Friday, February 15, 2013

Postmaster: Please let us stop Saturday mail

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The head of the U.S. Postal Services pleaded with Congress Wednesday not to thwart his plan to cut Saturday mail as a way to save money, but postal workers unions criticized the plan as illegal and financially questionable.

Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe told a Senate committee hearing that the plan announced last week is one among a number of steps needed because the agency's financial situation is "dire ... more urgent than ever."

The U.S. Postal Service lost $1.3 billion in the final three months of last year, following a nearly $16 billion loss the previous fiscal year. Under the plan announced last week, package delivery would continue Monday through Saturday but about $2 billion could be saved annually by cutting other mail to just five days a week.

"Please do not force us back into a six-day window," Donahoe said in an appearance before the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee.

Part of the agency's problem is that letter mailing has plummeted as customers move to the internet for email, bill-paying and other uses. But the bulk of the postal service red ink is due to a law Congress passed in 2006 forcing it to pre-pay future retiree health costs, something no other agency must do.

Among those who spoke Wednesday against the Saturday cutback was Cliff Guffey of the American Postal Workers Union, who urged that the pre-funding be stopped. He said cutting Saturday mail is a change that is "too fast and too far," and will damage the agency unnecessarily.

The proposed change is based on what appears to be a legal loophole: That government at the moment is operating on a temporary spending measure as opposed to an appropriations bill, something Donahoe's lawyers says gives him authority to make the change that has been Congress' purview for decades.

Senators were not sure about the legal justification and asked to be sent what Donahoe says is a nine-page opinion from his lawyers on it. Lawmakers also want a report from the comptroller general on how much money will be saved by the cutback against how much will lost from decreased Saturday business.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/postmaster-please-let-us-stop-saturday-mail-192424698.html

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'Beautiful Creatures': The Reviews Are In!

Supernatural romance conjures plenty of 'Twilight' comparisons (both good and bad) from critics.
By Amy Wilkinson


Alice Englert in "Beautiful Creatures"
Photo: Warner Bros.

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1701972/beautiful-creatures-reviews.jhtml

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Thursday, February 14, 2013

Epigenetics shapes fate of brain vs. brawn castes in carpenter ants

Feb. 13, 2013 ? The recently published genome sequences of seven well-studied ant species are opening up new vistas for biology and medicine. A detailed look at molecular mechanisms that underlie the complex behavioral differences in two worker castes in the Florida carpenter ant, Camponotus floridanus, has revealed a link to epigenetics. This is the study of how the expression or suppression of particular genes by chemical modifications affects an organism's physical characteristics, development, and behavior. Epigenetic processes not only play a significant role in many diseases, but are also involved in longevity and aging.

Interdisciplinary research led by Shelley Berger, PhD, from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, in collaboration with teams led by Danny Reinberg from New York University and Juergen Liebig from Arizona State University, describe their work in Genome Research. The group found that epigenetic regulation is key to distinguishing one caste, the "majors," as brawny Amazons of the carpenter ant colony, compared to the "minors," their smaller, brainier sisters. These two castes have the same genes, but strikingly distinct behaviors and shape.

Ants, as well as termites and some bees and wasps, are eusocial species that organize themselves into rigid caste-based societies, or colonies, in which only one queen and a small contingent of male ants are usually fertile and reproduce. The rest of a colony is composed of functionally sterile females that are divided into worker castes that perform specialized roles such as foragers, soldiers, and caretakers. In Camponotus floridanus, there are two worker castes that are physically and behaviorally different, yet genetically very similar.

Lead author Daniel F. Simola, PhD, a postdoctoral researcher in the Penn Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, explains that "the major is also called a soldier, and it has a much larger head, so the force of its mandibles can break larger prey. It does more nest and colony defense."

The minor caste, on the other hand, is smaller and more numerous. "They do most of the nursing within a colony, take care of the young, and they will also go out and collect most of the food," says Simola. "On average, 75 to 80 percent of the foraging activity is done by the minors." The minor also has a considerably shorter lifespan than the major caste, making the ant castes a good model for longevity studies as well as behavioral studies.

But how do such marked differences arise when both the major and the minor castes share the same genome? "For all intents and purposes, those two castes are identical when it comes to their gene sequences," notes senior author Berger, professor of Cell and Developmental Biology. "The two castes are a perfect situation to understand how epigenetics, how regulation 'above' genes, plays a role in establishing these dramatic differences in a whole organism."

To understand how caste differences arise, the team examined the role of modifications of histones (protein complexes around which DNA strands are wrapped in a cell's nucleus) throughout the Camponotus floridanus genome, producing the first genome-wide epigenetic maps of genome structure in a social insect. Histones can be altered by the addition of small chemical groups, which affect the expression of genes. Therefore, specific histone modifications can create dramatic differences between genetically similar individuals, such as the physical and behavioral differences between ant castes.

"These chemical modifications of histones alter how compact the genome is in a certain region," Simola explains. "Certain modifications allow DNA to open up more, and some of them to close DNA more. This, in turn, affects how genes get expressed, or turned on, to make proteins. These modifications establish specific features of different tissues within an individual, so we asked whether there are also overall differences in histone modifications between the brawny majors and the brainy minors that might alter specific features of the whole organism, such as behavior."

In examining several different histone modifications, the team found a number of distinct differences between the major and minor castes. Simola states that the most notable modification, "both discriminates the two castes from each other and correlates well with the expression levels of different genes between the castes. And if you look at which genes are being expressed between these two castes, these genes correspond very nicely to the brainy versus brawny idea. In the majors we find that genes that are involved in muscle development are expressed at a higher level, whereas in the minors, many genes involved in brain development and neurotransmission are expressed at a higher level."

These changes in histone modifications between ant castes are likely caused by a regulator gene, called CBP, that has "already been implicated in aspects of learning and behavior by genetic studies in mice and in certain human diseases," Berger says. "The idea is that the same CBP regulator and histone modification are involved in a learned behavior in ants -- foraging -- mainly in the brainy minor caste, to establish a pattern of gene regulation that leads to neuronal patterning for figuring out where food is and being able to bring the food back to the nest."

Simola notes that "we know from mouse studies that if you inactivate or delete the CBP regulator, it actually leads to significant learning deficits in addition to craniofacial muscular malformations. So from mammalian studies, it's clear this is an important protein involved in learning and memory."

These findings have established the crucial role of genome structure in general, and histone modifications in particular, in determining the acquisition of organism-level characteristics in ant castes. The research team is looking ahead to expand the work by manipulating the expression of the CBP regulator in ants to observe effects on caste development and behavior. They also hope to refine the technique of mapping histone modifications so that specific tissues, such as a brain from a single ant, can be analyzed, rather than using pooled samples, as in the current study.

Berger observes that all of the genes known to be major epigenetic regulators in mammals are conserved in ants, which makes them "a fantastic model for studying behavior and longevity. Ants provide an extraordinary opportunity to explore and understand the epigenetic processes that underlie many human diseases and the aging process."

Berger is also the director of the Penn Epigenetics Program. The research was supported by a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Collaborative Innovation Award, a postdoctoral training grant from the Penn Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, and a postdoctoral fellowship from the Helen Hay Whitney Foundation.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. D. F. Simola, C. Ye, N. S. Mutti, K. Dolezal, R. Bonasio, J. Liebig, D. Reinberg, S. L. Berger. A chromatin link to caste identity in the carpenter ant Camponotus floridanus. Genome Research, 2012; DOI: 10.1101/gr.148361.112

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/JUzTFtySxa4/130213131839.htm

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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

PFT: 'Gronk is a big meathead that likes to party'

Bruton SmithAP

Panthers owner Jerry Richardson has struck a deal to keep his team in Charlotte for 15 years in exchange for public money, and has already prepared to have the team sold within two years of his death.

But if he wanted to divest now, he apparently has an option.

Bruton Smith, a billionaire NASCAR track owner based out of Charlotte, just made a magnanimous if more than a little self-serving gesture during an appearance on local radio.

During an appearance with WBT-AM?s Keith Larson, Smith referenced Richardson?s will stating the team would be sold within two years of his passing, then said: ?Why two years? Why not two months??

?Do you think he?s interested in selling?? Smith asked the host. ?I have not approached him. If the price is right, yeah, I?d be interested.?

Smith, who will turn 86 in March, also said he ?would commit to the city, and I would not ask them for any money. . . .

?Maybe Mr. Richardson had just as soon sell it today as commit to selling it two years after his passing. I don?t know. That could happen, don?t you think??

Smith, the owner of Sonic Automotive, and Speedway Motorsports Inc., owns a number of NASCAR tracks. But he threatened to move the one nearest Charlotte in a spat with government officials over tax subsidies, among other rows over tax dollars. The exit off Interstate 85 to get to his facility is now known as ?Bruton Smith Boulevard.?

He?s also a skilled promoter, and knows how to pick a fight and stir a pot.

Whether he?s serious about buying his local NFL franchise remains to be seen, but Smith has clearly taken a swipe at Richardson after last week?s deal to accept more than $200 million of state and local assistance to upgrade Bank of America Stadium.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/02/12/logan-mankins-gronk-is-a-big-meathead-whos-not-hurting-anyone/related/

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Sonos Releases The Playbar, A Sound Bar With Built-In Streaming Magic

PLAYBAR_topThe Playbar (or PLAYBAR, in Sonos' inimitable all-caps style) is a nine-speaker soundbar that can be placed above or below your TV and connects to your in-home Sonos network as well as your television. The device connects to your TV or receiver via an optical cable and can also stream music through the standard Sonos system for playback of local music, Pandora, Rdio, and other music services.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/fMNbsGwX8z8/

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Vine: Storytelling in Six Seconds (or Less) | Flip the Media

I see a lot of movies. As a lifelong film geek and a current programmer for the Seattle International Film Festival, I?ve seen the good, the bad, and the ugly (generally, as well as the Sergio Leone classic). Some are too long, others are thankfully brief, but they all employ classical film narrative techniques to some degree. The each utilize montage, point of view, and other tried and true filmmaking elements that we?ve all come to accept today as pretty standard. But back when these techniques were first introduced, they were all seen as startling breaks from the established norms.

For instance, Russian filmmaker Lev Kuleshov developed early theories on the effect of editing and the juxtaposition of images in sequence. His famous ?Kuleshov Effect? was an early example of the power of editing to imbue a sequence of images with meaning, forcing the audience to experience an emotion based on the context and order of the images presented.

YouTube Preview Image

In one of the most famous examples of montage, Sergei Eisenstein?s ?Odessa Steps? sequence from his film ?Battleship Potemkin?, we see firsthand the birth of the artful editing techniques that many of us may take for granted in the breakneck narrative speed of the latest blockbuster film at the multiplex. However, when ?Battleship Potemkin? was first released in 1925, it was an eye-popping (and heart-pounding) revelation to its original audience.

YouTube Preview Image

Though Moore?s Law may apply to many things, storytelling is not one of them. ?As the storytelling art has evolved, the pace of narrative innovation has most certainly slowed, save for the occasional novelty of Smell-o-Vision, 3D(!), or any number of the William Castle contrivances in the 1950s, leaving many of us wondering what?s next when it comes to storytelling in a visual medium.

Until?Vine, that is.

Traditionalists and Luddites, turn back now, because you?re about to see the future of filmmaking?in six seconds or less.

https://vine.co/v/b1LTZYhpUDn?(stickman fail)

https://vine.co/v/bJYZimYlZIx?(Jimmy Fallon gets deep)

https://vine.co/v/b19vewP6Qnu?(stop-motion sugar packets)

These are just a few of the experiments currently taking place on what may be the world?s most efficient storytelling engine. If you want to find more examples like these, just search Twitter for the hashtags #vine and #vinefavs and you will find a treasure trove of people struggling to find their voice in a very public, and often very revealing, way. But each of these six-second struggles moves us all a step closer to a collective understanding of the power of storytelling as a way of connecting with each other. Sure, we can?t all be experts like the crew at Pixar, but Vines (as they are called) provide a near real-time platform to play with narrative space, style and technique. Though crude, these are the storytelling pioneers of today.

Just as Kuleshov and Eisenstein took a nascent medium and turned it into a storytelling powerhouse (just think, without montage, moving pictures would be just that), ?Vinemakers? are exploring a similarly new medium (digital video) that will lay the groundwork for the next 20 years of storytelling technique and style. Far from going off the deep end of ?short attention span editing? that had everyone up in arms in the 1990s, Vine is forcing us to relearn the basics of story form and structure through the creation of digital microstories, leading to the birth of new storytellers, better stories and more engaged audiences.

Even with the simple and relatively cheap production and distribution tools currently offered via digital media, there has never been a more open and user-friendly storytelling platform than Vine. Combining the social connectivity of Instagram, the ubiquitousness of smartphone video cameras and the constraints of in-app authoring, Vine provides a remarkable outlet for creativity in and of the moment. Taking MCDM Director Hanson Hosein?s oft-quoted ?publish, then filter? mantra to new extremes, Vine is the digital tool that will introduce an entire generation of content creators to the magic of story in the most innovative and effective way possible: by sharing it with others.

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Source: http://flipthemedia.com/2013/02/vine-storytelling-in-six-seconds-or-less/

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5 things to watch in Obama's State of the Union Address (CNN)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/284295235?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Obama to bring 34K troops back from Afghanistan

WASHINGTON (AP) ? A person familiar with President Barack Obama's State of the Union address says he will announce that 34,000 U.S. troops will be home from Afghanistan one year from Tuesday.

That's about half the U.S. troops currently in Afghanistan. The decision marks the next phase in Obama's plans to end the U.S.-led war in Afghanistan by the end of 2014.

The person who provided the information did so on condition of anonymity to discuss the drawdown before the president's announcement.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-announce-34k-troops-home-1-141956446--politics.html

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Dorner Fans Cheer Him On Twitter As Gunbattle Goes Down: ?Fight The Power?, ?Go Dorner Go?

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Source: http://www.jammiewf.com/2013/dorner-fans-cheer-him-on-twitter-as-gunbattle-goes-down-fight-the-power-go-dorner-go/

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Friday, February 8, 2013

Amazon Kindle Paperwhite sees Australia

For those Aussies waiting for the Amazon Kindle Paperwhite?to finally be available locally here’s some good news. ?Amazon’s still not shipping to Australia however? Dick Smith Online has the Paperwhite up for pre-order. The best news is that the cost is $149AU, a price that’s pretty close (or ?maybe cheaper assuming the Aussie dollar stays [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2013/02/08/amazon-kindle-paperwhite-sees-australia/

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Monday, February 4, 2013

Vietnam hands down long jail terms in subversion case: TV

BANGKOK (Reuters) - A court in Vietnam has sentenced a man to life in prison and given jail terms of up to 17 years to other defendants after they were found guilty of subversive activities, state-run Vietnam Television said on Monday.

The verdict follows a series of harsh punishments handed down for dissent in the communist-ruled country, at a time of reported political infighting among the leadership centered on how to reform the economy and tackle management problems at big state firms that have led to piles of bad debt.

The People's Court of Phu Yen province gave a life sentence to Phan Van Thu, head of a group that wanted to establish a new government in Vietnam, the television station said in a news bulletin.

Jail terms of between 12 and 17 years were handed to others in the case, the television station said without elaborating.

"Their action has seriously violated the laws," it said.

People's Police newspaper, which is run by the Public Security Ministry, said Thu and others had built up their forces in a tourist resort in the central province of Phu Yen from 2004, printing a number of anti-government documents until they were arrested in February 2012.

Thu had spent time in prison for anti-government activities in the late 1970s, the newspaper said.

In January, 13 political activists were found guilty of anti-state crimes and sentenced to prison, a ruling condemned by rights activists as part of a crackdown on dissidents.

Late last month, police arrested human rights lawyer Le Quoc Quan in Hanoi after he wrote an article criticizing the Communist Party, Human Rights Watch said in its World Report 2013 published on Friday.

"The Vietnamese government is systematically suppressing freedom of expression, association, and peaceful assembly, and persecuting those who question government policies, expose official corruption, or call for democratic alternatives to one-party rule," the rights group said in its report.

The government has made no comment on the report.

Among other cases, on January 24 security forces detained a blogger in the northern province of Hung Yen and took him to a mental institution, according to a letter to Vietnam's leaders from the Paris-based Vietnam Committee on Human Rights.

Last week, the authorities deported Nguyen Quoc Quan, a U.S. national of Vietnamese origin, after keeping him in prison without trial since April last year.

Quan was accused of subversion and of being a member of Viet Tan, an outlawed pro-democracy group based in the United States, Communist Party newspaper Nhan Dan said.

Quan's trial, scheduled for January 22, was dropped and he was freed on January 30, the Viet Tan group said.

(Writing by Alan Raybould; Editing by Robert Birsel)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/vietnam-hands-down-long-jail-terms-subversion-case-065033950.html

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JAL wants to talk compensation with Boeing

Japan Airlines Co Ltd said it will talk to Boeing Co about compensation for the grounding of the 787 Dreamliner, adding that the idling of its jets would cost it nearly $8 million from its earnings through to the end of March.

The carrier, which operates seven of the 50 Dreamliners in service around the world, said robust demand on European, North American and Southeast Asian routes would help offset the impact of the 787's grounding, and it increased its annual operating profit forecast by almost 13 percent.

"Rather than negotiations with Boeing, the important thing now is getting the 787 flying again safely as soon as we can," said JAL's president Yoshiharu Ueki. "However, when the situation has settled down we can and are preparing to begin those talks."

Rival All Nippon Airways, which has more 787s than JAL, said last week it would seek compensation from Boeing once the amount of damages was clearer.

JAL raised its operating profit forecast to 186 billion yen ($2 billion) for the year to end-March, from a previous estimate of 165 billion yen. It predicted the impact on its earnings from the grounding of the technologically advanced Dreamliner at around 700 million yen for the rest of this fiscal year.

All Boeing's 787s are out of action as investigators in Japan and the United States try to find the cause of two recent incidents with the plane's lithium-ion batteries - a battery fire on a JAL 787 at a U.S. airport and an emergency landing by another plane on a domestic ANA flight after battery problems triggered a smoke alarm.

U.S. officials said late last week they were making progress in their investigation into the battery fire at Boston airport.

Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/japanese-airline-want-discuss-787-grounding-compensation-boeing-1B8219495

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