Wednesday, October 23, 2013

An Exhaustive Survey From Columbus To Nemesis In 'Roth Unbound'



Roth Unbound, Claudia Roth Pierpont's aptly titled study of Philip Roth's evolution as a writer, unleashes a slew of memories — including my eye-opening first encounter with Portnoy's Complaint as a naive 14-year-old. It also stokes a strong desire to re-read his books, which I suspect will be the case for many.


About that early memory: My father was an avid fan, who connected with Roth's exuberant, subversive take on sex and what it meant to be both a secular Jew and an American in the years following WorId War II. And because I read pretty much whatever I found lying around our home, I wrote a report on his groundbreaking fourth book in my ninth grade reading journal. While most readers were shocked by Portnoy's outrageous, unquenchable lust, what bowled me over was the realization that my overbearing Brooklyn grandmother wasn't unique: Roth had captured her right down to her name, Sophie! (My teacher, no doubt taken aback, commented, "I'd never recommend it to ninth grade readers, but you seem to have seen what's best in it.")


Pierpont, no relation to Roth despite her middle name, became friendly with the writer after he sent her a letter in response to one of her New Yorker articles. In the book's introduction, she acknowledges that she has benefited from his decision to stop writing fiction, which he announced publicly last year: Now "he had time to talk about his work because he wasn't doing it anymore." Her book is sprinkled with tantalizing glimpses of the man, whom she describes as "a brilliant talker ... as funny as you might think from his books," and of his life, including an amusing dinner at his Connecticut home with Mia Farrow. There are also passing mentions of lovers who provided the models for some of his characters. But readers looking for more of the juicy personal stuff will have to wait for a full-scale biography. Roth Unbound is mainly about the books.





A longtime contributor and staff writer for The New Yorker, Claudia Roth Pierpont is the author of Passionate Minds: Women Rewriting the World, a collection of essays on women writers.



Shiva Rouhani/Courtesy of Farrar, Straus and Giroux

All of them. Pierpont tracks Roth's recurrent themes — Jewish identity, manliness, sexual desire, art versus life, the unpredictable savagery of history, illness and mortality – through one book after another, from Goodbye, Columbus in 1959 to Nemesis in 2010. This makes for a dazzling if sometimes exhausting journey. We're relieved when she finally makes it through the entire formidable stack and brings us up to date in a more intimate bonus chapter, "Afterthoughts, Memories, and Discoveries: At It Again."


Despite her personal tie and obvious admiration, Pierpont doesn't mince words in her literary criticism, and her book is better for it. She deems Roth's first novel, Letting Go, "overlong and — toward the end, especially — laborious." His 1998 novel, I Married a Communist (part of his American trilogy, along with American Pastoral and The Human Stain) "does not really work," she writes. "I don't believe there is a book by Roth in which the voices are dimmer or less engaging."


On the other hand, The Ghost Writer, published in 1979, elicits her highest praise: "Like The Great Gatsby or Willa Cather's The Professor's House, it is one of our literature's rare, inevitably brief, inscrutably musical, and nearly perfect books." Then she probes further: "What had happened to make this possible?"



Pierpont flags Roth's "vocal immediacy," exceptional ear and inventive playfulness, his penchant for Swiftian satire, "hall-of-mirrors intricacy," moral dilemmas, doppelgangers, counterlives and "the rapturous list." She reminds us repeatedly that even the recurring characters who share his biographical details — Nathan Zuckerman, David Kepesh, and "Philip Roth" — are masks, and are not to be mistaken for the author. She keeps her quotes to a minimum, but they include winners like this line from The Counterlife: "Jews are to history what Eskimos are to snow."


Pierpont dutifully — and defensively — addresses the accusations of anti-Semitism and misogyny that have shadowed Roth throughout his career, the latter amplified after the 1996 publication of his second wife Claire Bloom's furious post-divorce memoir, Leaving the Doll's House. "It should be clear by now," she comments, "that Roth, when attacked, prefers to goad rather than retreat: to make mischief, to get adrenaline flowing." It often seems that he's fueled by what Mickey Sabbath, his "deliberately abrasive and insanely funny" misanthropic character in Sabbath's Theater, called the male hormone: "preposterone."


In her enthusiasm, Pierpont occasionally goes over the top with "not since" pronouncements. "It's possible that not since Proust has a writer so nearly captured Time," she writes of Sabbath's Theater. Or, more broadly: "Not since Henry James, it seems to me, has an American novelist worked at such a sustained pitch of concentration and achievement, book after book after book." Which leaves me wondering: What about John Updike and Saul Bellow (both of whose relationships with Roth she considers at length)? Not to mention Joyce Carol Oates and E.L. Doctorow.


That said, Roth Unbound brings heightened understanding to the extraordinary scope and risk-taking brilliance of Roth's work, and makes a compelling case for its enduring importance. In fact, not since I first read Portnoy's Complaint have I been so struck by a writer's willingness to – dare I say it? – expose himself to so much outraged criticism.



Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/23/236380848/an-exhaustive-survey-from-columbus-to-nemesis-in-roth-unbound?ft=1&f=
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Underwood will star on live TV in 'Sound of Music'


NEW YORK (AP) — The end of the year looks busy for Carrie Underwood, and she couldn't be happier.

The six-time Grammy winning singer will host the Country Music Association Awards for the sixth time. You can see her every week singing the opening on Sunday Night Football. And for one night in December, she will star in a live television version of "The Sound of Music."

The 30-year-old star told the Associated Press Tuesday night on the red carpet of the TJ Martell Foundation gala, where she was one of the night's honorees, that she nervous doing something she's never done before. But then she realized, "None of us have. This is a live show on TV. So this is definitely a challenge for all of us."

She equated the live singing and acting as "going to a Broadway show, but you're in your living room."

"The Sound of Music" airs Dec. 5 on NBC with Underwood playing Maria alongside "True Blood" vampire Stephen Moyer. He portrays Captain von Trapp. Broadway veterans — and Tony winners —Audra McDonald, Laura Benanti, and Christian Borle round out the cast as Mother Abbess, Elsa, and Max, respectively.

While the Nashville-based Underwood is no stranger to performing before millions of people on live television — she won the fourth season of "American Idol" — she felt she needed more preparation, so she showed up in New York three weeks early.

"I wanted to be here and have all my lines memorized and everything and be ready for it. It's been really wonderful," Underwood said. "Audra and Laura are incredible. Stephen's great. It's nice to be surrounded by that much talent."

Before doing that show, the multi-platinum selling artist returns to her hosting duties on the CMA's. She's also nominated for three awards including, Album of the year, and Song of the Year. While she and co-host Brad Paisley have got it down to a science, she doesn't see the experience as old hat.

"You never know what's going to happen with us hosting," Underwood joked, referring to her and Paisley.

She added: "I think being nominated — especially when hosting the CMA's — you just never know."

The CMA's take place Nov. 6 in Nashville.

Underwood also spoke of recording the opening number this season for Sunday Night Football on NBC. She claims doing it was a no-brainer.

"It's a lot of fun. I grew up watching football. I'm from Oklahoma it's what we do," she said with a big smile.

The conversation then turned to hockey and her husband Mike Fisher's team, the Nashville Predators.

"They got off to a little bit of rocky start, but definitely getting some momentum. I feel like my husband right now. I know what he feels like now. I feel there's some really great, new young talent," Underwood said.

And what about the team's star center?

"My hubby, he's been out for the past couple of games with a foot fracture thing. But he'll be back on the ice, ASAP. I hope he does, because that's the only way I get to see him, other than iChat."

_____

Follow John Carucci at —http://www.twitter.com/jacarucci

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/underwood-star-live-tv-sound-music-060356556.html
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iTunes Radio reaches 20 million listeners, over 1 billion songs played

iTunes Radio reaches 20 million listeners, over 1 billion songs played

iTunes Radio, which was debuted with iOS 7, has already reached over 20 million listeners and 1 billion played songs since it's launch in September, according to Tim Cook live from Apple's iPad event.

Do you listen to iTunes Radio and if so, how pleased have you been with the service so far?

See also:


    






Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/CzHCtWC12Ro/story01.htm
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Thor: The Dark World: Film Review


Nobody gives good sneer like Tom Hiddleston, back once again in the pleather leggings and goat-horned helmet to play bad guy Loki in Thor: The Dark World and pretty much steal the whole show. Amiable hunk Chris Hemsworth may play the title character in this subset of Marvel's meta-Avengers franchise, but this well-intentioned "witless oaf," as his evil foster brother describes him at one point, is practically a guest at his own party here, as scads of new characters and millions of dollars worth of CGI crowd the screen. Most of it pales into insignificance when Loki takes the stage, which isn't often enough given how wildly uneven the sections without him are. Although director Alan Taylor manages to get things going properly for the final battle in London, the long stretches before that on Asgard and the other branches of Yggdrasil are a drag, like filler episodes of Game of Thrones but without the narrative complexity, mythical heft or all-pervading sexiness.



PHOTOS: Exclusive Portraits of Chris Hemsworth



In a year when so many box-office sure bets, especially sequels, have been a bust, it's harder than usual to predict how well Thor: The Dark World will do. Tracking numbers are predicting an opening weekend somewhere in the $75 million stratosphere. Meh word of mouth could diminish returns over the subsequent weeks, but who knows. There are a lot of die-hard fans out there, especially for the Marvel-verse, but then again they can also be a very discerning and exacting audience.


The opening sequence provides backstory on the Dark Elves, sharp-beaked, pointy-eared meanies from Alfheim who date back to before the beginning of time and claim a black, gaseous substance called Aether as their all-powerful weapon of mass destruction. They're seen being vanquished (but, of course, not quite) by Thor's grandfather. Thereafter, the story basically picks up where The Avengers left off, with Loki in manacles back on Thor's home planet -- or "realm," they call it -- Asgard, after trying to take over our world and trashing New York in the process. His glass-walled, whited-out cell in the dungeon bears a striking resemblance to similar baddie-holding pens in films past, from the X-Men franchise to Skyfall; there he reads books and has heart-to-black-heart chats with his adopted mother, Frigga (Rene Russo, finally getting more to do in this installment than just standing around smiling).


In uppity other realms, Thor has been putting down insurgents alongside his warrior buddies -- the Lady Sif (Jaimie Alexander), and the "Warriors Three," Volstagg (Ray Stevenson), Hogun (Tadanobu Asano) and Fandral (Zachary Levi, stepping in for Josh Dallas) -- and preparing to take over from dad Odin (Anthony Hopkins) as king. Since the Bifrost bridge that connects Asgard to Earth was destroyed two films back, Thor has no means to travel to our world to see Jane Foster (Natalie Portman), the fetching lady scientist he became smitten with in the first movie but barely mentioned in The Avengers.


Luckily, omnipotent bridge-keeper Heimdall (Idris Elba) can see she's basically fine, albeit mightily annoyed with Thor for not staying in touch. Based in London now, she's trying to heal her wounded pride by having a blind date with nice but decidedly non-godly Richard (Chris O'Dowd, criminally underused). She dumps him unceremoniously as soon as her intern Darcy (Kat Dennings), who now has her own intern (Jonathan Howard), interrupts their meal with evidence of a space-fabric disturbance that seems familiar. While investigating the weird phenomenon, Darcy is sucked into another realm and infected with Aether, which sometimes give her scary white-free eyes, evoking happy memories of Black Swan.


PHOTOS: Behind the Scenes of 'Thor'


It turns out that The Convergence, the incredibly rare astronomical alignment of all nine realms, is beginning, hence the possibility of Bifrost-free travel between Earth and Asgard. Thor comes to collect Jane, gets slapped a few times for not calling her, and they commute back to Asgard to see its intricate landscape of cavernous assembly halls and gleaming golden towers, fashioned in the forge of many a mainframe, all impressively conceived and executed by production designer Charles Wood and visual effects supervisor Jake Morrison. That said, some of the more barren landscapes look decidedly less convincing with their papier-mache boulders and screen-like backdrops when Malekith (Christopher Eccleston), the leader of the surviving Dark Elves and his crew, come to try and collect their Aether.


The middle section is mostly a muddle, with endless cross-cutting between the Dark Elves plotting, attacking and then retreating to plot some more, earthlings Darcy and Dr. Erik Selvig (Stellan Skarsgard) worrying, and the Asgardians bickering over what they should do. The latter finally decide -- despite manifest evidence provided by two previous films that it would be a very bad idea -- to release Loki from jail so that he can fight on their side. Once Loki is back in play, magisterially sneering and loftily dispensing one-liners, the whole thing perks up again. Until, that is, he's off the scene again for reasons which can't be revealed.


The final showdown in Greenwich, London, squares off the Dark Elves and their unleashed Aether against the Asgardians and humans, managing in the process to grind most of Sir Christopher Wren's exquisite 17th century Royal Naval College buildings into a fine, powdery digitally rendered pixel dust. It's here, in this stretch, that the film finally gets its mojo back, finding the requisite balance between bombast and wise-cracks that made the first Thor work in its finest moments. Admittedly, nothing Loki-unrelated in Thor: The Dark World quite matches the hilarity of the scene in the first film where Thor strides into a pet shop and demands a horse, but the finale pleasingly gives the hardworking supports a chance to josh around, the stereoscopy comes into its own, and the editing, credited to Dan Lebental and Wyatt Smith, finds its groove. What a shame the script up until this point is too often so ramshackle and plodding, like the writers were finishing off the dialogue in between catering breaks.


With a project so firmly supervised by its studio, it's hard to tell how much director Alan Taylor should be credited or blamed for the finished result. The Dark World is certainly a far cry from the jaunty little indie crime caper Palookaville (1995) he started his career with. Since then, he's directed some great episodes on some of the very best TV series, including The Sopranos, Mad Men, and, most germane of all in this context, Game of Thrones, on which he also serves as a co-executive producer. Perhaps it's unfair to compare Thrones with The Dark World given the former has so much more scope to build its world over hours of programming, but for all the budget spent on lavish visual effects in The Dark World nothing in it quite compares to the White Walkers marching relentlessly through the snowy Northern wastes at the end of the Taylor-directed episode "Valar Morghulis."


Viewers are advised to not make for the exit as soon as the end credits start rolling and stick it out until the very end if they want to see a postscript that reveals a character who may prove central to the next film. Indeed, the end credits have two Easter-egg scenes, in keeping with the trickle of in-jokes aimed at Marvel aficionados that provides a flash-quick cameo for one of Thor's superhero companions from The Avengers.


Production: Marvel Studios
Cast: Chris Hemsworth, Natalie Portman, Tom Hiddleston, Stellan Skarsgard, Idris Elba, Christopher Eccleston, Anthony Hopkins, Rene Russo, Kat Dennings
Director: Alan Taylor
Screenwriter: Christopher L. Yost, Christopher Markus & Stephen McFeely, based on a story by Don Payne and Robert Rodat
Producers: Kevin Feige
Executive producers: Nigel Gostelow, Stan Lee, Victoria Alonso, Craig Kyle, Alan Fine, Louis D'Esposito
Director of photography: Kramer Morgenthau
Production designer: Charles Wood
Costume designer: Wendy Partridge
Editors: Dan Lebental, Wyatt Smith
Music: Brian Taylor


Not yet rated, 112 minutes


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/news/~3/wV7ZsugOtRc/649886
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Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Fed stimulus hopes lift S&P 500 to another record


NEW YORK (AP) — The prospect of more economic stimulus from the Federal Reserve pushed the Standard & Poor's 500 index to a fourth consecutive record close Tuesday.

Investors also were encouraged by strong earnings from major U.S. companies such as Whirlpool, Delta Air Lines and Kimberly-Clark.

The U.S. economy added 148,000 jobs in September, the Labor Department reported Tuesday, lower than the 180,000 jobs forecast. The report was delayed for 2 ½ weeks because of a 16-day partial government shutdown.

Analysts are also expecting the upcoming jobs report for October to be weak because the shutdown may have dampened hiring.

In the absence of stronger jobs growth, the economy will struggle to grow quickly and that means the Fed is unlikely to stop its stimulus effort anytime soon.

"We've probably got another relatively soft report ahead of us," said Jeff Kleintop, Chief Market Strategist for LPL Financial. "That's likely to keep the Fed on hold for some time and the market seems to like that."

The Fed has been buying $85 billion of bonds a month to keep long-term interest rates low and spur economic growth. The stimulus has been a key driver of a 4 ½-year rally in stocks that has pushed the S&P 500 index and Dow Jones industrial average to record levels this year.

On Tuesday, the S&P 500 index rose 10.01 points, or 0.6 percent, to 1,754.67. The Dow gained 75.46 points, or 0.5 percent, to 15,467.66. The Nasdaq composite advanced 9.52 points, or 0.2 percent, to 3,929.57.

Investors are also watching company earnings for the third quarter.

S&P 500 companies are forecast to report average earnings growth of 3.5 percent for the third quarter, according to the latest estimate from S&P Capital IQ. That would be the slowest rate of growth since the third quarter a year ago.

While growth has slowed, about two-thirds of companies are reporting earnings that are beating forecasts from Wall Street analysts.

"So far, the bottom line earnings are beating the reduced expectations," said Darrell Cronk, a regional Chief Investment Officer for Wells Fargo Private Bank.

Netflix had a volatile day.

The company's stock opened higher after Netflix reported late Monday that its earnings quadrupled and it attracted more subscribers in the third quarter. The gains faded throughout the day and the stock closed down $32.47, or 9 percent, at $322.52.

The stock has gained 248 percent this year, making it the second-best performer in the S&P 500 after Best Buy. Despite the good results, analysts at Jefferies Group say Netflix's valuation is hard to justify given the cost of content, heavy competition and likelihood that the company will have to raise capital to fund its operations.

In government bond trading, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.52 percent, its lowest level since late July, from 2.60 percent late Monday.

The yields on long-term Treasury notes are used to set the rates on consumer loans such as mortgages. Falling rates should help the housing sector by keeping the cost of home financing low.

The drop in yields "is very much supportive for the mortgage markets," said Anastasia Amoroso, Global Market Strategist at J.P. Morgan Funds. "That is definitely a tailwind for the housing market and the consumer."

Homebuilders K.B. Home rose 62 cents, or 3.7 percent, to $17.19. D.R. Horton climbed 56 cents, or 3 percent, to $19.23

Stocks of homebuilders also got a boost from a report that showed spending on U.S. construction projects rose at a solid pace in August, helped by further gains in residential building.

In commodities trading, the price of crude oil fell $1.42, or 1.4 percent, to $97.80 a barrel as recent data indicated there is plenty of supply to meet current demand. The price of gold rose $26.80, or 2 percent, to $1,342.60 an ounce.

Among stocks making big moves:

— Whirlpool rose $15.22, or 11.6 percent, to $146.19 after the company said its third-quarter net income more than doubled.

— Delta Air Lines rose 80 cents, or 3.2 percent, to $25.49. The airline made more than a billion dollars in the third quarter as more passengers paid a little bit extra to fly. Delta also said it was seeing strong holiday bookings.

— Kimberly-Clark rose $4.14, or 4.2 percent, to $102.97 after the maker of Kleenex tissues and Huggies diapers said its third-quarter net income rose 6 percent.

— Coach fell $4.08, or 7.5 percent, to $50.10 after the maker of luxury handbags and accessories said its quarterly net income fell. The company is struggling with weaker sales in North America.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/fed-stimulus-hopes-lift-p-500-another-record-211302571--finance.html
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McGill/MUHC research team wins global innovation award for HIVSmart self-screening strategy and app

McGill/MUHC research team wins global innovation award for HIVSmart self-screening strategy and app


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PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

22-Oct-2013



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Contact: Julie Robert
julie.robert@muhc.mcgill.ca
514-934-1934 x71381
McGill University Health Centre





This news release is available in French.


Tuesday, October 22st, Montreal The Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre (RI-MUHC) and McGill University congratulate the team led by Dr. Nitika Pant Pai for receiving the international 2013 Accelerating Science Award Program (ASAP). The team won global recognition for developing an innovative self-test screening strategy for the Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). The award, funded by Public Library of Science (PLoS), Google and Wellcome Trust, recognizes scientific innovations borne out of Open Access research that address real world challenges. Dr. Nitika Pant Pai received the $30,000 award yesterday at the World Bank in Washington, DC.


"Receiving this award is a humbling experience," says Dr. Pant Pai, RI-MUHC researcher and assistant professor in the Department of Medicine at McGill University. "On behalf of my team, I would like to thank the award sponsors and Grand Challenges Canada (GCC) for funding this innovative research."


Despite approximately 2.5 million new cases of HIV being diagnosed each year across the world, six out of ten cases go undiagnosed, often due to the stigma attached to being tested.


"The HIV self-test screening tools developed by Dr. Pant Pai and her team offer a major step forward in addressing this global health issue," says Dr. David Eidelman, Dean of Medicine and Vice-Principal (Health Affairs), Faculty of Medicine, McGill University. "Dr. Pant Pai is a talented researcher and professor, whose work is a great inspiration to students. We are very proud to have her work within our Faculty."


"The development of this innovative application represents a major advancement in our ability to deal with the evolving HIV epidemic that affects people worldwide," adds Dr. Vassilios Papadopoulos Executive Director and Chief Scientific Officer of the RI-MUHC. "Unfortunately, stigma and discrimination are often associated with HIV. I am proud of our researchers for breaking down the boundaries that will lead to improved access to care."


The award-winning HIV screening strategy, which was developed at the Royal Victoria Hospital of the MUHC, involves an oral, over-the-counter,self-test that detects the presence of HIV antibodies, coupled with an interactive website and mobile phone app called HIVSmart. Users are guided through a confidential process of self-testing, which contains information, instructional videos, a 24 hour help line and confidential linkages to care and counselling.


HIV testing in health facilities has been less successful than hoped because of the stigma, discrimination privacy issues and long wait times. This strategy addresses some of these issues in a simple and effective way, allowing individuals to be tested in the privacy of their own homes and seek immediate medical advice.


"Introducing self-testing for HIV in many global communities is controversial and risky. There are unanswered questions and concerns that prevent people from taking the first step," explains Dr. Pant Pai. "We cannot ignore the fact that groups most affected with high rates of HIV infections are also marginalized, poor and vulnerable. They face access-to-care issues and need help in ways that other groups do not. We developed this innovation to respond to their needs."


"Grand Challenges Canada, which is funded by the Government of Canada, is proud to have supported Dr. Pant Pai's bold idea which could have such big impact on the lives of people with HIV. Dr. Pant Pai certainly is a Star in Global Health!" says Dr. Peter A. Singer, CEO of Grand Challenges Canada.


Currently, HIVSmart works on Android devices, but researchers are working on an iOS version, as well as expanding the number of languages. "We hope that this tool will be available to more people, through more phones in more countries over the coming months, including Canada," concludes Dr. Pant Pai.


The other members of Dr. Pant Pai's team that shared the award are Roni Deli-Houssein (Research Assistant Student, MUHC), Caroline Vadnais (Research Manager, RI-MUHC), and Sushmita Shivkumar ( M.D. Candidate 2016, McGill).

###


To watch the video of Dr. Pant Pai team project HIV Self-Test Empowers Patients please visit http://asap.plos.org/finalists/hiv-self-test-empowers-patients/


To learn more about the application visit http://www.nitikapantpai.com



Media contact:


Julie Robert

Public Affairs and Strategic Planning

McGill University Health Centre

514 934 1934 ext. 71381

julie.robert@muhc.mcgill.ca

muhc.ca | facebook.com/cusm.muhc




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McGill/MUHC research team wins global innovation award for HIVSmart self-screening strategy and app


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

22-Oct-2013



[


| E-mail

]


Share Share

Contact: Julie Robert
julie.robert@muhc.mcgill.ca
514-934-1934 x71381
McGill University Health Centre





This news release is available in French.


Tuesday, October 22st, Montreal The Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre (RI-MUHC) and McGill University congratulate the team led by Dr. Nitika Pant Pai for receiving the international 2013 Accelerating Science Award Program (ASAP). The team won global recognition for developing an innovative self-test screening strategy for the Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). The award, funded by Public Library of Science (PLoS), Google and Wellcome Trust, recognizes scientific innovations borne out of Open Access research that address real world challenges. Dr. Nitika Pant Pai received the $30,000 award yesterday at the World Bank in Washington, DC.


"Receiving this award is a humbling experience," says Dr. Pant Pai, RI-MUHC researcher and assistant professor in the Department of Medicine at McGill University. "On behalf of my team, I would like to thank the award sponsors and Grand Challenges Canada (GCC) for funding this innovative research."


Despite approximately 2.5 million new cases of HIV being diagnosed each year across the world, six out of ten cases go undiagnosed, often due to the stigma attached to being tested.


"The HIV self-test screening tools developed by Dr. Pant Pai and her team offer a major step forward in addressing this global health issue," says Dr. David Eidelman, Dean of Medicine and Vice-Principal (Health Affairs), Faculty of Medicine, McGill University. "Dr. Pant Pai is a talented researcher and professor, whose work is a great inspiration to students. We are very proud to have her work within our Faculty."


"The development of this innovative application represents a major advancement in our ability to deal with the evolving HIV epidemic that affects people worldwide," adds Dr. Vassilios Papadopoulos Executive Director and Chief Scientific Officer of the RI-MUHC. "Unfortunately, stigma and discrimination are often associated with HIV. I am proud of our researchers for breaking down the boundaries that will lead to improved access to care."


The award-winning HIV screening strategy, which was developed at the Royal Victoria Hospital of the MUHC, involves an oral, over-the-counter,self-test that detects the presence of HIV antibodies, coupled with an interactive website and mobile phone app called HIVSmart. Users are guided through a confidential process of self-testing, which contains information, instructional videos, a 24 hour help line and confidential linkages to care and counselling.


HIV testing in health facilities has been less successful than hoped because of the stigma, discrimination privacy issues and long wait times. This strategy addresses some of these issues in a simple and effective way, allowing individuals to be tested in the privacy of their own homes and seek immediate medical advice.


"Introducing self-testing for HIV in many global communities is controversial and risky. There are unanswered questions and concerns that prevent people from taking the first step," explains Dr. Pant Pai. "We cannot ignore the fact that groups most affected with high rates of HIV infections are also marginalized, poor and vulnerable. They face access-to-care issues and need help in ways that other groups do not. We developed this innovation to respond to their needs."


"Grand Challenges Canada, which is funded by the Government of Canada, is proud to have supported Dr. Pant Pai's bold idea which could have such big impact on the lives of people with HIV. Dr. Pant Pai certainly is a Star in Global Health!" says Dr. Peter A. Singer, CEO of Grand Challenges Canada.


Currently, HIVSmart works on Android devices, but researchers are working on an iOS version, as well as expanding the number of languages. "We hope that this tool will be available to more people, through more phones in more countries over the coming months, including Canada," concludes Dr. Pant Pai.


The other members of Dr. Pant Pai's team that shared the award are Roni Deli-Houssein (Research Assistant Student, MUHC), Caroline Vadnais (Research Manager, RI-MUHC), and Sushmita Shivkumar ( M.D. Candidate 2016, McGill).

###


To watch the video of Dr. Pant Pai team project HIV Self-Test Empowers Patients please visit http://asap.plos.org/finalists/hiv-self-test-empowers-patients/


To learn more about the application visit http://www.nitikapantpai.com



Media contact:


Julie Robert

Public Affairs and Strategic Planning

McGill University Health Centre

514 934 1934 ext. 71381

julie.robert@muhc.mcgill.ca

muhc.ca | facebook.com/cusm.muhc




[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

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]

 


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/2013-10/muhc-mrt102213.php
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Chocolate Fashions Make For A Truly Sweet Little Black Dress





"Eternal Diamond," an A-line dress hand-painted with 40 pounds of Lindt chocolate. It's adorned simply along the hem with chili and orange segments, flavors used in speciality Lindt chocolate bars. The fan and hat are also crafted from chocolate, of course.



Photo: Paul Winch-Furness/Courtesy Salon du Chocolat


"Eternal Diamond," an A-line dress hand-painted with 40 pounds of Lindt chocolate. It's adorned simply along the hem with chili and orange segments, flavors used in speciality Lindt chocolate bars. The fan and hat are also crafted from chocolate, of course.


Photo: Paul Winch-Furness/Courtesy Salon du Chocolat


If you find yourself sauntering down the runway wearing 40 pounds of chocolate, don't sweat it. Seriously – you might find yourself dripping on the audience.


So warns Fiona Bitmead, one of ten models who showed off edible chocolate creations Friday night at the Salon du Chocolat in London. Five handlers helping her get dressed.


"[I] had to worry about a dress melting on me!" she says. "I can't say I've ever wanted to eat the dresses I've worn down the catwalk before."


But as Tim Gunn might say, make it work!


Salon du Chocolat, not surprisingly, is a French creation. It's the world's largest chocolate fair open to the public, and it has been running for 19 years. This year, it will travel to 23 cities around the world, providing patrons a chance to taste and buy artisan and specialty chocolate. The salon hits New York in November 2014.


Clad in little — and not so little — chocolate dresses, the models at the London event wore gowns, headpieces, bags and even a swimsuit all made of, or adorned with white, milk and the dark stuff.





Cute, but probably not the best choice for fun in the sun: This bikini was a collaboration between chocolatier Fruitful Blooms and swimwear purveyor Bikini Fling. It features Fruitful Blooms' signature chocolate leaves and flowers.



Photo: Paul Winch-Furness/Courtesy Salon du Chocolat


Cute, but probably not the best choice for fun in the sun: This bikini was a collaboration between chocolatier Fruitful Blooms and swimwear purveyor Bikini Fling. It features Fruitful Blooms' signature chocolate leaves and flowers.


Photo: Paul Winch-Furness/Courtesy Salon du Chocolat


Chocolatiers and designers worked together to create a chocoholic's dream dresses. Lauren Smith, a 23-year-old art school graduate, was hired by Swiss chocolatier Lindt to design its "Eternal Diamond" dress, the creation Bitmead modeled. The A-line dress gets its rich brown color from the 40 pounds of chocolate that cover it; it's adorned simply along the hem with chili and orange segments, flavors used in specialty Lindt chocolate bars. Smith says she had two major worries about the dress.


"One of the main challenges was trying to pick a fabric that could sustain the weight of the chocolate and the embellishments," Smith says. "Luckily, I picked a good, sturdy stiff canvas which worked well."


Fabric samples were tested at Lindt headquarters in advance to ensure the dress could withstand the heavy chocolate coating. Smith and the Lindt team constructed the piece de resistance by hand in just two weeks.





London patisserie On Cafe's entry featured a gown covered in macarons, of course.



Photo: Paul Winch-Furness/Courtesy Salon du Chocolat


London patisserie On Cafe's entry featured a gown covered in macarons, of course.


Photo: Paul Winch-Furness/Courtesy Salon du Chocolat


"The thing that I was really worried about was sewing through chocolate and fabric and that actually came out really well. It was a bit hard, but I was able to stitch it," Smith tells The Salt.


Food artist Paul Wayne Gregory was involved with the construction of the dress, which took 24 hours to hand-paint with chocolate. Gregory says the process wasn't without its meltdowns, as it were.


"Tempering helps," he says, "but there was a lot of melting, breaking and re-building."


And how on earth did they transport it? Gregory says, "We had two women holding it in the back of a van."


Mark Tilling, master chocolatier at Squires Kitchen, a British pastry shop and baking school, used 10 pounds of chocolate squares to create an Audrey Hepburn-inspired dress and matching round handbag. Tilling says the hardest part was finding something suitable to serve as the template.





Breakfast of chocolate at Tiffany's? Ten pounds of the dark, sweet stuff were used to craft this Audrey Hepburn-inspired dress and matching handbag, created by master chocolatier Mark Tilling of Squire Kitchen.



Photo: Paul Winch-Furness/Courtesy Salon du Chocolat


Breakfast of chocolate at Tiffany's? Ten pounds of the dark, sweet stuff were used to craft this Audrey Hepburn-inspired dress and matching handbag, created by master chocolatier Mark Tilling of Squire Kitchen.


Photo: Paul Winch-Furness/Courtesy Salon du Chocolat


"It took all day just to find the right dress," Tilling says. " It's got to be easy to get into, so we needed a long zip in the back."


Tilling started with the dress: Using it as a base, he warmed chocolate to act as glue for the squared panels that adorn the frock.


Thankfully, designers won't have to re-create their perishable dresses. Each fashion show will feature the work of local designers and chocolatiers.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2013/10/21/239291104/chocolate-fashions-make-for-a-truly-sweet-little-black-dress?ft=1&f=1004
Similar Articles: Nick Jonas   Danica McKellar  

Chocolate Fashions Make For A Truly Sweet Little Black Dress





"Eternal Diamond," an A-line dress hand-painted with 40 pounds of Lindt chocolate. It's adorned simply along the hem with chili and orange segments, flavors used in speciality Lindt chocolate bars. The fan and hat are also crafted from chocolate, of course.



Photo: Paul Winch-Furness/Courtesy Salon du Chocolat


"Eternal Diamond," an A-line dress hand-painted with 40 pounds of Lindt chocolate. It's adorned simply along the hem with chili and orange segments, flavors used in speciality Lindt chocolate bars. The fan and hat are also crafted from chocolate, of course.


Photo: Paul Winch-Furness/Courtesy Salon du Chocolat


If you find yourself sauntering down the runway wearing 40 pounds of chocolate, don't sweat it. Seriously – you might find yourself dripping on the audience.


So warns Fiona Bitmead, one of ten models who showed off edible chocolate creations Friday night at the Salon du Chocolat in London. Five handlers helping her get dressed.


"[I] had to worry about a dress melting on me!" she says. "I can't say I've ever wanted to eat the dresses I've worn down the catwalk before."


But as Tim Gunn might say, make it work!


Salon du Chocolat, not surprisingly, is a French creation. It's the world's largest chocolate fair open to the public, and it has been running for 19 years. This year, it will travel to 23 cities around the world, providing patrons a chance to taste and buy artisan and specialty chocolate. The salon hits New York in November 2014.


Clad in little — and not so little — chocolate dresses, the models at the London event wore gowns, headpieces, bags and even a swimsuit all made of, or adorned with white, milk and the dark stuff.





Cute, but probably not the best choice for fun in the sun: This bikini was a collaboration between chocolatier Fruitful Blooms and swimwear purveyor Bikini Fling. It features Fruitful Blooms' signature chocolate leaves and flowers.



Photo: Paul Winch-Furness/Courtesy Salon du Chocolat


Cute, but probably not the best choice for fun in the sun: This bikini was a collaboration between chocolatier Fruitful Blooms and swimwear purveyor Bikini Fling. It features Fruitful Blooms' signature chocolate leaves and flowers.


Photo: Paul Winch-Furness/Courtesy Salon du Chocolat


Chocolatiers and designers worked together to create a chocoholic's dream dresses. Lauren Smith, a 23-year-old art school graduate, was hired by Swiss chocolatier Lindt to design its "Eternal Diamond" dress, the creation Bitmead modeled. The A-line dress gets its rich brown color from the 40 pounds of chocolate that cover it; it's adorned simply along the hem with chili and orange segments, flavors used in specialty Lindt chocolate bars. Smith says she had two major worries about the dress.


"One of the main challenges was trying to pick a fabric that could sustain the weight of the chocolate and the embellishments," Smith says. "Luckily, I picked a good, sturdy stiff canvas which worked well."


Fabric samples were tested at Lindt headquarters in advance to ensure the dress could withstand the heavy chocolate coating. Smith and the Lindt team constructed the piece de resistance by hand in just two weeks.





London patisserie On Cafe's entry featured a gown covered in macarons, of course.



Photo: Paul Winch-Furness/Courtesy Salon du Chocolat


London patisserie On Cafe's entry featured a gown covered in macarons, of course.


Photo: Paul Winch-Furness/Courtesy Salon du Chocolat


"The thing that I was really worried about was sewing through chocolate and fabric and that actually came out really well. It was a bit hard, but I was able to stitch it," Smith tells The Salt.


Food artist Paul Wayne Gregory was involved with the construction of the dress, which took 24 hours to hand-paint with chocolate. Gregory says the process wasn't without its meltdowns, as it were.


"Tempering helps," he says, "but there was a lot of melting, breaking and re-building."


And how on earth did they transport it? Gregory says, "We had two women holding it in the back of a van."


Mark Tilling, master chocolatier at Squires Kitchen, a British pastry shop and baking school, used 10 pounds of chocolate squares to create an Audrey Hepburn-inspired dress and matching round handbag. Tilling says the hardest part was finding something suitable to serve as the template.





Breakfast of chocolate at Tiffany's? Ten pounds of the dark, sweet stuff were used to craft this Audrey Hepburn-inspired dress and matching handbag, created by master chocolatier Mark Tilling of Squire Kitchen.



Photo: Paul Winch-Furness/Courtesy Salon du Chocolat


Breakfast of chocolate at Tiffany's? Ten pounds of the dark, sweet stuff were used to craft this Audrey Hepburn-inspired dress and matching handbag, created by master chocolatier Mark Tilling of Squire Kitchen.


Photo: Paul Winch-Furness/Courtesy Salon du Chocolat


"It took all day just to find the right dress," Tilling says. " It's got to be easy to get into, so we needed a long zip in the back."


Tilling started with the dress: Using it as a base, he warmed chocolate to act as glue for the squared panels that adorn the frock.


Thankfully, designers won't have to re-create their perishable dresses. Each fashion show will feature the work of local designers and chocolatiers.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2013/10/21/239291104/chocolate-fashions-make-for-a-truly-sweet-little-black-dress?ft=1&f=1004
Related Topics: eric decker   mrsa   breast cancer awareness   Derrick Thomas   Mayweather vs Canelo results  

NASA sees major Hurricane Raymond lashing western Mexico

NASA sees major Hurricane Raymond lashing western Mexico


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PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

21-Oct-2013



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Contact: Rob Gutro
robert.j.gutro@nasa.gov
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center






Low pressure System 96E developed quickly over the weekend of Oct. 19 and 20 and by Oct. 21 had grown into Hurricane Raymond. Before Raymond exploded into a major hurricane NASA's Terra satellite flew overhead from space and NOAA's GOES satellite provided images of Raymond as a major hurricane.


On Oct. 19 at 11 p.m. EDT, System 96E organized into Tropical Depression 17-E about 205 miles/330 km south of Acapulco, Mexico. By 5 a.m. EDT on Oct. 20, the depression strengthen into Tropical Storm Raymond.


NASA's Terra satellite flew over Raymond on Oct. 20 at 1800 UTC/2 p.m. EDT when it was a tropical storm off the coast of southwestern Mexico. The visible image was taken by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer instrument and showed that clouds associated with Raymond's northern quadrant were streaming over mainland Mexico, despite the center being over open water. Six hours later, Raymond reached hurricane strength with maximum sustained winds near 75 mph/120 kph.


On Oct. 21 Hurricane warnings and watches were in effect as Raymond brought heavy rains, gusty winds and rough seas to western Mexico.


A Hurricane Warning was posted from Tecpan De Galeana to Lazaro Cardenas, while a Hurricane Watch was in effect from Acapulco to Tecpan De Galeana. In addition, a Tropical Storm Warning was In effect from Acapulco to Tecpan De Galeana.



At 8 a.m. EDT/1200 UTC, Hurricane Raymond's maximum sustained winds were around 120 mph/195 kph making it a major hurricane. A "major hurricane" is a storm reaching Category 3 or higher on the Saffir-Simpson scale that measures hurricane intensity. Some strengthening is possible during the next day or so, according to the National Hurricane Center.


Raymond's center or eye was located near latitude 16.2 north and longitude 102.3 west, about 115 miles/185 km south-southwest of Zihuatanejo, Mexico. That's also about 165 miles/265 km west-southwest of Acapulco.


Raymond is crawling northward at 2 mph/4 kph, which means a longer lashing of coastal Mexico. The National Hurricane Center (NHC) expects Raymond will continue to drift northward and closer to the coast today.


NOAA's GOES-West satellite took an infrared image of Hurricane Raymond on Oct. 21 at 1200 UTC/8 a.m. EDT when it was a major hurricane and it was lashing western Mexico. The image clearly showed Raymond's eye. At NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. NASA's GOES Project created the image using data from the NOAA satellite.



In addition to hurricane-force winds, storm surge accompanied by large and destructive waves is expected to produce significant coastal flooding in areas of onshore flow within the warning areas. Rainfall expected from the storm is forecast to be between 2 to 4 inches with isolated amounts up to 8 inches over the Mexican state of Guerrero and Michoacan. For updated warnings and watches visit the National Hurricane Center webpage: http://www.nhc.noaa.gov.


###


Text credit: Rob Gutro

NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center




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NASA sees major Hurricane Raymond lashing western Mexico


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

21-Oct-2013



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Contact: Rob Gutro
robert.j.gutro@nasa.gov
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center






Low pressure System 96E developed quickly over the weekend of Oct. 19 and 20 and by Oct. 21 had grown into Hurricane Raymond. Before Raymond exploded into a major hurricane NASA's Terra satellite flew overhead from space and NOAA's GOES satellite provided images of Raymond as a major hurricane.


On Oct. 19 at 11 p.m. EDT, System 96E organized into Tropical Depression 17-E about 205 miles/330 km south of Acapulco, Mexico. By 5 a.m. EDT on Oct. 20, the depression strengthen into Tropical Storm Raymond.


NASA's Terra satellite flew over Raymond on Oct. 20 at 1800 UTC/2 p.m. EDT when it was a tropical storm off the coast of southwestern Mexico. The visible image was taken by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer instrument and showed that clouds associated with Raymond's northern quadrant were streaming over mainland Mexico, despite the center being over open water. Six hours later, Raymond reached hurricane strength with maximum sustained winds near 75 mph/120 kph.


On Oct. 21 Hurricane warnings and watches were in effect as Raymond brought heavy rains, gusty winds and rough seas to western Mexico.


A Hurricane Warning was posted from Tecpan De Galeana to Lazaro Cardenas, while a Hurricane Watch was in effect from Acapulco to Tecpan De Galeana. In addition, a Tropical Storm Warning was In effect from Acapulco to Tecpan De Galeana.



At 8 a.m. EDT/1200 UTC, Hurricane Raymond's maximum sustained winds were around 120 mph/195 kph making it a major hurricane. A "major hurricane" is a storm reaching Category 3 or higher on the Saffir-Simpson scale that measures hurricane intensity. Some strengthening is possible during the next day or so, according to the National Hurricane Center.


Raymond's center or eye was located near latitude 16.2 north and longitude 102.3 west, about 115 miles/185 km south-southwest of Zihuatanejo, Mexico. That's also about 165 miles/265 km west-southwest of Acapulco.


Raymond is crawling northward at 2 mph/4 kph, which means a longer lashing of coastal Mexico. The National Hurricane Center (NHC) expects Raymond will continue to drift northward and closer to the coast today.


NOAA's GOES-West satellite took an infrared image of Hurricane Raymond on Oct. 21 at 1200 UTC/8 a.m. EDT when it was a major hurricane and it was lashing western Mexico. The image clearly showed Raymond's eye. At NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. NASA's GOES Project created the image using data from the NOAA satellite.



In addition to hurricane-force winds, storm surge accompanied by large and destructive waves is expected to produce significant coastal flooding in areas of onshore flow within the warning areas. Rainfall expected from the storm is forecast to be between 2 to 4 inches with isolated amounts up to 8 inches over the Mexican state of Guerrero and Michoacan. For updated warnings and watches visit the National Hurricane Center webpage: http://www.nhc.noaa.gov.


###


Text credit: Rob Gutro

NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center




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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/2013-10/nsfc-nsm102113.php
Tags: Beyond Two Souls   castle   Linda Ronstadt   bradley manning   The Butler  

Tammin Sursok Debuts Slim Post-Baby Body Two Weeks After Giving Birth


Hot mama! Tammin Sursok showed off her jaw-dropping post-baby body just two weeks after welcoming her first child. The 30-year-old actress looked fit and slim while going for a walk with husband Sean McEwen in L.A. on Monday, Oct. 21.


PHOTOS: Jaw-dropping post-baby bodies


Sursok got her power walk on while her actor/director hubby pushed daughter Phoenix Emmanuel Sursok-McEwen in a covered stroller. The ABC Family star, who plays Jenna on Pretty Little Liars, had a big smile on her face while working out in a tight pink T-shirt, tiny black shorts and sneakers.


PHOTOS: Young Hollywood moms


On Oct. 8, the actress' rep confirmed exclusively to Us Weekly that the couple, married since August 2011, welcomed their first child. Baby Phoenix weighed in at 9 pounds, 12 ounces at birth.


PHOTOS: Get to know the cast of Pretty Little Liars


During an interview with Australian radio deejays Kyle and Jackie O earlier this year, Sursok revealed the she hopes to had more little ones to their family soon. "We want like three or four," she shared. "But a lot of Tammins running around -- I don't know if the world needs anymore."


Source: http://www.usmagazine.com/celebrity-moms/news/tammin-sursok-debuts-slim-post-baby-body-two-weeks-after-giving-birth-20132110
Tags: bo pelini   tupac   Robin Quivers   Shawn Burr   EverQuest Next  

In Kansas, Farmers Commit To Take Less Water From The Ground

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Water from the Ogallala Aquifer is withdrawn about six times faster than rain or rivers can recharge it. Now, a group of farmers in one part of northwestern Kansas have agreed to pump 20 percent less water out of the aquifer over the next five years.Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NprProgramsATC/~3/NPBIjlX3LRs/in-kansas-farmers-commit-to-take-less-water-from-the-ground
Category: tim tebow   Common App   ariana grande   Sinkhole In Florida   Dufnering  

Government Shutdown Delays Rocket Launch





A Minotaur I at Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia.



NASA


A Minotaur I at Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia.


NASA


The launch of a rocket carrying a record-breaking 29 satellites — originally set for early next month — will be delayed by a few weeks after the partial government shutdown halted preparations.


The Minotaur 1, operated by private space-launch firm Orbital Sciences Corp. had been slated for blast off from NASA's Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia on Nov. 4. Space.com reports:


"But just as preparations began to ramp up for the launch, managers had to order a work stoppage Oct. 1 because the government shutdown interrupted access to facilities on NASA property, including a satellite processing building, a rocket storage complex and the launch pad."


The launch of the Minotaur 1, which Space.com describes as "a fusion of decommissioned Minuteman missile stages and new commercial solid rocket motors," has been tentatively rescheduled for Nov. 19. Space.com says:




"The Minotaur 1 rocket will launch 29 satellites into low Earth orbit, setting a new record for the most payloads ever deployed from a single rocket.


The largest payload is a technology trailblazer named STPSat 3, an approximately 400-pound spacecraft hosting five experiments to test next-generation satellite components and measure the space environment.


Four dozen more satellites will launch stowed inside CubeSat deployment pods for release once the Minotaur's upper stage reaches orbit."




Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/21/239275488/government-shutdown-delays-rocket-launch?ft=1&f=1014
Category: Reign   Mexico vs Costa Rica   breast cancer awareness   bachelorette   Spain train crash  

Monday, October 21, 2013

When Science and Archaeological Conspiracy Theories Collide

When Science and Archaeological Conspiracy Theories Collide

There's no doubt that technology has changed the field of archaeology in profound ways. New tools have taken archaeologists to places they couldn't go before and opened the door to countless new discoveries. They've also shed some light on some of the—err—more creative interpretations of artifacts.

Read more...


    






Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/yiJ-9fZJXbQ/when-science-and-archaeological-conspiracy-theories-col-1446529030
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Fugitive Arrest: Former Banking Executive Caught In Italy





Former UBS banking executive Raoul Weil was indicted by a U.S. federal grand jury in 2008, on charges that he helped wealthy clients avoid billions in taxes.



Antonio Calanni/AP


Former UBS banking executive Raoul Weil was indicted by a U.S. federal grand jury in 2008, on charges that he helped wealthy clients avoid billions in taxes.


Antonio Calanni/AP


A former UBS bank executive who has been a fugitive since being indicted on federal charges in 2008 has been arrested in Italy. Swiss citizen Raoul Weil, the former head of UBS Global Wealth Management International, is accused of defrauding the U.S. government by helping clients evade taxes.


From Rome, NPR's Sylvia Poggioli filed this report for our Newscast unit:




"A police spokeswoman in Bologna said Raoul Weil was arrested Saturday when he checked into a Bologna hotel. That set off an alert system thanks to an international arrest warrant for Weill issued by the United States.


"The U.S. declared him a fugitive in early 2009, after he failed to surrender on charges he conspired to help 17,000 Americans hide assets worth $20 billion in Swiss bank accounts.


"That same year, UBS was fined $780 million and agreed to hand over the names of some 4,500 U.S. clients with secret Swiss bank accounts to avoid facing criminal charges. That deal marked a historic break in Switzerland's long tradition of bank secrecy."




Before he became a fugitive, Weil, 53, faced "up to five years in prison and $250,000 in fines," the industry website WealthManagement.com reported at the time of his indictment. Weil has said he is innocent of the charges against him.


In announcing the 2008 indictment against Weil, the Justice Department said, "In 2004 alone, Swiss bankers, who ultimately reported to Weil, traveled to the United States approximately 3,800 times to discuss their clients' Swiss bank accounts."


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/21/239239444/fugitive-arrest-former-banking-executive-caught-in-italy?ft=1&f=1001
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Study: 15 percent of US youth out of school, work


WASHINGTON (AP) — Almost 6 million young people are neither in school nor working, according to a study released Monday.

That's almost 15 percent of those aged 16 to 24 who have neither desk nor job, according to The Opportunity Nation coalition, which wrote the report.

Other studies have shown that idle young adults are missing out on a window to build skills they will need later in life or use the knowledge they acquired in college. Without those experiences, they are less likely to command higher salaries and more likely to be an economic drain on their communities.

"This is not a group that we can write off. They just need a chance," said Mark Edwards, executive director of the coalition of businesses, advocacy groups, policy experts and nonprofit organizations dedicated to increasing economic mobility. "The tendency is to see them as lost souls and see them as unsavable. They are not."

But changing the dynamic is not going to be easy.

The coalition also finds that 49 states have seen an increase in the number of families living in poverty and 45 states have seen household median incomes fall in the last year. The dour report underscores the challenges young adults face now and foretell challenges they are likely to face as they get older.

A young person's community is often closely tied to his or her success. The Opportunity Nation report tracked 16 factors — Internet access, college graduation rates, income inequality and public safety among them — and identified states that were doing well for its young people.

Topping the list of supportive states are Vermont, Minnesota and North Dakota. At the bottom? Nevada, Mississippi and New Mexico.

"Their destiny is too often determined by their ZIP code," said Charlie Mangiardi, who works with Year Up, a nonprofit that trains young adults for careers and helps them find jobs.

"We have the supply. We don't have a lack of young people who need this opportunity," Mangiardi added.

Just look at some of the nation's largest cities. Chicago, Houston, Dallas, Miami, Philadelphia, New York, Los Angeles, Atlanta and Riverside, Calif., all have more than 100,000 idle youth, the Opportunity Nation report found.

"Often times they lack the social capital in life," Mangiardi said. "There's a whole pool of talent that is motivated, loyal and hardworking." They just can't get through an employer's door, he added.

That's why Year Up spends a year working with high school graduates to teach them career skills such as computer programming or equipment repair they can use when the program ends. It also includes life coaching so they can learn skills such as time management. More than 4,500 young adults from urban areas have completed the program and 84 percent of them have found work.

But it's a far tougher time for other young people.

In Mississippi and West Virginia, 1 in 5 young people are idle — higher than their older neighbors. Mississippi has an overall unemployment rate of 8 percent, while West Virginia posts about 7 percent. Like most states, they saw their unemployment rate fall since 2011, but researchers caution that shift could come from fewer residents looking for work and from more who had simply given up their search for jobs.

And it's not as though the challenges emerge from nowhere. Quality early childhood programs help students from poor families overcome societal hurdles, and on-time high school graduation rates often follow quality schools — other factors Opportunity Nation examined in its report.

"A lot of times we don't want to look at data because we don't want to be depressed," said Rob Denson, president of Des Moines Area Community College in Iowa.

But it's an uncomfortable reality that needs to be addressed, he said.

Using previous years' reports from Opportunity Nation, Denson helped rally community organizations in his city to develop a pilot program to help students as young as 14 find summer work.

"When we got the index, it really allowed us to use it as a rallying point for all of the community-based organizations we work with to say, 'Look, this is what the world sees when they look at Iowa,'" he said.

Starting next summer, Des Moines students will be placed in paying jobs, part of a citywide collaboration to help its urban communities. It will help older adults, as well, because crime rates are expected to fall, he said.

"If they're not in school or at work," Denson said, "they're not usually doing something positive."

___

Follow Philip Elliott on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/philip_elliott

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/study-15-percent-us-youth-school-040246252.html
Related Topics: friday the 13th   sons of anarchy