Sunday, March 17, 2013

Novartis lung cancer drug gets key FDA designation

NEW YORK (AP) -- Novartis AG said Friday that its experimental cancer drug LDK378 was designated as a breakthrough therapy by the Food and Drug Administration.

The Swiss drugmaker is studying LDK378 as a treatment for a rare type of metastatic non-small cell lung cancer. It is intended for patients whose cancer progressed during treatment with Pfizer Inc.'s drug Xalkori, or who could not tolerate treatment with Xalkori.

The FDA created the breakthrough therapy program in 2012 as a way to speed up the approval process for drugs that could be significant improvements in the treatment of serious or life-threatening diseases from what's currently on the market.

Novartis is running two mid-stage clinical trials of LDK378. It plans to start late-stage testing later in 2013 and to file for marketing approval in early 2014.

Shares of Novartis rose 96 cents to $69.91 in late morning trading. The stock has changed hands between $51.20 and $70.24 in the past 52 weeks.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/novartis-lung-cancer-drug-gets-150608426.html

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Saturday, March 16, 2013

Ryan Seacrest, Julianne Hough Split After Almost Three Years Together (REPORT)

Ryan Seacrest and Julianne Hough have reportedly called it quits after dating for almost three years.

According to People, sources close to the couple have confirmed that they have decided to take a break and are currently living apart. The sources say both Seacrest and Hough's busy work schedules ended up being too much on their relationship, although they remain friends and are in regular contact.

"Honestly, their schedules were too hectic," an insider tells Us Weekly, explaining that Seacrest's "American Idol" hosting gig, as well as Hough's work commitments played a huge factor in the breakup. "It just got to be too much. I think they both just sort of knew they couldn't do it anymore," the source adds. "The travel and lifestyle got to be too much. Who knows if this is just for now, but I think this is for good."

"It's a hard thing to do, especially when you're so caught up in your work and bettering yourself," Hough recently told Parade of keeping her romance with Seacrest alive. "It does get hard because you're so focused on that, but I think at the end of the day you have to find a balance with what's really important."

Seacrest, 38, and Hough, 24, began dating in 2010 after meeting during an interview while the former "Dancing With the Stars" pro was still with country singer Chuck Wicks.

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/16/ryan-seacrest-julianne-hough-split_n_2890436.html

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Friday, March 15, 2013

Lessons from Iraq... in 1958.

The Atlantic recently re-posted a piece they'd commissioned from William R. Polk in 1958 and I stumbled across it when I was looking for some of Mr. Polk's more recent work this morning.

Mr. Polk's essay was published five months after the July 1958 coup that ended the pro-Western monarchy that the British had installed in Iraq in 1921 and came at a time of enormous regional upheaval, when forms of government were being upended, new ideologies were burbling throughout the Arab cultural and social sphere, and the US and its closest allies were desperately scrambling for a new regional modus videndi. The essay is simply titled "The Lesson of Iraq" and I'm putting it straight into my "the more things change..." file.

Here's the first paragraph: "Crash programs seldom result in a sound policy. Too often our State Department has waited until the United States was involved in a new crisis before it began to improvise a pact, a doctrine, or a show of force; too often we have reacted in the heat of emergency, under circumstances not of our own choosing."

There's a lot of wisdom in those words alone as regards US behavior in the years since 9/11, certainly for our nearly decade of war in Iraq, which removed the secular-nationalist Baath Party (that rose to power with a coup of its own in 1963), and for America's fumbling for new policies in a region that is once again being turned on its head. In the 1950s, US-friendly monarchs were overthrown in Iraq and Egypt and replaced by officers angry at what they considered the humiliation of being Western client states and seeking to upend what they saw as corrupt domestic orders. Across the region, publics were inflamed with the pan-Arabism preached by Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser.

Today, political Islam has come to the fore in Egypt. In Iraq, a Shiite-Islamist dominated government resulted from the US war to remove Saddam Hussein. In Syria a bloody, sectarian war is raging with the US uncertain of what to do, seeking influence with a rebellion, many of whose members have as little love for America as Abdel Karim Kassem did for the US in 1958.

Also interesting is his comments on the lack of a US plan b in Iraq in the 1950s, which reminds me very much of our long-standing relationship with Mubarak's Egypt. Iraq then was awash in secret police and informants, a place where all peaceful avenues for channeling political dissent were shut down, leaving a chaotic uprising the only real avenue for change. Nuri as-Said was the political power behind the Iraqi throne, a seven-term prime minister who Polk called the "keystone of the Iraqi arch of power." But he was also aging, in ill-health, and in a country with growing aspirations and frustrations brought on by rising levels of education and industrialization thanks to oil wealth, he wouldn't have hung on for long, coup or no coup.

Yet "in case of his retirement, which Washington should have foreseen, upon whom or what were we planning to rely? Nuri built no party organization and had no follower of sufficient ability to succeed in command. The hatred directed toward his government, which was held in check by the fear he inspired, could not be controlled by any of his associates or followers."

While it is far from a perfect analogy, the US also had no plan b for Egypt after Hosni Mubarak, the reliable dictator who was aging, in ill-health, had closed off all avenues for peaceful political dissent, and was trying to find a way to pass power to his unpopular son that most observers predicted would end in disaster.

The Egyptian uprising of Jan. 2011 couldn't have been timed or predicted. But that a change was coming was clear for years. I covered Egypt intensely from 2003-2008 and have made frequent visits since. The US constantly urged Mubarak to "reform" in public, but in private the flow military and economic aid was assured, and when the change came, which has brought the Muslim Brotherhood to power (at least for now) US policy makers were ill-prepared.

The piece covers a lot of ground -- from the Arab-Israeli conflict, the stability of Jordan and the oil monarchies of the Gulf, and the definition of US interests. A lot of the context has changed, but much of this essay still rings true. He concludes with a call to US policy-makers, reminding his readers that, in the end, most people in the region want to prosper, the oil states want to sell their oil, and no one wants ruinous wars if they can avoid it.

"Let us not forget that our essential policy interests are identical with those of the Arabs," he writes.

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lessons-iraq-1958-203932819.html

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10 things you need to know today: March 15, 2013

GOP Sen. Rob Portman backs gay marriage, Samsung unveils its Galaxy SIV, and more in our roundup of the stories that are making news and driving opinion

1. GOP SEN. PORTMAN DROPS HIS OPPOSITION TO GAY MARRIAGE
Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio), a prominent mainstream conservative who was vetted as a possible 2012 running mate for Mitt Romney, reversed his longtime hardline opposition to gay marriage on Thursday night. Portman became the first sitting Senate Republican, and one of a very few GOP federal officeholders, to openly support same-sex marriage, saying he arrived at the change of heart after two years of soul-searching that started when he learned his 21-year-old son, Will, is gay. "It allowed me to think of this issue from a new perspective," Portman said, "and that's of a Dad who loves his son a lot and wants him to have the same opportunities that his brother and sister would have." [Cleveland Plain Dealer]
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2. OBAMA STRESSES COMMITMENT TO ISRAEL'S SECURITY AHEAD OF VISIT
President Obama said in an interview broadcast in Israel Thursday that the U.S. would do whatever it takes to stop Iran from building a nuclear bomb. Obama is preparing for a trip to Israel next week ? his first to the country as president. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu once marked the "red line" where it would be too late to prevent Tehran from going nuclear, and that time appears to be approaching in Netanyhu's estimation. "We think that it would take over a year or so for Iran to actually develop a nuclear weapon, but obviously we don't want to cut it too close," Obama said. When asked if he would order an attack if Iran refused to rein in its nuclear program, Obama said: "When I say that all options are on the table, all options are on the table." [Reuters]
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SEE MORE: 10 things you didn't know about the president's secret army

3. NEXT UP AT CPAC: ROMNEY
Mitt Romney, the GOP's defeated presidential nominee, will make his first public speech since election night on Friday at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Maryland. Romney struggled through the campaign to win over a skeptical Republican base, once trying to reassure the base by saying he had been a "severely conservative governor" in Massachusetts. But at a CPAC gathering focused on the future and bouncing back from November election setbacks, Romney is being received as "kind of last year," in the words of one participant. "I'm ready for some new blood," said Laurie Pettengill, a former New Hampshire state representative. [Politico]
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4. SAMSUNG UNVEILS THE GALAXY SIV
Samsung Electronics finally unveiled its hotly anticipated Galaxy SIV smartphone on Thursday, culminating an intense PR blitz with a packed event at Radio City Music Hall in New York. The latest version of the South Korean company's wildly popular device has a screen slightly larger than the newest iPhone. It also has some innovative new features, including Smart Scroll, which scrolls the screen to the best angle when the front camera detects someone looking at the phone. Samsung is already the world leader in smartphone sales, and the new Galaxy marks its best shot yet at challenging Apple's dominance in the U.S. market. "This is Samsung's time right now," said Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster. [New York Times]
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SEE MORE: Today in history: March 15

5. ASSAULT RIFLE BAN CLEARS SENATE COMMITTEE
The Senate Judiciary Committee on Thursday approved a new ban on semiautomatic, military-style assault rifles. The vote, split along party lines, came after a heated meeting in which Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) asked committee chair Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), who proposed the legislation, whether the First Amendment could be curtailed in the same way he says the assault rifle ban limits the Second Amendment's right to bear arms. "I'm not a sixth grader," Feinstein responded. The measure, part of a package of gun measures pitched in response to the December Sandy Hook school massacre, now goes to the full Senate, where it's likely to be blocked by a GOP filibuster. [CNN]
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6. PHYSICISTS SAY THEY'VE FOUND THE ELUSIVE HIGGS BOSON
Scientists reported Thursday that they believe a particle discovered at the world's largest atom smasher last year is indeed a Higgs boson, potentially marking the end of the 50-year quest to find the so-called "God particle." Scientists believe the elusive, sub-atomic speck helps other tiny particles passing through it stick together to form atoms. The discovery, announced at a conference in Italy, would help explain how the Big Bang created the universe from nothing 13.7 billion years ago ? a breakthrough considered an automatic favorite to win a Nobel Prize. [Associated Press]
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SEE MORE: What Sen. Rob Portman's change of heart means for gay marriage

7. REUTERS EDITOR ACCUSED OF CONSPIRACY
Federal authorities on Thursday charged a Reuters social media editor, Matthew Keys, for allegedly helping the hacker cooperative Anonymous attack the website of his former employer, a Fox-affiliated local TV station in Sacramento, Calif., as well as The Los Angeles Times' website. (Both are owned by the Tribune Company.) Keys boasted on his blog in 2011 that he had communicated with "top level hackers within Anonymous." Keys said he communicated with them as a journalist, and offered no guarantees of confidentiality. The Justice Department charged him with conspiracy, saying he gave Anonymous usernames and passwords after he was fired from the TV station, and told the hackers to "go f**k some s**t up." [Huffington Post]
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8. TWO MORE CARNIVAL SHIPS HOBBLED DURING CRUISES
A month after the Carnival Triumph's nightmare cruise made headlines, Miami-based Carnival Cruise Lines is having problems with two other ships. The Carnival Legend, which can carry 2,100 passengers, was limping toward its home port in Tampa, Fla., on Friday after skipping its final stop at Grand Cayman island due to problems with its propulsion system. The Carnival Dream is stuck at port in St. Maarten following the failure of its emergency diesel generator. [NBC News]
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SEE MORE: Why the Patriots let Wes Welker walk away

9. GLITCH DELAYS SOME TAX REFUNDS
A software glitch is delaying income-tax refunds to 660,000 people by up to six weeks, the Internal Revenue Service says. The problem affects only certain taxpayers who filed between Feb. 14 and Feb. 22, and claimed education tax credits, which provide up to $2,500 for college expenses, or the Lifetime Learning credit, which provides up to $2,000. Turbo Tax users were not affected, but tax preparing giant H&R Block said some of its clients were. [Associated Press]
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10. NADAL DEFEATS FEDERER
In a renewal of one of tennis' great rivalries, Rafael Nadal demolished an injury-hampered Roger Federer on Thursday to reach the semifinals of the BNP Paribas Open. Nadal's 6-4, 6/2 victory marked his 19th win in 29 meetings with his rival, and his first hard-court tournament since returning from knee problems. Federer was clearly struggling with a back injury, but Nadal relished the win. "Well, it's amazing, no?" Nadal said in an on-court interview after the match. "For me, just to be back in the competition is fantastic." [New York Times]

SEE MORE: The Samsung Galaxy S IV launch event: Live coverage from New York

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/10-things-know-today-march-15-2013-083000472.html

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Exclusive: EMC, IBM eye web hosting company SoftLayer- sources

By Nadia Damouni

NEW YORK (Reuters) - International Business Machines Corp and EMC Corp are among parties in talks to buy privately held database web hosting company SoftLayer Technologies Inc, in a deal that could fetch over $2 billion, three sources close to the matter said.

Dallas, Texas-based SoftLayer has hired Morgan Stanley and Credit Suisse to run the sale process, the sources said, asking not to be named because the talks are private.

The IT infrastructure specialist, founded in 2005, has become the world's largest privately held website hosting service. The company provides its 25,000 customers with cloud infrastructure mainly for small and medium-sized businesses.

SoftLayer's sale process was initially spurred by one of its customers, AT&T Inc, which approached the company in recent months seeking exclusive talks, one of the sources said. AT&T is no longer involved in the process, two of the sources said.

Spokespeople for SoftLayer, AT&T, EMC, IBM, Morgan Stanley and Credit Suisse declined to comment.

Over the last few years, web hosting companies, including Rackspace Hosting Inc, have been considered attractive takeover candidates as technology and telecom companies look to improve the performance and cost efficiencies of their enterprise cloud computing services.

In 2011, CenturyLink Inc bought managed hosting and colocation provider Savvis Inc for $2.5 billion. Also that year Verizon Communications Inc spent $1.4 billion to buy IT services provider Terremark Worldwide.

EMC has been pushing ahead with its cloud-based software business, announcing a new venture on Wednesday with VMware Inc called Pivotal Inc, which will combine both companies' data analytics and cloud application assets.

EMC and VMware are hoping that the new Pivotal will cash in on an expected jump in demand for data analytics software as companies like telecom service providers want better tools to analyze masses of data from multiple different technology platforms [ID:nL1N0C53CS].

With 100,000 servers under management, SoftLayer counts VMware competitor Citrix Systems Inc as one of its customers, making it even more attractive to the current suite of buyers, the sources said.

SoftLayer is majority held by GI Partners, which purchased all of the equity in partnership with SoftLayer management in August of 2010.

In November of that year GI Partners merged The Planet, SoftLayers's biggest competitor, with SoftLayer. GI Partners had a controlling interest in hosting company The Planet, where current SoftLayer CEO Lance Crosby served as chief operations officer for five years.

Last year, SoftLayer appointed former Leap Wireless International Inc executive Walter Berger as its chief financial officer.

(Additional reporting by Nicola Leske and Sinead Carew; Editing by Soyoung Kim, Bernard Orr)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/exclusive-emc-ibm-eye-hosting-company-softlayer-sources-013448509--sector.html

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Ways on Promoting Plastic Surgery | Jackie's Women's Interest Bazaar

Related eBooks

The best way to promote cosmetic surgery is by including your objectives why you are offering such important and helpful details to future patients. Such information will help them a lot in deciding. In this present innovative industry, there are several ways available in promoting a cosmetic surgery service and you need to pick the one that fits your services. Plastic surgery advertising techniques may include the paid and free types of promoting and marketing.

A very relatively scaled-down process, having a new smaller promoting and marketing funds may possibly go for cost-effective alternatives that will may possibly support to obtain an ideal outcome. A new greater approach needing numerous places of work may perhaps enjoy when it comes to impress as well as automated marketing campaigns for you to encourage the company?s products and services. These web based along with well-known . Promotion and marketing approaches usually are important intended for a new profitable aesthetic surgical procedures approach. Implementing these guidelines and also concepts can support incredibly throughout creating your own aesthetic surgical procedures process a successful one:

Being a cosmetic surgeon, having a website simply means that they can reach you easily. It is important that you have a quality website with great content and should be encouraging enough to attract your reader to visit your clinic. You will be able to know if your website design is encouraging if your reader decides to go to your clinic for consultation. It is best if you hire an expert website designer, particularly those which have extensive knowledge in developing medical sites. Making use of photos showing before and after the procedure is done is a plus.

A good internet site can be ineffective if perhaps the idea is definitely not at all insured in places simply by excellent Web optimization. A good efficient Search engine optimization marketing promotion approach needs goals rotating near the specific internet site. Imaginative Search engine optimization approaches include things like web page link construction, tag words, keyword and key phrase analysis, publishing information sites along with articles or blog posts, directory website distribution, and so on. These kinds of strategies will certainly push qualified targeted visitors involving nearby prospective people that will help your aesthetic procedure site.

One of the popular ways of promoting nowadays is by the use of social media. Using sites such as Twitter, Linkedln and Facebook to draw in great number of patients is a good idea. By doing this you will be able to get connected with your new patients as well as with your previous patients. You will be able to deal with their concerns privately and individually. Putting the website link on social media profiles will direct your visitors to your website. Also, you can promote your plastic surgery services effectively with the use of social media.

Probably the most successful, never-ending and also established methods to generate fresh clients is thru recommendations by means of drawing in individuals. To make sure clients keep the training contented, take care of these individuals nicely, and offer just as much proper care as well as make them feel comfortable as possible. Response immediately on their inquiries both before and after therapy. In addition, set several incentives with regard to individuals that provide recommendations.

There are many places where you can find quality information about Breastaugmentation but you must meet qualified plastic surgeon sydney before you take a decision.

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Cosmetic Surgery (LANGE Clinical Medicine)Cosmetic Surgery (LANGE Clinical Medicine)

Full-color, step-by-step guidance on how to perform the most popular procedures in cosmetic surgery

Using more than 250 full-color illustrations and photos, and clear, concise text, Cosmetic Surgery teaches you how to perform the latest and most in-demand surgical and non-surgical procedures in aesthetic plastic surgery. Each chapter includes patient selection and preparation, technique, complications, outcomes assessment, and references, and many illustrations that have been prepared specifically for this book.

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  • A consistent, easy-to-navigate approach that facilitates quick learning
  • More than 250 full-color illustrations that clarify each step of every procedure
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  • Facial surgeries including facelift, brow lift, blepharoplasty, otoplasty, rhinoplasty, and chin implants
  • Breast surgery, body contouring, and bariatric plastic surgery including breast augmentation, breast reduction, abdominoplasty, brachioplasty, and liposuction
  • Non-surgical options including Botox, injectable fillers, chemical peel, dermabrasion, and laser surgery
  • Other considerations such as new developments in cosmetic surgery, the business of cosmetic surgery, and the public?s view of cosmetic surgery
Surgery Junkies: Wellness and Pathology in Cosmetic CultureSurgery Junkies: Wellness and Pathology in Cosmetic CultureThe ease of accessibility, improvements in safety and technology, media attention, growing acceptance by the public, or an increasingly superficial culture: whatever the reason, cosmetic surgery is more popular today than ever. In 2005, in the United States alone, there were nearly two million aesthetic operations-more than quadruple the number from 1984, along with more than eight million non-surgical procedures. Innovative surgical methods have also brought cosmetic improvements to new areas of the body, such as the ribs, buttocks, and genitalia.

Despite the increasing normalization of cosmetic surgery, however, there are still those who identify individuals who opt for bodily modifications as dupes of beauty culture, as being in conflict with feminist ideals, or as having some form of psychological weakness. In this ground-breaking book, Victoria Pitts-Taylor examines why we consider some cosmetic surgeries to be acceptable or even beneficial and others to be unacceptable and possibly harmful. Similarly, why are some patients considered to be psychologically healthy while others deemed pathological? When is the modification of our appearance empowering and when is it a sign of weakness?

Drawing on years of research, her personal experience with cosmetic surgery, analysis of newspaper articles and television shows, and in-depth interviews with surgeons, psychiatrists, lawyers, judges, and others, Pitts-Taylor brings new perspectives to the promotion of "extreme" makeovers on television, the medicalization of "surgery addiction," the moral and political interrogation that many patients face, and feminist debates on the topic.

While many feel that cosmetic surgery is a deeply personal choice and that its pathology is rooted in the individual psyche, Pitts-Taylor makes a compelling argument that the experience, meanings, and motivations for cosmetic surgery are highly social. A much needed "makeover" of our cultural understanding of cosmetic surgery, this book is both authoritative and thoroughly engaging.

Cosmetic Facial Surgery, 1eCosmetic Facial Surgery, 1e

Take your practice to the next level! Cosmetic Facial Surgery provides a highly illustrated, case-based approach to common face and neck procedures. In this full-color reference, internationally renowned surgeon Joe Niamtu III, DMD, covers techniques including brow, face, and neck lifts; nose, eye, and ear surgery; cosmetic surgery practice with discussions of the process of facial aging, diagnosing and consulting with patients, clinical digital facial implants; skin resurfacing; the use of neurotoxins; and the removal of skin lesions. The book also prepares you for photography, and anesthesia considerations. In a companion DVD, video clips feature Dr. Niamtu demonstrating key procedures addressed in the text.

  • Comprehensive coverage includes the full range of surgical procedures from the upper face to the lower face/neck area.
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Source: http://www.jackiesbazaar.com/womensinterests/cosmetic-surgery/ways-on-promoting-plastic-surgery

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Chemical chameleon tamed: Researchers give floppy molecule a structure through solvent effects

Mar. 14, 2013 ? How you get the chameleon of the molecules to settle on a particular "look" has been discovered by RUB chemists led by Professor Dominik Marx. The molecule CH5+ is normally not to be described by a single rigid structure, but is dynamically flexible. By means of computer simulations, the team from the Centre for Theoretical Chemistry showed that CH5+ takes on a particular structure once you attach hydrogen molecules.

"In this way, we have taken an important step towards understanding experimental vibrational spectra in the future," says Dominik Marx. The researchers report in the journal Physical Review Letters.

In the CH5+ molecule, the hydrogen atoms are permanently on the move

The superacid CH5++, also called protonated methane, occurs in outer space -- where new stars are formed. Researchers already discovered the molecule in the 1950s, but many of its features are still unknown. Unlike conventional molecules in which all the atoms have a fixed position, the five hydrogen atoms in CH5+ are constantly moving around the carbon centre. Scientists speak of "hydrogen scrambling." This dynamically flexible structure has been explained by the research groups led by Dominik Marx and Stefan Schlemmer of the University of Cologne as part of a long-term collaboration. Marx's team now wanted to know if the structure can be "frozen" under certain conditions by attaching solvent molecules -- a process called microsolvation.

Microsolvatation: addition of hydrogen molecules to CH5+ one by one

To this end, the chemists surrounded the CH5+ molecule in the virtual lab with a few hydrogen molecules (H2). Here, the result is the same as when dissolving normal ions in water: a relatively tightly bound shell of water molecules attaches to each ion in order to then transfer individual ions with several solvent molecules bound to them to the gas phase. To describe the CH5+ hydrogen complexes, classical ab initio molecular dynamics simulations are not sufficient. The reason is that "hydrogen scrambling" is based on quantum effects. Therefore Marx's group used a fully quantum mechanical method which they developed in house, known as ab initio path integral simulation. With this, the essential quantum effects can be taken into account dependent on the temperature.

Hydrogen molecules give the CH5+ molecule "structure"

The chemists carried out the simulations at a temperature of 20 Kelvin, which corresponds to -253 degrees Celsius. In the non-microsolvated form, the five hydrogen atoms in the CH5+ molecule are permanently changing positions even at such low temperatures -- and entirely due to quantum mechanical effects. If CH5+ is surrounded by hydrogen molecules, this "hydrogen scrambling" is, however, significantly effected and may even completely come to a halt: the molecule assumes a rudimentary structure. How this looks exactly depends on how many hydrogen molecules are attached to the CH5+ molecule. "What especially interests me is if superfluid helium -- like the hydrogen molecules here -- can also stop hydrogen scrambling in CH5++" says Marx. Experimental researchers use superfluid helium to measure high-resolution spectra of molecules embedded in such droplets. For CH5+ this has so far not been possible. In the superfluid phase, the helium atoms are, however, indistinguishable due to quantum statistical effects. To be able to describe this fact, the theoretical chemists at the RUB spent many years developing a new, even more complex path-integral-based simulation method that has recently also been applied to real problems.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Ruhr-Universitaet-Bochum, via AlphaGalileo.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Alexander Witt, Sergei D. Ivanov, Dominik Marx. Microsolvation?Induced Quantum Localization in Protonated Methane. Physical Review Letters, 2013; 110 (8) DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.110.083003

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/h0rsx0KMakM/130314085054.htm

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Alessandra Ambrosio, Candice Swanepoel Stun: Whose Look Do You like Best? (PHOTOS)

Alessandra Ambrosio and fellow Victoria's Secret model Candice Swanepoel headed to "Extra" on Tuesday to promote the lingerie brand's 2013 swim collection.

Candice looked elegant in a crisp white sweater-and-cropped-pants outfit that accentuated her tiny waist and blonde hair. Her strappy black sandals added a bit of sex appeal to her tailored look. But if she was short on sultriness, her fellow model made up for it in spades.

Alessandra showed off what her mama gave her in a bright blue romper that complemented her mile-long legs. To call the onesie short would be an understatement; we are guessing there was some serious tush-on-chair contact when the supermodel sat down. Not that she did a lot of sitting in that outfit.

Alessandra isn't shy about showing off skin. The model famously pulled a Demi Moore when she posed nude (and very pregnant) for Brazilian jewelry brand Vivara a few months before welcoming her second child, a boy, into the world.

We would totally wear Candice's outfit to the office, or even out to dinner for that matter, with a bright clutch for a pop of color. Alessandra's look might be harder for us plebeians to pull off. Flat sandals and a cardigan would tone down the sexy, but we might save this number for a day at the beach as a coverup.

Which look do you prefer: Candice's tailored white outfit or Alessandra's sexy romper?

PHOTOS:

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alessandra ambrosio

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  • Homem Vogue, April 2005

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  • Arena UK, June 2008

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  • Cosmopolitan Germany, July 2008

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  • GQ UK, September 2008

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  • L'Officiel Brazil, July 2009

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  • Glamour Mexico, October 2009

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  • DT Spain, November 2009

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  • Cosmopolitan Germany, February 2010

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  • Elle Czech Republic, May 2010

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  • Glamour, June 2010

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  • Vogue Brazil, July 2010

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  • Vogue Japan, July 2010

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  • Cosmopolitan Norway, October 2010

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  • Vogue Mexico, December 2010

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  • Vogue Beauty Japan, December 2010

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  • Muse, Winter 2011

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/13/alessandra-ambrosio-candice-swanepoel-photos_n_2866924.html

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Democrats wary of Japan entering trade talks

(AP) ? Concerned that Japan's possible participation in ongoing trade talks among Pacific nations threatens the U.S. auto industry, Congressional Democrats raised their worries in a letter to President Barack Obama on Thursday.

At least four dozen House and Senate Democrats said Japan has a long history of erecting barriers against U.S. auto imports and resisting U.S. efforts to create a more level playing field, and that is unlikely to change if Japan joins the 11-nation Trans-Pacific Partnership, or TPP, negotiations aimed at establishing free trade principles.

Instead, they wrote, Japanese auto exports to the United States could increase if the United States eliminates its current 2.5 percent car tariffs and 25 percent truck tariffs.

"These longstanding economically harmful practices are not susceptible to cursory negotiations at this stage, three years into the U.S. involvement in the TPP negotiations and close to the administration's target date" for concluding the TPP talks, they wrote.

The administration has said it hopes to wrap up the negotiations by the end of this year. Last month, during a visit to Washington, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe signed a joint statement with Obama saying they would continue talks on Japan's "possible interest" in joining the TPP talks.

Among those signing the letter was Rep. Sander Levin of Michigan, champion of the auto industry and top Democrat on the Ways and Means Committee, which oversees trade issues.

In the letter, the Democrats wrote that Japan now exports 120 automobiles to the United States for every U.S. auto exported to Japan. They also wrote that the two countries will remain close and important allies but "a flawed, one-way trade agreement that benefits Japan at the expense of the United States businesses and workers will not help strengthen this vital relationship."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-03-14-Japan-Trade/id-0728323b469146a2a68e798441dcc0e3

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Thursday, March 14, 2013

Gwyneth Paltrow Cook Book: It's All Good!

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AP EXCLUSIVE: Police blamed in Egypt revolt deaths

FILE - In this Jan. 28, 2011 file photo, Egyptian anti-government activists clash with riot police in Cairo, Egypt. A government inquiry into the deaths of nearly 900 protesters during Egypt?s uprising has concluded police were behind nearly all the killings and used snipers on rooftops overlooking Tahrir Square to shoot into the huge crowds. The report, parts of which were obtained by The Associated Press, is the most authoritative account of the killings and determines the deadly force used could only have been authorized by ousted President Hosni Mubarak's security chief, with the president?s full knowledge. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis, File)

FILE - In this Jan. 28, 2011 file photo, Egyptian anti-government activists clash with riot police in Cairo, Egypt. A government inquiry into the deaths of nearly 900 protesters during Egypt?s uprising has concluded police were behind nearly all the killings and used snipers on rooftops overlooking Tahrir Square to shoot into the huge crowds. The report, parts of which were obtained by The Associated Press, is the most authoritative account of the killings and determines the deadly force used could only have been authorized by ousted President Hosni Mubarak's security chief, with the president?s full knowledge. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis, File)

FILE - In this Sunday, Feb. 13, 2011 file photo, an Egyptian protester, center right, argues with a police officer in Tahrir Square in downtown Cairo, Egypt. A government inquiry into the deaths of nearly 900 protesters during Egypt?s uprising has concluded police were behind nearly all the killings and used snipers on rooftops overlooking Tahrir Square to shoot into the huge crowds. The report, parts of which were obtained by The Associated Press, is the most authoritative account of the killings and determines the deadly force used could only have been authorized by ousted President Hosni Mubarak's security chief, with the president?s full knowledge. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti, File)

FILE - In this Jan. 26, 2011 file photo, Egyptian riot police clash with anti-government activists in Cairo, Egypt. A government inquiry into the deaths of nearly 900 protesters during Egypt?s uprising has concluded police were behind nearly all the killings and used snipers on rooftops overlooking Tahrir Square to shoot into the huge crowds. The report, parts of which were obtained by The Associated Press, is the most authoritative account of the killings and determines the deadly force used could only have been authorized by ousted President Hosni Mubarak's security chief, with the president?s full knowledge. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis, File)

FILE - In this Friday, Jan. 28, 2011 file photo, Egyptian anti-riot police clash with antigovernment protesters in Cairo, Egypt. A government inquiry into the deaths of nearly 900 protesters during Egypt?s uprising has concluded police were behind nearly all the killings and used snipers on rooftops overlooking Tahrir Square to shoot into the huge crowds. The report, parts of which were obtained by The Associated Press, is the most authoritative account of the killings and determines the deadly force used could only have been authorized by ousted President Hosni Mubarak's security chief, with the president?s full knowledge. (AP Photo/Muhammed Abu Zaid, File)

(AP) ? The highest-level inquiry into the deaths of nearly 900 protesters in Egypt's uprising has concluded that police were behind nearly all the killings and used snipers on rooftops overlooking Cairo's Tahrir Square to shoot into the huge crowds.

The report, parts of which were obtained by The Associated Press, is the most authoritative and sweeping account of the killings and determines that the deadly force used could only have been authorized by Hosni Mubarak's security chief, with the ousted president's full knowledge.

The report of the fact-finding commission, created by Islamist President Mohammed Morsi, could weigh heavily in the upcoming retrial of Mubarak, as well as his security chief, former Interior Minister Habib el-Adly, and six top police commanders. It is likely also to fuel calls for reforming the powerful security forces and lead to prosecutions of members of the police force.

The findings were leaked at a sensitive time for the country's police. Still hated by most Egyptians, the force is in upheaval, with segments of police on strike and its chief, Interior Minister Mohammed Ibrahim, pleading not to drag it into politics. The force is also facing a challenge from Islamist groups threatening to set up "popular committees" to fill what they call a security vacuum created by the police strike.

Part of the force also is protesting what some officers see as an attempt by Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood to control the force. The Brotherhood denies the charge.

The Interior Ministry, which controls the police, has repeatedly rejected charges that it bore responsibility for the killings in Cairo and other cities during the 18-day uprising that began on Jan. 25, 2011, and ended with Mubarak stepping down. In contrast, the pro-democracy activists behind the uprising have long maintained that police were to blame.

Mubarak and el-Adly, the second most powerful figure after the ousted leader, were convicted and sentenced to life in jail in June 2012 for failing to stop the killings, but the two have successfully appealed their convictions. The six top police commanders put on trial with Mubarak and el-Adly ? including the head of security in Cairo and the commander of the riot police ? were acquitted of charges related to the killings. The prosecution appealed that verdict and a new trial of the eight will start next month.

The report was submitted to Morsi and the nation's top prosecutor late last year. Morsi, Egypt's first freely elected president, has repeatedly vowed to seek retribution for the victims of the revolution and has ordered pensions and monetary compensation for families of the dead and wounded.

He has also decreed the creation of a special prosecution office to investigate and refer to trials criminal cases related to the uprising.

One of the report's authors, lawyer and rights activist Mohsen Bahnasy, said he planned to submit relevant parts of the report to the prosecution in the Mubarak case as well as to other courts trying policemen charged with killing protesters. In the past two years, trials of policemen over protester killings have almost all ended with acquittals.

It is up to the top prosecutor to officially request that the report be included in the new Mubarak trial, according to human rights lawyer Gamal Eid.

Police brutality during Mubarak's 29 years in office was a key cause of the uprising, but the army generals who took over for him, and Morsi, who followed them, have so far failed to reform the force.

The 16-member fact-finding panel included rights activists, lawyers, judges and a representative from the military prosecutor's office. It conducted about 400 interviews with police and witnesses.

The report went into extensive detail, citing police logs of the issuing of assault rifles and rounds of ammunition, and listing the officers who received them. It also cited logs on the rounds returned to storerooms, showing that a large amount was used, according to one member of the commission. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to reveal that part of the report.

"The use of firearms can only be authorized by the interior minister who must in turn inform the political leadership (Mubarak)," said the report. "And if the police continue to use firearms for more than one day, then the political leadership must be informed."

The report cites witnesses as saying police snipers were positioned on the roofs of a hotel and the American University in Cairo, overlooking Tahrir, and the Interior Ministry nearby, firing down on crowds of protesters.

Police officials told the commission that snipers' equipment of the kind used during the uprising could only be found with members of an elite counterterrorism unit that worked under Mubarak's pervasive state security agency and took orders directly from the interior minister.

Most the victims were shot in the head or chest, suggesting the use of snipers, and bystanders were also killed or wounded as they watched the clashes from their homes, the report said.

From interviews with witnesses and doctors, the report gave a detailed look on the extent of the turmoil, particularly on Jan. 28, 2011, the deadliest day of the uprising, when protesters battled police in and around Tahrir. By the end of the day, the police forces melted away from the streets, plunging the country into chaos and lawlessness.

One young Cairo protester just avoided being run over by a speeding police vehicle and then was shot 14 times. Another's head was cracked open by gunfire as he carried a banner reading "peaceful" outside a mosque in Tahrir, the report reads.

Qasr el-Eini Hospital, the largest of several facilities near Tahrir, received 32 bodies on Jan. 28, a senior surgeon told the commission. Another doctor at the hospital said more than 100 wounded, most shot in the face and chest, were brought in immediately after he started his shift at 8 p.m. In the next 10 hours, the hospital dealt with a total of 200 cases.

The report also established that two of the six police generals who were Mubarak's co-defendants ? Cairo security chief Ismail el-Shaer and director of general security Adly Fayed ? were positioned in or near Tahrir Square on that day. Investigators determined this by looking at police records of tracking devices carried by the generals for their own security.

The commission documented a total of 846 deaths during the 18 days ? including 71 in the Mediterranean city of Alexandria, 13 in the province of Beni Suef south of Cairo and 19 in northern Sinai. In addition, the Interior Ministry told the commission that 26 policemen were killed in the uprising.

The 84-year-old Mubarak, according to the report, received at his palace a dedicated live TV feed from Tahrir arranged by Anas el-Fiqi, his information minister. He also authorized el-Adly during a meeting held four days before the start of the uprising to suspend the cellphone network and the Internet if needed. Mubarak later denied in court that he knew the extent of the protests and crackdown against them.

But el-Adly, who served Mubarak for more than a decade, told investigators in his prison cell that the former president was kept "fully abreast" of what was going on, starting with the uprising's first fatal shootings by police in the coastal city of Suez on Jan. 25, 2011.

The court said it ruled to acquit the six police generals because it was not "comfortable" with the statements made by prosecution witnesses against them, that the policemen who did the actual shooting have not been identified and arrested, and that the prosecution did not present material evidence against them, such as voice or video recordings and the Interior Ministry's weapons and ammunition logs.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-03-13-ML-Egypt-Protester-Killings/id-c59a67f3abba475994bc4adc7f1a9f75

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First full day of papal conclave begins

By Barry Moody

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - After a first inconclusive vote, Cardinals began the process of choosing a new pope in earnest on Wednesday, praying for inspiration at the start of the first full day in a conclave to choose a leader to face a major crisis in the Catholic Church.

The 115 cardinal electors attended a morning Mass in the Pauline Chapel in the Vatican's Apostolic Palace.

From there, they were returning to the Sistine Chapel to hold as many as two votes in the morning and two in the afternoon, seeking to elect a pontiff capable of facing a string of scandals and internal strife.

Pilgrims and tourists began arriving in the square early in the morning, hoping to get a glimpse of history by watching smoke emerge from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel.

When a pope is elected, white smoke will emerge from the chapel and the bells of St Peter's will peal.

The cardinals were shut inside on Tuesday for the first time, after a day of religious pomp and prayer to prepare for the task. Only one vote was held on Tuesday night, ending inconclusively as expected, with black smoke billowing from a chimney above the chapel to signal no pope had been elected.

No modern conclave has reached a decision on the first day, so the lack of an outcome on Tuesday's single vote was no surprise. The initial vote is seen as a way of filtering the choice down to frontrunners for discussions in following days.

Most bets are on a decision by Thursday although there is still no clear favourite and it could take longer.

"A new pope by tomorrow," was the headline in Wednesday's La Stampa newspaper.

No hint is expected to emerge before the pope is chosen. The Vatican has taken precautions, including electronic jamming devices, to prevent any leaks from inside the conclave.

The new pope will take up a burden that Pope Benedict declared in February was beyond his physical capabilities.

The Church is reeling from a child abuse scandal and the "Vatileaks" case in which Benedict's butler revealed documents alleging corruption and infighting inside the Curia, or central bureaucracy. It has also been shaken by rivalry from other churches, the advance of secularism, especially in its European heartland, and problems in the running of the Vatican bank.

Frontrunners include Italy's Angelo Scola - who would return the papacy to traditional Italian hands after 35 years of the German Benedict XVI and Polish John Paul II - and Brazilian Odilo Scherer - who would be the first non-European pope since Syrian-born Gregory III, nearly 1300 years ago.

Before beginning their conclave on Tuesday, the cardinals attended a Mass in the imposing St Peter's Basilica where Cardinal Angelo Sodano, dean of the "princes of the Church", called for unity.

"My brothers let us pray that the Lord will grant us a pontiff who will embrace this noble mission with a generous heart," he said in his homily.

WHAT KIND OF POPE IS NEEDED?

In preparatory meetings before the conclave, the cardinals seemed divided between those who believe the new pontiff must be a strong manager to get the dysfunctional bureaucracy under control and others who are looking more for a proven pastoral figure to revitalise their faith across the globe.

Milan Archbishop Scola, who has managed two big Italian dioceses without being part of the Vatican's central administration, could be well-placed to understand the Curia's Byzantine politics and introduce swift reform.

Scherer is said to be the Curia's favoured candidate and would satisfy those who want a non-European, reflecting the future of a Church shifting towards the developing world.

A host of other candidates from numerous nations have also been mentioned as "papabili" - potential popes - including U.S. cardinals Timothy Dolan and Sean O'Malley, Canada's Marc Ouellet and Argentina's Leonardo Sandri.

All the prelates meeting in the Sistine Chapel were appointed by either Benedict XVI or John Paul II, and the next pontiff will almost certainly pursue their fierce defence of traditional moral teachings.

In a ritual reflecting the centuries-old history of the conclave, the red-robed cardinals walked in procession through lavish marble chambers into the Sistine Chapel, accompanied by Latin chants and organ music.

Two rows of Swiss Guards from the papal army, dressed in traditional yellow, red and blue uniforms with helmets and pikes, stood at attention as the cardinals processed past.

The cardinals took an oath of secrecy and the papal master of ceremonies, Monsignor Guido Marini, said "Extra Omnes" or "Everybody Out", meaning all those not involved in the election had to leave before the heavy wooden doors were pulled shut.

The cardinals meet inside a chapel which houses some of the world's greatest art treasures - Michelangelo's luminous frescos. The Last Judgment is depicted behind the altar and the depiction of God giving life to Adam is on the ceiling.

Each night they retire to a Vatican guesthouse, where more elaborate precautions have been taken to avoid leaks.

Some cardinals speculated this week that it might take 4-5 days to pick the new pontiff because of the difficulty of the task and the number of strong candidates.

The average length of the last nine conclaves was just over three days and none went on for longer than five.

(Additional reporting by Catherine Hornby, Naomi O'Leary, Philip Pullella, Crispian Balmer and Tom Heneghan; Editing by Peter Graff and Patrick Graham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cardinals-begin-voting-earnest-pope-face-church-crisis-002758519.html

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Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Open to the outdoors and all kinds of entertaining possibilities, this ...

After three years of living in their new house, this Georgia family needed an update: The toddlers had grown into playful kiddos, and they all wished for more room for family fun and entertaining.

They contacted builder John Willis Homes to renovate the home, and he brought in Jeff Thomas to plan the space and design the interior. The natural beauty of this home's yard immediately inspired Thomas to create a design that connected with the outdoors, literally and stylistically.

Basement at a Glance
Who lives here: A couple with a 5-year-old daughter and 7-year-old son
Location: Atlanta
Size: About 2,000 square feet

Source: http://www.houzz.com/ideabooks/7366882/list/Basement-of-the-Week--Backyard-Beauty-Inspires-a-Resort-Like-Space

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Tuesday, March 12, 2013

OP-ED | Include Surgery Centers in Connecticut's Health Insurance ...

by Ken Rosenquest | Mar 11, 2013 2:40pm
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Posted to: Opinion

Ken Rosenquest photo As concern grows among advocates and policymakers about the potential for increased costs under health care reform, the leaders of Connecticut?s Health Insurance Exchange could be missing significant cost savings by not including the sixty non-hospital, community-based surgery centers in basic health plans

Under the federal Affordable Care Act ? often called Obamacare ? the states are to establish insurance exchanges, where consumers and small businesses would be able to purchase quality insurance for reasonable premiums.

A board of directors has been working here in Connecticut for more than 18 months, developing a framework, and establishing basic coverage that every insurer must include if their plans are to be offered on the exchange. Yet surgical centers, where the cost of care is up to 50 percent less than hospitals, are so far not included as cost-saving alternative.

The Hartford Surgical Center, Connecticut?s first such facility, was established in 1976 and is still in operation. Since then facilities have been located throughout the state, operating under the same regulations and accreditation and reporting standards as hospitals. The centers provide a high-quality, safe alternative for surgical procedures that do not require hospitalization.

Surgical centers are in most cases smaller than hospitals, and are located outside of urban areas, where patients can find easy access and reduced waiting times.

They offer a wide range of services to physicians and patients, providing care to Medicaid and Medicare recipients, managed care patients, self-pay, as well as those unable to pay.

Some centers specialize in a specific procedure, such as colonoscopies, which make the facilities more efficient and cost effective. Specialization of staff also results in better outcomes for patients.

Because the centers do not provide overnight or urgent care, as hospitals do, their costs are significantly lower.? And because costs are lower, co-pays for Medicaid and Medicare patients are lower.

We will always need hospitals for emergencies and trauma care, and for surgeries that require a hospital stay, and our health insurance should cover that care.

Connecticut?s surgery centers, after nearly forty years of operation, are a well-established provider of health care.

If we are going to tackle the skyrocketing costs of health insurance, and if health care reform is going to have any success, we can and must include every option for cost savings. That means including surgical centers and their services for coverage in any health care plan offered by the Connecticut Health Insurance Exchange.

Ken Rosenquest is the president of the CT Association of Ambulatory Surgery Centers

Tags: Ken Rosenquest, CT Association of Ambulatory Surgery Centers, colonoscopies, Medicaid, Medicare, Insurance Exchange

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Source: http://www.ctnewsjunkie.com/ctnj.php/archives/entry/op-ed_include_surgery_centers_in_connecticuts_health_insurance_exchange/

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Comet Pan-STARRS or PANSTARRS: What's In a Celestial Name?

What's the name of the bright comet currently visible in the western sky at sunset?

Look around the Internet and you'll find many different names for Comet Pan-STARRS, which is visible in the twilight sky of the Northern Hemisphere this week, weather permitting.? Some NASA statements refer to the comet as PANSTARRS, while others use the object's official designation C/2011 LR (PANSTARRS).

Comet Pan-STARRS made its closest approach to the sun on Sunday (March 10), with stargazers reporting to SPACE.com that it is visible to the naked eye if you know when and where to look. This week, the comet is visible low in the western sky, just after sunset. [How to see the comet]

The official body that governs the names of everything astronomical is the International Astronomical Union. Remember them? They are the people who reclassified Pluto a dwarf planet in 2006.While observing the comet may seem straightforward, the specifics of its name are a bit more complicated.

The IAU's rules for comet names, which are republished from the group's website below, say that each comet's moniker should include:

1) "A prefix, alluding to the type of comet, that can be any of the following- P/ for a periodic comet.

- C/ for a comet that is not periodic.

- X/ for a comet for which a meaningful orbit cannot be computed.

- D/ for a periodic comet that no longer exists or is deemed to have disappeared.

2) The year of discovery, including:

- An uppercase letter identifying the half-month of observation during that year (A for first half of January, B for second half and so on).

- A number representing the order of discovery within that half month.

3) When a periodic comet is observed after its second apparition, the IAU?s Minor Planet Center (MPC) gives it a permanent number indicating the order of the discovery.

4) To complete the designation a comet is given the name of its two first discoverers (last name for an individual or one word or acronym for a team of astronomers). The names appear in chronological order and are separated by a hyphen. In very rare cases the title can consist of three discoverers, or even be generic."

If you had X-ray vision and could see the names attached to the comets currently in the evening sky, you'd see the vast variety of names that are possible. Most people are surprised at just how many comets are actually in the sky at any given time. Most of these are too faint to be seen except by large telescopes.

When the comet currently gracing our western sky was discovered in late June 2011, the CBAT gave it the name "C/2011 L4 (PANSTARRS)."

There are no problems with the first part of the name, "C/2011 L4." The disagreements come with the name in parentheses. Because it was discovered by the members of a project as a group, the CBAT used the acronym of the group. The group's name is a mouthful: the Panoramic Survey Telescope & Rapid Response System. On their website and in their logo, they use the acronym "Pan-STARRS."

Wikipedia uses Pan-STARRS to refer to the project, but PANSTARRS to refer to the comet, and this is probably the most correct. Do a search for "panstarrs" on NASA's webpage, and you find three different spellings in the first five hits: the two above plus "PanSTARRS" without the hyphen. I've even seen it spelled "PanSTARRs," which is obviously wrong.

The problem with a hyphen in "Pan-STARRS" is that hyphens are used in comet names very specifically to indicate that a comet has two discoverers. For example, Comet C/1995 O1 (Hale-Bopp) was named thus to indicate its co-discovery by Alan Hale and Thomas Bopp.

No matter how you spell it, the Pan-STARRS project is a "discovery machine." Its entire purpose is to discover asteroids and comets, and it's doing so very efficiently. Just look at all the comets named for Pan-STARRS in the related sky map to this story.

Whatever name it goes by, it's a lovely comet, and worth a look.

Editor's note: If you snap an amazing photo of Comet Pan-STARRS, or any other celestial object, and you'd like to share it for a possible story or image gallery, please send images and comments, including location information, to Managing Editor Tariq Malik at spacephotos@space.com.

This article was provided to SPACE.com by Starry Night Education, the leader in space science curriculum solutions. Follow Starry Night on Twitter @StarryNightEdu. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook or Google+. Original article on SPACE.com.

Copyright 2013 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/comet-pan-starrs-panstarrs-whats-celestial-name-220215877.html

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Liberal Democrats fear Obama may give away too much on budget

By Rachelle Younglai and Mark Felsenthal

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - As President Barack Obama tries to improve relations with Congress, it is not only Republicans who are wary of him but also some Democrats, who on Tuesday warned the president not to compromise their liberal principles in return for a budget deal.

At a lunch with Senate Democrats, Obama said it was critically important to work with Republicans in order to reach a "grand bargain" to reduce the country's budget deficit, according to lawmakers.

"Of course some of us responded by saying 'Yes. But what is in that grand bargain?' We don't want to start whacking away at Social Security," Iowa Senator Tom Harkin told reporters after the lunch.

The liberal Democrats are worried Obama wants to use a less generous inflation index to calculate increases in Social Security retirement benefits. The lower index, known as the chained consumer price index, takes into account changes in consumer buying habits and could trim spending, and thus retirees' benefits, by $130 billion over 10 years.

Senator Bernie Sanders, an independent from Vermont who caucuses with the Democrats, called the lower inflation index a "stupid" idea.

"I think the much better approach is how to bring more revenue into the system," Sanders told Reuters after the lunch. "There are ways to address these problems without cutting benefits. That is the case I made to the president," he said.

When asked how Obama responded to their concerns, Harkin said the president said things were open for negotiation.

Obama's visit to Capitol Hill came as Republican and Democratic lawmakers introduced competing plans to deal with long-term budget deficits. Republicans proposed balancing the budget in 10 years with $4.6 trillion in spending cuts. Democrats proposed trimming deficits by $1.85 trillion over 10 years in part through tax increases on the wealthy.

TOUGH CHOICES

The White House acknowledged Democrats' concerns over federal benefits programs and said on Tuesday Obama has made proposals that include items that are very tough choices for his fellow Democrats to go along with.

Obama's discussion with Senate Democrats was the first in a series of meetings the president has scheduled with lawmakers this week. Obama will meet with Republicans in the House of Representatives on Wednesday and then with Senate Republicans and House Democrats later in the week.

After a combative campaign to prevent deep spending cuts that went into effect March 1, Obama has shifted gears and adopted a less confrontational approach to achieve a deficit reduction package he says must include both spending cuts, reductions to entitlement programs such as Social Security, and greater revenues.

White House aides said the change in tone reflects a desire by the president to move away from crisis-driven bare-knuckles negotiations to a more collegial process that aims at building consensus around a deal over time.

They said Obama switched tactics to try to engage individual lawmakers rather than the Republican leadership, because Republican House Speaker John Boehner had said he would simply not discuss raising revenues.

Obama's aides believe the best move right now is to deal with rank-and-file members. If a consensus can be reached, it might give Boehner and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell some political cover from their right wing.

Last week, Obama dined with rank and file Republicans. After that, Senate Democrats were also looking for some "love" from the president, said one Senate Democratic aide.

But although lawmakers from both parties have said Obama's efforts will help improve relations with Congress, Sanders said it was not just about the interactions.

"It is what you are proposing," he said.

(Reporting by Rachelle Younglai and Mark Felsenthal; Editing by Alistair Bell and Todd Eastham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/liberal-democrats-fear-obama-may-away-too-much-231019289--business.html

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Monday, March 11, 2013

Oops! Video-game image of Syria used in TV news segment

A Danish television channel has admitted it mistakenly used an image from a computer game to illustrate a news report about Syria.

TV2 Head of News Jacob Nybroe said Sunday the picture that was used as a backdrop behind news anchor Cecilie Beck on Feb. 26 came from Ubisoft's adventure game "Assassin's Creed."

He says he learned about the mistake this week, following speculation about the origin of the image on social media sites.

One of the TV channel's employees had found the image online and thought it was a photo of Damascus' skyline. (You can see the original, with a Ubisoft copyright notice, here, as ITV points out.)

Nybroe says it was a terrible mistake and a "reminder to us all of the importance of verifying the sources of pictures."

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/ingame/oops-video-game-image-syria-used-tv-news-segment-1C8781256

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Hungary to insert rejected laws into constitution

BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) ? Hungary's prime minister can't take "no" for an answer, even when he is being instructed by the country's highest court.

Over the past 18 months, the Constitutional Court has struck down several of the government's policies, including fining or jailing the homeless for living in public spaces, banning political campaign ads on commercial radio and TV stations and forcing university students who accepted state scholarships to work in Hungary for years after they graduate.

On Monday, however, lawmakers from Prime Minister Viktor Orban's Fidesz party are preparing to pass a lengthy amendment to the constitution that will entrench all those discredited policies and many others, ensuring that the government gets its way no matter what anyone says.

The amendment has alarmed the European Union, which over the past several months has forced Orban to dilute some of the laws meant to expand his control over everything from the central bank and the economy to the arts and the media.

The current argument is only the latest example of international criticism over government policies seen to be concentrating power in Orban's hands, paying lip service to democratic principles and expanding the state's role to the detriment of private enterprise.

On Friday, European Commission President Jose Maria Barroso spoke by telephone with Orban and sent him a letter expressing his concerns about possible conflicts between the planned amendment and EU laws.

"We trust that these contacts will ensure that our concerns are taken into account," commission spokeswoman Pia Ahrenkilde Hansen told The Associated Press, adding that the intention was to avoid facing "any vote that would result in incompatibility with EU law ... and would make the time ahead more difficult."

In a written response to Barroso after their call, Orban confirmed "the full commitment" of Hungary's government and parliament to European norms, but gave no direct indication that Monday's vote on the amendment, which has more than 20 articles, would be delayed.

With most domestic challengers neutralized ? Orban allies run the media council, the state audit office, the central bank and other key institutions ? the prime minister has taken to lashing out at EU bureaucrats in Brussels.

Although 97 percent of Hungary's development funds over the past years have been provided by the EU, Orban has said Hungary won't allow itself "to be dictated to by anyone from Brussels or anywhere else" and that Hungary does not need "unsolicited comradely assistance" from people in "finely-tailored suits" to write its constitution.

The U.S. has also voiced concerns about the amendment. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said it "could threaten the principles of institutional independence and checks and balances that are the hallmark of democratic governance."

The 49-year-old Orban's repeated attempts to concentrate power and carry out his "revolution in a voting booth," as he dubbed his party's landslide win in 2010, seem at odds with his past. Once a determined anti-communist dissident, he entered the political stage in 1989 by publicly calling for the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Hungary and the end of the communist dictatorship.

To rebuild an economy deeply damaged by eight years of Socialist Party rule, Orban and his "right hand," Gyorgy Matolcsy, until last week economy minister but now president of the National Bank of Hungary, have applied unorthodox policies.

Since 2010, the government, for example, has nationalized about $14 billion in assets earlier administered by private pension funds, introduced the EU's highest bank tax and value added tax rates as well as levies on financial transactions and phone calls. Hungary also has a flat income tax rate of 16 percent and, to help counter a rapidly aging population, substantial tax breaks for families with children.

Orban says the institutional overhaul is needed to break the influence of former communists. The new constitution replaces one based on a Stalin-era constitution that was rewritten in 1989, when the country threw off communist rule.

By including legislation in the constitution which earlier had been struck down as unconstitutional, the new amendment ? the fourth since the constitution, or Fundamental Law, as it is called, took effect in January 2012 ? makes it clear that Orban will accept no setbacks and that the decisions of his parliamentary majority should not be questioned.

That attitude is also expressed in one of the key articles of the amendment, which says the country's president, who signs all legislation into law, and the Constitutional Court can review whether the procedures to pass the amendment were lawful, but can't examine its contents.

"Instead of defending citizens from the will of the state," the new articles "defend the will of the government from constitutionality," said Mate Daniel Szabo, a legal expert with the pro-democracy Eotvos Karoly Policy Institute.

The proposal also bans courts from referring to legal precedents set under the previous constitution.

"This means stepping back to where we were in 1990," said Szabo. "We'll be starting everything over, which is very dangerous."

The new constitution was met with large street protests in 2012, with some calling Orban a dictator or a "Viktator." Recently, however, most of the domestic complaints about the amendment have come from legal scholars, though there have been some signs of public anger.

A few dozen activists staged a sit-down protest at Fidesz headquarters Thursday, while around 2,500 people marched Saturday to the Constitutional Court to protest the amendment.

For the government, the amendment is just business as usual.

Justice Minister Tibor Navracsics said the proposal "is, to a great extent, merely a technical amendment," while Foreign Minister Janos Martonyi said criticism was being "fueled by misunderstandings and inadequate information."

A year before the next parliamentary elections, Hungary's opposition parties are in disarray and a new electoral law makes it even harder to seriously challenge Fidesz, so the effects of Orban's constitutional amendments could be enduring.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hungary-insert-rejected-laws-constitution-114140274.html

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