided Qusair into four sectors and had made major gains in all but the one that includes the town centre.

"All of the mercenaries' supply routes were cut off completely," it said, referring to the rebels.

Islamist rebel groups, including the Nusra Front and Ahrar al-Sham, said they had sent reinforcements to Qusair. But one opposition activist said these were stuck on the outskirts and had yet to link up with the town's defenders.

"So far they are just fighting and dying, their assault hasn't resulted in much yet, unfortunately," the activist said.

Rebels posted a video of fighters in what they said was central Qusair. "We will keep fighting to the last man here who can say 'there is no god but God'," one insurgent said.

Hezbollah's deepening involvement in Qusair has raised the prospect of renewed civil war in adjacent Lebanon, where two rockets hit the Shi'ite Muslim movement's stronghold in south Beirut on Sunday and one was fired from south Lebanon towards Israel.

The rockets struck hours after Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah promised that his anti-Israel guerrillas, fighting alongside Assad's forces, would win whatever the cost.

A Lebanese security source said another 107mm rocket, which did not go off, had been aimed at Beirut airport. The launch sites were near Aitat, in the hills just south of the capital.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon voiced "deep concern" at Hezbollah's admitted combat role and the risk that the Syrian conflict will spill into Lebanon and other neighboring states.

"CHEMICAL ATTACK" AFFECTS DOZENS

The U.S.-Russian initiative so far appears only to have intensified the violence, especially around Qusair and Damascus.

In Harasta, an eastern Damascus suburb largely under rebel control, dozens of people were afflicted by respiratory difficulties after an apparent overnight chemical attack, according to opposition sources. Video showed victims lying on the floor of a room, breathing from oxygen masks.

The sides in the conflict, now in its third year, have accused each other of using chemical weapons. France's Le Monde newspaper published first-hand accounts on Monday of apparent chemical attacks by Assad's forces in April.

The newspaper said one of its photographers had suffered blurred vision and breathing problems for four days after an attack on April 13 on the Jobar front, in central Damascus.

Another video from Harasta overnight showed at least two fighters being put into a van, their eyes watering and struggling to breathe while medics put tubes into their throats.

It was not possible to verify the videos independently.

Syria, which is not a member of the anti-chemical weapons convention, is believed to have one of the world's last remaining stockpiles of undeclared chemical arms.

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius told reporters in Brussels there was "increasingly strong evidence of localized use of chemical weapons" in Syria and said Paris would consult its partners on what action ought to be taken.

In Brussels later on Monday, an EU foreign ministers meeting on whether to relax an EU embargo on arming the Syrian rebels ended without agreement, Austria's foreign minister said.

Britain and France had pushed for a deal to deliver arms while Austria and several other EU capitals opposed this.

Other EU diplomats said more discussions would be held later in the evening. It was not initially clear whether a new attempt at finding a compromise would be made.

All EU sanctions on Syria could collapse unless the 27-nation bloc agrees on the fate of the arms embargo before it expires on Saturday.

OPPOSITION DISARRAY

The U.S.-Russian initiative provides the first slim hope in almost a year for a diplomatic end to a conflict that has cost more than 80,000 lives and caused a refugee exodus that the U.N. refugee agency expects to top 3.5 million by the end of 2013.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov met in Paris on Monday to discuss the conference they want to hold in Geneva in June.

U.S. officials said little about the talks in advance and played down expectations of any announcements, suggesting the peace conference's timing and venue - widely expected to be in Geneva - will be announced by the United Nations.

China, which along with Russia, has three times blocked U.N. Security Council action on Syria, said on Monday it would join the proposed talks and would push all concerned towards peace.

Damascus has indicated it will take part in the talks. But the fractured opposition, which has previously required Assad's exit to be guaranteed before any negotiations, has yet to lay out its position and remains mired in internal quarrels.

The opposition crisis deepened on Monday when liberals were offered only token representation, undermining international efforts to lend the Islamist-dominated alliance greater support.

To the dismay of envoys of Western and Arab nations monitoring four days of opposition talks in Istanbul, the 60-member Syrian National Coalition thwarted a deal to admit a liberal bloc headed by opposition campaigner Michel Kilo.

The failure to broaden the coalition, in which a Qatari-backed bloc influenced by the Muslim Brotherhood is prominent, could sap Saudi support for the revolt.

The coalition's Western backers had wanted more seats for liberals, an idea backed by Saudi Arabia, which had been uneasy about Qatar's rising influence, coalition insiders said.

(Additional reporting by Ingrid Melander and Brian Love in Paris, Costas Pitas in London, Ben Blanchard in Beijing, Adrian Croft and Justyna Pawlak in Brussels and Tom Miles in Geneva; Writing by Alistair Lyon; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syria-fighting-rages-amid-reports-chemical-attacks-105151844.html

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More on Nihilism: White Neighbors, Crime, Community, and Black ...

In a casual conversation in what was meant to welcome me to my new city, a white neighbor uncomfortably reminded of me the racial challenges that remain very much intact in the South between white folk and people of color, when he candidly referenced the degree of crime in the city as being the province of the ignorant, uneducated and low income ?blacks? in the neighborhood.?
No code words were necessary. He expressed concern regarding the racial ?other? moving into the white-dominated communities, causing a shifting of geography (white flight) within the city and surrounding areas of Memphis. (Amazingly, he openly discussed these issues with me, as he conveyed that I was an ?exception? to other blacks he encounters on a day-to-day basis.)
Dr. Darron Smith, writing over at the Grio, has a nice piece on race and crime as experienced in Memphis, Tennessee that is worth reading.

I appreciate the sincerity of his argument and concerns about black youth violence.

Inspired by Cornel West's essay some years ago, I have written about the problem of black nihilism and its toxic impact on young people several times. I am no closer to a solution or any particularly brilliant insight on the matter.

Perhaps, there is no easy answer to a problem that was centuries in the making. However, I have come to one qualifier in my thinking on these matters: the nihilism of the ghetto youthocracy and their Chief Keef heroes that kill dozens (if not hundreds) of other black people every week across the country are a symptom of a larger crisis in American cultural values.

The United States has one of the highest rates of inter-personal violence in the world. Americans worship the gun and donate their children to its cult of death. The United States is an imperialist power that kills abroad at will. The United States is a society typified by consumerism, media spectacle, Facebook narcissism, a reality TV show culture that promises that anyone can be famous for doing nothing, and gross wealth and wage inequality. Together those elements (and others) have created a national crisis of meaning wherein human life is equated with ability to buy things and hurt others without consequence.

The nihilism of many black ghetto underclass youth is a function of a debased type of biopolitics that reflects the values of the neo liberal national security corporate democratic surveillance State.

A question. How do we take the macro-level and institutional analysis of these dynamics as described by Darron below and apply it to actionable interventions on the day-to-day?

Memphis is ranked as the tenth deadliest city in the nation. Since I arrived here, not a week has gone by when a young black male under the age of 25 has not been injured or killed as a result of interpersonal conflict within predominately black spaces and, subsequently, reported on the nightly news. The face of crime is young, black and male, and those young men are typecast as angry, overly violent, aggressive and a general menace to society.?
That image pervades our thinking, informing our manufactured understanding that all black men are to be feared and are, thus, potential suspects in a police lineup. Inequality in society makes crime more likely as populations must find ways to cope with despair. Having few socially acceptable coping skills, black men often lash out, defending what little they may possess in the form of manhood and pride.
What my neighbor failed to realize, like most white Americans, is that these circumstances are realities that create the conditions that give rise to crime and deviance and can fuel society?s perceptions of crime that lead to unjust characterizations.
I am left confused and spent by these conversations about how institutions intersect with personal behavior and choices. My response is as follows: all of what Dr. Smith may have written here is true. But, so what?

And where do we go from here?

Source: http://wearerespectablenegroes.blogspot.com/2013/05/more-on-nihilism-white-neighbors-crime.html

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Monday, May 27, 2013

Israeli author Amos Oz wins Franz Kafka prize

(AP) ? Acclaimed Israeli author Amos Oz has won the prestigious Franz Kafka Prize in the Czech Republic.

An international jury that included prominent German literary critic Marcel Reich-Ranicki selected Oz for the prize, which is awarded annually with a $10,000 prize.

Past winners have included the American novelist Philip Roth and Nobel laureates Elfriede Jelinek of Austria and Harold Pinter of Britain.

It is awarded by the Prague-based Franz Kafka Society to authors whose works "appeal to readers regardless of their origin, nationality and culture."

The society said in a statement Monday that Oz has agreed to travel to Prague with his wife for an October ceremony to receive the prize.

Oz has been said to be among the candidates for the Nobel Prize for literature in last several years.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-05-27-Czech-Kafka%20Prize/id-ebae13d60e9648a189699fa2d1db8116

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Tips To Make Money With Internet Marketing | Affiliate Marketing ...

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Don?t take advantage of these cookies, and make sure you don?t work with affiliates who do either. When visitors discover such exploits, they will at the very least be angry with the exploiter. The worse cases can involve breaking trackers or giving viruses to users.

TIP! You should always be honest when participating in affiliate marketing, and you will find that the people who visit your site will be affected in a positive way. Affiliate marketing, like any other business, demands honesty.

Keep your affiliate marketing plan logical and focused by finding an affiliate program that offers the merchandise you wish to promote. It might be best to use many affiliate networks to market your products, and provide many different avenues of income. However don?t get involved with every web marketing opportunity that you come across. It is important to make sure that they all offer products and services that you are comfortable selling.

If you want to make the most profits, focus on affiliates that bring you the most revenue. On a consistent basis, look into the results of your affiliates. The affiliates that do not make a lot of profit can be eliminated, so that you can focus on the ones that bring in more revenue.

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Pick an affiliate program which offers many payment options. Some affiliate companies will only mail a check for payment to you after you have reached a pre determined dollar amount. Others will pay you through direct deposit or other payment methods such as PayPal and AlertPay.

Try your hand at secret links. Certain techniques exist for infiltrating your content with links that go straight to the affiliates without making these links really obvious. Take advantage of these, but be up front about it. Readers appreciate honesty and transparency, so let them know the context of the link.

TIP! Only fair affiliate companies (ones with generous profit sharing) deserve your business. Avoid doing business with companies that do not offer at least twenty percent commission for each product sold.

Remember to always link your site with those within a similar niche. Therefore, the link you put on an affiliate website should be spo0rts related to be of any benefit. Website visitors show higher click-through rates on links that are related to what they came to read about.

You should give careful consideration to the products you intend to advertise before setting up the links to do it. When it comes to affiliate links, it?s all about arrangement. Once you figure out the most efficient method of doing this, you will immediately see an increase in profits.

Remember why someone is visiting your site ? if they are there for a particular theme such as sports or gardening, that is what they are expecting to find. Just throwing an unrelated affiliate link on your site won?t help you much. Links that offer the visitor something related to what initially attracted them have a much better chance of being followed.

TIP! Know your audience when you?re looking for new affiliates. Not only does this provide the most effective results, but your visitors will appreciate a product picked with care and an astute assessment of their interests and needs.

Not all affiliate websites are created equal. Some are overly complicated and frustrating. Determined site owners are not going to let a frustrating website hinder them from taking in revenue. This is great because it helps to build trust and make sales.

An affiliate marketer should be honest about the business he is engaged in. Disclose everything up front and describe the purpose of your site. If people do not trust your site, they will simply leave it and buy directly from the seller.

Start with google ads and other paid advertising to optimize your affiliate programs. They supply keyword friendly ads to increase sales on your site. It is a targeted approach for online publishers, with revenues generated by showing relevant ads that are more likely to attract buyers.

TIP! Looks for affiliate partners that provide you with tools to improve your results. Affiliate companies usually have a pretty good idea of what they are doing.

Look for affiliate partners that provide resources to help you advertise and sell their products. Affiliate companies are far from stupid. They will do their homework on bringing customers in. What sets a good affiliate company apart from the rest is the willingness to share that information with their clients, in order to maximize both product sales and commissions.

Use affiliations to market your online business more effectively. This type of marketing program is likely to increase the amount of visitors to a website more than banner advertisements and other similar tactics. The usability of a website and the commission are the most important parts of choosing a affiliate.

Look for affiliate companies with a high ratio of sales conversions. Use 1% as a guideline to determine if the conversion rate is acceptable.

TIP! IF you use banner ads try exciting content-perhaps a trivia question. A lot of people are trivia buffs and cannot resist.

You can make a nice chunk of change in online marketing, but you need to be on top of your game to get anywhere. You need to get your website or blog as high a ranking as possible in each search engine. This will get you affiliate links that are better, bringing in more more for you.

Affiliate marketing is extremely rewarding, as your sites become a huge asset and make you serious profits now, and into the future. However, note that online marketing requires an initial investment of your time to make interesting, quality content that will make sure you stand out above the rest. Setting goals and maintaining them will help you become a successful online marketer.

Too many banners make a site appear confusing so try to avoid overusing them. Excessive banner ads make your site look trashy, and can turn off potential visitors. Have plenty more content than you have banners on your website, and make sure that whatever banners you have are strategically placed around your website so they don?t all end up cluttered on one page.

TIP! Not every company that says they offer 100% commission is a scam. Read any fine print you find, no matter how large the urge to reject it right away.

I will show you 3 things anyone can do which will certainly get folks to fall in love with purchasing stuff produced by your company. This is the factual narrative of exactly how a pair of ex-homeless men helped more than 27,530 ordinary people delete their personal ?Inner Wussy? and earn over $6.1 million in profits on-line over the last 5 months.


Source: http://revenue-affiliate-marketing.freeoptinoffers.com/2013/05/27/tips-to-make-money-with-internet-marketing/

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Helping or hovering? When 'helicopter parenting' backfires

Amanda Lucier / The Virginian-Pilot via AP file

As the first generation of kids who have "helicopter parents" graduates into the world, some some studies show that the parenting style may have backfired.

By JoNel Aleccia, Senior Writer, NBC News

The father who called to dispute the C grade his adult son got on a college exam had good intentions, Chris Segrin knows. He only wanted what was best for his kid, and if that involved lobbying the University of Arizona professor for a change, so be it.

?Somehow, his dad just seemed to know that the exam was worth a grade of a B,? says Segrin, a behavioral scientist who studies interpersonal relationships and mental health.

But what the dad didn?t know is that the phone call actually undermined his son, leaving the young man feeling insecure and incapable, not empowered and supported, a casualty of what researchers like Segrin describe as an epidemic of ?overparenting.?

?When it was all done, the son came in. He was actually a nice kid who apologized profusely,? Segrin recalls. ?Sometimes this type of parenting is imposed on children against their will.?

Whether it?s called overparenting or the better-known ?helicopter parenting,? the style of overly attentive, competitive child-rearing popular since about the mid-1990s may have backfired.

As the first generation of overparented kids continues to graduate into the world, a slew of studies, including Segrin?s, now show that youngsters whose parents intervene inappropriately -- offering advice, removing obstacles and solving problems that kids should tackle themselves -- actually wind up as anxious, narcissistic young adults who have trouble coping with the demands of life.

?The paradox of this form of parenting is that, despite seemingly good intentions, the preliminary evidence indicates that it is not associated with adaptive outcomes for young adults and may indeed be linked with traits that could hinder the child?s success,? concludes Segrin?s latest study, set to be published next month in the Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology.

Other recent studies also have found that too much help can create undesired outcomes, including a paper by California sociologist Laura T. Hamilton that says that the more money parents spend on their child?s college education, the worse grades the kid gets. Another study by Virginia psychologist Holly H. Schiffrin finds that the more parents are involved in schoolwork and selection of college majors, the less satisfied their kids feel with their college lives.?

Courtesy Studio One to One

C. Lee and Khris Reed write the blog "Helicopter Parenting and Just Plane Dad," in which they chronicle their attentive efforts to parent 16-year-old Hailey. They defend their "extremely overprotective" style of parenting and disagree with studies that show that so-called helicopter parenting hampers young adults' coping skills.

That news doesn?t sit well with parents like C. Lee and Khris Reed of Seffner, Fla., who are the producers of a blog dubbed ?Helicopter Mom and Just Plane Dad: Tales from the Not-So-Darkside of Parenting.? In it, they proudly chronicle their all-too attentive parenting of their only child, 16-year-old Hailey, dubbed ?Beloved? on the blog, and they don?t apologize for it.

?We are extremely overprotective and overbearing,? says mom C. Lee Reed, 42, an executive assistant at a large orthopedic practice. ?I know at every second where she is and who she?s with. I will monitor every bit of technology. She knows the rule is we know every password.?

The Reeds are familiar with research on helicopter parenting and, in short, they don?t buy it. Good parents naturally are invested in every aspect of their children?s lives, they contend.

?I don?t agree that just because we?ve been that way, we hamper her,? says C. Lee.

Adds Khris Reed, 41, a general manager for a local auto parts store: ?When people say ?helicopter parent? or ?helicopter mom,? in general, it?s the idea of the mom standing in the bushes with binoculars. The far extreme has put a bad rap on it.?

They believe that Hailey, who attends an online high school and doesn?t drive yet, is developing the life skills and self-sufficiency she?ll need to flourish at college in a few years, and later on her own, while still maintaining close ties with Mom and Dad.

For her part, Hailey thinks so, too.

?They teach me a lot of things that I?ll need to know in the real world so that I?m not lost and I know how to take care of myself,? she says.

Helicopter parenting sprang up in the era of ?Baby on Board? signs, mandatory car seats and bicycle helmets and police department fingerprinting sessions to prevent child abduction. There was a greater sense of anxiety, combined with a greater sense of competition, as the children of the massive Baby Boom generation reached high-school and college age, says Margaret Nelson, author of the 2010 book ?Parenting Out of Control: Anxious Parents in Uncertain Times.?

?Parents have become constantly more involved in their children?s lives than they were a decade or two ago,? says Nelson, a professor of sociology at Middlebury College, a top liberal arts college in Vermont.

There was a push, especially among educated working professionals, to provide youngsters with every opportunity to succeed, from homework tutors and lacrosse camps at age 8 to college application essay assistance at age 18, the experts say. Parents became fierce advocates for their children, intervening with teachers, coaches -- even employers.

The problem with all that help, says Segrin, is that when it?s overdone, it keeps children from developing their own age-appropriate strengths and skills.

?When we do not give the child the freedom to try on his or her own and maybe fail on his own, he doesn?t develop the competency that children who fail learn,? he says.

Segrin?s latest papers relied on interviews with more than 1,000 college-age students and their parents from across the nation. They found that many of the young adult kids are in touch with their parents constantly, with nearly a quarter communicating by text, phone or other means several times every day and another 22 percent reaching out once a day.

?There?s this endless contact with parents,? says Segrin, who doesn't have children. ?I don?t think it?s just calling to socialize. A lot of it is, ?How do I?? ?Will you?? ?Can you?? They are still quite reliant on their parents.?

The studies showed that parents who felt more anxiety about their children and more regret about their own missed goals led to greater overparenting. At the same time, they found that kids who were overparented were more likely be anxious and narcissistic and to lack coping skills.

That makes sense to Elizabeth May, 22, a recent University of Arizona graduate who participated in Segrin?s research with her mom, Suzanne May, 55. She says her parents were not the helicopter type, but she knows of plenty who were.

In one instance, the house where May lived with roommates was broken into and things were stolen. May called the landlord to ask that an alarm system be installed, but before she could finish the negotiations, her roommate?s mother rushed in and demanded action.

?I felt like it kind of undermined my communication with our landlord,? she says. ?I feel like we could have gotten it done ourselves.?

Separating harmful overparenting from appropriate parenting isn?t easy.

?There?s no sure 100-percent fault-free parenting guidebook,? observes Suzanne May.

In this culture, helicopter parenting is almost contagious, observes Nelson, the Middlebury College professor, with parents vying with each other to prove how engaged and attentive they are.

It would be better, suggests Segrin, for parents to put that energy into helping children -- especially late adolescents and young adults -- learn to handle problems and setbacks on their own

That can be challenging because different kids can handle responsibility at different ages, experts say. But it starts with parents actively choosing to let children experience the consequences of their actions instead of rushing to intervene. Suzanne May, an elementary school teacher who left the workforce while she raised her three kids, recalls a time when one child forgot crucial homework and called to ask May to bring it to school.?

"I told her, 'No, it's your responsibility. I'm not at your disposal to say, 'Hey, Mom, I forgot this,'" May says. That was a hard stance at the time, but her daughter learned that she needed to remember her work.?

In the short run, letting kids suffer discomfort or failure is tough, Segrin says. Most parents want to help their children if they can.?

?Overparenting is motivated with the idea of doing good things,? Segrin says. ?But it does the exact opposite in the long run. In the long run, parents are impairing their child?s coping skills. They?re winning the battle, but actually losing the war.?

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Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653381/s/2c6a561f/l/0Lvitals0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A50C260C184695810Ehelping0Eor0Ehovering0Ewhen0Ehelicopter0Eparenting0Ebackfires0Dlite/story01.htm

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Economics and Investing: - SurvivalBlog.com

This page contains a single entry by Jim Rawles published on May 26, 2013 9:21 PM.

Odds 'n Sods: was the previous entry in this blog.

Letter Re: When Bugging Out is Not an Option: Hunkering Down with a Quadriplegic is the next entry in this blog.

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Source: http://www.survivalblog.com/2013/05/economics-and-investing-1541.html

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Israeli Lawmaker Asks Mark Zuckerberg to Testify Over Facebook Account That Impersonated Him

Israeli Lawmaker Asks Mark Zuckerberg to Testify over Phony Facebook Account that Impersonated HimYedioth-Mark-Zuckerberg-Knesset

The Israeli newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth wrote: "The State of Israel is waiting for Mr. Facebook." (Image from Yedioth Ahronoth via Holes in the Net blog)

According to his strict interpretation of Jewish tradition, ultra-Orthodox Member of Knesset Moshe Gafni doesn't use the mainstream social media. Ironically, he is also chairman of the legislative body's Science and Technology Committee. Imagine then his surprise when the lawmaker who also heads the United Torah Judaism Party learned he had a Facebook account where he was allegedly responding to posts on his wall.

Infuriated that someone was posting as him, the Israeli lawmaker tried to contact Facebook where he ran into other figurative walls. Exasperated, he's wielding a tool with which he is familiar: an invitation to testify sent to Facebook Chairman and CEO Mark Zuckerberg. Not exactly an invitation to be his Facebook "friend."

The Israeli news site Ynet describes Gafni's saga:

Gafni, who as an ultra-Orthodox Jew, is against using the social network, was concerned about his reputation and tried to have the page removed.

First, he attempted to contact the Facebook management, but to no avail. He turned to the Knesset Guard's sergeant-at-arms and other officials, who told him they were unable to do anything about it.

Gafni tried to contact the Facebook management yet again, and after failing he consulted professional sources at the Knesset and decided to convene an urgent discussion at the Knesset's Science and Technology Committee, which he happens to head - both in order to solve his personal problem and in a bid to help other public figures or citizens who may be facing a similar problem.

But Gafni did not settle for a standard guest list, which includes Knesset Guard Sergeant-at-Arms Brigadier-General Yossi Grif, and decided to take it even further: He sent a letter to Zuckerberg himself and asked him to attend the discussion in order to inform Israeli lawmakers on how Facebook deals with such cases and on ways to contact its management.

The Orthodox newspaper Kikar HaShabat writes that the Facebook page of Gafni's imposter became a "viral hit," with dozens of "likes" within the first hours that it went up.

His phony Facebook page that was created on April 30 appears to be here, and as of this writing, has garnered more than 300 "likes."

Other prominent Israeli politicians like Finance Minister Yair Lapid (Yesh Atid) and Knesset opposition leader Shelly Yachimovich (Labor Party) post updates almost daily on Facebook to communicate with the public. That practice elicited criticism from Gafni, who has said some of his colleagues spend too much time on Facebook and not enough time at the Knesset.

Ynet published an excerpt of Gafni's letter to the 29-year-old Facebook founder:

To the distinguished Mr. Zuckerberg, I have the honor to invite you to the Israeli Knesset to take part in a comprehensive discussion about defending civil rights in the era of the Facebook social network.

Several days ago, I discovered that an impostor had opened a Facebook profile using my name. I reported it, but the profile is still active... I am not just concerned about myself... I'm wondering how an ordinary citizen can protect himself from such mischief, which may harm him and his family... I ask you to come and take part in this serious discussion... I would be happy to see you as our guest of honor at the Knesset.

MK Gafni tells the Israeli paper Yedioth Ahronoth: "The fact that any citizen can open a Facebook page using my name or the name of another Knesset member or public representative is serious, but we will know what to do in order to defend ourselves."

"I don't know if Zuckerberg will accept our request to attend the discussion, but we are public representatives cannot ignore the given situation, which can cause a great amount of damage to citizens," he added.

Yedioth Ahronoth published a photo of Zuckerberg with a caption that in part read "The State of Israel is waiting for Mr. Facebook."

The Israeli social media blog "Holes in the Net" reports that many Israelis have been victim of phony accounts set up in their name. Others have been hacked.

A recent survey reported that half of all Israelis - four million - have a Facebook account.

The survey by comScore cited on Thursday in Haaretz revealed that Israelis spend more time on Facebook per month than users in any other country.

Elad Brindt Shavit, Facebook account manager for Israel, tells Haaretz that Israelis spend an average of 11 hours per month on the social media site.

Member of Knesset Gafni's committee has the hearing scheduled for two weeks from now, according to Ynet. Question remains: will Zuckerberg accept the lawmaker's invitation?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/israeli-lawmaker-asks-mark-zuckerberg-testify-over-facebook-115414097.html

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