Sunday, April 8, 2012

A Helpful Analysis On Easy Satellite Direct Secrets | time-aftertime.net

Reporter Karan J. I. Grimm ? The Immediate Television Satellite Technique are a most recent innovation that concerns the usage of satellite know-how towards television medium. Hughes is usually a communication satellite key, which started the application of Immediate Television satellite process in 1999. Immediate Television right now gives many channels the two area and international to the subscribers. It produced heritage by starting off the DTH or even the DTV revolution and introduced watching movies to Television screens.

Immediate Television Satellite System?s biggest edge is its digital configuration. The digital edge about analogue marks its potential to deliver DVD-like display quality, hi-def transmission and really clear audio output. Fundamental essentials reasons why it has changed your house theatre process in popularity. A highly defined on-screen help with plenty of suitable plan details are an innovation that could just be a result of digital technology and Immediate Television satellite programs.

Dish Community is usually a preferred service agency in the usa they usually at the moment offer you free of charge satellite TV programs. Each and every package includes around four free of charge satellite receivers, a no cost satellite dish, and free of charge set up coming from a experienced qualified. The Immediate T.V satellite process permits a service supplier to provide a variety of channels and a lot of state of the art features these kinds of Immediate Television TIVO & HDTV.

satellite direct reviews amusement has changed successfully after a few years of stiff competition with dish networks. Immediate Television operates about several satellites, which float in space in the country. They enable continuous feeding of long spaces of time of amusement into small dishes for the rooftops of the consumer?s property. The technology also permits bundling of internet via satellite and radio channels

Increasing price of tv is an reason behind increasing popularity of Immediate Television. An expanding trend noticed is that often several rrndividuals are disconnecting their cable services and selecting an immediate Television dish. Aside from the savings opportunity, satellite television for pc process offers use of a bigger variety of channels and programming options.

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Your Janitorial Business and Direct Mail: How to Stay Within Arms ? |

www.cleanbid.net Its not sexy. Its not the latest marketing fad in cleaning business. It doesnt have to be. What are we talking.

Link:
Your Janitorial Business and Direct Mail: How to Stay Within Arms ?

Show Tagged as: arms, business, direct, get-business-leads, internet, janitorial, Marketing, prospects, service-having

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Career Change for Academics ? Blog Archive ? for PSCDA, 4-7-2012

?

?Assessment? Tools for Discovering and Articulating Strengths

http://www.reachcc.com/360reach?? 360 Reach Personal Branding assessment tool (Basic tool is free)

http://www.dependablestrengths.org/?? Dependable Strengths (self-assessments)

http://www.strengthsfinder.com/home.aspx? Clifton StrengthsFinder ?(1.0 and 2.0) ?Code accessed through several books by ?Marcus Buckingham, Douglas Clifton and/or Tom Rath (Gallup organization)

http://www.cappeu.com/Realise2.aspx? Realise2 (Marketed as a strengths assessment AND development tool)

http://viacharacter.org/www/?? http://www.viacharacter.org/SURVEYS.aspx ?VIA Classification and Inventory of Strengths (Billed as the scientific study of character, and the ?backbone? of the science of positive psychology?

?

Articles on (and Definitions of) Social Media and Job Search Techniques

http://mashable.com/follow/search?q=job+search+and+social+media+2012&commit=Search?? (a search on Mashable for job search and social media 2012)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_social_networking_websites? (pretty current)

http://www.job-hunt.org/social-networking/social-media.shtml? Social Media and Job Search

http://socialmediatoday.com/jorgen-sundberg/358886/how-social-media-will-help-your-job-search

http://www.usnews.com/education/best-colleges/articles/2011/05/09/social-media-helps-hinders-job-search-for-grads

http://jobsearch.about.com/od/onlinecareernetworking/a/socialrecruiting.htm? ?Social recruiting and your job search, ?by Alison Doyle
http://jobsearch.about.com/od/networking/a/socialmedia.htm? How to use social media in your job search, ?by Alison Doyle

http://windmillnetworking.com/2011/02/25/tips-integrating-social-media-linkedin-job-search-2011/

http://www.recareered.com/blog/2012/04/05/get-the-strongest-impact-from-your-weak-linkedin-connections/

http://www.fastcompany.com/1818177/the-unexpected-way-to-use-your-social-network-strategically

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Top Social Networking Sites (and Articles, Reviews and Comparisons)

http://social-networking-websites-review.toptenreviews.com/

http://jobmob.co.il/blog/gigantic-linkedin-job-search-tips/

http://www.cio.com/article/508121/Facebook_Bible_Everything_You_Need_to_Know_About_Facebook

http://www.ebizmba.com/articles/social-networking-websites??? (April 2012)

http://social-networking-websites-review.toptenreviews.com/? 2012 Social networking Website Comparisons

http://jobsearch.about.com/b/2011/07/11/companies-using-social-media-for-hiring.htm

http://jobsearch.about.com/od/onlinecareernetworking/a/socialrecruiting.htm

http://www.fastcompany.com/1818177/the-unexpected-way-to-use-your-social-network-strategically article by Don Peppers

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For more current, and very lively, discussions of job search, resume techniques, cover letters and anything job-search related, look at LinkedIn?s? Career Central Group ? managed by Phil Rosenberg (an uber-connector, recruiter and prolific writer of inflammatory articles on related topics)

?

http://www.preptel.com/resources/?? company has developed an ATS-look-alike computer process (called Resumeter) to ?grade? resumes for ?Fit? with a job description ? claims that ATS determines the keywords and phrases used (for Resumeter?, sign up for 7 days free ? normally $25/month after that)
?Articles of particular interest on the resources part of the site? ?Technology: Foe or Friend??
Information cited:
?At most companies, computers read your resume, not humans.
?About 75% of resumes are discarded for low word match..
?More than 20% of resumes have formatting issues (per machines).
?Only 1% of total applicants get an interview.
?worthy of a news flash: Today, most employers no longer share your r?sum? with hiring managers. Hiring managers receive a summary report generated by Applicant Tracking System (ATS) software that removes bias-causing problems, tracks EEOC compliance and performance, and supposedly levels the playing field across the applicant pool. Regardless of how your clients are getting into the company ? friend, job board, recruiter, or online application ? everyone goes through these ATS systems
?.A survey of more than 300 biotech and health care job seekers showed only 20% knew the importance of keywords and the correct way to use them strategically in a r?sum?. About 80% knew the importance of doing pre-interview company research, but none of them thought about using that research to devise and derive keywords to use in their r?sum?.
? Quotes above from http://www.preptel.com/resources/? ?by Jon Ciampi

?

Also see? http://wordle.net?? Word Cloud tool

?

For continuing information on the topic later, see Seattle Career Trainer ? ( http://seattlecareertrainer.com/blog/ )

?

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Saturday, April 7, 2012

NKorea's Bethlehem is birthplace of Kim religion

In this Wednesday, April 4, 2012 photo, snow falls on a mosaic of the late North Korean leader Kim Il Sung at a spot at the foot of Mount Paektu where he is said to have camped overnight while leading a fight against the Japanese. The story of Mount Paektu is the story of how one man managed to build an entire national culture and history around his own carefully crafted story, deliberately drawing on the methods and symbols of religion. (AP Photo/David Guttenfelder)

In this Wednesday, April 4, 2012 photo, snow falls on a mosaic of the late North Korean leader Kim Il Sung at a spot at the foot of Mount Paektu where he is said to have camped overnight while leading a fight against the Japanese. The story of Mount Paektu is the story of how one man managed to build an entire national culture and history around his own carefully crafted story, deliberately drawing on the methods and symbols of religion. (AP Photo/David Guttenfelder)

In this Monday, April 2, 2012 photo, a North Korean soldier, working as a guide, walks near a cabin that is said to have been the home of the late North Korean leader Kim Il Sung and the birthplace of his son and late leader Kim Jong Il at what was a secret military camp during the fight against the Japanese at the foot of Mount Paektu, North Korea. (AP Photo/David Guttenfelder)

In this Monday, April 2, 2012 photo, the hoof of a deer used as a door handle hangs on the door of the small cabin that is said to have been the home of the late North Korean leader Kim Il Sung and the birthplace of his son and late leader Kim Jong Il at what was a secret military camp during the fight against the Japanese at the foot of Mount Paektu, North Korea. (AP Photo/David Guttenfelder)

In this Tuesday, April 3, 2012 photo, a bronze monument of the late North Koran leader Kim Il Sung stands at the Samjiyon Grand Monument area in Samjiyon, North Korea at the base of Mount Paektu. The story of Mount Paektu is the story of how one man managed to build an entire national culture and history around his own carefully crafted story, deliberately drawing on the methods and symbols of religion. (AP Photo/David Guttenfelder)

In this Monday, April 2, 2012 photo, North Korean soldiers walk on a snowy mountain road at the base of Mount Paektu, North Korea near a secret camp that is said to have been the home of the late North Korean leader Kim Il Sung and the birthplace of his son and late leader Kim Jong Il. (AP Photo/David Guttenfelder)

(AP) ? As the snow drifts through the towering evergreen trees, silence enshrouds this remote pilgrimage site, a place some here consider the Bethlehem of North Korea.

It was in a rustic log cabin at the foot of Mt. Paektu where Kim Il Sung, the founder of modern North Korea, led the fight for his country's independence from Japanese imperialism more than 70 years ago, according to state-sanctioned accounts. Nearby is the lodge where his son and eventual heir Kim Jong Il was born, the accounts claim.

The story of Kim's exploits at Mount Paektu is seen as the genesis of the official history of North Korea, a legend that borrows heavily from the methods and symbols of religion in a largely atheistic country.

As North Korea celebrates the centenary of Kim Il Sung's birth, his past, like the misty peaks of Mount Paektu, remains veiled in myth. Some foreign historians dispute parts of Kim's eight-volume memoirs as well as the official biography published by North Korea in 2001, and many details are impossible to verify.

However, the prodigiously detailed memoirs do suggest that he drew from a wide range of early influences, including Christianity, Confucianism, communism and a native movement called Chondoism, to craft the mythology used to justify and enshrine his family's rule.

"Kim turned his whole family into a divine entity," said historian Song Bong-sun at Korea University in South Korea. "He knew theocracies last longer than any type of regime."

Though Kim's ancestral roots were in the southern city of Jeonju, he was born outside Pyongyang in 1912 to a poor but devout Christian family of tenant farmers. He was named Kim Song Ju, or "pillar of the country."

Years before his birth, American missionaries had arrived in Pyongyang, the nation's capital, with books, medicine and bibles. They were so successful in converting locals that by 1907 the city became known as the "Jerusalem of the East," according to missionary accounts.

Kim writes in his memoirs that he often accompanied his mother to church, although he later downplays her devotion by saying she mainly considered church a place of rest and respite. Kim also insists that his father, born to a church elder and schooled by missionaries, urged him to "believe in your own country and in your own people rather than in Jesus Christ."

Despite his later efforts as president to restrict religion, Kim readily acknowledges the presence of Christians and Christianity in his early life. Its influence is clear: The 10 Principles of Kim's ideological philosophy hint at the 10 Commandments of Christianity, and all three Kim rulers are referred to as "heaven sent."

At the time of Kim Il Sung's birth, Korea was two years into colonial rule by Japan, a period Kim describes in his memoirs as a "living hell" for Koreans. Koreans were ordered to take Japanese names and speak only Japanese, in a bid to obliterate their language and culture.

The fight for Korea's independence is a dominant theme in Kim's memoirs, called "With the Century," apparently written in 1992 at age 80. Kim places himself in a long line of patriots, claiming that his great-grandfather played a key role in a famous attack on a U.S. ship, the General Sherman, as it sailed up the Taedong River in 1866.

When Kim was 6, the Japanese threw his father into prison, and he recalls the shock of seeing his father covered with scars and wounds. Kim writes that when his father died at age 31, he left his son at his deathbed with two pistols and a mission to win back their country.

Kim's tales are also meant to burnish his own credentials as an independence fighter. Even as a child, he says, he used a knife to scratch out the words "Mother-tongue" on a Japanese-language textbook, and spiked the tires of Japanese policemen with nails.

Apart from two years in Korea during middle school, he spent most of his teenage years in China, a refuge and base for independence fighters like his parents. It was there, Kim recalls, that he began his self-study of communism, including Lenin's biography, at age 13. At 14, he joined a military academy in Jilin, where he began to get involved in the anti-Japanese movement.

In his memoirs, he recalls what he describes as a momentous gathering in a bare room in Oct. 17, 1926, when he and his friends created the Down-with-Imperialism Union, and elected him president. Kim says he considers that organization the root of the current ruling Workers' Party of Korea.

Even then, Kim knew the power of cloaking a political message in a good story. He recounts setting up a secret library and luring in classmates with love stories before slipping them books about communism.

By 1927, he writes, activists had decided to make Mount Paektu their base. In 1929, at age 17, Kim was thrown into jail. He says in his memoirs that he used the time to plot an armed Korean revolution.

When he was released the following May, he began recruiting members to join a new, communist political party, according to his official biography. North Korea now considers his founding of the Anti-Japanese People's Guerrilla Army on April 25, 1932, as the start of the modern-day Korean People's Army.

Kim also started going by the nom de guerre "Kim Il Sung," meaning "Kim, the sun." Kim wasn't the first warrior to pick that name ? there were 16 well-known "Kim Il Sungs" in the previous decade with a reputation as fierce fighters, historian Song said.

The name marks the beginning of his bid to build for himself an aura of primacy. In later years, he became known as the "Sun," borrowing the potent symbol of power common to many religions and traditions. His April 15 birthday is called "Day of the Sun."

Kim's biography says he set up his guerrilla base in Manchuria in the early 1930s, and sought to push across the border by establishing headquarters at Mount Paektu by 1936. However, some experts say it is not clear whether he ever lived at Mount Paektu, and Song notes that Kim more likely served with communist Chinese forces rather than leading an independent guerrilla army.

Densely forested Paektu, straddling the Korean-Chinese border, was both a strategic defensive choice and a savvy symbolic one. Mount Paektu is Korea's highest peak and its most volatile, with an active volcano that still threatens to erupt. It's where Korea's first founder, the mythical Tangun, is said to have descended 5,000 years ago.

In the early 1940s, Kim was back in Manchuria and made forays back to the secret camp at Mount Paektu, according to his official biography. A month after Japan's defeat in August 1945, he sailed back to Korea with the Soviet army, clad in a Soviet military uniform, according to most accounts. He was 33.

As the Soviets and Americans divided trusteeship of newly liberated Korea along the 38th parallel, Soviet-backed Kim stepped into the void left by the end of Japanese colonial rule. When Seoul held its own separate elections in 1948, a new nation sprang up in the north that September: the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, with Kim as head of state.

During his career, Kim created and served in every top title in North Korea: premier, chairman of the Central Military Commission, supreme commander of the army, general secretary of the Central Committee of the Workers' Party and finally, president. Schooling, medical care and housing were all free. But in return he demanded filial, near-religious loyalty and an adherence to the militaristic rules that govern life in North Korea.

Defectors say those who oppose the party and state face imprisonment. Amnesty International estimates as many as 200,000 people are being held in North Korean labor camps today, based on satellite imagery and defector accounts. North Korea denies the existence of such gulags.

Kim also turned isolation into part of North Korea's creed through a "Juche" philosophy, which calls on his people to summon self-reliance even during hard times, such as the famine of the mid-1990s that killed hundreds of thousands of people.

"The Juche spirituality is the force that unites North Koreans in the most dire situations," said Shin Eun-hee, a Korean-Canadian theology professor at Seoul's Kyunghee University who has lectured at Kim Il Sung University in the past.

Kim threw the same mantle of reverence over his family, calling his son Kim Jong Il a "great man of the Mount Paektu type" who shared his ideas and his personality. That status now has been extended to grandson Kim Jong Un, who took over as leader following Kim Jong Il's December death.

The extent of reverence for the Kims can take foreigners by surprise ? every sentence is prefaced with thanks to leaders, and they are given credit for every achievement, small and large. Such aphorisms can seem practiced or obligatory; indeed, it is practically state law to pay thanks to the Kims.

"The process in which people start to see God and Jesus as absolute entities is very similar to the way Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il are revered," observed Lee Su-won, a North Korea researcher at Dongguk University in Seoul.

Biblical shades come through clearly in the legend of Kim Jong Il's birth at Paektu in 1942.

Some accounts suggest Kim Jong Il was born in Siberia in 1941. But according to North Korea, his mother, Kim Jong Suk, gave birth to the future leader in a simple log cabin at the height of winter in 1942, swaddling the infant with military blankets until fellow guerrilla fighters came to her with a quilt stitched together with salvaged scraps of cloth. Guerrilla fighters spread the news of the baby's arrival in messages painted in ink on the bark of trees across the Paektu region, the official history says.

Kim's memoirs make other religious and cultural references.

For instance, he recounts visiting an ethnic Korean community living on the Chinese side of Mount Paektu where most followed a religion called Chonbulgyo. He cites their belief that 99 fairies descend daily from the heavens to bathe in Lake Chon on Mount Paektu, and that the people built a 99-room temple to house them.

Kim also describes being intrigued by the Chondo religion, a native Korean movement characterized by the idea that all men are equal and bear the spirit of the heaven in themselves, said Jeong Jeong-sook, a chief educator for the sect in Seoul. As with Juche, Chondoists consider people to be the masters of their own fates, Jeong said.

Freedom of religion is enshrined in North Korea's constitution, and there are still several sanctioned churches and Buddhist temples across the country. However, Kim frowned upon the practice of religion, and the official number of followers dropped drastically after he took power.

By contrast, Mount Paektu has been recreated as an altar of sorts to Kim, his wife and his son, who routinely are referred to as the "three commanders of Mount Paektu."

By the 1980s, very little was left of the simple log cabins built in the 1930s apart from some decaying timber and a few charcoal briquettes. But Kim Il Sung retraced his steps in 1986, and researchers unearthed a few cooking utensils that once belonged to his wife in the spot where the cabin once stood, guide Kim Kum Ran told The Associated Press. He ordered the encampments rebuilt the way they looked in 1937, down to the roebuck deer hooves used as door handles, she said.

It is rare for foreign journalists to see Mount Paektu; even for North Koreans, it's not easy to get the permission and the means to travel to the far north unless they are part of organized "study tours." Still, the guide claimed that tens of thousands of mourners trudged to the mountain cabin after Kim Jong Il's December death, leaving as gifts shovels to help keep the paths clear of snow.

Kim, the young guide dressed in a military outfit, said she remembers the death of his father in 1994, when she was a first-grader. She said she had not been able to eat for three days.

"It really was like my own grandfather had died," she said. "Even before kindergarten, as soon as we start speaking, we learn to call the Great Leader 'Our Father.'"

___

Associated Press writer Sam Kim contributed to this report from Seoul, South Korea.

___

Follow AP's Korea bureau chief for Pyongyang and Seoul at twitter.com/newsjean and Sam Kim at twitter.com/samkim_AP.

Associated Press

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Not So Good at Negotiating? - Stanford Public Interest Law Foundation

Did your last negotiation go something like this? Let the Gould Center for Conflict Resolution help. You?ll work through your next big negotiating challenge (business or personal) with Janet Martinez and other Gould-affiliated faculty, with a yummy lunch to stoke your fires.

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Does Your Shampoo Contain These Harmful Chemicals? ? Beauty ...

Although shampoos have been basically created to cleanse the hair and scalp, the shampoos available these days claim to do so much more. While some promise long and strong hair, others claim to ad shine and glow to your hair. Before falling for these promises, it is important to remember that certain ingredients in the shampoo can actually damage your hair and irritate the scalp.

Very few people check the ingredient list of the shampoos they use. According to recent studies, most of the shampoos available commercially, contain chemicals that can lead to skin irritation and hair loss. Here is a list of ingredients found in shampoos that can pose potential health risks and allergic reactions:

? Fragrances used in shampoos can cause rashes and headaches. Highly sensitive people may even experience vomiting and coughing.

? Propylene glycol found in shampoos is another ingredient that can cause allergic reactions.

? Sodium lauryl sulfate (SLS) is an ingredient in shampoos that can irritate the eyes and scalp. It can also damage the hair follicles and lead to hair loss. In extreme cases, it can also cause asthma attacks.

? Some shampoos contain diethanolamine that can cause damage to the liver and kidney.

According to recent studies, researchers have found a direct link between certain ingredients in shampoos and numerous health risks. Some synthetic chemicals found in shampoos can disrupt hormones and cause other health issues as well. Without being aware of these health risks, a lot of customers continue to purchase and use chemical-based shampoos on a daily basis. The only way to protect your hair and health from the damaging effects of these chemicals is to read more about the ingredients your daily shampoo contains and to switch to a gentler shampoo with safer ingredients if necessary.

To ensure that your hair gets all the nourishment and protection it needs without getting exposed to chemical damage, make sure that the shampoo you choose is sulfate-free and pH balanced. For instance, the hair thickening shampoo in the Keranique hair care system is free of sulfates and enriched with antioxidants and vitamins that help cleanse, nourish and soothe the scalp and hair.

The Keranique hair product ingredients include hydrolyzed keratin that forms a protective shield along the hair?s cuticle to safeguard against external UV damage. In addition to detangling hair and improving its texture, the deep moisturizing formulation of the shampoo also leaves hair shiny and glossy. The sulfate-free formulation makes it safe for use on color treated hair as well. The shampoo also helps preserve the youthful nature of your hair.

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Friday, April 6, 2012

Ecosystems dependent on snowy winters most threatened, long term research confirms

ScienceDaily (Apr. 6, 2012) ? As global temperatures rise, the most threatened ecosystems are those that depend on a season of snow and ice, scientists from the nation's Long Term Ecological Research (LTER) Network say."The vulnerability of cool, wet areas to climate change is striking," says Julia Jones, a lead author in a special issue of the journal BioScience released April 6 featuring results from more than 30 years of LTER, a program of the National Science Foundation (NSF).

In semi-arid regions like the southwestern United States, mountain snowpacks are the dominant source of water for human consumption and irrigation. Research by Jones and her colleagues shows that as average temperatures increase in these snowy ecosystems, a significant amount of stream water is lost to the atmosphere. The study involves more than thirty years of data from 19 forested watersheds across the country. All of the study sites provide water to major agricultural areas and to medium and large cities.

But, like many long-term studies, this one revealed a surprise. Water flow only decreased in the research sites with winter snow and ice. Jones explains, "Streams in dry forested ecosystems seem more resilient to warming. These ecosystems conserve more water as the climate warms, keeping streamflow within expected bounds.

A range of factors can impact watersheds, from human influence past and present, to El Ni?o climate oscillations. "Long-term records are finally long enough to begin to separate the effects of each," Jones points out. "This research shows both the vulnerability and resilience of headwater streams. Such nuanced insights are crucial to effective management of public water supplies."

Surprising and transformative results are common in LTER, which comprises 26 sites in North America, Puerto Rico, the island of Moorea, and Antarctica. The network has amassed more than 30 years of data on environmental recovery and change. In contrast to most grant-funded research, which spans only a few years, LTER studies are often sustained over decades, documenting gradual changes and long-term variability that often cannot be revealed by short-term studies. Scott Collins, Chair of the LTER Executive Board, observes that "each additional year of LTER data helps us to better understand how ecosystems respond to environmental change. Such understanding provides valuable information for federal agencies, land managers, and legislators who want to develop responsible policies to deal with a rapidly changing world."

The BioScience issue reveals how the network's diversity of long-term research approaches, including detailed observations and experiments, environmental gradient studies, and complex simulation models, can contribute to solutions in an era of unprecedented environmental change. "How can we evaluate the ability of natural ecosystems to sustain critical ecological processes and the human societies that depend on them?" asks Saran Twombly, NSF's program director for LTER. "The research reported here demonstrates the unique and powerful insights that emerge from long-term studies and the analysis of long term data. This research reaches beyond scientists to engage the public and decision-makers."

In addition to deciphering ecosystem-level clues, LTER research can identify the biological winners and losers in a changing climate. According to Andrew Fountain, lead author of another LTER study in the April issue of BioScience, "The cryosphere, or the part of the Earth affected by snow and ice, has been shrinking. The populations of microbes, plants, and animals that depend on the snow and ice will decrease if they are unable to migrate to new areas with ice. But life that previously found the cryosphere too hostile should expand." In shallower snow, he explains, animals such as white-tailed deer, mule deer, elk, and caribou expend less energy and can more easily escape predators. "One species' loss can be another species' gain," says Fountain.

BioScience's retrospective look at the LTER network comes at a time when institutions charged with stewarding the nation's environmental health are increasingly being challenged to provide a basis for their decision making. A different article by a team led by Charles Driscoll from Syracuse University features several examples of how LTER research has informed important decisions over the past decade, including state and regional forest and watershed management policies. Driscoll observes, "LTER datasets and experiments help inform local- to national-scale decisions regarding climate change, pollution, fire, land conversion, and other pressing environmental challenges. This creates a crucial bridge between the scientific community and society."

There are other reasons the BioScience retrospective is timely. Demand for natural resources is increasing with global human population, which the United Nations projects to reach at least 9 billion by 2050. Another paper in the special issue shows how long-term ecosystem data can help researchers simulate a region's future based on a range of possible human actions. "For example, how might forest ecosystems change if more people begin to use wood to heat their homes?" poses Jonathan Thompson of the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute, the lead author of the paper.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of New Mexico, Long Term Ecological Research (LTER) Network.

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


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

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

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Aflibercept fails to extend survival of men with mCRPC in pivotal ...

Not entirely surprisingly, in a joint media release from Regeneron Pharmaceuticals and Sanofi issued yesterday, the two companies have announced that the investigational agent aflibercept did not extend overall survival in combination with docetaxel and prednisone in the randomized Phase III VENICE trial.

The randomized, double-blind, multi-national, Phase III VENICE study (VEGF Trap Administered with Docetaxel in metastatic androgen-independent prostate cancer) was designed to compare the efficacy and safety of aflibercept (also known as Zaltrap?) in combination with docetaxel and prednisone to a placebo + docetaxel + prednisone in men with metastatic, castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC). A total of 1,224 patients with mCRPC were randomized to receive one or other of the two regimens.? The primary study endpoint was an improvement in overall survival. Secondary endpoints included effects on PSA levels, pain, and progression-free survival.

According to the media release, Regeneron and Sanofi ?are conducting a detailed analysis of the VENICE data, and full results will be presented at an upcoming medical meeting.? However, it seems unlikely that any further investment will be made in aflibercept as a potential treatment for advanced forms of prostate cancer.

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Health Symptoms Tired | Health & Fitness

health symptoms tired

Are you frequently suffering from being exhausted and body pains? If this is the case, it isn?t usual for you to be feeling that. These pains are caused by the toxins that have been adding up in your body. If you want to be in excellent health always and not go through any of these sicknesses, best for you to perform a body cleanse detox often. Taking a trip to the spa, doing a detox diet, or using the foot patches are all different methods for you to cleanse your body.?

A lot of people want to go to a detox spa to perform a body cleanse detox as it is like a retreat where you can relax and do several treatments for cleansing your system. These spas offer a variety of treatments wherein you can detoxify specific areas that you are hurting from. Since this is a spa that offers specialized treatments, you can assume the prices to be quite expensive, other then that, you really have to provide time to go to these spas to cleanse as it isn?t something that can be done instantly.?

If you are sure about doing a body cleanse detox then going for a detox diet would be an excellent option. Performing a detox diet just means that you will stop eating unhealthy foods that cause wastes to build up and go for the healthy foods that are toxin free. This will allow you to be healthy overall allowing you to feel excellent as well. It may be difficult for you to alter your diet and stop consuming junk that you are used to but consuming foods that are good for you will really make you feel good overall.?

Detox foot patches are a great way for you to undergo body cleanse detox often. As you sleep, these patches will absorb the toxins in your body instantly. This is so easy that you are left with no reason but to cleanse often keeping you healthy and clear from any ailments.?

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Video: Preparing a classic Easter feast

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Whitney Houston's final autopsy report released

FILE - In this April 25, 2010 file photo, singer Whitney Houston performs at the o2 in London as part of her European tour. An autopsy report shows that cocaine was found in Houston's system and that investigators recovered whity powdery substances from her hotel room. Houston died Feb. 11, in California at the age of 48. (AP Photo/Joel Ryan, file)

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Whitney Houston was found face-down in a bathtub with cocaine in her system and drug paraphernalia on the bathroom counter nearby, investigators revealed in the singer's final autopsy report released Wednesday.

The report delivered a grim accounting of Houston's final hours nearly three months ago. The singer complained of a sore throat before an assistant suggested she take a bath before the start of a pre-Grammy Awards gala. By the time the assistant returned, Houston had drowned and was lying face down in the tub.

Investigators who scoured the room later found in the bathroom a "spoon with a white crystal like substance in it," and a white powdery substance in a drawer and on a mirror, according the report. The report does not specifically identify the substances as cocaine, although toxicology tests discovered the drug in Houston's heart and extremities.

The report provides a sad footnote to Houston's life, revealing the toll the singer's drug use took on her body.

When coroner's officials said two weeks ago that Houston died from accidental drowning, they also revealed that cocaine had played a role in her death. The office has said there were signs of both chronic and recent use.

An investigator noted a hole in the singer's nose, listed under "history of substance abuse."

Assistant Chief Coroner Ed Winter said he could not discuss how recently Houston may have used cocaine, or other details of the final report.

Beverly Hills police Lt. Mark Rosen said the investigation is still open and he could not comment on the findings. The department has said there did not appear to be signs of foul play.

On her final day alive, Houston complained she had a sore throat for several days, and an assistant suggested she take a bath, according to the report. By the time her assistant returned, Houston had been submerged for at least an hour, the report estimates.

Water soaked the floor, seeping into the bedroom area.

Investigators initially expected drugs or alcohol played a role in Houston's death, but no alcohol was found in her system. They eventually ruled her death an accidental drowning, with heart disease and cocaine use cited as contributing factors.

Houston's death came just hours before a pre-Grammy gala thrown by her mentor Clive Davis. She was attempting another comeback by starring in a remake of the film "Sparkle," in which she plays the mother of three girls who form a singing group and struggle with fame and drug addiction.

A trailer released Monday featured Houston prominently, including a snippet of her performance of the classic gospel song "His Eye Is on the Sparrow."

Toxicology results also showed Houston had marijuana, Xanax, the muscle relaxant Flexeril, and the allergy medication Benadryl in her system. None of those drugs were considered factors in her death.

The singer also had buildup of plaque in her arteries that can restrict blood flow. Winter has said the condition is common in drug users. The report indicated a 60 percent blockage in the singer's right coronary artery.

The singer had battled addiction for years, but friends and family have said she appeared committed to making a comeback in the months before her death.

"The biggest devil is me. I'm either my best friend or my worst enemy," Houston told ABC's Diane Sawyer in an infamous 2002 television interview with then-husband Bobby Brown by her side.

___

Anthony McCartney can be reached at http://twitter.com/mccartneyAP .

FILE - In this Oct. 28, 2006, file photo, musician Whitney Houston arrives at the 17th Carousel of Hope Ball benefiting the Barbara Davis Center for Childhood Diabetes in Beverly Hills, Calif. An autopsy report shows that cocaine was found in Houston's system and that investigators recovered whity powdery substances from her hotel room. Houston died Feb. 11, in California at the age of 48. (AP Photo/Matt Sayles, file)

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Thursday, April 5, 2012

Justin Bieber makes highest Billboard debut with "Boyfriend"

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Labspaces.net Latest News RSS News Feed

Labspaces.net Latest News RSS News FeedScience News hand picked by the Labspaces.net communityhttp://www.labspaces.net/ Wed, 04 Apr 2012 00:20:19 -0500Labspaces.net Latest News RSS News Feedhttp://www.labspaces.net/ http://www.labspaces.net/images/badge_large.pngIBM telescope would create more data than Internet <table> <tr><td> There's a massive telescope on the drawing board that hasn't even started construction yet, but when it's finished in 2024, it'll generate more data in a single day than the entire Internet. The computing giant IBM is collaborating with ASTRON (the Netherlands Institute of Radio Astronomy) to develop the next-generation computer tech needed to handle the colossal amount of data captured by the Square Kilometer Array (SKA), </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: CNN - Discipline: Astronomyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118942/IBM_telescope_would_create_more_data_than_Internet_ Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:48:59 -0500A survey of 1,000 Swedish Facebook users <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/1260787_hand_on_keyboard.jpg" width="80" height="53.333333333333" border="0" /> </td><td> The surveyed women spend an average of 81 minutes per day on Facebook, whereas men spend 64 minutes. Low educated groups and low income groups who spend more time on Facebook also report feeling less happy and less content with their lives. This relationship between time spent on Facebook and well-being is also salient for women, but not for men. These are some of the results of Sweden's largest F </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: University of Gothenburg - Discipline: Internethttp://www.labspaces.net/118941/A_survey_of_______Swedish_Facebook_users Tue, 03 Apr 2012 16:00:01 -0500We Can Survive Killer Asteroids ? But It Won?t Be Easy <table> <tr><td> Killer asteroids are a somewhat remote danger, but they are possible and can deal Earth what amounts to an extinction-level event. The dinosaurs didn't escape that fate, and it would be shame (to say the least) if we humans, with our larger brains and space programs, didn't fare better. But avoiding death by asteroid requires commitment, and some tough decisions we need to make now. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: Wired - Discipline: Spacehttp://www.labspaces.net/118940/We_Can_Survive_Killer_Asteroids_____But_It_Won___t_Be_Easy Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:48:59 -0500Pollen can protect mahogany from extinction <table> <tr><td> <img src="/images/news/Old_Bark_&_leaves_I_IMG_8671.jpg" width="80" height="53.333333333333" border="0" /> </td><td> New research from the University of Adelaide could help protect one of the world's most globally threatened tree species - the big leaf mahogany - from extinction. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: University of Adelaide - Discipline: Ecologyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118939/Pollen_can_protect_mahogany_from_extinction Tue, 03 Apr 2012 14:45:01 -0500Deconstructing the Creepiness of the 'Girls Around Me' App and What Facebook Could Do About It <table> <tr><td> Social networks and the app ecosystems that surround them may find themselves at odds over user privacy. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: The Atlantic - Discipline: Technologyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118938/Deconstructing_the_Creepiness_of_the__Girls_Around_Me__App_and_What_Facebook_Could_Do_About_It Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:48:59 -0500Nearly half of preschool children not taken outside to play by parents on a daily basis <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/868934_kids_fun_with_the_playground.jpg" width="80" height="106.66666666667" border="0" /> </td><td> The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that pediatric healthcare providers promote active healthy living by encouraging children to play outside as much as possible. Being outdoors correlates strongly with physical activity for children, which is important for preventing obesity in the preschool years and on through adulthood. A new study led by Pooja Tandon, MD, </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: Seattle Children's - Discipline: Healthhttp://www.labspaces.net/118937/Nearly_half_of_preschool_children_not_taken_outside_to_play_by_parents_on_a_daily_basis Tue, 03 Apr 2012 14:30:01 -0500Too much happiness can make you unhappy, studies show <table> <tr><td> The happier you are, the better, right? Not necessarily. Studies show that there is a darker side to feeling good and that the pursuit of happiness can sometimes make you .?.?. well, less happy. Too much cheerfulness can make you gullible, selfish, less successful ? and that?s only the tip of the iceberg. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: Washington Post - Discipline: Psychologyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118936/Too_much_happiness_can_make_you_unhappy__studies_show Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:48:59 -0500Early life emotional trauma may stunt intellectual development <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/shutterstock_82159063.jpg" width="80" height="96" border="0" /> </td><td> Early life emotional trauma may stunt intellectual development, indicates the first long term study of its kind, published online in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: BMJ-British Medical Journal - Discipline: Psychologyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118935/Early_life_emotional_trauma_may_stunt_intellectual_development_ Tue, 03 Apr 2012 14:15:01 -0500Want to be healthier? Go to college, study finds <table> <tr><td> A report card released on Tuesday ranking the relative health of people in more than 3,000 counties in the United States found that those with more college-educated residents had fewer premature deaths and fewer reports of being in poor or fair health. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: MSNBC - Discipline: Healthhttp://www.labspaces.net/118934/Want_to_be_healthier__Go_to_college__study_finds Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:48:59 -0500Fermi observations of dwarf galaxies provide new insights on dark matter <table> <tr><td> <img src="/images/news/42359_web.jpg" width="80" height="80" border="0" /> </td><td> There's more to the cosmos than meets the eye. About 80 percent of the matter in the universe is invisible to telescopes, yet its gravitational influence is manifest in the orbital speeds of stars around galaxies and in the motions of clusters of galaxies. Yet, despite decades of effort, no one knows what this "dark matter" really is. Many scientists think it's likely that the mystery will be solv </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center - Discipline: Astronomyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118933/Fermi_observations_of_dwarf_galaxies_provide_new_insights_on_dark_matter Tue, 03 Apr 2012 14:00:01 -0500See the cities that never sleep from space <table> <tr><td> This image of the eastern US taken from the International Space Station shows that when the sun goes down, the Big Apple is far from alone </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: New Scientist - Discipline: Spacehttp://www.labspaces.net/118932/See_the_cities_that_never_sleep_from_space Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:48:59 -0500What do ADHD and cancer have in common? Variety <table> <tr><td> <img src="/images/news/PET-image.jpg" width="80" height="86.909090909091" border="0" /> </td><td> According to new research conducted at Oregon Health & Science University, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is more than one disorder. It's an entire family of disorders, much like the multiple subtypes of cancer. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: Oregon Health & Science University - Discipline: Neurosciencehttp://www.labspaces.net/118931/What_do_ADHD_and_cancer_have_in_common__Variety Tue, 03 Apr 2012 13:45:01 -0500Controversial flu studies cleared for publication <table> <tr><td> The US National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity revises its recommendations on two H5N1 flu studies after revisions to the manuscripts </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: New Scientist - Discipline: Science Politicshttp://www.labspaces.net/118930/Controversial_flu_studies_cleared_for_publication Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:48:59 -0500Empathy doesn't extend across the political aisle <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/shutterstock_74531899.jpg" width="80" height="47.733333333333" border="0" /> </td><td> When we try to put ourselves in someone else's shoes, we usually go all the way, assuming that they feel the same way we do. But a new study published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, finds that we have limits: we don't extend this projection to people who have different political views, even under extreme circumstances. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: Association for Psychological Science - Discipline: Psychologyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118929/Empathy_doesn_t_extend_across_the_political_aisle Tue, 03 Apr 2012 13:30:01 -0500'Smart sand' builds copies of objects <table> <tr><td> Stick an object inside a grid of these little electronic cubes, and they automatically create a copy </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: New Scientist - Discipline: Materials Sciencehttp://www.labspaces.net/118928/_Smart_sand__builds_copies_of_objects Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:48:59 -0500Sparrows change their tune to be heard in noisy cities <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/713px-House_Sparrow,_England_-_May_09.jpg" width="80" height="67.2" border="0" /> </td><td> Sparrows in San Francisco's Presidio district changed their tune to soar above the increasing cacophony of car horns and engine rumbles, details new George Mason University research in the April edition of "Animal Behaviour." The study, "Birdsongs Keep Pace with City Life: Changes in Song Over Time in an Urban Songbird Affects Communication," compares birdsongs from as far back as 1969 </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: George Mason University - Discipline: Animal Behaviorhttp://www.labspaces.net/118927/Sparrows_change_their_tune_to_be_heard_in_noisy_cities Tue, 03 Apr 2012 13:15:01 -0500Photon sieves make super-cheap space telescopes <table> <tr><td> A plastic sheet called a "photon sieve" focuses incoming light, providing a quick, cheap way to replace damaged space telescopes </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: New Scientist - Discipline: Astronomyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118926/Photon_sieves_make_super_cheap_space_telescopes Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:48:59 -0500Researchers link neural variability to short-term memory and decision making <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/shutterstock_81254956.jpg" width="80" height="60" border="0" /> </td><td> A team of University of Pittsburgh mathematicians is using computational models to better understand how the structure of neural variability relates to such functions as short-term memory and decision making. In a paper published online April 2 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), the Pitt team examines how fluctuations in brain activity can impact the dynamics </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: University of Pittsburgh - Discipline: Neurosciencehttp://www.labspaces.net/118925/Researchers_link_neural_variability_to_short_term_memory_and_decision_making Tue, 03 Apr 2012 13:00:01 -0500In a 3-D Printed Future, Do Toymakers Have a Business Model? <table> <tr><td> What's to stop kids from pirating LEGO sets as readily as they pirate music? Let's assume for a minute that 3D printing becomes as good as its proponents say it will, and soon. We're talking high strength plastics, high resolution models, all at prices that the average consumer can afford. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: Technology Review - Discipline: Technologyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118924/In_a___D_Printed_Future__Do_Toymakers_Have_a_Business_Model_ Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:48:59 -0500Scientists study the catalytic reactions used by plants to split oxygen from water <table> <tr><td> <img src="/images/news/42333_web.jpg" width="80" height="120.53333333333" border="0" /> </td><td> Splitting hydrogen and oxygen from water using conventional electrolysis techniques requires considerable amounts of electrical energy. But green plants produce oxygen from water efficiently using a catalytic technique powered by sunlight ? a process that is part of photosynthesis and so effective that it is the Earth's major source of oxygen. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: Georgia Institute of Technology Research News - Discipline: Biochemistryhttp://www.labspaces.net/118923/Scientists_study_the_catalytic_reactions_used_by_plants_to_split_oxygen_from_water Tue, 03 Apr 2012 12:45:01 -0500Why creepy Uncanny Valley keeps us on edge <table> <tr><td> The "uncanny valley" phenomenon remains almost as mysterious as when Japanese roboticist Masahiro Mori first coined the term in 1970. But scientists have begun venturing deeper into the metaphorical valley to better understand why robots or virtual characters with certain human characteristics can trigger such mental uneasiness. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: MSNBC - Discipline: Psychologyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118922/Why_creepy_Uncanny_Valley_keeps_us_on_edge Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:48:59 -0500Discovery paves way for improved painkillers <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/72200_spilled_pills.jpg" width="80" height="60" border="0" /> </td><td> An international team of researchers involving the University of Adelaide and University of Colorado has made a major discovery that could lead to more effective treatment of severe pain using morphine. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: University of Adelaide - Discipline: Healthhttp://www.labspaces.net/118921/Discovery_paves_way_for_improved_painkillers Tue, 03 Apr 2012 12:30:01 -0500Arizona law would censor the Internet <table> <tr><td> The state of Arizona could find itself in the company of countries like China and Syria for censoring the Internet if the state's governor signs a bill recently passed by the legislature. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: MSNBC - Discipline: Internethttp://www.labspaces.net/118920/Arizona_law_would_censor_the_Internet Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:48:59 -0500Virus protects against autoimmunity <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/800px-Epstein_Barr_Virus_virions_EM_10.1371_journal.pbio.0030430.g001-L.JPG" width="80" height="57.066666666667" border="0" /> </td><td> To the surprise of investigating researchers, an animal model of Epstein Barr virus protected lupus-prone mice against development of the autoimmune disease. Earlier work had suggested that EBV might promote the development of autoimmunity. "We were completely surprised. So, we redid the experiments, and the results came out the same," said Dr. Pelanda, lead author on the paper appearing onli </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: National Jewish Health - Discipline: Healthhttp://www.labspaces.net/118919/Virus_protects_against_autoimmunity Tue, 03 Apr 2012 12:15:01 -050017-year-old pianist invents land-mine detector <table> <tr><td> Marian Bechtel, 17, has invented a new minesweeper. It costs far less than current technology, uses sound waves to detect where the devices are ? and was inspired by a piano. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: MSNBC - Discipline: Technologyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118918/___year_old_pianist_invents_land_mine_detector Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:48:59 -0500New compound may halt growth of malaria parasite <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/Plasmodium.jpg" width="80" height="86.133333333333" border="0" /> </td><td> A drug candidate that has shown promise for neutralizing dangerous bacteria also prevents the parasite that causes malaria from growing, new research by a Yale University team headed by Nobel laureate Sidney Altman shows. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: Yale University - Discipline: Agriculturehttp://www.labspaces.net/118917/New_compound_may_halt_growth_of_malaria_parasite Tue, 03 Apr 2012 12:00:01 -0500'Stingray' gadgets help cops track your cellphone <table> <tr><td> Police in an affluent suburb are using a futuristic $244,000 spy gadget that allows it to track cellphones without having to ask telephone companies. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: MSNBC - Discipline: Technologyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118916/_Stingray__gadgets_help_cops_track_your_cellphone Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:48:59 -0500How stress influences disease: Study reveals inflammation as the culprit <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/843474___code__.jpg" width="80" height="53.333333333333" border="0" /> </td><td> Stress wreaks havoc on the mind and body. For example, psychological stress is associated with greater risk for depression, heart disease and infectious diseases. But, until now, it has not been clear exactly how stress influences disease and health. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: Carnegie Mellon University - Discipline: Healthhttp://www.labspaces.net/118915/How_stress_influences_disease__Study_reveals_inflammation_as_the_culprit Tue, 03 Apr 2012 11:45:01 -0500Why FDA Declines to Ban BPA <table> <tr><td> The FDA declines to ban a troubling and ubiquitous chemical, but research goes on </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: TIME Magazine - Discipline: Healthhttp://www.labspaces.net/118914/Why_FDA_Declines_to_Ban_BPA Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:48:59 -0500Scientists find evidence that human ancestors used fire one million years ago <table> <tr><td> <img src="/images/news/42188_web.jpg" width="80" height="54.933333333333" border="0" /> </td><td> An international team led by the University of Toronto and Hebrew University has identified the earliest known evidence of the use of fire by human ancestors. Microscopic traces of wood ash, alongside animal bones and stone tools, were found in a layer dated to one million years ago at the Wonderwerk Cave in South Africa. "The analysis pushes the timing for the human use of fire back by 30 </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: University of Toronto - Discipline: Archaeologyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118913/Scientists_find_evidence_that_human_ancestors_used_fire_one_million_years_ago Tue, 03 Apr 2012 11:30:01 -0500Gold Miners Dig Deep ? To The Ocean Floor <table> <tr><td> Next year, an Australian company plans to start drilling deep underwater off the coast of Papua New Guinea to extract deposits rich with copper, gold, silver and zinc. The firm says the operation is much less messy than mining on land, but some scientists worry about the impact on deep-sea life. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: NPR - Discipline: Geologyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118912/Gold_Miners_Dig_Deep_____To_The_Ocean_Floor Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:48:59 -0500New study is first to show that pesticides can induce morphological changes in vertebrate animals <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/309769_tadpole_dreaming.jpg" width="80" height="59.636363636364" border="0" /> </td><td> The world's most popular weed killer, Roundup?, can cause amphibians to change shape, according to research published today in Ecological Applications. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: University of Pittsburgh - Discipline: Developmenthttp://www.labspaces.net/118911/New_study_is_first_to_show_that_pesticides_can_induce_morphological_changes_in_vertebrate_animals Tue, 03 Apr 2012 11:15:01 -0500Earth Has Just One Moon, Right? Think Again <table> <tr><td> Everybody knows that there's just one Moon orbiting the Earth. But a new study by a team of astronomers concludes that everybody is dead wrong about that. Tiny mini-moons, just a few feet across, make regular orbits around the planet. But they don't stick around very long ? they're easily pulled away by the gravity of neighboring planets. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: NPR - Discipline: Spacehttp://www.labspaces.net/118910/Earth_Has_Just_One_Moon__Right__Think_Again Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:48:59 -0500Fertilizer use responsible for increase in nitrous oxide in atmosphere <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/115333main_image_feature_329_ys_4.jpg" width="80" height="60" border="0" /> </td><td> University of California, Berkeley, chemists have found a smoking gun proving that increased fertilizer use over the past 50 years is responsible for a dramatic rise in atmospheric nitrous oxide, which is a major greenhouse gas contributing to global climate change. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: University of California - Berkeley - Discipline: Environmenthttp://www.labspaces.net/118909/Fertilizer_use_responsible_for_increase_in_nitrous_oxide_in_atmosphere Tue, 03 Apr 2012 11:00:01 -0500Do Negative Ads Make A Difference? Political Scientists Say Not So Much <table> <tr><td> Blistering political ads like the Swift Boat attacks on John Kerry in 2004 may not be as decisive as politicians think. Political scientists say if voters already know a candidate, negative ads don't have much of an impact. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: NPR - Discipline: Psychologyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118908/Do_Negative_Ads_Make_A_Difference__Political_Scientists_Say_Not_So_Much Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:48:59 -0500Scientists find slow subsidence of Earth's crust beneath the Mississippi delta <table> <tr><td> <img src="/images/news/42337_web.jpg" width="80" height="50.133333333333" border="0" /> </td><td> The Earth's crust beneath the Mississippi Delta sinks at a much slower rate than what had been assumed. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: National Science Foundation - Discipline: Geologyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118907/Scientists_find_slow_subsidence_of_Earth_s_crust_beneath_the_Mississippi_delta Tue, 03 Apr 2012 10:45:01 -0500ScienceShot: Why Old Paper Turns Yellow <table> <tr><td> Scientists identify molecular basis of aging effect </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: Science - Discipline: Chemistryhttp://www.labspaces.net/118906/ScienceShot__Why_Old_Paper_Turns_Yellow Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:48:59 -0500Whole genome sequencing not informative for all <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/shutterstock_25532056.jpg" width="80" height="53.6" border="0" /> </td><td> With sharp declines in the cost of whole genome sequencing, the day of accurately deciphering disease risk based on an individual's genome may seem at hand. But a study involving data of thousands of identical twins by Johns Hopkins investigators finds that genomic fortune-telling fails to provide informative guidance to most people about their risk for most common diseases, and warns against com </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions - Discipline: Geneticshttp://www.labspaces.net/118905/Whole_genome_sequencing_not_informative_for_all Tue, 03 Apr 2012 10:30:01 -0500How Facebook "Contagion" Spreads <table> <tr><td> Study finds surprising incentive for people to join the social-networking site </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: Science - Discipline: Internethttp://www.labspaces.net/118904/How_Facebook__quot_Contagion_quot__Spreads Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:48:59 -0500Ovastacin cuts off sperm binding <table> <tr><td> <img src="/images/news/42202_web.jpg" width="80" height="74.666666666667" border="0" /> </td><td> A study in The Journal of Cell Biology describes how a secreted enzyme helps egg cells avoid being fertilized by more than one sperm. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: Rockefeller University Press - Discipline: Developmenthttp://www.labspaces.net/118903/Ovastacin_cuts_off_sperm_binding Tue, 03 Apr 2012 10:15:01 -0500Little Fish Need a Break <table> <tr><td> Report says seabirds and other predators depend on small forage fishes near base of food web </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: Science - Discipline: Ecologyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118902/Little_Fish_Need_a_Break Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:48:59 -0500Osteoporosis drugs may increase risk of serious eye disease <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/1021854___atomic__.jpg" width="80" height="60.16" border="0" /> </td><td> Drugs that are commonly used to prevent osteoporosis may increase the risk of serious inflammatory eye disease in first-time users, found an article in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal). </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: Canadian Medical Association Journal - Discipline: Healthhttp://www.labspaces.net/118901/Osteoporosis_drugs_may_increase_risk_of_serious_eye_disease Tue, 03 Apr 2012 10:00:01 -0500Research brings new understanding to past global warming events <table> <tr><td> <img src="/images/news/42332_web.jpg" width="80" height="106.66666666667" border="0" /> </td><td> A series of global warming events called hyperthermals that occurred more than 50 million years ago had a similar origin to a much larger hyperthermal of the period, the Pelaeocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM), new research has found. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: University of New Hampshire - Discipline: Geologyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118900/Research_brings_new_understanding_to_past_global_warming_events Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:45:02 -0500Discovery of the first evidence for Pre-Columbian sources of Maya Blue <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/Azulm6.jpg" width="80" height="122.66666666667" border="0" /> </td><td> Once again, science and anthropology have teamed up to solve questions concerning the fascinating, brilliantly hued pigment known as Maya Blue. Impervious to the effects of chemical or physical weathering, the pigment was applied to pottery, sculpture, and murals in Mesoamerica largely during the Classic and Postclassic periods (AD 250-1520), playing a central role in ancient Maya religi </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: Field Museum - Discipline: Archaeologyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118899/Discovery_of_the_first_evidence_for_Pre_Columbian_sources_of_Maya_Blue Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:30:01 -0500Too dog tired to avoid danger <table> <tr><td> <img src="/images/news/42330_web.jpg" width="80" height="53.066666666667" border="0" /> </td><td> How do dogs behave when their ability to exert self-control is compromised? Are they more likely to approach dangerous situations or stay well away? According to a new study by Holly Miller, from the University of Lille Nord de France, and colleagues, dogs that have 'run out' of self-control make more impulsive decisions that put them in harm's way. The work was just published online in Springer's </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: Springer - Discipline: Animal Behaviorhttp://www.labspaces.net/118898/Too_dog_tired_to_avoid_danger Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:15:01 -0500Newly found protein helps cells build tissues <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/843473___code__.jpg" width="80" height="53.454545454545" border="0" /> </td><td> As they work together to form body parts, cells in developing organisms communicate like workers at a construction site. The discovery of a new signaling molecule in flies by Brown University biologists not only helps explain how cells send many long-haul messages, but also provides new clues for researchers who study how human development goes awry, for insta </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: Brown University - Discipline: Molecular Biologyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118897/Newly_found_protein_helps_cells_build_tissues Tue, 03 Apr 2012 08:00:05 -0500Death cap mushroom poison to arrest pancreatic cancer in mice <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/shutterstock_59372219.jpg" width="80" height="53.6" border="0" /> </td><td> The mere thought of an identification error sends a chill down the spine of any mushroom lover: The death cap mushroom (Amanita phalloides), which resembles the common white button mushroom, contains one of the most deadly poisons found in nature, ?-amanitin. This substance kills any cell without exception, whether it be healthy or cancerous. At the German Cancer Research Center (Deuts </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres - Discipline: Cancerhttp://www.labspaces.net/118896/Death_cap_mushroom_poison_to_arrest_pancreatic_cancer_in_mice Mon, 02 Apr 2012 17:00:01 -0500Dartmouth scientists track radioactive iodine from Japan nuclear reactor meltdown <table> <tr><td> <img src="/images/news/42322_web.jpg" width="80" height="53.333333333333" border="0" /> </td><td> Radioactive iodine found by Dartmouth researchers in the local New Hampshire environment is a direct consequence of a nuclear reactor's explosion and meltdown half a world away, says Joshua Landis, a research associate in the Department of Earth Science. The failure of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power facility, following the March 11, 2011, earthquake and tsunami, was the largest nuclear disast </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: Dartmouth College - Discipline: Chemistryhttp://www.labspaces.net/118895/Dartmouth_scientists_track_radioactive_iodine_from_Japan_nuclear_reactor_meltdown Mon, 02 Apr 2012 16:45:01 -0500Ancient Egyptian cotton unveils secrets of domesticated crop evolution <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/shutterstock_64410901.jpg" width="80" height="53.066666666667" border="0" /> </td><td> Scientists studying 1,600-year-old cotton from the banks of the Nile have found what they believe is the first evidence that punctuated evolution has occurred in a major crop group within the relatively short history of plant domestication. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: University of Warwick - Discipline: Evolutionhttp://www.labspaces.net/118894/Ancient_Egyptian_cotton_unveils_secrets_of_domesticated_crop_evolution Mon, 02 Apr 2012 16:30:01 -0500Exploring the antidepressant effects of testosterone <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/shutterstock_1748023.jpg" width="80" height="0" border="0" /> </td><td> Testosterone, the primary male sex hormone, appears to have antidepressant properties, but the exact mechanisms underlying its effects have remained unclear. Nicole Carrier and Mohamed Kabbaj, scientists at Florida State University, are actively working to elucidate these mechanisms. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: Elsevier - Discipline: Physiologyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118893/Exploring_the_antidepressant_effects_of_testosterone Mon, 02 Apr 2012 16:15:01 -0500Corals 'could survive a more acidic ocean' <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/shutterstock_90485029.jpg" width="80" height="106.66666666667" border="0" /> </td><td> Corals may be better placed to cope with the gradual acidification of the world's oceans than previously thought ? giving rise to hopes that coral reefs might escape climatic devastation. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: ARC Centre of Excellence in Coral Reef Studies - Discipline: Marine Biologyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118892/Corals__could_survive_a_more_acidic_ocean_ Mon, 02 Apr 2012 16:00:01 -0500Death anxiety increases atheists' unconscious belief in God <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/shutterstock_82159063.jpg" width="80" height="96" border="0" /> </td><td> New research suggests that when non-religious people think about their own death they become more consciously skeptical about religion, but unconsciously grow more receptive to religious belief. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: University of Otago - Discipline: Psychologyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118891/Death_anxiety_increases_atheists__unconscious_belief_in_God Mon, 02 Apr 2012 14:45:01 -0500South Pole Telescope hones in on dark energy, neutrinos <table> <tr><td> <img src="/images/news/42317_web.jpg" width="80" height="53.333333333333" border="0" /> </td><td> Analysis of data from the 10-meter South Pole Telescope is providing new support for the most widely accepted explanation of dark energy ? the source of the mysterious force that is responsible for the accelerating expansion of the universe. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: University of Chicago - Discipline: Astronomyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118890/South_Pole_Telescope_hones_in_on_dark_energy__neutrinos Mon, 02 Apr 2012 14:30:01 -0500Rare immune cells could hold key to treating immune disorders <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/SEM_blood_cells.jpg" width="80" height="99.466666666667" border="0" /> </td><td> The characterisation of a rare immune cell's involvement in antibody production and ability to 'remember' infectious agents could help to improve vaccination and lead to new treatments for immune disorders, say researchers from the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: Walter and Eliza Hall Institute - Discipline: Immunologyhttp://www.labspaces.net/118889/Rare_immune_cells_could_hold_key_to_treating_immune_disorders Mon, 02 Apr 2012 14:15:02 -0500Estrogen is responsible for slow wound healing in women <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/Estriol_v2.jpg" width="80" height="42.4" border="0" /> </td><td> Estrogen causes wounds in women to heal slower than in men - who have lower levels of estrogen - says a new study published in the April 2012 issue of the FASEB Journal. In the report, scientists from the University of California, Berkeley, provide the first evidence that mild injury response in the eye is fundamentally different in males and females because of estrogen. This discovery prov </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology - Discipline: Healthhttp://www.labspaces.net/118888/Estrogen_is_responsible_for_slow_wound_healing_in_women____ Mon, 02 Apr 2012 14:00:01 -0500Research team discovers new quantum encryption method to foil hackers <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/1159613_binary_code_1.jpg" width="80" height="113.20754716981" border="0" /> </td><td> A research team led by University of Toronto Professor Hoi-Kwong Lo has found a new quantum encryption method to foil even the most sophisticated hackers. The discovery is outlined in the latest issue of Physical Review Letters. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: University of Toronto Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering - Discipline: Computer Sciencehttp://www.labspaces.net/118887/Research_team_discovers_new_quantum_encryption_method_to_foil_hackers Mon, 02 Apr 2012 13:45:01 -0500Study reveals insight into how key protein protects against viral infections <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/1021854___atomic__.jpg" width="80" height="60.16" border="0" /> </td><td> Scientists from the University of Utah School of Medicine have discovered that a mouse protein called IFITM3 contributes to the body's defense against some types of viral infections by binding to an enzyme responsible for regulating the pH of a cell's waste disposal system. This finding, published in the March 30, 2012, issue of Innate Immunity, sheds light on the cellular </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: University of Utah Health Sciences - Discipline: Biochemistryhttp://www.labspaces.net/118886/Study_reveals_insight_into_how_key_protein_protects_against_viral_infections Mon, 02 Apr 2012 13:30:01 -0500Organics probably formed easily in early solar system <table> <tr><td> <img src="/images/news/42312_web.jpg" width="80" height="60" border="0" /> </td><td> Complex organic compounds, including many important to life on Earth, were readily produced under conditions that likely prevailed in the primordial solar system. Scientists at the University of Chicago and NASA Ames Research Center came to this conclusion after linking computer simulations to laboratory experiments. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: University of Chicago - Discipline: Chemistryhttp://www.labspaces.net/118885/Organics_probably_formed_easily_in_early_solar_system Mon, 02 Apr 2012 13:15:02 -0500'Druggable' protein complex identified as a therapeutic target in acute myeloid leukemia <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/shutterstock_96250214.jpg" width="80" height="80" border="0" /> </td><td> Scientists at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory have identified a candidate drug target for treating acute myeloid leukemia (AML), a white blood cell cancer that proliferates out of control in the bone marrow. The team, led by Assistant Professor Chris Vakoc, M.D., Ph.D., shows that blocking a protein called PRC2 halts this uncontrolled proliferation in the bone marrow of mi </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory - Discipline: Cancerhttp://www.labspaces.net/118884/_Druggable__protein_complex_identified_as_a_therapeutic_target_in_acute_myeloid_leukemia Mon, 02 Apr 2012 13:00:01 -0500PTSD genes identified by UCLA study <table> <tr><td> <img src="http://www.labspaces.net/images/news/shutterstock_86205961" width="80" height="89.6" border="0" /> </td><td> Why do some persons succumb to post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) while others who suffered the same ordeal do not? A new UCLA study may shed light on the answer. </td> </tr> </table> <br>Source: University of California - Los Angeles Health Sciences - Discipline: Geneticshttp://www.labspaces.net/118883/PTSD_genes_identified_by_UCLA_study Mon, 02 Apr 2012 12:45:01 -0500

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