Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Dropped heart successfully transplanted in Mexico (AP)

MEXICO CITY ? A heart that was dropped on the ground while being transported to a hospital has been successfully transplanted into a 28-year-old hair stylist.

Dr. Jaime Saldivar says Erika Hernandez doesn't yet know that her new heart made national news when a medic stumbled and the plastic-wrapped heart tumbled out of a cooler onto the street two weeks ago.

Saldivar says it will be up to the family to tell her.

A rosy-cheeked Hernandez spoke briefly with reporters on Tuesday and thanked the donor's family, saying "I have no words to express what I'm feeling right now."

Hernandez was born with a congenital heart defect. She received the heart of a man who died in a car accident.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120125/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_mexico_heart_dropped

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Ancient tulip-like creature had bizarre gut

The animal was a filter feeder, with a tulip-shaped body and a stem that anchored it to the seafloor.

A weird tulip-shaped creature discovered fossilized in 500-million-year-old rocks had a feeding system like no other known animal, researchers reported today (Jan. 18).

Skip to next paragraph

The animal was a?filter feeder, with a tulip-shaped body and a stem that anchored it to the seafloor. Named?Siphusauctum gregarium, the creature was about the length of a dinner knife at 8 inches (20 cm) and had a bulbous structure that contained its feeding system and gut.

The fossil was discovered in a rock layer called the Burgess Shale in the Canadian Rockies.

"Most interesting is that this feeding system appears to be unique among animals," study researcher Lorna O'Brien, a doctoral candidate at the University of Toronto, said in a statement. "Recent advances have linked many?bizarre Burgess Shale animals?as primitive members of many animal groups that are found today, but?Siphusauctum?defies this trend. We do not know where it fits in relation to other organisms."

Siphusauctum?lived in gardenlike clusters on the seafloor, with some fossil slabs containing the remains of more than 65 individuals. Researchers have discovered more than 1,100 individual specimens, earning the fossil area the nickname "the tulip beds."

You can follow?LiveScience?senior writer Stephanie Pappas on Twitter?@sipappas.?Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter?@livescience?and on?Facebook.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/LKce_1hc9D8/Ancient-tulip-like-creature-had-bizarre-gut

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Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Segel is Harvard Hasty Pudding Man of the Year (AP)

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. ? Actor Jason Segel can add a Hasty Pudding pot award to his career highlights.

Harvard University's Hasty Pudding Theatricals on Monday named Segel its Man of Year.

The student group is the nation's oldest undergraduate drama troupe. It'll host a parade and roast for Segel on Feb. 3.

Segel got his start in the short-lived but critically acclaimed television series "Freaks and Geeks."

He later wrote and starred in the 2008 movie "Forgetting Sarah Marshall," which earned more than $100 million worldwide. And he co-wrote and starred in last year's "The Muppets."

He plays Marshall Eriksen on the CBS comedy "How I Met Your Mother."

Last year, Jay Leno won the Hasty Pudding award, which recognizes outstanding entertainers.

Actress Claire Danes has been named this year's Woman of the Year.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tv/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120124/ap_en_tv/us_people_hasty_pudding_segel

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Administration nominees awaiting next move by GOP (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Senate Republicans are returning to Washington in an angry mood over President Barack Obama's appointments to two key agencies during a year-end break.

More than 70 nominees to judgeships and senior federal agency positions are awaiting the next move from Republicans, who can use Senate rules to block votes on some or all of Obama's picks.

While Republicans return Monday to discuss their next step, recess appointee Richard Cordray is running a new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and the National Labor Relations Board ? with three temporary members ? is now at full strength with a Democratic majority.

Obama left more than 70 other nominees in limbo, well aware that Republicans could use Senate rules to block them.

The White House justified the appointments on grounds that Republicans were holding up the nominations to paralyze the two agencies. The consumer protection agency was established under the 2010 Wall Street reform law, which requires the bureau to have a director in order to begin policing financial products such as mortgages, checking accounts, credit cards and payday loans.

The Supreme Court has ruled that the five-member NLRB must have a three-member quorum to issue regulations or decide major cases in union-employer disputes.

Several agencies contacted by The Associated Press, including banking regulators, said they were conducting their normal business despite vacancies at the top. In some cases, nominees are serving in acting capacities.

At full strength, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. has five board members. The regulation of failed banks "is unaffected," said spokesman Andrew Gray. "The three-member board has been able to make decisions without a problem." Cordray's appointment gives it a fourth member.

The Comptroller of the Currency, run by an acting chief, has kept up its regular examinations of banks. The Federal Trade Commission, operating with four board members instead of five, has had no difficulties. "This agency is not a partisan combat agency," said spokesman Peter Kaplan. "Almost all the votes are unanimous and consensus-driven."

Republicans have pledged retaliation for Obama's recess appointments, but haven't indicated what it might be.

"The Senate will need to take action to check and balance President Obama's blatant attempt to circumvent the Senate and the Constitution, a claim of presidential power that the Bush administration refused to make," said Sen. Charles Grassley, an Iowa Republican who is his party's top member on the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Grassley wouldn't go further, and Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky hasn't tipped his hand after charging that Obama had "arrogantly circumvented the American people." Before the Senate left for its break in December, McConnell blocked Senate approval of more than 60 pending nominees because Obama wouldn't commit to making no recess appointments.

Republicans have to consider whether their actions, especially any decision to block all nominees, might play into Obama's hands.

Obama has adopted an election-year theme of "we can't wait" for Republicans to act on nominations and major proposals like his latest jobs plan. Republicans have to consider how their argument that the president is violating Constitutional checks and balances plays against Obama's stump speeches characterizing them as obstructionists.

Senate historian Donald Ritchie said the minority party has retaliated in the past for recess appointments by holding up specific nominees. "I'm not aware of any situations where no nominations were accepted," he said. The normal practice is for the two party leaders to negotiate which nominations get votes.

During the break, Republicans forced the Senate to convene for usually less than a minute once every few days to argue that there was no recess and that Obama therefore couldn't bypass the Senate's authority to confirm top officials. The administration said this was a sham, and has released a Justice Department opinion backing up the legality of the appointments.

Obama considers the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau a signature achievement of his first term. Republicans have been vehemently opposed to the bureau's setup. They argued the agency needed a bipartisan board instead of a director and should have to justify its budget to Congress instead of drawing its funding from the independent Federal Reserve.

Cordray is expected to get several sharp questions from Republicans when he testifies Tuesday before a House Oversight and Government Reform panel.

The NLRB has been a target of Republicans and business groups. Last year, the agency accused Boeing of illegally retaliating against union workers who had struck its plants in Washington state by opening a new production line at its non-union plant in South Carolina. Boeing denied the charge and the case has since been settled, but Republican anger over it and a string of union-friendly decisions from the board last year hasn't abated.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120123/ap_on_go_co/us_nominations_spat

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Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Ireland's former richest person declared bankrupt (AP)

DUBLIN ? A famed entrepreneur who was once rated Ireland's richest person was declared bankrupt Monday as a bank pursues him for debts exceeding euro2.1 billion ($2.7 billion).

Lawyers for tycoon Sean Quinn withdrew his opposition to a Republic of Ireland bankruptcy order sought by the former Anglo Irish Bank, the reckless lender at the center of Ireland's calamitous property crash.

The bankruptcy judgment will force a thorough court investigation of Quinn's finances, which the bank hopes will reveal capital and assets that it can reclaim from Quinn, his wife and five children.

Quinn, 64, didn't attend Monday's court hearing. He issued a statement accusing the bank of pursuing "a personal vendetta" and declaring that the "judgment in no way improves Anglo's prospects of recovering money for the taxpayer."

Quinn had a reported 2007 net worth of euro4.7 billion ($6 billion) but sank much of his fortune into Anglo months before the bank ? the most aggressive lender to Ireland's construction barons ? suffered crippling losses as the country's decade-long property bubble burst.

The Quinn family secretly built up to a 28 percent stake in Anglo shares using an ill-regulated financial instrument that hid the scale of their investment from other stockholders. As Anglo's share price plunged, Quinn says the bank encouraged his family to borrow hundreds of millions specifically to buy more Anglo stock, a charge the bank denies.

Ireland nationalized Anglo in 2009 to prevent its collapse, wiping out a Quinn family investment estimated at euro2.8 billion. The government last year renamed Anglo as the Irish Bank Resolution Corp., or IBRC. Its bailout is expected to cost taxpayers euro29 billion, a bill so great it overwhelmed Ireland's finances and forced the government last year to negotiate a humiliating loan pact with the European Union and International Monetary Fund.

Dublin Commercial Court Justice Elizabeth Dunne told Quinn's lawyer Gavin Simons that Quinn would have to appear in person in coming days to provide documents showing how much he's worth today.

Last week Quinn lost a Belfast legal battle to retain bankruptcy protection in the neighboring British territory of Northern Ireland. The judge there ruled that Quinn had misled a previous Belfast court that his main base of business was in Northern Ireland, rather than the Republic of Ireland.

"I never done a day's work from southern Ireland in my life," Quinn, who has lived for decades in the Republic of Ireland, insisted to reporters outside the Belfast court last week.

Dublin-based IBRC would have faced greater difficulty pursuing Quinn for debts in Northern Ireland. Quinn also could have returned to business within a year under U.K. bankruptcy law, whereas the Irish prevent bankrupts from holding company directorships for up to 12 years.

Quinn said the tougher Irish rules meant he would be too old ? 76 in the year 2024 ? to direct any new companies then.

"Anglo achieved their goal of ensuring that I will never create another job," he said of Monday's judgment.

Quinn boasts one of Ireland's most celebrated rags-to-riches stories. He grew up on a border farm in Northern Ireland's County Fermanagh, left school barely literate at 14 and started his first construction-gravel business with a 100-pound ($150) bank loan.

Within three decades Quinn had transformed his quarry into a nationwide cement company. He built and bought luxury hotels, pubs, apartment complexes and commercial properties throughout Ireland, Britain, Eastern Europe and Asia; founded Ireland's third-largest insurance company; and took interests in glassworks, packaging and radiators.

In April 2011, IBRC seized ownership of his Irish-based Quinn Group, forced him and relatives off the board, and sold a majority stake in his insurance company to U.S. insurance company Liberty Mutual. In November, shortly after Quinn had secured a surprise bankruptcy-protection order in Belfast, the bank won Dublin court judgments totaling euro2.16 billion ($2.7 billion) against Quinn.

A November affidavit from Quinn recorded he had less than euro11,000 ($15,000) in cash in three bank accounts.

But the Quinns and IBRC are locked in several legal battles stretching from the British Virgin Islands to Cyprus over control of a commercial property empire spanning Britain, Russia, Ukraine, Turkey and India valued at more than euro700 million.

The bank accuses Quinn of fraudulently shifting ownership of his foreign properties, including office blocks and shopping malls, to relatives and shell companies that remain under the Quinns' surreptitious control. The Quinns deny these charges.

His five children have filed a Dublin lawsuit against IBRC seeking to have the bulk of the family's Anglo borrowing voided on the grounds that the bank should never have lent them the money in the first place. They also are seeking to have IBRC return businesses to their ownership that were seized in April 2011.

Their lawsuit argues that Anglo misled them about the company's imminent danger of collapse and spurred them to commit market fraud by manipulating Anglo's share price. IBRC insists Anglo's loans to the Quinns were for much wider business reasons.

___

Online:

Irish Bank Resolution Corp., http://www.ibrc.ie/

Quinn's empire, http://www.quinn-group.com/

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120116/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_ireland_bankrupt_tycoon

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Monday, January 16, 2012

Scientists Tweak Photosynthesis in Pursuit of a Better Biofuel

Advances | Energy & Sustainability Cover Image: January 2012 Scientific American MagazineSee Inside

By altering how plants turn sunlight into chemical energy, scientists hope to produce biofuels that make economic sense


Image: Chris Stein/Getty Images

For years researchers have been trying to figure out the best ways of making plants produce biofuels. But there is a funda?mental problem: photosynthesis, the process by which plants convert sunlight into stored chemical energy, is highly inefficient. Plants turn only 1 to 3 percent of sunlight into carbohydrates. That is one reason why so much land has to be devoted to growing corn for ethanol, among other bad biofuel ideas. And yet plants also have many advantages: they absorb carbon dioxide at low concen?trations directly from the atmosphere, and each plant cell can repair itself when damaged.

Scientists have begun a new effort to soup up photosynthesis and help humans make greener fuel. The U.S. Advanced Research Projects Agency for Energy, known as ARPA-e, has funded 10 such projects so far, most of which use genetic engineering to tweak a plant?s DNA-based instruction manual for growth, pigments, and the like. The largest grant?more than $6 million?has gone to the University of Florida to alter pine trees to make more turpentine, a potential fuel. Another project, led by Davis, Calif.?based Arcadia Biosciences, is aimed at inducing fast-growing grasses such as switchgrass to produce vegetable oil for the first time in history.

In the future, engineers might create a black plant that would absorb all incoming sunlight or a plant that uses different wavelengths of light to power the different steps of photo?synthesis; plants now use the same wavelengths for everything. An engineered biofuel-producing plant might even have smaller leaves, re?ducing its own energy demands for growth, or it might no longer store energy as sugar but turn it directly into a hydrocarbon molecule for human use as fuel.

The scientists in the program, dubbed PETRO, for plants engineered to replace oil, will also have to deal with the challenges of increasingly limited water supplies for crops and public skepticism of gen?etic?ally modified organ?isms. And they will face comp?etition from efforts to replace photosynthesis altogether, such as ARPA-e?s own Electrofuels program, which aims to induce microbes to make hydro?carbons, or from efforts to build artificial leaves that use the electricity from solar cells to split water into oxygen and hydro?gen for use as fuel. For plants, simply being green is no longer enough.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=dd8008cd09e77af802ec60263ef68560

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Book Review : 50 Popular Beliefs That People Think Are True by Guy P. Harrison

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Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/337597/title/Book_Review__50_Popular_Beliefs_That_People_Think_Are_True_by_Guy_P._Harrison

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Sunday, January 15, 2012

Undecided voters can get clarity with Candidates iPhone app (Appolicious)

Choosing a presidential candidate to back can be confusing, especially for first-time voters. Candidates takes your opinions and helps pair you with a candidate who shares your point of view on the issues.

Through an in-app quiz, voters will share their opinions on a variety of matters, from abortion to immigration. Be careful to read each question carefully if you want the most accurate results, as some wording might be unintentionally misleading. A slide bar below each question lets you further tailor your results by sharing how important a particular topic is to you. After you?ve finished the quiz, Candidates will rank the current presidential candidates as your best choice, according to how they compare (most to least similar) with your issue positions. While you?re taking the quiz, you can tap the information button to read Wiki articles if you?re interested in learning more about a particular issue. Candidates also presents statistics on how all previous users responded to each question so you can see how your responses stack up against the opinions of others.

Candidates provides contact information for how to get involved with each candidate?s race, along with links to voter-registration information and Wikipedia articles on each candidate.

Load time for the inline web pages and Wikipedia articles varies (and Candidates did freeze on occasion), but overall its results are of decent accuracy and should provide undecided voters some guidance for the 2012 election.

Create a list of your favorite political apps

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/applecomputer/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/appolicious_rss/rss_appolicious_tc/http___www_appolicious_com_articles10734_undecided_voters_can_get_clarity_with_candidates_iphone_app/44158065/SIG=13clhfpoq/*http%3A//www.appolicious.com/tech/articles/10734-undecided-voters-can-get-clarity-with-candidates-iphone-app

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Saturday, January 14, 2012

People's Choice Awards Face-Off: Miley Cyrus vs. Ashley Greene


Let's make a winner out of either Miley Cyrus or Ashley Greene, shall we?

Neither young star nabbed any trophies at the 2012 People's Choice Awards last night, as Harry Potter stuck it to The Twilight Saga all evening long, winning all categories in which the two were nominated.

But at least each beauty looked her best on the red carpet, although only one can be crowned the champion of this Fashion Face-Off. Study the dresses below of Miley and Ashley and vote on your favorite now.

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/01/peoples-choice-awards-face-off-miley-cyrus-vs-ashley-greene/

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Sunday, January 8, 2012

AcerCloud Is Acer?s Answer To The Media Cloud

PicStream_imgIt is the dawning of the age of cloudquarius. Acer, in addition to a set of ultrabooks, just announced something it's calling AcerCloud. This service, like iCloud, brings all of your content onto all of your devices, allowing you to "create, acquire and consume on different devices."

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/TBR043OZ3nY/

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How can it be? Student financial aid fuels increase in college tuition. (+Video)

When federal (and state) financial aid programs make money available to well-off students, it is in a college's interest to capture that aid and use it to 'improve' the college, thus driving up costs and tuition. Aid must be restructured so that more of it goes to needy students.

Something is fundamentally wrong with America?s college financial aid system when students from families with triple-digit incomes receive plenty of federal aid ? while the less well-off are scrambling for it.

Skip to next paragraph

According to the Department of Education, 35 percent of dependent students from families making at least $100,000 a year received Federal Stafford Loans in 2008, and 15.6 percent received the ?subsidized? variety (where the government pays the interest while the student is in school). Stafford loans account for 82 percent of all federal financial aid lending.

Two theories compete to explain this, and they offer radically different policy prescriptions.

The first explanation holds that college costs are mostly determined by factors over which colleges have little control, such as prevailing faculty salaries. Colleges can do little other than react by setting tuition to cover costs.

If students are having to pay more, then financial aid and state appropriations budgets must be inadequate. The solution is straightforward: The federal government should increase the money available for financial aid.

We think this theory is incorrect. An alternative, which holds that the real problem is out-of-control spending in higher education, provides the better explanation.

Under this view, more money for financial aid will simply be absorbed as college spending increases. Our research (most notably our 2009 study, ?Financial Aid in Theory and Practice?) found that increased financial aid can be downright counterproductive by fueling the academic arms race ? a major driver of the cost and tuition explosion in higher education.

The underlying problem is that the ?value-added outcomes? of colleges (how much their students learn, how much their skills increase, etc.) are not easily observed or measured. That largely precludes colleges from competing based on the education they provide.

Instead, they compete on prestige or reputation. Their goal is to signal high quality, and the easiest way to signal that is to have high-quality ?inputs,? such as prize-winning faculty and state-of-the-art equipment.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/commentary/~3/wMYay1RNZe8/How-can-it-be-Student-financial-aid-fuels-increase-in-college-tuition.-Video

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Ohio magnitude 4.0 earthquake linked to fracking

Michael Marshall, environment reporter

PA-12402837.jpg(Image: Amy Sancetta/AP/Press Association Images)

Ohio has suspended work at five deep wells used to dispose of waste water from natural gas extraction, following evidence linking the operations to a magnitude 4.0 earthquake on New Year's Eve.

It is the latest case of an earthquake being linked to the pumping of water into underground wells. Two small earthquakes in the UK last year were also blamed on the process.

Although it was relatively small, the quake will only add to the controversy around fracking, a process used to extract natural gas from otherwise inaccessible deposits. Fracking has also been blamed for contamination of drinking water.

Properly known as hydraulic fracture, fracking involves pumping pressurised water into underground rocks to shatter them and release natural gas trapped inside. But as the Christian Science Monitor points out, it was not this dramatic process itself that was to blame for the Ohio quakes. They appear to have been caused by the disposal of the waste water after fracking. This water is pumped into deep wells, and as more water is added, the pressure can gradually rise to levels high enough to cause relatively large earthquakes.

Scientific American explains how the quake was linked to the disposal wells:

Nine small earthquakes had already occurred between March and November 2011 within an eight-kilometer radius of a wastewater injection well run by Northstar Disposal Services. Because quakes are otherwise rare in the Youngstown area... Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory (LDEO) [placed] mobile seismographs in the vicinity to better determine what was going on... The epicenters of the two holiday quakes were within 100 meters of each other, and within 0.8 kilometer of the injection well... The quakes were caused by slippage along a fault at about the same depth as the injection site, almost three kilometers down.

Reuters adds that the quakes are far from the first case of earthquakes apparently triggered by the disposal of water underground:

A quake of 4.2 magnitude in Ashtabula, Ohio, on January 26, 2001, was believed to be due to deep-well injection... And in 1987 there was an incident with a correlation to high pressure deep well injection.

What's more, NPR notes that gold mining in South Africa in the 1960s was linked to small earthquakes.

According to Arthur McGarr of the United States Geological Survey in Menlo Park, California, the size of the earthquake depends on the volume of water injected. When the volume of water doubles, the maximum possible quake magnitude rises about 0.4.

Subscribe to New Scientist Magazine

Source: http://feeds.newscientist.com/c/749/f/10897/s/1b8cf34e/l/0L0Snewscientist0N0Cblogs0Cshortsharpscience0C20A120C0A10Cohio0Eearthquake0Elinked0Eto0Efrac0Bhtml0DDCMP0FOTC0Erss0Gnsref0Fonline0Enews/story01.htm

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Friday, January 6, 2012

LA arson suspect also faces German fire probe (AP)

LOS ANGELES ? Harry Burkhart's problems didn't start when he allegedly ignited more than 50 fires that terrorized Los Angeles last week. He's under investigation in Germany for a house fire near Frankfurt, and investigators searching his Hollywood apartment turned up news articles about the Los Angeles fires and a series of car blazes in Germany last year.

The disclosures Wednesday came on a day when Burkhart made an awkward first court appearance in Los Angeles, where he appeared dazed with his long hair matted on the front of his face, and alternated between sitting and standing.

The ponytailed Burkhart was arrested Monday near the Sunset Strip in a van with Canadian license plates loaded with fire-starting materials, and he has stonewalled investigators while being placed on a suicide watch. His mother, Dorothee Burkhart, appeared disoriented in federal court Tuesday after being arrested on a fraud warrant from Germany, where she referred to Nazis and questioned if her son had died.

Their family history remains murky, but documents reveal both mother and son struggled with mental illness. They had a vagabond lifestyle, with addresses at various times in Germany, the U.S. and Canada, and the son holds a German passport but authorities say he was born in Chechnya.

Medical records dated March 2010 and submitted in a lengthy dispute over commercial space the mother rented in Vancouver say she suffered from depression, anxiety, severe post traumatic stress disorder and panic attacks. A separate note, also dated March 2010, says Harry Burkhart suffered from autistic spectrum disorder since his childhood, and he has severe anxiety, post traumatic stress disorder, depression and "is not stable mentally because of increase stress due to fear."

His mother said in court Tuesday that he is mentally ill.

Harry Burkhart was charged Wednesday with 37 counts of arson as part of a rash of fires that caused more than $3 million in damage, while his mother was being held without bail after being detained on 19 counts of fraud from Germany, including failing to pay for a 2004 breast-augmentation surgery and pilfering security deposits from renters and landlords.

In requesting Harry Burkhart be held on no bail, investigators said in court documents that a search of Burkhart's Hollywood apartment turned up news articles about the Los Angeles fires as well as a series of car fires in Frankfurt last September. Authorities couldn't comment on whether Burkhart is a suspect in the German fires. His bail was set at $2.85 million.

The fire at the German house that belonged to the Burkhart family has been ruled an arson, Marburg prosecutors' spokeswoman Annemarie Wied told The Associated Press Wednesday.

Burkhart did not live in the area, but his name surfaced as a suspect after he filed an insurance claim shortly after the fire, Wied said.

"When one files an insurance claim on a house the same day it burns down, it raises eyebrows," she said.

Burkhart, whom Wied identified only as "Harry B." in keeping with German privacy laws, has not yet been questioned in the case and no arrest warrant has been issued for him. She said she did not know how long ago he had been identified as a suspect in the arson investigation.

Burkhart was in Los Angeles by Oct. 26 ? 12 days after the Marburg area fire ? according to U.S. court papers, which say that he went with his mother on that day to the German consulate to renew his passport.

Neighbors say they kept mostly to themselves in a second-floor apartment across from a supermarket in Hollywood, where doors in the apartments are shielded by steel gates.

Their lives in the U.S. began unspooling last week.

Harry Burkhart watched as his mother was arrested on fraud charges from Germany, and a day later he exploded in a profanity-laced rant against the U.S. at her court hearing, saying "F--- the United States!" or "F--- all Americans," authorities said.

The next day, police say, he began setting car fires at night, many in the Hollywood area near his apartment. Authorities believe he began the rampage after being outraged by his mother's legal troubles.

Court documents give "a sense that this particular individual was set off by the incarceration of his mother, with whom he appears to be quite close, and he had latent anti-American views. That combination apparently set him off on this binge," said Los Angeles County District Attorney Steve Cooley.

Harry Burkhart was taken into custody after authorities received a tip from federal officials who recognized him in a security video that showed a ponytailed man emerging from a garage where a car was set ablaze.

Burkhart's nonimmigrant visa is set to expire Jan. 18, authorities said. His mother last entered the country lawfully in January 2007 and she left four months later, officials said.

A website offering appointment-only sensual massage is registered to Dorothee Burkhart, though her name is not mentioned on the site.

Frankfurt court spokesman Guenther Meilinger told the AP that Dorothee Burkhart will go on trial for the fraud charges once she is extradited back to Germany.

"We expect and hope that the U.S. authorities will look into the request for extradition ... so that the proceedings against her can continue," he said.

The extradition request has yet to be drawn up and sent to the German Justice Ministry for relay to U.S. authorities, said Doris Moeller-Scheu, a spokeswoman for Frankfurt prosecutors.

Asked about the discovery of news articles in Harry Burkhart's Los Angeles apartment about a series of car fires in Frankfurt last September, Moeller-Scheu said that there was no active investigation of him in Frankfurt.

Dorothee Burkhart faces only the fraud charges, but that it was not unusual for an international arrest warrant to be issued in such a case, Meilinger said.

She was originally scheduled to go on trial in September 2007, but she fled before the proceedings opened, prompting the international arrest warrant, Meilinger said.

___

Associated Press writers Dorothee Thiesing in Frankfurt and Bradley Klapper and Pete Yost in Washington contributed to this report. Rising reported from Berlin.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/terrorism/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120105/ap_on_re_us/us_los_angeles_arson

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Man arrested for threatening SF parking officer with baseball bat

A man was arrested for using a baseball bat to threaten a parking control officer that put a parking boot on his car in San Francisco's Inner Parkside neighborhood on Wednesday, police said.

The female parking control officer called for assistance at about 12:20 p.m. Wednesday in the 2100 block of 15th Avenue, where she had been placing a boot on a car wheel when the owner approached and threatened her with a baseball bat, according to police.

The man, whose name was not immediately available, denied threatening her, saying he was just getting the bat and other baseball equipment out of the car.

However, a witness heard the threats and the man was arrested on suspicion of brandishing a weapon on a parking control officer, police said.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/sfexaminer/Crime/~3/NuHsLoW5uQc/man-arrested-threatening-sf-parking-officer-baseball-bat

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Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Panels raise questions on prostate-cancer screenings, treatment ...

A blood screening result that suggests prostate cancer is bound to provoke high anxiety ? even though up to 80 percent of those findings turn out to be false positives.

Anxiety deepens, of course, if a biopsy confirms a cancer diagnosis, to the extent that many men demand surgery or radiation even when they don?t need it.

Now, two national health panels have made startling recommendations that call into question the way doctors have been handling prostate cancer testing and treatment. One panel said men should skip standard prostate-specific antigen, or PSA, testing unless they have symptoms such as urinary blockage or pain. A second panel urged many men with low-risk prostate tumors to turn to ?active surveillance? rather than immediate surgery or radiation.

The recommendations ? the first is part of a draft report by the U.S. Preventive Services task force in October, the second came from a panel convened by the National Institutes of Health in December ? have generated controversy, even as researchers work to develop better methods.

?Skipping the PSA is the wrong way to approach it. It?s an extreme viewpoint that will have terrible ramifications on public health if it goes forward,? says Dr. Bruce Kava, interim chair of urology at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine.

?I?ve had patients whose cancer was discovered by a PSA test,? adds Dr. Rakesh Singal, a urologist and prostate cancer researcher at the University of Miami medical school.

The Preventive Services task force recommendation came after a months-long study of clinical trials around the world. ?The common perception that PSA-based early detection of prostate cancer prolongs lives is not supported by the scientific evidence,? the draft report said. The task force is a congressionally mandated panel of doctors, nurses and other specialists that develops recommendations for doctors and hospitals.

The second recommendation, from a ?consensus panel? of 14 researchers and clinicians convened in December by the National Institutes of Health, tackled the treatment side: ?Treatment of low-risk prostate cancer with radical prostatectomy or radiation therapy leads to side effects such as impotence and incontinence. Active surveillance has emerged as a viable option.?

Responding to those concerns, researchers in South Florida and around the world are working on better screening tests to replace or at least supplement the PSA test, which has been in use since 1986. Such improved tests could make the screening controversy ?moot,? the U.S. Cancer Foundation says. It says studies also are under way to better guide how aggressive treatment should be when cancer is confirmed.

The prostate, a plum-sized gland that sits above the base of the penis and helps produce semen, becomes enlarged in half of all men by age 60, and half of those will have symptoms such as frequent urination, weak stream or inability to completely empty the bladder.

And the symptoms raise the question: Is it benign prostate hyperplasia (enlargement) or prostate cancer? Cancer is not rare. One-third of men ages 40 to 60 and three-quarters of men older than 85 have prostate cancer, federal health officials say ? even though most of it is microscopic and clinically insignificant.

Researchers say most of those diagnosed with prostate cancer are likely to grow old and die of something else first. The lifetime risk of death from prostate cancer is only 2.5 percent, and the median age of death from prostate cancer is 80, says the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Still, it?s the second-greatest cause of male cancer deaths after lung cancer, killing 32,000 men a year.

?We realize it?s a dilemma,? says Kava, the urologist, calling the number of positive PSA tests that lead to negative biopsies ?unacceptably high. ? And biopsies are not innocuous. Some find them painful. Also, false positives can create anxiety, sometimes depression.?

Biopsies also cause fever, infection, bleeding and transient urinary difficulty in 68 of every 1,000 procedures, the task force report says. Seeking to balance the benefits of the PSA test against the harms, the task force concluded that men without overt symptoms should skip the PSA tests.

Protest came quickly from the American Urological Association: ?We are concerned that the task force?s recommendations will ultimately do more harm than good,? it said. ?It is our feeling that, when interpreted appropriately, (the PSA test) provides important information in diagnosis.?

Research at several U.S. universities soon might produce better screening tests to replace or supplement the PSA test, said the California-based Prostate Cancer Foundation, which raises funds for research. Foundation president Jonathan Simons said his group?s 2011 annual Scientific Retreat heard presentations of 17 new tests under way that might improve on the PSA.

Source: http://www.kansas.com/2012/01/03/2160770/panels-raise-questions-on-prostate.html

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Obama, Congress begin 2012 in oil pipeline dispute (AP)

WASHINGTON ? President Barack Obama and Congress are starting the election year locked in a tussle over a proposed 1,700-mile oil pipeline from Canada to Texas that will force the White House to make a politically risky choice between two key Democratic constituencies.

Some unions say the Keystone XL pipeline would create thousands of jobs. Environmentalists fear it could lead to an oil spill disaster.

A law Obama signed just before Christmas that temporarily extended the payroll tax cut included a Republican-written provision compelling him to make a speedy decision on whether to build the pipeline. The administration is warning it would rather say no than rush a decision in an election year.

It's a dicey proposition for Obama, who enjoyed strong support from both organized labor and environmentalists in his winning 2008 campaign for the White House.

Environmental advocates, already disappointed with his failure to achieve climate change legislation and the administration's decision to delay new smog standards, have made it clear that approval of the pipeline would dampen their enthusiasm for Obama in the upcoming November election.

Some liberal donors even threatened to cut off funds to Obama's re-election campaign to protest the project, which opponents say would transport "dirty oil" that requires huge amounts of energy to extract.

If he rejects the pipeline, Obama risks losing support from organized labor, a key part of the Democratic base, for thwarting thousands of jobs.

Obama appeared to have skirted what some dubbed the "Keystone conundrum" in November when the State Department announced it was postponing a decision on the pipeline until after this year's election. Officials said they needed extra time to study routes that avoid an environmentally sensitive area of Nebraska that supplies water to eight states.

The affected area stretches just 65 miles through the Sandhills region of northern Nebraska, but the concerns were serious enough that the state's governor and senators opposed the project until the pipeline was moved.

Republican Gov. Dave Heineman, who opposed the initial route, says he supports efforts to accelerate the project, noting that provisions in the payroll tax bill allow the project developer to find a new route avoiding the Sandhills.

The new route would have to be approved by Nebraska environmental officials and the State Department, which has authority because the pipeline would cross an international border.

The pipeline would carry oil from tar sands in western Canada to refineries in Texas, passing through Montana, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas and Oklahoma. The project's developer, Calgary-based TransCanada, says the pipeline could create as many as 20,000 jobs, a figure opponents say is inflated. A State Department report last summer said the pipeline would create up to 6,000 jobs during construction.

The payroll tax cut law gives the Obama administration 60 days to decide whether to allow construction of the pipeline.

An "arbitrary deadline" for the permit decision would compromise the process, short-circuiting time needed to conduct required environmental reviews and preventing the issuance of a permit, the State Department warned in a written statement on Dec. 12. Obama administration officials confirmed that view after the payroll tax bill was approved.

Republicans call the threat little more than an excuse that allows Obama to placate environmental groups while not rejecting the pipeline outright.

"The only thing arbitrary about this decision is the decision by the president to say, `Well, let's wait until after the next election,' " said House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio.

Boehner and other Republicans say the pipeline would help Obama achieve his top priority ? creating jobs ? without costing a dime of taxpayer money. They hope to portray Obama's reluctance to approve the pipeline as a sign he favors environmentalists over jobs.

Russ Girling, TransCanada's president and chief executive, said his company would do whatever is necessary to make sure the project is approved.

"We've had more than enough surprises on this," said TransCanada spokesman Shawn Howard.

In Nebraska, where the pipeline faces strong resistance, state officials are awaiting an environmental study that will determine a new route. Officials have said the review will take six to nine months.

Some landowners in the Sandhills celebrated the decision to reroute the project, but the pipeline's strongest opponents say they still have concerns about the prospect of the government using its power of eminent domain to seize land, as well as liability issues in case of a spill.

"Republicans have bullied their way to get a reckless rider attached to a bill that was supposed to be about helping middle-class families," said Jane Kleeb, executive director of the group Bold Nebraska, which opposes the pipeline.

With the bill signed into law, Obama "must do the right thing for our land, water and families' health by denying the pipeline permit," Kleeb said.

Project supporters say U.S. rejection of the pipeline would not stop it from being built. Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper has said TransCanada could pursue an alternative route through Canada to the West Coast, where oil could be shipped to China and other Asian markets.

"Canada is going to develop this no matter what, and that oil is either going to come to the United States or it's going to go to a place like China. We want it here," said Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee.

Opponents call the West Coast option farfetched, noting that Canadian regulators have announced a one-year delay for a similar project that would carry tar sands oil to British Columbia, on Canada's western coast.

Native groups strongly oppose both the Keystone XL and the Northern Gateway pipeline proposed by TransCanada rival Enbridge. Canada's First Nations have constitutionally protected treaty rights and unsettled land claims that could allow them to block or significantly delay both pipelines.

Unions are watching closely. Unemployment in construction is far higher than other industries, with more than 1.1 million construction workers jobless, said Brent Bookers, director of construction at the Laborers' International Union of North America.

"For many members of the Laborers, this project is not just a pipeline, it is a lifeline," Bookers said, adding, "Too many hard-working Americans are out of work, and the Keystone XL pipeline will change that dire situation for thousands of them."

Roger Toussaint, international vice president of the Transport Workers Union, opposes the pipeline.

"The dangers of the pipeline are compelling, and no one should believe the claims of either the Republican leadership or the energy companies, with respect to the project being shovel ready or with respect to the number of jobs it's going to produce," he said.

___

Associated Press writer Grant Schulte in Lincoln, Neb., contributed to this report.

___

Follow Matthew Daly on Twitter: (at)MatthewDalyWDC

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120103/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_oil_pipeline

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Sunday, January 1, 2012

chrisorourke: RT @MatthewCallaway: Nintendo, Sony and EA quietly drop SOPA support | VentureBeat: 2 reviews http://t.co/je2K2qCk

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Nintendo, Sony and EA quietly drop SOPA support | VentureBeat: 2 reviews bit.ly/tk7yYr MatthewCallaway

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Source: http://twitter.com/chrisorourke/statuses/153608409508364289

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