Friday, July 26, 2013

Go Behind-the-Scenes of Performance-Capture in Crytek?s Ryse: Son of Rome

News, Trailers, Xbox One

by David Rodriguez Jul 25th 2013 4:14PM

One of the few titles that wowed everyone at E3?s Microsoft press briefing this year was Ryse: Son of Rome, which is being developed by Crytek. In the game?s newest behind-the-scenes video, the developers have lifted the veil from one of the Xbox One?s premier titles, detailing some of the unique performance-capture techniques at the disposal of Crytek. The game?s presentation is looking to be very cinematic and could be video game?s version of Gladiator if done right. While many deplored the game?s use of quick-time events, it seems to me that Ryse: Son of Rome will be strong for its overall cinematic presentation.

Ryse: Son of Rome is being developed by Crytek and will be published by Microsoft as a launch title for the Xbox One on an unspecified date later this year.

Source: http://www.dualshockers.com/2013/07/25/go-behind-the-scenes-of-performance-capture-in-cryteks-ryse-son-of-rome/

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Sunday, June 23, 2013

Changes in cell shape may lead to metastasis, not the other way around

June 21, 2013 ? A crucial step toward skin cancer may be changes in the genes that control cell shape, report a team of scientists from The Methodist Hospital Research Institute, the Institute of Cancer Research, London, and Harvard Medical School in an upcoming issue of Nature Cell Biology (now online).

Using automated high content screening and sophisticated computational modeling, the researchers' screening and analysis of tens of millions of genetically manipulated cells helped them identify more than a dozen genes that influence cell shape. Their work could lead to a better understanding of how cells become metastatic and, eventually, pinpoint new gene therapy targets for cancer treatment.

"We found that by altering the way the cells are grown to better mimic conditions in a living organism, gene expression could have a profound impact on cell shape," said Zheng Yin, the paper's lead author and a postdoctoral fellow at the Department of Systems Medicine and Bioengineering of The Methodist Hospital Research Institute (TMHRI). "This matters because many cancer biologists believe metastasis depends in part on the ability of cells to take on different shapes to escape their confines and spread to healthy tissue. We developed a method of identifying and analyzing the shapes of fruit fly cells, then validated and expanded the discoveries in mammal cancer cells.."

The scientists began their study in fruit fly immune cells called hemocytes. Under normal conditions, each hemocyte was found to take on just one of five distinct shapes about 98 percent of the time. In contrast to conventional wisdom, other shapes and "intermediate" forms were rare, suggesting genes that control cell shape behave more like light switches than teakettles coming to a slow boil. Genetic manipulation of these cells in a lab setting supported that view as well.

Next the group examined human and mouse melanoma cells, which also take on a variety of forms. The researchers identified seven genes that cause cells to take on an especially rounded form, or else an elongated form. One of these genes, PTEN, had a particularly strong impact. When turned off, virtually all cells became elongated or large and rounded, two shapes that can help cancerous cells escape confinement, travel blood vessels, and infiltrate healthy tissues. This information about PTEN is new, even though the gene was previously known to scientists as a tumor suppressor.

"By increasing the frequency of rounded and elongated cells this would provide metastatic cells with a survival advantage that is otherwise not gained by adopting only a single shape, or being highly plastic," said TMHRI Department of Systems Medicine and Bioengineering Chair Stephen T.C. Wong, Ph.D., P.E., who with Institute of Cancer Research, London, Fellow Chris Bakal, Ph.D., are the corresponding authors who oversaw the research.

Bakal added, "The cells have to become rounded to travel through the bloodstream or invade soft tissues such as the brain, but they take on an elongated shape to travel through harder tissues like bone. But until now, we knew hardly anything about how the cells assume either of these shapes and how they switch between the two."

Yin said he hopes data from the study will be useful to cell and developmental biologists who are interested in how and why many different kinds of animal cells change their shapes.

"I believe this dataset has great potential," he said. "We still saw three distinct shapes other than rounded and elongated, and a handful of cell populations enriched with intermediate shapes -- a lot of possibilities for hypothesis generation."

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/MZnLMdSRuDo/130621141658.htm

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Nevada's governor shows GOP strength in states (The Arizona Republic)

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Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Retired Chesterfield father adopts 5 children | WTVR.com - WTVR 6

Posted on: 6:46 pm, June 16, 2013, by Jake Burns, updated on: 07:21pm, June 16, 2013

CHESTERFIELD, Va. (WTVR) ? While more than 6,000 children in Virginia are spending Father?s Day in the foster care system, a Chesterfield man knows the impact a father?s influence can have on foster children.

?I have a second set of family now,? said Alvin Smalls, who along with his?wife, Cheryl, have adopted five children, ages five to 14 now, from Virginia foster care over the years.

?They would be stuck in the foster care system. They would never get the chance to have a mother, a father,? said Smalls.? ?I don?t know what kind of freedom they would? have in there [foster care], but I think this helps tremendously.?

Most children in foster care come from difficult family backgrounds, according to adoption experts.

?They?re often victims of abuse or neglect, and are in circumstances that are so dire that they can?t remain with their biological family,? said Nadine Marsh-Carter, president of the Children?s Home Society of Virginia.

When the permanency of a father figure is introduced in into a foster child?s life, they tend to blossom both mentally and physically.? Marsh-Carter said there is ?no price tag? on the value a father?s influence has on children.

Smalls retired five years ago after spending 19 years commuting from Richmond to New York on a weekly basis.

During that time, Smalls? five biological children were still living at home.? Instead of taking a break, Smalls is now raising a whole new generation of youngsters.

Smalls said raising his adopted children is a whole different process from his biological children. However, his mission for the adopted children has remained the same.

?Teaching them; guiding them; and of course, you to give them love,? said Smalls. ?Without the love, I don?t know what direction they?ll go into.? There?s a bound there that I have to make sure I maintain, nurture and keep strong.?

In Virginia, there are?1,200 foster children who are eligible for immediate adoption.

Click the social sharing icons at the top of bottom of this story if you love good news.?

Source: http://wtvr.com/2013/06/16/retired-chesterfield-father-adopts-5-children/

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Iran's Ahmadinejad given court summons over feuds

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) ? Iran's official news agency says a criminal court has summoned outgoing President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad over a lawsuit filed by the country's parliament speaker and others.

Monday's report by IRNA gave no further details, but Ahmadinejad and the speaker, Ali Larijani, have waged political feuds for years. In February, Ahmadinejad released a barely audible videotape that purported to show discussion over bribes that included Larijani's brother.

A parliamentary committee also joined Larijani in the legal action.

IRNA, which comes under the president's authority, noted there were several other subpoenas issued previously against Ahmadinejad. It described the latest as unconstitutional. The court set a November date for Ahmadinejad's appearance.

He officially leaves office in August after the swearing-in of President-elect Hasan Rowhani, a relative moderate who won a landslide victory last week.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/irans-ahmadinejad-given-court-summons-over-feuds-102224892.html

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Monday, June 17, 2013

The New Battle Over Immigration (Fortune, 1988) - Fortune Features

So should it admit people from abroad because they have these skills -- or because they have relatives who are U.S. citizens?

Editor's note:?Every Sunday we publish a favorite story from?our magazine archives. This week, we turn to a topic that Americans have long debated: Immigration reform. As the U.S. Senate began debating an immigration bill earlier this week, we take a look at how the conversation of allowing more foreigners into the U.S. has evolved (or mostly stayed the same) over the years.

By?Scott McConnell

immigrants-mainConsider how America might look in the year 2000 unless it admits more?immigrants: The labor force is aging and shrinking -- a legacy of the baby- boom generation, whose panda-like reproductive patterns put birthrates below replacement level in 1972 and kept them there. Shortages of skilled labor, already noticeable in the 1980s in such fields as nursing and engineering, become acute. While the domestic market shrinks, America's international allies, economic rivals, and political adversaries watch the U.S. slouching toward a future sketched by Ben Wattenberg, the Jeremiah of the birth dearth: ''a society that keeps getting older and smaller, older and smaller.'' That scenario won't play in real life. As the economy shrugs off market crashes and continues to grow, people the world over dream of ways to come to America to fill its jobs and enjoy its freedoms. Last year, when the State Department quietly announced that 10,000 visas would be made available to people from countries that had been cut out of the recent?immigration?stream, government experts expected 100,000 applicants. They received 1.5 million. Today at least two million people, all qualified for?immigration, await visas for entry.

America, a nation of?immigrants, is once again engaged in a battle of whom and whom not to let in. Always an emotional issue, theimmigration?debate this time plays off the human drama of family ties against the critical need for skilled workers. The outcome will determine no less than the health of the economy as well as the future composition and character of the country. A tacit bargain exists between American capitalism and the restless and ambitious people who, whatever their birthplace or talents, reach the country's shores: In exchange for labor, and painful efforts at assimilation, come a higher standard of living and upward mobility, if not always for themselves then at least for their children. But the terms of that historic bargain are being gradually transformed. Once a maw that could take in all, even those with little education and less English, the economy now demands skills.

By the end of the century the U.S. will add some 21 million new jobs. Almost all will require a high level of literacy and at least some specific training -- in many cases quite a lot of it. Though native-born Americans will take many of the new openings, assuming they can overcome dismal public school preparation, they will be in short supply. The Hudson Institute's study Workforce 2000 figures that an astounding 22% of the jobs appearing in the next 12 years will go to new arrivals. That may be wishful thinking. Current?immigration?policy gives little weight to education or job skills. The single most important criterion for establishing?immigrantstatus: family ties. The ''family reunification'' goal of existing policy means preferential treatment not only for the immediate family of naturalized citizens -- spouses, parents, and minor children -- but for the extended family as well. In a phenomenon called ''chain?immigration,'' an in-law can bring in a brother, who can sponsor another in-law, and so on, expanding the number of families eligible for reunification indefinitely. Of the 500,000 nonrefugee?immigrants?to the U.S. in 1986, about 470,000 had family sponsors. Admissions of refugees, those special cases whom the President and Congress agree to let in on humanitarian grounds, have averaged 65,000 a year since 1983.?From 1980 to 1982 the dramatic exodus of Vietnamese allowed the U.S. to bring in several times that figure. About 20,000 would-be citizens enter the U.S. and simply claim asylum each year, but only about a quarter of them are eventually permitted to become resident aliens. The largest stream of?immigrantsoutside the family-preference categories are those who had the foresight to enter the U.S. illegally before 1982. By the time the amnesty program is finished, an estimated two million illegal aliens will be eligible for citizenship and thus able to bring in their extended families.

immigrant-1In deciding who will be allowed to?immigrate, the possession of job skills, or entrepreneurial ability, or capital to invest, counts for practically nothing. Only 27,000 visas a year go to professionals and their families. Skilled and unskilled workers whose employers endure the complicated process to sponsor them account for another 27,000. After years of wrangling over illegal?immigration, Congress is now debating the system of legal?immigration. The key question is whether?immigration?policy should move away from family reunification and toward the selection of immigrants?on the basis of their likely economic contribution. A bill that inches in that direction, jointly sponsored by Senator Edward Kennedy (D- Massachusetts) and Alan Simpson (R-Wyoming), rolled easily through the Senate in March. Similar legislation, which calls for an annual ceiling of 670,000?immigrants, vs. 590,000 in the Kennedy-Simpson bill, has been introduced by Representative Charles Schumer (D-New York) and is pending before the House judiciary committee. Both Senate and House bills open a small channel for ''independent''?immigrants. A point system, which takes into account education, English-language skills, work experience, and occupational demand, would be used to allocate 55,000 of these visas annually. Another 5,000 visas would go to investors who can each put $2 million into a business that creates ten full-time jobs. Both bills wisely cut back some of the advantages given to the cousins and in-laws of present citizens.

Smooth Senate passage does not promise an easy road in the House, where various?immigration?lobbies may stall?reform. Heading a group that wants sharp reductions in the numbers of?immigrants?is the Federation for American?Immigration?Reform?(FAIR), a coalition supported by environmentalists and such population controllers as former Colorado Governor Richard Lamm, some liberals who worry about the competitive impact of low-wage?immigrants?on blacks and other disadvantaged Americans, and people who feel uneasy about the influx of large numbers of foreigners. On the other side is the National?Immigration, Refugee, and Citizenship Forum, which favors increased?immigration. Forum is an umbrella organization for labor unions, churches, refugee assistance organizations, and Hispanic and other ethnic groups. Though the lobby uses the declining birthrate and looming labor shortages to support its views, it remains tightly wedded to the family reunification criteria. Families, says Forum's director, Rick Swartz, ''serve as cushions'' for?immigrants, helping them become comfortable in the new culture. The National Council of La Raza (''the race''), a Mexican-American group with allies in the House Hispanic caucus, also supports family reunification. ''It provides a network of persons already here who help the acculturation process,'' says La Raza's director of policy analysis, Charles Kamasaki. While not opposed in principle to a special category for independent?immigrants, as put forth in the House and Senate bills, Kamasaki worries that skills-based?immigration?would eventually cut into the visas now reserved for family reunification. In spite of the subject's importance, business has mainly stayed out of the debate. While such groups as FAIR and La Raza can generate piles of letters to Congress, the only persistent business voice on the Hill belongs to the fruit and vegetable growers, who want to ensure their access to a work force of low- paid aliens, legal or otherwise. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has testified in Congress in support of the limited but valid issue of increasing quotas for the foreign employees of U.S. corporations. Roughly nine million?immigrants?will come to the United States during the , 1980s, twice the number that came in the 1970s and many more than have entered in any similar period since World War I.

But it is not an unprecedented flow, relatively speaking. From 1900 to 1930, the foreign-born made up more than 12% of a (much smaller) U.S. population, twice the percentage today. Most of the?immigrants, about 84%, are from Asia, Latin America, and the Caribbean (see table). While this reflects the great desire by people in those areas to come to the U.S., the composition is also the consequence of the?Immigration?Act of 1965. This law repudiated the national origins quotas that had governed?immigration?for most of the century. The old system generally ensured that those who were allowed to enter would not alter the country's ethnic balance. Thus, it effectively kept out Asians and shut the door to most of Eastern Europe's hunted Jews during the Nazi era. The new law, passed in the spirit of the 1960s, treated all nations the same -- Ireland and Italy like Pakistan and Ethiopia. Replacing the country quotas was a preference system, which favored family ties, not talent or skills. The system allows the entry of immediate family members without limit. It also allocates 270,000 visas worldwide to preference categories: other relatives, professionals, and company-sponsored workers. Of those precious visas, fully 90% go to family members. No country gets more than 20,000 of the preference visas in one year.?In the event more than 20,000 petitioners are eligible for visas, their applications are held over to the next year, with priority over later applicants.

immigrant-2No one expected the 1965 act to radically change the traditional European patterns of?immigration. After all, who had family members here? Attorney General Robert Kennedy told the Senate that 5,000 Asian?immigrants?might come the first year, ''after which?immigration?from that source would virtually disappear."?The bill's white ethnic supporters in Congress expected that Italian- and Greek-Americans would have leeway to bring their relatives. At first they were right. Of the 3.3 million?immigrants?who came during the 1960s, Italy, Germany, Britain, and Canada trailed behind only Cuba and Mexico as sources of new?immigrants. But the stream changed quickly. Though Asians, Mexicans, and other Latin Americans had few family connections, they filled the smaller quotas for employer-sponsored workers and professionals. Europeans did not. In booming Western Europe people didn't want to leave; in East Bloc countries they ; couldn't. The first Asians were physicians, engineers, nurses, the occasional war bride from Korea and Vietnam. By the late 1960s European scientists and engineers, who had usually been able to enter and bring their families at will, began to find their professional counterparts from India, Korea, and Taiwan ahead of them in the line for the 27,000 professional visas. These first Asians used the family-preference system to its full potential. What no legislator voting on the 1965 act envisioned was how quickly family reunification would produce chain?immigration. Imagine one?immigrant, say an engineering student, who was studying in the U.S. during the 1960s. If he found a job after graduation, he could get labor certification and become a legal resident alien. He could then bring over his wife, and six years later, after being naturalized, his brothers and sisters. They, in turn, could bring their wives, husbands, and children. Within a dozen years, one?immigrant?entering as a skilled worker could easily generate 25 visas for in-laws, nieces, and nephews.

Chain immigration made families happy, but it brought other difficulties. Several countries -- the Philippines, Mexico, Korea, the Dominican Republic -- quickly filled their quotas, creating long waiting lists. This backlog completely closed the door to those would-be?immigrants?who had no close relatives to sponsor them. In effect, countries that hadn't quickly established a beachhead of?immigrants?after the 1965 law were kept out of the system. This problem was responsible for the last-minute amendment to the 1986?Immigration?Reform?and Control Act that provided for a one-time only issuance of 10,000 visas for 36 countries whose?immigration?had been ''adversely affected'' by the 1965 bill. One of these countries was Ireland, ancestral home of Brian Donnelly, the Boston Congressman who proposed the amendment. Others were Poland and Hungary, where potential?immigrants?were finding it easier to leave. Tens of thousands of applications came from Indonesia and Japan. Seven thousand Rumanians, whose country was not included in the program, made inquiries at the U.S. embassy. In Burma, which also was not included, 5,000 showed up at the American embassy. The huge response to the Donnelly amendment -- 150 applications were filed for every available visa -- was a stunning demonstration of the pent-up desire for American citizenship around the world. Countries were not really hurt by the 1965 law, but individuals were. A brother-in-law of someone who had?immigrated?ten years before could come in, no matter what his talents or lack of them. A person with ambition and skills was blocked. Traditionally?immigrants?to the U.S. have done well not only because the economy needed them, but also because the decision toimmigrate?itself tends to rule out the passive and complacent. As Rick Swartz of the National?Immigration?Forum puts it: ''Immigrants?tend to be the stronger willed, the more sophisticated, the more adventuresome.'' Their children have done well too. Economist Barry Chiswick of the University of Illinois figures that for most of this century the children of?immigrants?have earned 5% to 10% more than native-born children with the same level of education. Most research shows that, so far, the economy has been helped by the recent wave of?immigration.

Studies by both the Rand Corp. and the Urban Institute conclude that new?immigration?has particularly stimulated the economy of California, the home of nearly 30% of recent?immigrants. The main point of the Urban Institute's The Fourth Wave is that an influx of?immigrants?during the 1970s did not create higher unemployment for the native born. Author Thomas Muller found that recent arrivals took two of three newly created jobs in Los Angeles County, one out of three in Southern California. But the?immigrants?did not upset employment rates. In fact, California unemployment rates, higher than the national average in 1970, fell below the mean in the early 1980s. Many?immigrants?found basic manufacturing jobs in Southern California, which became a large-scale maker of clothes and furniture. Muller notes that the backbone of this work force is low-paid, often illegal labor, and that these factory jobs simply would not exist without?immigrants?to take them. The white-collar managers of such firms benefit, as do the workers who produce raw materials for such companies. Muller stresses that the new wave ofimmigrants?worked well economically because of its sociological diversity. The large numbers of laborers from Mexico were balanced by a parallel stream from Asia of quite skilled?immigrants?-- 37% had some college education or better. The only economic losers from?immigrationwere workers at the bottom of the occupational ladder, whose growing numbers forced wage growth to slow. The problem of social assimilation may well be more emotionally charged for Americans, both?immigrants?and natives, than economic issues. In such Los . Angeles suburbs as Monterey Park, older white residents battle thriving Chinese?immigrants?about zoning regulations, a contest rooted in cultural tension over ''unreadable'' Asian-language signs in the malls and other symbols of the changing of a neighborhood. But these confrontations have been polite and bloodless, mild by the traditional standards of American ethnic politics, softened by the shared middle-class mores of the participants. If future tensions between natives and?immigrants?take on the added edge of class conflict, the battles may be less polite.

immigrant-3For Mexican immigrants, assimilation and economic advancement have been tightly linked. A Rand study by Kevin McCarthy and Burciaga Valdez concludes that Mexicans in California have been joining the American mainstream in the same three-generation process that generations of Poles, Russians, and Italians have traced. When they arrive in California, Mexicans typically speak minimal English, have less than eighth-grade educations, and take low-skilled jobs. Their children tend to grow up bilingual, finish high school at rates close to the state average (though rarely go further), and find work in such semiskilled jobs as machinists and clerks. The third generation, Mexican-Americans with American-born parents, are more comfortable with English than Spanish, attend college or technical school at rates approaching those of other Californians, and have gained a solid foothold in the middle-class professions. Yet future economic trends threaten this classic pattern. The Rand study expressed alarm at the coming shrinkage of the bridge jobs -- the skilled craft or clerical jobs often taken by the sons and daughters of Mexican?immigrants?-- which may retard the progress of the second generation. The Center for Continuing Study of the California Economy figures that from now until 1995, the state economy will be increasingly technological, but that Hispanics, Asians, and blacks will not be holding the higher-skilled jobs in proportion to their population. Such trends make it questionable whether the children of today's unskilledimmigrants?will be able to assimilate as easily as past generations. The problem could well be aggravated by the amnesty program. It will lead to the naturalization of an estimated two million?immigrants, mostly unskilled, within seven years -- and by the subsequent admission of their relatives under family reunification. The largest class of new?immigrants?may find themselves $ shut out of the most dynamic sectors of the economy, and thus from the assimilation process, by their lack of skills and education.

The variable that most closely predicts economic success for?immigrants?as for other Americans is education. But Barry Chiswick's recent research suggests that the present, kinship-drivenimmigration?system is beginning to drive?immigrant?educational levels down. The shift of?immigration?from Europe to Asia and Latin America does not fully explain the decline. In fact, the phenomenon is most pronounced within the stream of Asian?immigrants. Those who entered in the years immediately after the 1965 Act were the best-educated?immigrant?group ever because they received almost all their visas under the occupational and skills preferences. It was their children who astonished the nation with their accomplishments in high school math and science competitions ten to 15 years later. Yet this flow of talent is now being diluted by the priority given to their in-laws and cousins; since 1970 the average educational level of Asian?immigrants?has dropped by about two years. The U.S. passed the 1965?Immigration?Act at a time when America's economic predominance seemed as if it might extend forever. The nation had soaring gains in productivity, declining energy costs, a continually growing GNP. Other countries barely challenged the U.S. in the global markets, much less its own. Foreign control over American industry and real estate were difficult to imagine. Now, with the trade and budget deficits lurking in the background, a different vocabulary is gradually slipping into the discussion of the new bills. The letter introducing the Kennedy-Simpson?immigration?proposal quietly suggests that legislation would bring?immigration?policy ''more in line with the national interest.'' Charles Schumer describes his bill as a way to help ''competitiveness.'' Where?immigration?is concerned Congressmen raise such ideas cautiously, fearful of exposing themselves to the charge of being antifamily or worse.

A few guidelines should help the current debate. First, the U.S. needs?immigrants?as much as?immigrants?need the U.S. Current levels of legal?immigration?can be absorbed easily and can probably be increased. Second, the economy requires people with labor market skills and ability in math and the sciences. Third, the U.S. does not have a growing need for unskilled labor. Current?immigrationpolicy seems designed to encourage the unskilled, deny the skilled. The amnesty provision in the 1986?Immigration?Act can be defended on humanitarian grounds as protection of a vulnerable class of unskilled workers. But its eventual effect, when those future citizens start to unify their families, will be to confer citizenship on many millions of unskilled people. As long as present law remains in effect, those applicants will have priority over those whose only card is education, or needed job skills. When thousands of skilled nurses, who came in on temporary work permits, now face deportation in the midst of a looming national health care crisis, the family- first criteria seems truly perverse. As a beginning to?immigration?reform, kinship?immigration?should be limited to immediate family members -- spouses, minor children, parents. Second, the largest class of?immigrants?should be admitted on the basis of their education and of labor market needs. Most visas should be allocated by a point system, subject to regular congressional review and adjustment. Skills, education, and relative youth should count. A few points could be awarded for English- language skills, but most people, particularly in the professions, learn English rapidly enough.

Family ties to American citizens might remain as a criterion, but only one among several. Some effort should be made to ensure diversity, possibly by quotas based on the total population of each country. Greater variety in the?immigrant?stream would be likely to increase public and political support for moreimmigration. Finally, the quotas for refugees should be raised; no group of Americans teaches us more about the blessings of freedom. Ifimmigration?reform?is passed, Americans will discover a raging international competition for?immigrants?who can make a distinct economic contribution. Canada and Australia have had point systems for two decades and are happy with the results. While the U.S. has not issued a visa to an investor since 1978, Canada now welcomes?immigrants?with capital to invest and entrepreneurial skills.?Immigration?lawyer Daryl Buffenstein tells of listening recently to Canada's minister of state for?immigration, Gerry Weiner, give a speech about the great benefits Canada was reaping from its new influx of entrepreneurial?immigrants. Returning to his seat, Weiner leaned over and whispered to Buffenstein: ''Just one favor -- keep the American system exactly like it is.''

Source: http://features.blogs.fortune.cnn.com/2013/06/16/the-new-battle-over-immigration-fortune-1988/

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Thursday, May 2, 2013

Monday, April 29, 2013

Kim Kardashian and Family in Greece: They're on a Boat!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/04/kim-kardashian-and-family-in-greece-theyre-on-a-boat/

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When performing ab stomach crunches, breathe out forcefully towards the top of the movements. This will cause your stomach muscle tissues to operate more difficult and burns a greater quantity of energy. Use this strategy to boost the effectiveness of your ab crunches.

Exercise is useful for anyone, and you may improve your exercise by fine-tuning your schedule and changing it from time to time. With more health and fitness expertise to enhance your fitness expertise you can easily build a fitness plan and achieve your objectives.

There is more content available about leg workout for women head over to Kasha D. Hitchman?s site there?s a lot of details not detailed in this article, find those details on Author?s website to locate supplementary information.

Source: http://www.articlessquad.com/follow-these-suggestions-to-health-and-fitness-2/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=follow-these-suggestions-to-health-and-fitness-2

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Huffington Post to launch German edition

BERLIN (AP) ? The Huffington Post is expanding its footprint in Europe with a German language edition.

The online news portal says it is partnering with German company Tomorrow Focus AG to launch the site in Europe's biggest news market this fall.

Tomorrow Focus said in a statement Monday that the site will be produced in Munich and cater to readers in Germany, Austria and Switzerland.

The Huffington Post already has international editions in Britain, Canada, France, Italy and Spain. A Japanese version is due to launch in May.

The U.S. version of the site was founded by Ariana Huffington in 2005 and bought by AOL Inc. in 2011.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/huffington-post-launch-german-edition-083452737.html

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Friday, April 26, 2013

With HIPAA Compliance, Cloud Storage Platform Box Makes A Big Push Into Healthcare; Invests In Drchrono

boxCloud storage company Box is making a big push into the healthcare sector today. Not only has Box received HIPAA compliance, but the company has announcing a new set of partners in the space, as well as an equity investment in drchrono, a startup that simplifies the professional lives of doctors by bringing electronic health records and much more to the iPad.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/jbRjUwjg3WQ/

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Open Your Mind to the New Psychedelic Science

Link Information - Click to View

Open Your Mind to the New Psychedelic Science
In recent years, a small cadre of scientists has cautiously rekindled the scientific study of psychedelics. At a recent conference, they reported new findings on how these drugs scramble brain activity in ways that might help explain their mind-bending effects. ...

Source: Wired
Posted on: Friday, Apr 26, 2013, 8:42am
Views: 12

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127961/Open_Your_Mind_to_the_New_Psychedelic_Science

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Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Penn State Hass avocado research poster wins American Society For Nutrition Annual Awards

Penn State Hass avocado research poster wins American Society For Nutrition Annual Awards [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 23-Apr-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Alyson Campbell
acampbell@crt-tanaka.com
646-218-6037
FoodMinds LLC

New research explores connection between avocado consumption and CVD risk factors and body composition

Tuesday, April 23, 2013 [Boston, MA] The scientific poster session, Interventions for the Treatment and Prevention of Nutrition-Related Diseases, included the poster that won first prize in two American Society for Nutrition Scientific Sessions at Experimental Biology (EB) contests the Student Interest Group (SIG) Travel Award competition and the Aging and Chronic Disease Research Interest Section (RIS) Graduate Student Poster competition. The winning poster is based on a clinical study that investigated the effects of eating one Hass avocado every day on risk factors for cardiovascular disease compared to a similar moderate fat diet without avocados, an average American diet and a low-fat diet. The study was conducted by Pennsylvania State University researchers Penny Kris-Etherton, PhD, RD, and Li Wang, PhD Candidate, and supported by the Hass Avocado Board (HAB).

The SIG and RIS awards are annual prizes awarded to PhD students based on their abstracts and presentations at EB. Abstracts were assessed on scientific merit, research design, experimental methodology, conclusions, and significance of findings to scientific knowledge.

Although this was a small-scale study, "Initial findings from our research shows that inclusion of one avocado a day, as part of a healthy moderate fat diet, may contribute to greater benefits on cardiovascular risk factors than a moderate fat diet that provides the equivalent fatty acid profile," said Wang. "While more studies are needed, this research suggests that there may be something unique about the avocado, beyond its monounsaturated fat content."

Additionally, Maxwell Johnson, MS, and Bonny Burns-Whitmore, MPH, DrPH, RD, California State Polytechnic University, presented findings from their investigation on the effects of daily intake of avocados on body composition and blood cholesterol levels in healthy college students during the poster session, Energy Balance, Macronutrients and Weight Management.

"Our research findings showed that eating an avocado a day did not negatively alter body composition," said Burns-Whitmore.

###

HAB is supporting research to improve understanding of the unique, positive benefits of consuming fresh Hass avocados to human health and nutrition. Clinical studies are currently underway to investigate the relationship between avocado consumption and risk factors for cardiovascular disease, avocados' potential positive role in weight management and diabetes, and avocados' ability to enhance nutrient absorption. For more information, visit http://www.avocadocentral.com/nutrition.

About the Hass Avocado Board

The Hass Avocado Board was established in 2002 to promote the consumption of Hass avocados in the United States. A 12-member board representing domestic producers and importers of Hass avocados directs HAB's promotion, research and information programs under supervision of the United States Department of Agriculture. Hass avocados are grown in California and imported into the US from Mexico, Chile, Peru, Dominican Republic and New Zealand.


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

?


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


Penn State Hass avocado research poster wins American Society For Nutrition Annual Awards [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 23-Apr-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Alyson Campbell
acampbell@crt-tanaka.com
646-218-6037
FoodMinds LLC

New research explores connection between avocado consumption and CVD risk factors and body composition

Tuesday, April 23, 2013 [Boston, MA] The scientific poster session, Interventions for the Treatment and Prevention of Nutrition-Related Diseases, included the poster that won first prize in two American Society for Nutrition Scientific Sessions at Experimental Biology (EB) contests the Student Interest Group (SIG) Travel Award competition and the Aging and Chronic Disease Research Interest Section (RIS) Graduate Student Poster competition. The winning poster is based on a clinical study that investigated the effects of eating one Hass avocado every day on risk factors for cardiovascular disease compared to a similar moderate fat diet without avocados, an average American diet and a low-fat diet. The study was conducted by Pennsylvania State University researchers Penny Kris-Etherton, PhD, RD, and Li Wang, PhD Candidate, and supported by the Hass Avocado Board (HAB).

The SIG and RIS awards are annual prizes awarded to PhD students based on their abstracts and presentations at EB. Abstracts were assessed on scientific merit, research design, experimental methodology, conclusions, and significance of findings to scientific knowledge.

Although this was a small-scale study, "Initial findings from our research shows that inclusion of one avocado a day, as part of a healthy moderate fat diet, may contribute to greater benefits on cardiovascular risk factors than a moderate fat diet that provides the equivalent fatty acid profile," said Wang. "While more studies are needed, this research suggests that there may be something unique about the avocado, beyond its monounsaturated fat content."

Additionally, Maxwell Johnson, MS, and Bonny Burns-Whitmore, MPH, DrPH, RD, California State Polytechnic University, presented findings from their investigation on the effects of daily intake of avocados on body composition and blood cholesterol levels in healthy college students during the poster session, Energy Balance, Macronutrients and Weight Management.

"Our research findings showed that eating an avocado a day did not negatively alter body composition," said Burns-Whitmore.

###

HAB is supporting research to improve understanding of the unique, positive benefits of consuming fresh Hass avocados to human health and nutrition. Clinical studies are currently underway to investigate the relationship between avocado consumption and risk factors for cardiovascular disease, avocados' potential positive role in weight management and diabetes, and avocados' ability to enhance nutrient absorption. For more information, visit http://www.avocadocentral.com/nutrition.

About the Hass Avocado Board

The Hass Avocado Board was established in 2002 to promote the consumption of Hass avocados in the United States. A 12-member board representing domestic producers and importers of Hass avocados directs HAB's promotion, research and information programs under supervision of the United States Department of Agriculture. Hass avocados are grown in California and imported into the US from Mexico, Chile, Peru, Dominican Republic and New Zealand.


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

?


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


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-04/fl-psh_1042213.php

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US futures moving higher as corporate profits roll

NEW YORK (AP) ? Stock futures are moving higher on more strong earnings from U.S. corporations, and ahead of new data expected to show that the number of homes being built is approaching levels last seen more than four years ago.

Dow Jones industrial futures are up 53 points to 14,552. S&P futures have added 3.1 points to 1,559. Nasdaq futures are up 12.25 points to 2,809.50.

DuPont, the chemical maker, reported first-quarter profits Tuesday that more than doubled as its agricultural unit did brisk business. Travelers insurance and Coach are soaring in premarket trading after big quarters.

Apple posts earnings after the market closes.

The Commerce Department releases new home figures and most economists expect a slight uptick from March, which would be close to record highs reached just before the housing collapse.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-futures-moving-higher-corporate-profits-roll-120854533--finance.html

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Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Nigeria says heavy fighting in northeast, no word on casualties

ABUJA (Reuters) - Nigerian authorities said on Monday there had been heavy fighting between security forces and Islamist militants in a remote part of the northeast, but there was no confirmation of reports from a local official that 185 people had been killed.

Fighting erupted on Thursday in Baga, a fishing town on the shores of Lake Chad, adjacent to the Chadian border, spokesmen for the Borno state government that administers the area and its military said.

A delegation from the state government visited the town on Sunday in the aftermath of the fighting, and a community representative put the death toll at 185, Borno spokesman Umar Gusau said by telephone.

"We are investigating," he said. "For now, we don't have a very good basis for the figure. These people say they have died and they have buried them. From my experience, most times residents exaggerate figures."

He added that since the town had already buried the victims, it had been impossible for authorities to count the bodies.

Authorities were questioning residents about family members who had died to try to estimate the death toll, he said.

Sagir Musa, a spokesman for the mixed military and police Joint Task Force (JTF) in Borno state, also expressed skepticism about the reported toll.

"There was a clash between the Boko Haram terrorists and the JTF but I can tell you is that the death toll was terribly inflated," he said by telephone.

The military is sometimes accused by locals of understating civilian casualties in fighting.

The violence comes as the government awaits a report from a panel tasked with formulating an offer of amnesty for the insurgents if they give up their struggle for an Islamic state, which has killed many hundreds in northern Nigeria in the past three years.

President Goodluck Jonathan wants the panel to establish links with the group, which has so far shown no interest in peace talks.

Jonathan, a Christian southerner, has been unsuccessful in quelling the violence through military means and, in recent weeks, traditional leaders in the predominantly Muslim north have put pressure on him to offer Boko Haram a deal.

If 185 people did die in the Baga fighting, it would be the greatest loss of life in the conflict since 186 people were killed in coordinated strikes by Boko Haram fighters in January 2012 in the north's main city of Kano.

Gusau said parts of Baga were badly damaged when he visited it on Sunday, with several houses burned. He said Nigerian soldiers sometimes over-react when attacked by Boko Haram gunmen, killing many in retaliation.

Boko Haram, which is loosely modeled on the Taliban movement in Afghanistan, wants an Islamic caliphate in Nigeria, a country of 170 million split evenly between Christians and Muslims.

(Reporting by Tim Cocks and Isaac Abrak; Editing by Michael Roddy)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nigeria-says-heavy-fighting-northeast-no-word-casualties-152826728.html

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Sunday, April 14, 2013

At #Thatcher, no halfhearted tweets on Iron Lady's legacy

The global reaction to former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's death displayed the depth of her impact ? like it or not.

By Ryan Lenora Brown,?Correspondent / April 8, 2013

This is a 1969 file photo showing Margaret Thatcher. The former British Prime Minister known as 'the Iron Lady' passed away Monday morning.

AP/File

Enlarge

Irreverent, brisk, and decisive.?

Skip to next paragraph Ryan Lenora Brown

Correspondent

Ryan Brown edits the Africa Monitor blog and contributes to the national and international news desks of the Monitor. She is a former Fulbright fellow to South Africa and holds a degree in history from Duke University.?

Recent posts

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As Margaret Thatcher was in life, so are the tweets that have followed her death.

In the minutes following the announcement of the former British prime minister's death Monday, #Thatcher shot to the top of global Twitter trends as the world weighed in on her legacy ? or at least as much of it as they could cram into 140 characters or less.?

Here are some highlights of the global Twitter reaction.?

Official response

World leaders were among the first to weigh in on Thatcher's legacy with carefully curated messages of condolence.

"Lady Thatcher didn?t just lead our country, she saved our country," wrote @David_Cameron, the official Twitter account of the British Prime Minister. (And the snarky backlash quickly followed. "From equality and happiness?" one tweeter replied, one of some 2,000 who responded to the prime minister's initial tweet. "Just how out of touch can one man be?" asked another.)??

"She stands as an example to our daughters that there is no glass ceiling that can?t be shattered," weighed in @BarackObama, while?India's prime minister, Manmohan Singh (@PMOIndia) wrote blandly,?"She was a transformative figure under whom the United Kingdom registered important progress on the national and international arena."

And the BBC sent along a message from Mikhail Gorbachev, tweeting: '#Thatcher "a great politician & bright personality" who will "remain in our memory & history"'

But in at least one corner of the world where Thatcher's legacy is particularly fraught, there was silence on official Twitter accounts.

"Waiting for an official comment from Buenos Aires re?#Thatcher's?death," tweeted the BBC's Argentina correspondent. "Under her govt Britain went to war with?Argentina?over the Falklands."

'Like a tank barrel'

Elsewhere in the Twitter-verse, reactions were more raucous, mixing critiques and memories of the Iron Lady's towering personality.?

"Condolences to my British friends for the 1980s," wrote Nigerian-American writer Teju Cole (@tejucole).

"Asking Thatcher a q at a press conf was intimidating," remembered Australian journalist Mark Colvin (@Colvinius). "Her gaze swivelled on you like a tank-barrel."?

He continued: "A friend of mine, interviewing Thatcher, asked her qs she didn't like. Just out of camera view, her press sec kicked him in the shins."

And one Canadian journalist weighed in to make sure a crucial aspect of the prime minister's legacy wasn't forgotten in the chatter. "Most of what Thatcher is claimed to have done is exaggerated," he wrote. "Except inventing soft ice cream - as a chemist in the '50s, she did that."

The empire tweets back

Meanwhile, across the British commonwealth, tweeters pondered the Thatcher legacy in their own backyard.

"Before there was Thatcher, there was [Indian Prime Minister] Indira Gandhi. Just saying. Apparently the two got along well," wrote Indian journalist?Ammu Kannampilly.

South Africans were less generous. "Apartheid supporter Margaret Thatcher dead at last," wrote a popular opinion writer. "Apartheid would've ended a little earlier had it not been for her," said another.?

And Irish comedy writer Colm Tobin put a finger on?his country's national pulse?when it came to Thatcher's legacy: "Not a lot of love for Margaret Thatcher in Ireland. As an enemy of the state she sits somewhere between Oliver Cromwell & Thierry Henry."

Too fast??

Amid the global haste to weigh on on Thatcher's death, however, Twitter also provided reminders about the dangers of the digital age scramble to be the first to a story.?

Thatcher detractors, for instance, gleefully circulated a BBC-based headline typo announcing that Thatcher had "died of a strike."

Meanwhile, the opening paragraph of the Financial Times' obituary for Thatcher briefly revealed what one tweeter called "the perils of the pre-packaged obit."?

The text was quickly corrected, but not before it was immortalized on Twitter, a moment of clumsy reaction captured in Internet amber for all the world to see.

None of the Twitter reaction, however, came as a shock to British journalist Martin Belam. In December he tweeted a pie chart he'd created called, "What Twitter will look like on the day Thatcher dies."?

At last, a Thatcher tweet no one can dispute.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/Fy8VvhUkeO0/At-Thatcher-no-halfhearted-tweets-on-Iron-Lady-s-legacy

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1 dead, 1 missing in avalanches east of Seattle

SNOQUALMIE PASS, Wash. (AP) ? A woman who had been buried in five feet of snow has died, and one man was still missing Sunday morning after a pair of spring avalanches struck separate groups hiking in the mountains each of Seattle, authorities in Washington state said.

Sgt. Katie Larson, with the King County Sheriff's Office, said a team of rescuers worked through the night in blizzard-like conditions to carry the female snowshoer off the mountain just after midnight.

She was not moving and had been in and out of consciousness. Medics confirmed that she had died when they reached the base of the mountain, Larson said.

"The conditions yesterday were horrific," Larson said Sunday. "It took 25 rescuers about five to six hours" to bring her off the mountain in a sled.

The woman, whose identity was not known, had been hiking with her dog near a group of a dozen other people Saturday afternoon when an avalanche hit Red Mountain near Snoqualmie Pass east of Seattle.

She had been buried in five feet of snow but was dug out with the help of a group of a dozen snowshoers, who had also been caught in the avalanche.

Members of the group told authorities that it took them 45 minutes to find the woman. They dug her out of five feet of snow. "They did their best to try to warm her up," Larson said.

Meanwhile, the search for a 60-year-old hiker who was swept down the mountain in a separate avalanche at Granite Mountain Saturday was suspended indefinitely due to the poor weather conditions.

"There was a heavy snow dump last night, and conditions are still very hazardous," Larson said.

The man, from Kent, Wash., was with two other friends when the avalanche carried them more than 1,200 feet down the mountain. The two friends suffered injuries that described as not life-threatening. One of them was taken to a hospital, but Larson did not know his condition.

The avalanches occurred as heavy snow fell near Snoqualmie Pass.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/1-dead-1-missing-avalanches-east-seattle-163311465.html

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Saturday, April 13, 2013

Kerry: N. Korean launch would be 'huge mistake'

BERLIN, April 11 (Reuters) - Bayern Munich have received more than 200,000 ticket requests for their Champions League semi-final game in Munich, thousands of which were made before they advanced against Juventus, the club said on Thursday. "We have been updating the figure constantly and at the moment it stands at 200,000 ticket requests for the semi-final home leg," a Bayern Munich official told Reuters. Bayern's stadium fits only 69,000 and that includes the 39,500 ticket holders and any fans travelling with their opponents. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-warns-north-korea-against-missile-launch-102700637.html

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Vatican foundation announces 'economy and society' book prize ...

CWN - April 12, 2013

Books written by professors who teach at universities in Spain and Italy are the first winners of the Centesimus Annus - Pro Pontifice Foundation?s ?economy and society? book award.

Ciudadania, migraciones y religion: Un dialogo etico desde la fe cristiana (Citizenship, Migration, and Religion: Ethical Dialogue from the Christian Faith) was written by Father Julio Luis Mart?nez, SJ, rector of Comillas Pontifical University in Madrid; L'economia del bene comune (The Economy of the Common Good) was written by Stefano Zamagni of the University of Bologna.

Named after Blessed John Paul II?s 1991 social encyclical and founded by the same Pope two years later, the foundation exists to promote Catholic social teaching.

The first book, said Cardinal Domenico Calcagno, president of the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See,

highlights the fact that in the context of waning national sovereignty immigration calls for a new understanding of both the concept of citizenship and the relationship between religion and politics. Citizenship, belonging to a country, is traditionally part of one?s identity. But what does citizenship mean in a multicultural society, made up of people from widely different backgrounds? How can one reach out to the "stranger" without jeopardizing one?s identity? How can one relate to this stranger, his religion ? which is often not the host country?s ? without falling into relativism? Fr. Mart?nez is convinced that the Social Doctrine of the Church can provide real help, actually an indispensable contribution, towards an adequate answer to these questions.

Cardinal Calcagno, who oversees the activity of the foundation, stated that the second book

suggests we need to widen the range of fundamental categories that allow us to understand economic activity. Against a dominant model which considers market and State the only major economic players, Zamagni presents a third sphere of values (solidarity, entrepreneurship, sympathy) which neither efficiency nor a search for justice can fulfill. He is convinced that without these values of fraternity and reciprocity market and State cannot function. He believes in the need to make room for an economic space within the market (not outside or against it) where players are inspired by the principle of solidarity.

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Source: http://www.catholicculture.org/news/headlines/index.cfm?storyid=17573

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All Movie Trailers Are the Same Freaking Thing

Let's all admit it: we love movie trailers. A minute or two of bite sized scenes showing off great looking shirtless actors with even better looking almost topless actresses combined with explosions, laughs, mind blowing sequences and a tinge of sex is a wonderful formula to get us hyped. Even if all movie trailers are cut the same way, I'll never not get excited to watch them. Animation Domination High Def creates a song and exposes a formula in this silly animation on how to make a movie trailer. It's hilarious. [Animation Domination High Def] More »
    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/xV6xN-F3hDw/all-movie-trailers-are-the-same-freaking-thing

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