Thursday, April 11, 2013

A new measure may unlock the mysteries of pain

If you have ever arrived at a hospital writhing in agony and had the six faces of the "Wong-Baker Pain Assessment Scale" thrust in front of you, you know that the medical profession's understanding of pain is, shall we say, in a rudimentary state. But a new study suggests there may be a more revealing way to communicate the experience of pain than pointing to a grimacing stick-figure face with furrowed brows and some tears.

A group of scientists at the University of Michigan have succeeded in using functional magnetic resonance imaging to tease apart the brain's consistent response to physical pain from its very similar response to emotional pain. The result is a moving picture of physical pain that allowed the researchers to predict with remarkable accuracy whether the individual whose brain they were watching was experiencing intense physical pain, the sensation of a warm spot on his arm, or the sting of social rejection.

Physical pain is a deeply subjective sensation. The same physical insult is felt differently from person to person. It can be magnified by depression; masked by drugs or the experience of shock; brought on, even, by social rejection or the loss of a loved one.

To make matters more complex, the line between emotional anguish and physical pain is a thin one -- and with good reason, because the brain circuits that processes physical pain largely overlap with those that process social pain.

But the latest research, published in Thursday's edition of the New England Journal of Medicine, offers the tantalizing prospects that pain "could be objectified by a measure that did not require direct patient reporting," as an editorial commenting on the study put it.

In four separate experiments, researchers put 114 subjects into fMRI scanners and watched as the participants had a heated wand applied to their arm. The tip of the device could deliver "thermal stimuli" ranging from innocuously warm to painfully hot.

In the first two studies, researchers developed for each subject a "neural signature" of physical pain. They found that in 94% of cases, seeing only those predictable patterns of brain activity would allow researchers to tell whether the subject was in pain.

In a third study, 40 participants underwent the same battery of stimuli. But researchers also recorded their brains' responses to a form of social pain -- the intense rejection each felt from seeing photographs of a person who had recently instigated a wrenching romantic break-up.

While there was considerable overlap between the neural signatures of social rejection and of physical pain, small differences between the two allowed researchers to tell whether a subject in a scanner was feeling the sting of being dumped or the burn of a hot poker pressed against her arm 78% of the time -- a success rate much better than chance.

In a fourth study, the researchers showed that infusions of the potent narcotic remifentanil (Fentanyl) not only suppressed subjects' subjective experience of pain when the heat on their arm was intense; it also suppressed the neural brain "signature" of pain by an average of 53%.

For medical practice, the implications of this work are far-reaching.

If a clear measure of physical pain could be reliably captured by an imaging machine, patients who are "locked in" to bodies broken by disease or injury could tell their doctors if they hurt -- and what helps. Developers of pain-fighting drugs or devices would have a consistent metric by which to judge the effectiveness of their therapies. Opiate drug-seekers who claim to be in pain could be referred to addiction treatment rather than have their habit fed. Patients with phantom-limb pain, or whose chronic pain is exacerbated by depression, might use the images to guide efforts at pain-suppression.

Identifying the neural signature of physical pain ? and differentiating it from that of social pain ? is an exercise with ?enormous clinical relevance,? said University of Michigan psychologist Ethan Kross, the paper?s senior author. The techniques used in this round of research, he added, will need much refinement before they are ready to be used in physicians' offices.

"We?re just beginning to scratch the surface,? he said: Now that researchers can recognize two deeply subjective states of experience in the brain, they have come closer to learning how they might recognize the neural signatures of other complex emotions ? empathy, jealousy, anger or love.

"This data suggests it may be possible to look at patterns of neural activity across the brain to predict complicated psychological states," Kross said. "That's what really gets me excited."

Nathan DeWall, a University of Kentucky psychologist who also studies social pain, called the latest work "riveting." DeWall, who was not involved in the NEJM study, said its "elegant methods" and "clean results" will propel a relatively new line of research that exists at the juncture of medicine and neuroscience.?

The experiments demonstrate how high-tech brain scanners could help physicians assess clinical symptoms "that were previously thought to be impenetrable," wrote Dr. Assia Jaillard, a French radiologist, and Brigham and Women's Hospital neurologist Allan H. Ropper in the editorial that accompanied the study.

"Being doctors, though, we may ultimately have to acknowledge that 'pain is pain,' and can be reported only by the patient," they added.

melissa.healy@latimes.com

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/latimes/news/science/~3/aV48aJzIbH4/la-sci-pain-measure-fmri-20130409,0,705985.story

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Obama budget: Trim Social Security, tax wealthy

President Barack Obama gestures as he speaks about his proposed fiscal 2014 federal budget, Wednesday, April 10, 2013, in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

President Barack Obama gestures as he speaks about his proposed fiscal 2014 federal budget, Wednesday, April 10, 2013, in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

President Barack Obama, accompanied by acting Budget Director Jeffrey Zients, speaks in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, Wednesday April 10, 2013, to discuss his proposes fiscal 2014 federal budget. (AP Photo/J. David Ake)

FOR POSITION ONLY; Graphic shows major points of President Obama's FY 2014 budget and comparisons with other plans

House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio meets with reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, April 10, 2013, following a Republican strategy session, and the release of President Barack Obama's proposed fiscal 2014 federal budget. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

President Barack Obama, accompanied by acting Budget Director Jeffrey Zients, speaks in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, Wednesday April 10, 2013, to discuss his proposes fiscal 2014 federal budget. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

WASHINGTON (AP) ? President Barack Obama sent Congress a $3.8 trillion spending blueprint on Wednesday that strives to achieve a "grand bargain" to tame runaway deficits, raising taxes on the wealthy and trimming popular benefit programs including Social Security and Medicare.

The president's budget projects deficit reductions of $1.8 trillion over the next decade, achieved with higher taxes, reductions in payments to Medicare providers and cutbacks in the cost-of-living adjustments paid to millions of recipients in Social Security and other government programs.

The budget would also nearly double the federal tax on cigarettes to $1.95 per pack. That money would fund a new pre-school program for 4-year-olds.

The president's proposed spending for the 2014 fiscal year, which begins Oct. 1, would rise 2.5 percent from this year.

The budget projects a deficit for the current year of $973 billion, falling to $744 billion in 2014. Those would be the first deficits below $1 trillion since 2008. Even with the president's deficit reductions, the budget projects the red ink would total $5.3 trillion over the next 10 years.

The plan includes a compromise proposal that Obama offered to House Speaker John Boehner during "fiscal cliff" negotiations last December. Boehner walked away from those talks because of his objections to raising taxes on the wealthy.

By including proposals to trim Social Security and Medicare, the government's two biggest benefit programs, Obama is hoping to entice Republicans to consider tax increases.

"I have already met Republicans more than halfway, so in the coming days and weeks I hope that Republicans will come forward and demonstrate that they're really as serious about the deficit and debt as they claim to be," Obama said in the White House Rose Garden.

But instead of moving Congress nearer a grand bargain, Obama's proposals so far have managed to anger both the Republicans, who are upset by higher taxes, and Democrats unhappy about cuts to Social Security benefits.

The White House highlighted $580 billion in tax increases on the rich over 10 years, which would be obtained primarily by limiting deductions the wealthy can take. But the figure climbs closer to $1 trillion after adding in a 94-cents-per-pack increase in taxes on cigarettes, slower inflation adjustments to income tax brackets, elimination of oil and gas production subsidies, an increase in the estate tax and a new "financial crisis responsibility" fee on banks.

Responding to the budget, Boehner said Republicans were unwilling to go beyond the $660 billion in higher taxes approved as part of the "fiscal cliff" deal. "The president got his tax hikes in January. We don't need to be raising taxes on the American people," Boehner said.

House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., said Obama's budget "doesn't break new ground. It goes over old ground. It takes more from families to spend more in Washington." Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell dismissed Obama's budget as "not a serious plan. For the most part, just another left-wing wish list."

The president's spending and tax plan is two months late. The administration blamed the delay on the lengthy negotiations at the end of December and then fights over the resulting March 1 automatic spending cuts.

The Obama budget proposal will join competing outlines already approved by the Republican-controlled House and the Democratic-run Senate.

Obama's plan is not all about budget cuts. It also includes an additional $50 billion in spending to fund infrastructure investments, including $40 billion in a "Fix It First" effort to provide immediate money to repair highways, bridges, transit systems and airports nationwide.

Obama's budget would also provide $1 billion to launch a network of 15 manufacturing innovation institutes across the country, and it earmarks funding to support high-speed rail projects.

The president's plan to establish a program to offer preschool to all 4-year-olds from low- and moderate-income families would be financed by the higher tax on tobacco, which the administration said would raise $78 billion over a decade.

The administration said its proposals to increase spending would not increase the deficit but rather would be paid for either by increasing taxes or making deeper cuts to other programs.

Among the proposed cuts, the administration wants to trim defense spending by an additional $100 billion and domestic programs by an extra $100 billion over the next decade. However, those cuts would actually be less than the automatic spending cuts they would replace in the "sequester" that would have trimmed government spending by $1.2 trillion over 10 years. Obama's budget, if adopted, would eliminate future sequester reductions. Those cuts began taking effect on March 1 with an initial $85 billion in reductions.

The Obama budget proposes cutting $400 billion from Medicare and other health care programs over a decade. The cuts would come in a variety of ways, including negotiating better prescription drug prices and asking wealthy seniors to pay more.

It would obtain an additional $200 billion in savings by scaling back farm subsidies and trimming federal retiree programs.

The most sweeping proposal in Obama's budget is a switch in the way the government calculates the annual cost-of-living adjustments for the millions of recipients of Social Security and other benefits. The new method would take into account changes that occur when people substitute goods rising in price with less expensive products. It results in a slightly lower annual reading for inflation.

The switch in the inflation formula would cut spending on government benefit programs by $130 billion over 10 years, although the administration said it planned to protect the most vulnerable, including the very elderly. The change would also raise about $100 billion in higher taxes because the current CPI formula is used to adjust tax brackets each year. A lower inflation measure would mean more money taxed at higher rates.

In the tax area, Obama's budget would also implement the "Buffett Rule" requiring that households with incomes of more than $1 million pay at least 30 percent of their income in taxes.

Congress and the administration have already secured $2.5 trillion in deficit reduction over the next 10 years through budget reductions and with the end-of-year tax increase on the rich. Obama's plan would bring that total to $4.3 trillion over 10 years.

It is unlikely that Congress will get down to serious budget negotiations until this summer, when the government once again will be confronted with the need to raise the government's borrowing limit or face the prospect of a first-ever default on U.S. debt.

As part of the administration's effort to win over Republicans, Obama will have a private dinner at the White House with about a dozen GOP senators Wednesday night. The budget is expected to be a primary topic, along with proposed legislation dealing with gun control and immigration.

Early indications are that the budget negotiations will be intense. Republicans have been adamant in their rejection of higher taxes, arguing that the $660 billion increase on top earners that was part of the late December agreement to prevent the government from going over the "fiscal cliff" is all the new revenue they will tolerate.

The administration maintains that Obama's proposal is balanced with the proper mix of spending cuts and tax increases.

Obama has presided over four straight years of annual deficits totaling more than $1 trillion, reflecting in part the lost revenue during a deep recession and the government's efforts to get the economy going again and stabilize the financial system.

The budget plan already passed by the GOP-controlled House projects reaching balance in 2023, a year in which Obama's proposal projects a $439 billion deficit. The budget outline approved by the Democratic-controlled Senate tracks more closely to the Obama proposal, although it does not include changes to the cost-of-living formula for Social Security.

Online:

http://hosted.ap.org/interactives/2013/us-budget-2013/

___

Associated Press writers Andrew Taylor, Jim Kuhnhenn, Donna Cassata and Julie Pace contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-04-10-Obama%20Budget/id-770dfa199dcf4f3e9bcf9a51c92cb8a4

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Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Iran says 37 killed in earthquake in south

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) ? A 6.1 magnitude earthquake killed at least 37 and injured hundreds more in a sparsely populated area in southern Iran on Tuesday, Iranian officials said, adding that it did not damage a nuclear plant in the region.

The report said the earthquake struck the town of Kaki some 96 kilometers (60 miles) southeast of Bushehr, a town on the Persian Gulf that is home of Iran's first nuclear power plant, built with Russian help.

"No damage was done to Bushehr power plant," Bushehr provincial governor Fereidoun Hasanvand told state TV. He said 37 people had died so far and 850 were injured, including 100 who were hospitalized.

The plant's chief, Mahmoud Jafari, confirmed the site's condition to semi-official Mehr news agency, saying that it is resistant to earthquakes of up to magnitude eight.

Water and electricity were cut to many residents, said Ebrahim Darvishi, governor of the worst-hit district Shonbeh.

The UN's nuclear watchdog agency said on its website that it had been informed by Iran that there was no damage to the plant and no radioactive release and, based on its analysis of the earthquake, was not seeking additional information. The International Atomic Energy Agency statement indicated that it was satisfied there was little danger.

Damaged houses are seen in the earthquake stricken town of Bushehr in Iran April 9, 2013. A powerful earthquake struck close to Iran's only nuclear power station on Tuesday, killing 30 people and ... more? Damaged houses are seen in the earthquake stricken town of Bushehr in Iran April 9, 2013. A powerful earthquake struck close to Iran's only nuclear power station on Tuesday, killing 30 people and injuring 800 as it devastated small villages, state media reported. REUTERS/Mehr News Agency (IRAN - Tags: DISASTER) ATTENTION EDITORS - THIS IMAGE WAS PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY. THIS PICTURE IS DISTRIBUTED EXACTLY AS RECEIVED BY REUTERS, AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS less? ?

Shahpour Rostami, the deputy governor of Bushehr province, told state TV that rescue teams have been deployed to Shonbeh.

Three helicopters were sent to survey the damaged area before sunset, said Mohammad Mozaffar, the head of Iran's Red Crescent rescue department. He said damage was particularly bad in the village of Baghan.

Kaki resident Mondani Hosseini told The Associated Press that people had run out into the streets out of fear.

Dozens of aftershocks have been reported by the official IRNA news agency since the earthquake, which occurred at 16:22 local time, 11:58 GMT.

Iran announced three days of mourning.

The quake was felt across the Gulf in Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar, where workers were evacuated from high-rise buildings as a precaution.

Earlier on Sunday a lighter earthquake jolted the nearby area. Iran is located on seismic faults and it experiences frequent earthquakes.

In 2003, some 26,000 people were killed by a 6.6 magnitude quake that flattened the historic southeastern city of Bam.

In Russia, the head of the state agency responsible for the Bushehr project said the reactor was not producing fission by chain reaction when the tremor occurred.

"Personnel at the station are continuing to work in a normal regime, the radiation conditions are within the norms of natural background," Igor Mezenin was quoted as saying by the ITAR-Tass news agency.

____

AP writers George Jahn in Vienna and James Heintz in Moscow contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/iran-says-37-killed-earthquake-south-191841244.html

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Affymetrix expects 1Q revenue below Street's view

SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) -- The genetic testing instrument business Affymetrix Inc. expects first-quarter revenue below Wall Street expectations.

The Santa Clara, Calif., company said Tuesday it expects total revenue of about $78 million for the quarter that ended March 31. That includes about $19 million from its eBioscience segment. Affymetrix will report full results April 30 after markets close.

Analysts expect, on average, revenue of $83.3 million, according to FactSet.

The company also said Tuesday it expects to report cash on hand of at least $38 million as of March 31.

Affymetrix technology helps analyze biological systems at the cell, protein and gene levels. For instance, it provides kits for molecular biology applications like DNA sequencing and protein analysis.

Its shares finished at $4.66 on Monday. They have traded in a 52-week range of $2.96 to $5.50.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/affymetrix-expects-1q-revenue-below-113446579.html

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McConnell Recorded Plotting Judd Attack (ABC News)

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The Best Way To Sell More Personal Training - Fitness Business

By Pat Rigsby

Effectively selling personal training is one of the most common things that separate a financially successful fitness business from an unsuccessful one.

The good news is that selling is more in lie with everything else that you do as a trainer or a coach than you probably think.

And, in fact, the best way to sell more personal training is to make the sales process more about the prospective client and less about ?closing the sale.?

The way that selling personal training was taught for a long time and is still taught by some is that closing a sale is an adversarial interaction where either you win or the prospect wins.

What a horrible way to look at it.

Selling starts with having a truly valuable solution that the prospective client will benefit from and it?s really just the process of finding the right mutually beneficial relationship where you can help them achieve their goals and in exchange you get compensated for your help.

So let?s look at the best way to sell more personal training through the prospective client?s eyes:

Step 1: I Need To Know Who You And Your Business Are.

Purchasing obviously starts with awareness.? Someone can?t become your client if they don?t know who you are.?

Step 2: I Need To Connect With What You Offer.

What you have to offer needs to speak directly to that person.? If they?re looking for fat loss and you?re talking about corrective exercise, they don?t connect.? That doesn?t mean they don?t need it, but they don?t connect with it.?

Step 3: I Need To Trust You Can Deliver What I Specifically Want.

No one makes a purchase unless they believe that what they?re buying will deliver the outcome they?re looking for.?

These first three steps are where so many fitness pros miss the boat.? They think they?re selling what they want to sell rather than what a specific person wants.? Or they don?t recognize that they need to have the prospect personally connect with them and what they offer.

That?s the beauty of referral marketing.?

It takes care of all three of these steps at once.?

Your happy client makes people aware of who you are and really facilitates the connection and trust in a way that you can?t because they?re talking to someone who already knows, likes and trusts them.

Step 4: I Need To Experience What You Have To Offer.

Most people want to try before they buy.? This can mean something as simple as a Success Session with you to make sure you?re able to provide what they need, or it could be a couple of free sessions or a paid 21 day or month long program.

Step 5: I?m Ready To Become A Client.

This is where most fitness pros think everything happens.? They?re wrong.? This is just a natural step in the progression if you?ve done what you?re supposed to do up to this point.? It?s actually easier to lose people in the first couple of steps than it is this one.? You just don?t know you?ve lost them because they?re not sitting in front of you.

Step 6: I WANT To Become A Fan.

No one goes into a business hoping for an ordinary experience.? They want to be WOWed.? They want to fall in love with the business.? The fact that most businesses don?t inspire that type of feeling is a shame for them, but it?s an opportunity for you.

If you can create fans at this stage it makes everything else you do SO much easier.?

Step 7: I?m Eager To Share my Experience With Others.

This is the pinnacle.? If someone has made it through all 6 previous steps, then they?re primed to go out and be an advocate for what you do.? That may mean referring in the traditional sense.? It may mean talking about their experience on Facebook every day.? It could mean becoming a connector for you with people they know.

This process is a little different than what most people think of as sales, but it?s hands down the best way to sell more personal training.? So let?s take a quick look at how you can dial your training sales process in:

Step 1: Making Sure The Right People Know About You.

  • Is your business and your unique message getting in front of the type of prospects you want on a consistent basis?
  • Do you have multiple strategies in place that are making sure this happens?

Step 2: Do Your Ideal Prospects Connect With What You?re Saying.

  • Is your message or your Big Idea clear enough that it stands out from the competition?
  • Does it speak to the people you want to have as clients so specifically that they feel like you?re speaking directly to them?

Step 3: Are You Creating Enough Trust?

  • Do you have testimonials and success stories that speak to how effectively you deliver what you say you do?
  • Is everything that someone can see about you congruent?

Step 4: Do You Have A Great Try Before You Buy Experience?

  • Do you have a strong Front End Offer in place?
  • Does it WOW the prospect or is it just like everyone else?s?

Step 5: How Do You Transition People To Become Clients?

  • Do you have a Win / Win Closing Process?
  • Are you focusing on selling what?s best for the client or what?s the most expensive?

Step 6: Do You Have A WOW Experience?

  • Is it clear to your clients that what they get from you is very different from what the competition offers?
  • Do you actively educate your clients?
  • Do you have WOW touchpoints with every client?

Step 7: Do You Make It Easy For Your Clients To Connect You With Others?

  • Do you have a variety of ways for clients to introduce you to their network?
  • Do you connect with your clients through social media?
  • Do you get testimonials from your clients?
  • Do you provide sharable education?

So hopefully you see why the best way to sell personal training isn?t the traditional way to sell personal training.? Your fitness sales process is really the cultivation of a relationship with your ideal prospect to the point that they become a fan that eagerly spreads the word about your business.

So use the questions that I shared toward the end to optimize your approach to selling and before long you can be reaping the rewards of the best way to sell more personal training.

Source: http://fitbusinessinsider.com/the-best-way-to-sell-more-personal-training/

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Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Sony unveils Anycast Touch all-in-one production system at NAB

SONY'S NEW ANYCAST TOUCH ADDS FAMILIAR EASY-TO-USE INTERFACE TO ITS POWERFUL AND PORTABLE LIVE PRODUCTION SYSTEM

Las Vegas, NAB Booth C11001, April 7, 2013 -- Sony's new Anycast Touch system combines
the familiar touch-screen interface common in mobile devices with full-scale A/V
performance. This affordable, easy-to-use, ultra-portable all-in-one live production system is
ideal for live broadcasting or webcasting in applications such as education, corporate,
government, houses of worship, sports and more.

The Anycast Touch system combines a video switcher, audio mixer, special effects
generator, PTZ camera control, a real-time streaming encoder, image still store, character
generator, and scale converter. It uses a sliding, dual touch-screen interface similar to a
tablet. A unique tilt-screen function allows the two dual screens to split video and audio
controls and conveniently store them in scene folders with settings including titles, logos and
effects. Operators can recall the next video source just by touching its thumbnail picture,
and content can be easily streamed live over the internet or a dedicated network.

Sony's Anycast Touch live production system
The Anycast Touch system eliminates the additional hardware typically required for professional live streaming such as encoders, video recorders, audio mixers, titlers and remote camera controllers.

The new system (model AWS-750) is an evolution of Sony's popular Anycast AWS-G500. Enhancing the original system's portability, flexibility and scalability, Anycast Touch offers incredible picture quality for live production. The system can produce full HD (1920x1080) content with 10-bit processing to produce extremely clear, highly detailed pictures either in SD, HD or a mix of both.

Sony's Anycast Touch live production system will be available in September 2013.

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/07/sony-new-anycast-touch-nab-2013/

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The ethics of resurrecting extinct species

Apr. 8, 2013 ? At some point, scientists may be able to bring back extinct animals, and perhaps early humans, raising questions of ethics and environmental disruption.

Within a few decades, scientists may be able to bring back the dodo bird from extinction, a possibility that raises a host of ethical questions, says Stanford law Professor Hank Greely.

Twenty years after the release of Jurassic Park, the dream of bringing back the dinosaurs remains science fiction. But scientists predict that within 15 years they will be able to revive some more recently extinct species, such as the dodo or the passenger pigeon, raising the question of whether or not they should -- just because they can.

In the April 5 issue of Science, Stanford law Professor Hank Greely identifies the ethical landmines of this new concept of de-extinction.

"I view this piece as the first framing of the issues," said Greely, director of the Stanford Center for Law and the Biosciences. "I don't think it's the end of the story, rather I think it's the start of a discussion about how we should deal with de-extinction."

In "What If Extinction Is Not Forever?" Greely lays out potential benefits of de-extinction, from creating new scientific knowledge to restoring lost ecosystems. But the biggest benefit, Greely believes, is the "wonder" factor.

"It would certainly be cool to see a living saber-toothed cat," Greely said. "'Wonder' may not seem like a substantive benefit, but a lot of science -- such as the Mars rover -- is done because of it."

Greely became interested in the ethics of de-extinction in 1999 when one of his students wrote a paper on the implications of bringing back wooly mammoths.

"He didn't have his science right -- which wasn't his fault because approaches on how to do this have changed in the last 13 years -- but it made me realize this was a really interesting topic," Greely said.

Scientists are currently working on three different approaches to restore lost plants and animals. In cloning, scientists use genetic material from the extinct species to create an exact modern copy. Selective breeding tries to give a closely-related modern species the characteristics of its extinct relative. With genetic engineering, the DNA of a modern species is edited until it closely matches the extinct species.

All of these techniques would bring back only the physical animal or plant.

"If we bring the passenger pigeon back, there's no reason to believe it will act the same way as it did in 1850," said co-author Jacob Sherkow, a fellow at the Stanford Center for Law and the Biosciences. "Many traits are culturally learned. Migration patterns change when not taught from generation to generation."

Many newly revived species could cause unexpected problems if brought into the modern world. A reintroduced species could become a carrier for a deadly disease or an unintentional threat to a nearby ecosystem, Greely says.

"It's a little odd to consider these things 'alien' species because they were here before we were," he said. "But the 'here' they were in is very different than it is now. They could turn out to be pests in this new environment."

When asked whether government policies are keeping up with the new threat, Greely answers "no."

"But that's neither surprising nor particularly concerning," he said. "It will be a while before any revised species is going to be present and able to be released into the environment."

Greely and Sherkow recommend that the government leave de-extinction research to private companies and focus on drafting new regulations. Sherkow says the biggest legal and ethical challenge of de-extinction concerns our own long-lost ancestors.

"Bringing back a hominid raises the question, 'Is it a person?' If we bring back a mammoth or pigeon, there's a very good existing ethical and legal framework for how to treat research animals. We don't have very good ethical considerations of creating and keeping a person in a lab," said Sherkow. "That's a far cry from the type of de-extinction programs going on now, but it highlights the slippery slope problem that ethicists are famous for considering."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Stanford University. The original article was written by Thomas Sumner and Bjorn Carey.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. J. S. Sherkow, H. T. Greely. What If Extinction Is Not Forever? Science, 2013; 340 (6128): 32 DOI: 10.1126/science.1236965

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/KzHo9LXWg1o/130408165955.htm

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Monday, April 8, 2013

Help Make Your Home Improvement Project Pain-free With These ...

The data in this article about home remodeling tips and tricks will certainly aid you in getting began with many different of your assignments. Not only will you save your time, but additionally you will learn beneficial sources to assist you for all your potential projects. Simply use this informative guide and it also will enable you to learn all you need to know.

When childproofing your house, will not overlook your house windows as prospective threat zones. Dangling cords from window shades or hues cause a strangulation hazard, along with your little one can slip by way of a vast-available window, even if you find a hue into position. Check out every single windowpane in your house carefully and adapt your treatments and habits in line with the dangers posed by each specific home window.

When you are altering your inside illumination, make the change to compact phosphorescent lights. CFLs are energy efficient, meaning they preserve energy translates into lower electric power bills. Additionally, this kind of illumination endures much longer. Keep in mind these lights consist of mercury also, so after it is time to discard them, learn how to effectively do this.

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Source: http://www.bahasabudaya.org/help-make-your-home-improvement-project-pain-free-with-these-great-tips/

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Arkansas residents seek millions after Exxon crude oil spill

Two Arkansas residents filed a class action lawsuit against Exxon Mobil Friday, demanding to be compensated for damages after a crude oil pipeline ruptured the week before in their subdivision outside Little Rock, Ark.

Kathryn Chunn and Kimla Greene, residents of Ledrick Circle, filed the lawsuit in U.S. District Court on behalf of themselves and other affected residents and are seeking more than $5 million in damages. According to the 16-page document, which was posted on the Arkansas Times website Friday, homeowners within 3,000 feet of the pipeline were impacted by the spill that occurred in Mayflower, Ark., a suburb 20 miles from Little Rock.

Read the lawsuit (.pdf)

According to the lawsuit, 19,000 barrels were spilled in what the residents are calling the ?worst spill in Arkansas history.? Exxon, however, says the equivalent of 5,000 crude oil barrels were spilled.

The lawsuit says the pipeline?s capacity was increased by 50 percent in 2009 and that the line was not adequately maintained or inspected. The 65-year-old Pegasus pipeline transports crude oil from Canada between Illinois and Texas.

Exxon has not responded to the lawsuit but said in an online statement that it is paying for the cleanup and "will honor all valid claims."

In an online briefing Saturday, the company said the spill mostly affected the yards of six homes. The company says the water supply has not been tainted. Exxon also pointed to air quality reports produced by the Environmental Protection Agency, which show an increase in carbon monoxide in some areas around the spill, but no increases in other emissions.

Arkansas Attorney General Dustin McDaniel launched an investigation last week into what caused the spill and the subsequent recovery efforts, and the investigation may be used as evidence for the plaintiffs. An Exxon spokeswoman told Reuters that the company will ?cooperate fully? with any investigation.

Meantime, the 22 residents who were evacuated from their homes have not been able to return. State health authorities are still working on a plan for a safe return.

Mayflower, Ark., Chief of Police Bob Satkowski told Channel 7 News in Little Rock that those residents had to leave their homes because of health risks from the crude oil fumes and possible fires.

ExxonMobil initially downplayed environmental concerns, saying that the air quality didn't likely present a human health risk, ?with the exception of high-pooling areas.?

EPA officials said the cleanup would be long and expensive, according to KARK. Exxon has since said it would pay for the cleanup.

The oil spill came at a bad time for crude oil public relations. Two days before the spill, Reuters reported that a train carrying crude oil derailed in Minnesota and spilled up to 30,000 gallons.

The week before, the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration recommended fining Exxon Mobil Pipeline Company $1.7 million for how the company responded to a crude oil pipeline failure in the Yellowstone River in Montana.

The Mayflower, Ark. oil spill was more than 10 times more significant than the Montana spill, which leaked 1,509 barrels.

To put these numbers in perspective: The 1989 Exxon Valdez spill poured 260,000 to 750,000 gallons into Alaskan waters.

The 2010 Deep Water Horizon oil spill, the most significant oil spill in the U.S., leaked 4.9 million barrels into the Gulf Coast.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653351/s/2a7086f5/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Cbusiness0Carkansas0Eresidents0Eseek0Emillions0Eafter0Eexxon0Ecrude0Eoil0Espill0E1C9254722/story01.htm

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Roll for initiative (Unqualified Offerings)

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Conn. gov faults gun lobbyists over restrictions

In this April 4, 2013, photo, Connecticut Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, center, signs legislation at the Capitol in Hartford, Conn., that includes new restrictions on weapons and large capacity ammunition magazines, a response to last year's deadly school shooting in Newtown. Neil Heslin, behind left, father of Sandy Hook shooting victim Jesse Lewis, Nicole Hockley, right, mother of Sandy Hook School shooting victim Dylan, and Conn. Lt. Gov. Nancy Wyman, left, watch. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)

In this April 4, 2013, photo, Connecticut Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, center, signs legislation at the Capitol in Hartford, Conn., that includes new restrictions on weapons and large capacity ammunition magazines, a response to last year's deadly school shooting in Newtown. Neil Heslin, behind left, father of Sandy Hook shooting victim Jesse Lewis, Nicole Hockley, right, mother of Sandy Hook School shooting victim Dylan, and Conn. Lt. Gov. Nancy Wyman, left, watch. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)

(AP) ? Connecticut Gov. Dannel P. Malloy harshly criticized gun industry lobbyists on Sunday, saying they are doing too little to halt gun violence.

Just three days after he signed into law new restrictions on weapons and large-capacity magazines, the governor compared Wayne LaPierre, executive vice president of the National Rifle Association, to clowns and said lobbyists want to ensure that the industry can sell guns indiscriminately.

"Wayne reminds me of the clowns at the circus," Malloy said of LaPierre on CNN's "State of the Union." ''They get the most attention and that's what he's paid to do."

Representatives of the NRA did not immediately return a call seeking comment.

"What this is about is the ability of the gun industry to sell as many guns to as many people as possible even if they're deranged, even if they're mentally ill, even if they have a criminal background," Malloy said. "They don't care. They want to sell guns."

Robert Crook, executive director of the Connecticut Coalition of Sportsmen, a lobbying group, said Malloy's criticism was "absolutely false."

"It's another political statement from a governor with little knowledge," he said.

Connecticut's gun industry supports a gun trafficking task force and tighter background checks of buyers, Crook said.

Andrew Doba, a spokesman for Malloy, said the Democratic governor was criticizing lobbyists, not the gun industry. Malloy has said he wants Connecticut's large gun industry to remain in the state, though gun manufacturers say the new restrictions will hurt their business.

"People are welcome to stay in our state as long as they're producing a product that can be sold in the United States legally," Malloy said.

Nearly four months after a gunman killed 20 children and six educators at an elementary school in Newtown, lawmakers and Malloy enacted legislation that adds more than 100 firearms to the state's assault weapons ban. It also immediately bans the sale of magazines capable of holding more than 10 rounds of ammunition. People who purchased those guns and magazines before midnight Wednesday will be allowed to keep them if they're registered with the state police before Jan. 1.

Required background checks for private gun sales also take effect.

Other parts of the new law include a ban on armor-piercing bullets, establishment of a deadly weapon offender registry, expansion of circumstances when a person's mental health history disqualifies them from holding a gun permit, mandatory reporting of voluntary hospital commitments, doubled penalties for gun trafficking and other firearms violations, and $1 million to fund the statewide firearms trafficking task force.

Malloy said he preferred an "all-out ban" on magazines of more than 10 rounds of ammunition, but the legislature opposed him on the issue.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/apdefault/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-04-07-Gun%20Control-Conn/id-77f0c259ff6e4bcb98c05219c97f495c

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Sunday, April 7, 2013

India drop Sehwag for Champions Trophy

India's selectors on Saturday left out dashing batsman Virender Sehwag from a 30-man preliminary squad for the Champions Trophy in England in June.

Seasoned off-spinner Harbhajan Singh and veteran seamer Zaheer Khan were also missing from the list, which has to be shortened to 15 players a month before the one-day tournament opens on June 5.
Sehwag's 219 against the West Indies in December 2011 is the highest individual score in one-day internationals and he is only the second batsman to score a double-century in the shorter format after compatriot Sachin Tendulkar.
But he was dropped due to recent poor form.
The 34-year-old, who has scored 8,273 runs in 251 ODIs with 15 centuries, was also been left out of the last two Tests in the recent series against Australia, which India won 4-0.
Harbhajan, 32, last played an ODI two years ago in the West Indies, while Zaheer, 34, missed the entire Australian series due to a calf injury.
Uncapped off-spinner Parvez Rasool, 24, was included in the squad, making him the first cricketer from Held Kashmir to join the senior ranks.
India are drawn with South Africa, Pakistan and the West Indies in group B of the Champions Trophy, from which the top two will qualify for the semi-finals.
The other group comprises England, Australia, New Zealand and Sri Lanka.
India's 30-man preliminary squad:
Mahendra Singh Dhoni, Murali Vijay, Shikhar Dhawan, Gautam Gambhir, Unmukt Chand, Virat Kohli, Yuvraj Singh, Suresh Raina, Rohit Sharma, Manoj Tiwary, Ajinkya Rahane, Ambati Rayudu, Kedar Jadhav, Wriddhiman Saha, Dinesh Karthik, Ravichandran Ashwin, Amit Mishra, Ravindra Jadeja, Jalaj Saxena, Parvez Rasool, Ishant Sharma, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Ashok Dinda, Umesh Yadav, Shami Ahmed, Irfan Pathan, Vinay Kumar, Praveen Kumar, Ishwar Pandey, Sidharth Kaul.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/pakistan-news-newspaper-daily-english-online/Breaking/~3/qPj95Me7GjI/india-drop-sehwag-for-champions-trophy

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Saturday, April 6, 2013

No sign of sustained spread of H7N9 between humans : WHO

GENEVA (Reuters) - The World Health Organization said on Friday there was no sign of "sustained human-to-human transmission" of the H7N9 virus in China, but it was important to check on 400 people who had been in close contact with the 14 confirmed cases.

"We have 14 cases in a large geographical area, we have no sign of any epidemiological linkage between the confirmed cases and we have no sign of sustained human-to-human transmission," WHO spokesman Gregory Hartl told a news briefing in Geneva.

"The 400 contacts are being followed up to see if any of them do have the virus, have had it from someone else," he said.

"There are reports of people or a person with fever, so this is obviously why it's so important to follow up with all contacts in order to know whether or not they do have the virus and/or from whom they contracted it."

He added: "Remember even that if they are infected, you still need to try to find out if they contracted the virus from one another, or from a common environmental source."

Chinese authorities slaughtered over 20,000 birds on Friday at a poultry market in the financial hub Shanghai as the death toll from the new strain of bird flu mounted to six, spreading concern overseas and sparking a sell-off on Hong Kong's share market.

"It is really a severe illness but cases are being well handled and put into intensive care units. There doesn't seem to be any indication of infections in hospital so far," Hartl later told a group of reporters.

(Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay; Editing by Andrew Roche)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/no-sign-sustained-spread-h7n9-between-humans-094652277.html

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Near-Death Experiences More Vivid Than Real Life

Long after a near-death experience, people recall the incident more vividly and emotionally than real and false memories, new research suggests.

"It's really something that stays in the mind of people as a clear trace, and it's even more clear than a real memory," said Vanessa Charland-Verville, a neuropsychologist in the Coma Science Group at the University of Liege in Belgium. She, along with colleagues, detailed the study online March 27 in the journal PLOS ONE.

Mysterious phenomenon

Roughly 5 percent of the general population and 10 percent of cardiac-arrest victims report near-death experiences, yet no one really knows what they are, Charland-Verville told LiveScience.

Across cultures and religions, people describe similar themes: being out of body; passing through a tunnel, river or door toward warm, glowing light; seeing dead loved ones greet them; and being called back to their bodies or told it's not time to go yet.

Some think near-death experiences show the spirit and body can be separated. Others say oxygen deprivation or a cascade of chemicals in the failing brain are to blame. Some believe near-death experiences reveal the existence of God or heaven.

But what makes finding an explanation even more complicated is that healthy people in meditative trances and those taking hallucinogens, such as ketamine, describe very similar experiences, Charland-Verville told LiveScience.? [Trippy Tales: The History of 8 Hallucinogens]

Life-changing events

Because it's impossible to monitor these events in real time, Charland-Verville and her colleagues spoke with those who had gone through these trancelike states, sometimes years earlier.

"People are transformed forever by the experience," she said. "People say they're more empathic, they changed jobs, they're giving, they want to help the planet."

The team gave memory questionnaires to eight coma survivors who had near-death experiences, six who had coma memories but no memory of near-death experiences, seven who had no memories of their coma, and 18 people who had not had any of these experiences.

The questions assessed people's memories of imagined events as well as memories of near-death events, comas and emotional events from real life.

Even years later, the near-death experiences seemed hyperreal. In fact, they were remembered more clearly and emotionally than all other types of memories.

Charland-Verville speculates that these experiences have shaped religious symbols across cultures since the dawn of time. Now, the researchers want to study the brain activity of these individuals.

"If it changed people's lives, there must be something different in their brain functioning," she said.

Unanswered questions

The findings, though fascinating, can't answer whether the mind and body can be separated, said Christian Agrillo, a cognitive psychologist at the University of Padova in Italy who was not involved in the study.

"But it seems to suggest that what people recall in that moment is particularly genuine," Agrillo told LiveScience. "It's not a false memory that occurs after the event."

In addition, the study was small and asked people after the fact, making it tricky to draw firm conclusions, Zalika Klemenc-Keti?, a physician at the University of Maribor in Slovenia, wrote in an email.

In addition, "the study does not answer the question of whether [near-death experiences] really happened to patients or are only hallucinations, (which can be also perceived as real)," Zalika Klemenc-Keti? wrote.

Follow Tia Ghose on Twitter @tiaghose.?Follow?LiveScience @livescience, Facebook?& Google+. Original article on?LiveScience.com.

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

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/near-death-experiences-more-vivid-real-life-181840001.html

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New measurement of crocodilian nerves could help scientists understand ancient animals

Apr. 4, 2013 ? Crocodilians have nerves on their faces that are so sensitive, they can detect a change in a pond when a single drop hits the water surface several feet away. Alligators and crocodiles use these "invisible whiskers" to detect prey when hunting. Now, a new study from the University of Missouri has measured the nerves responsible for this function, which will help biologists understand how today's animals, as well as dinosaurs and crocodiles that lived millions of years ago, interact with the environment around them.

"The trigeminal nerve is the nerve responsible for detection of sensations of the face," said Casey Holliday, assistant professor of anatomy in the MU School of Medicine. "While we've known about these sensitive nerves in crocodiles, we've never measured the size of the nerve bundle, or ganglion, in their skulls, until now. When compared to humans, this trigeminal nerve in crocodiles is huge."

The key to this measurement is a specific hole in the skull. The trigeminal nerve is rooted inside the skull, but must travel through a large hole before it branches out to reach the crocodile's skin on its face. By examining how the skull size, brain size and ganglion size relate to each other, scientists can estimate how sensitive the face is. Eventually, Holliday hopes to measure this nerve in other ancient and contemporary species to learn more about animal behavior.

"Currently, we rely on alligators, crocodiles and birds to provide us with information about how ancient reptiles, such as pre-historic crocodiles and dinosaurs, functioned," said Holliday, who co-authored the study with doctoral student Ian George. "However, the first thing we have to do is to understand how the living animals function."

When comparing the size of the hole for the trigeminal nerve found in alligators to that of certain dinosaurs, George says that the hole in the much-larger dinosaur skull is very similar in size or even smaller, which could give scientists more information about how well dinosaurs could detect small sensations on the face. From there, the scientists can start to trace the evolution of this nerve and the mechanism used by crocodiles.

"Some species of ancient crocodiles lived on land and they probably wouldn't have a use for a sensitive face that can detect disturbances in the water," George said. "So our next step is to trace back and determine when the nerve got bigger and see how that might have paralleled the animals' ecology."

Holliday says that this information will aid future research, including when his team will examine skulls of ancient crocodiles. Understanding this nerve and its functions could also lead to better understanding of the anatomical basis for behavior in many living animals, including fish, electric eels, platypi and humans.

"The same way that we would look at the size of the visual cortex in the brain to understand how well an animal might see, we can now look at the trigeminal nerve in animals to determine how sensitive their skin on their faces is," Holliday said.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Missouri-Columbia.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Ian D. George, Casey M. Holliday. Trigeminal Nerve Morphology in Alligator mississippiensis and Its Significance for Crocodyliform Facial Sensation and Evolution. The Anatomical Record, 13 FEB 2013 DOI: 10.1002/ar.22666

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/678x3GJOG1g/130404152623.htm

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Friday, April 5, 2013

Obama's inner-circle: 'Where are the women?'

Melanne Verveer, Hillary Clinton's longtime confidante and former chief of staff, isn't defending a picture of President Barack Obama's all-male inner circle. To her, it naturally begs a question: "Where are the women?"

Verveer, the first ambassador of the State Department office for Global Women?s Issues and now executive director of the Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace and Security, also didn't criticize the reaction that followed an early January New York Times story topped with a photograph of Obama facing 10 male top advisers.

"Well, you heard the reaction?it reverberated across the country," Verveer said in an interview with Yahoo News. "Any woman looking at that, what was the message to her? Well, 'women don?t belong.'"

She added, "There?s the old story of the photo says far more than a thousand words, and I think that the reaction was one that is well documented, which is: Where are the women?"

The picture of Obama's inner circle was published at a time when the president was working to fill multiple top positions in his administration at the start of his second term, and he had appointed only white men such as John Kerry (State), Chuck Hagel (Defense) and John Brennan (CIA) to the highest roles.

The White House argued the picture was simply that?a photo?and was not an accurate representation of gender among White House staff. The administration also argued that the reaction was not warranted. "These stories are in reaction to a couple of appointments," White House press secretary Jay Carney said at a briefing Jan. 9, the day after the Times piece was published.

Since then, more appointments have been made, including REI CEO Sally Jewell to head up Interior; Tom Perez, assistant attorney general for civil rights, to lead Labor, Julia Pierson to head up the Secret Service and others who were not white men.

Verveer, who has worked with Clinton since her time as first lady, said that "obviously" the administration has since "worked to rectify" the situation.

[Click to read more on Verveer's thoughts about Hillary Clinton and 2016.]

Criticism of the administration's gender attitudes reappeared in the news this week after Obama called California Attorney General Kamala Harris the "best-looking attorney general."

On Friday, the White House confirmed that Obama called Harris to apologize for causing a "distraction" with his comments.

"He fully recognizes the challenges women continue to face in the workplace and that they should not be judged based on appearance," Carney said of the president during Friday's briefing.

Verveer declined to directly criticize the administration or confirm whether there is a boy's club mentality at the White House, saying more must be done to further women's issues and women in government domestically as well as globally.

She said gender diversity, while necessary for all levels of society, remains highly important in the top echelons of government.

"It sends a strong signal. We are obviously men and women of the United States. We are a very diverse population, and people need to feel that they belong, that their perspectives and their experiences are going to have some influence in the way decisions get made."

Asked if there had been missed opportunities in terms of appointments, specifically Defense Undersecretary Michele Flournoy being passed over in favor of former Republican Sen. Chuck Hagel to head up the Defense Department, Verveer responded: "It would be great if that glass ceiling at the Pentagon were broken in a way that demonstrated that we are indeed making progress."

She said Flournoy, with whom she worked, "would have been a very qualified candidate."

Verveer noted that many administration positions have yet to be filled. Speaking about women in general, Verveer said, ?We?re hard-pressed to say anymore 'Well, we can?t find any women who can do that job.'"

That thinking is a major aim of the Global Women's Issues office. There, Verveer, under Secretary of State Clinton, helped integrate women's issues and their perspective into U.S. foreign policy and the State Department's practices. This involved gender guidance directives for the department, including for the training of diplomats, integrating women in peace and security initiatives, bringing women's issues into the economic sphere, focusing on violence against women, women in agriculture and a host of other issues.

?Whether it?s cabinets, whether it?s Congresses, whether it?s peace negotiations, we?re better off when we have a wealth of experiences and talents represented in the decision-making process," Verveer said.

Obama has named second lady Jill Biden's chief of staff Cathy Russell to succeed Verveer, and Verveer said she is pleased with the decision. Verveer noted Russell's experience on Capitol Hill, where she was closely involved with legislation, as well as the advantages Verveer believes Russell's current position will afford her.

She is ?very connected in the White House,? Verveer said of Russell, which she said will help ensure women's issues receive attention.

"She will do a very good job."

Obama on Jan. 30 made permanent the Office of Global Women's Issues, ensuring its work will continue under the new secretary, John Kerry.

Does Clinton's departure mean there is a gap to fill as far as a prominent female member the administration? Verveer doesn't necessarily agree.

?I don?t know that it?s a prominent woman so much as a real appreciation for why it makes a difference not to just have?as one often refers to it?the boys' club making all the decisions" and having a female perspective injected into decision-making and the agenda, she said.

"Integrating gender in policy is about both men and women" making that happen, she said.

Verveer said one of the most difficult places for women to make progress globally continues to be the political sphere. She noted that in America, we recently celebrated having 20 female senators in office, even though women make up more than half the U.S. population.

?I don?t know, is it sharing power?" she posited about why the political sphere globally remains difficult to equalize.

"Is it that we haven?t modeled enough women in these positions??

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/melanne-verveer-photo-male-obama-inner-circle-suggested-202102414--politics.html

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Conn. approves tough new gun laws

HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) ? Gov. Dannel P. Malloy was expected to sign a wide-ranging bill that includes sweeping new restrictions on weapons and large capacity ammunition magazines, a response to last year's deadly school shooting in Newtown.

Following a total of more than 13 hours of respectful and at times somber debate, the House of Representatives and the Senate voted in favor of the 139-page bill crafted by leaders from both major parties in the Democratic-controlled General Assembly.

The bill passed 26-10 in the Senate and 105-44 in the House. Both were bipartisan votes.

Malloy's office said he would sign the legislation at noon Thursday during a ceremony at the state Capitol.

"I pray today's bill ? the most far-reaching gun safety legislation in the country ? will prevent other families from ever experiencing the dreadful loss that the 26 Sandy Hook families have felt," said House Majority Leader Joe Aresimowicz, D-Berlin, referring to the families of the 20 first graders and six educators killed Dec. 14 inside Sandy Hook Elementary School.

The December massacre, which reignited a national debate on gun control, set the stage for changes in the state that may have been impossible elsewhere: The governor, who personally informed parents that their children had been killed that day, championed the cause, and legislative leaders, keenly aware of the attention on the state, struck a bipartisan agreement they want to serve as a national model.

The legislation adds more than 100 firearms to the state's assault weapons ban and creates what officials have called the nation's first dangerous weapon offender registry as well as eligibility rules for buying ammunition. Some parts of the bill would take effect immediately after Malloy's signature, including background checks for all firearms sales.

Connecticut will join states including California, New York, New Jersey and Massachusetts in having the country's strongest gun control laws, said Brian Malte, director of mobilization for the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence in Washington.

"This would put Connecticut right at the top or near the top of the states with the strongest gun laws," Malte said.

Colorado and New York also passed new gun control requirements in the wake of the Newtown shooting, in which a 20-year-old gunman used a military-style semi-automatic rifle.

Compared with Connecticut's legislation, which, for example, bans the sale or purchase of ammunition magazines holding more than 10 rounds, New York restricted magazines to seven bullets and gave owners of higher-capacity magazines a year to sell them elsewhere. Colorado banned ammunition magazines that hold more than 15 rounds.

"There are pieces that are stronger in other states, but, in totality, this will be the strongest gun legislation passed in the United States," Betty Gallo, a lobbyist for Connecticut Against Gun Violence, said of the Connecticut bill.

But some lawmakers said they felt the legislation did not do enough to address mental health issues.

Rep. Mitch Bolinsky, a freshman Republican lawmaker from Newtown, acknowledged the legislation "is not perfect" and he hoped would be "a beginning in addressing critical mental health needs."

Rep. Douglas McCrory, D-Hartford, said he felt the bill "doesn't speak to the issue of gun violence that has permeated our cities," adding how families in his district who've lost children to gun violence have not received the same level of attention from state politicians as the Newtown families.

Many legislators spoke of balancing the rights of gun owners with addressing the horror of the Sandy Hook shooting. They've received thousands of emails and phone calls urging them to vote for or against the bill, with veteran Sen. Joan Hartley, a Democrat, saying she's never seen a more polarizing issue at the state Capitol.

But Senate Minority Leader John McKinney, R-Fairfield, whose district includes Newtown, said he felt he was representing the interests of the Sandy Hook victims as he cast his vote.

"I stand here as their voice, as their elected representative," he said, reciting the names of the 26 victims at the school.

Lawmakers appeared to still be stunned by the enormity of the massacre.

"When a child is sent to school, their parents expect them to be safe. The Sandy Hook shooting rampage was a parent's, a school system's, a community's and the nation's worst nightmare," said Republican state Sen. Toni Boucher of Wilton.

Gun rights advocates who greatly outnumbered gun control supporters in demonstrations held earlier in the day at the Capitol railed against the proposals as misguided and unconstitutional, occasionally chanting "No! No! No!" and "Read the bill!"

"We want them to write laws that are sensible," said Ron Pariseau, of Pomfret, who was angry he'll be made a felon if he doesn't register his weapons that will no longer be sold in Connecticut. "What they're proposing will not stop anything."

By the time the Senate voted around 6:30 p.m., many of the gun rights advocates had gone home, leaving behind proponents of the bill who applauded when the tally in the Senate was read. The halls were mostly empty by the time the House voted at 2:26 a.m. on Thurdsay.

House Minority Leader Lawrence Cafero Jr., R-Norwalk, who helped craft the bill, said he realizes the gun owners are unhappy with the bill, but he stressed that no one will lose their legally owned guns or magazines under the legislation.

"We did our job. We did it together," he said. "We did the best we could and I think we did a good thing."

In the legislature, where Democrats control both houses, leaders waited to unveil gun legislation until they struck a bipartisan deal that they say shows how the parties can work together elsewhere. They touted the package as a comprehensive response to Newtown that also addresses mental health and school security measures, including the creation of a new council to establish school safety standards and the expansion of circumstances when someone's mental history disqualifies him or her from obtaining a gun permit or other gun credentials.

But momentum on federal legislation has stalled in Congress, and President Barack Obama has planned a trip to Connecticut on Monday to step up pressure to pass a bill.

A silent majority in favor of stronger gun control has emerged following the Newtown massacre, Gallo said.

Among the gun control advocates were Dan and Lauren Garrett, of Hamden, wearing green shirts in honor of the Sandy Hook victims. The Garretts traveled to Hartford with their 10-month-old son, Robert, to watch the bill's passage. They said they hope lawmakers will build on the proposal.

"It's just the beginning of this bill. In six months from now, it's going to get stronger and stronger," Dan Garrett said. "I think they're watching us all over the country."

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Associated Press writers Stephen Kalin and Michael Melia in Hartford and John Christoffersen in New Haven contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/conn-governor-set-sign-gun-control-law-075015640.html

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