If there is anything the nonconformist hates worse than a conformist it's another nonconformist who doesn't conform to the prevailing standards of nonconformity.

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Saturday, June 30, 2007

Border fence accidentally built on Mexican soil

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Could cost $3 million to fix

By ALICIA A. CALDWELL

A U.S. Border Patrol vehicle is seen parked in the background through a repaired section of the U.S.-Mexico border fence. (AP/David Maung)

COLUMBUS, N.M. (AP) - The 2 1/2-kilometre barrier along the U.S.-Mexico border was designed to keep cars from illegally crossing into the United States. There's just one problem: It was accidentally built on Mexican soil.

Now embarrassed border officials say the mistake could cost the U.S. government more than $3 million to fix.

The barrier was part of more than 24 kilometres of border fence built in 2000, stretching from the town of Columbus to an onion farm and cattle ranch.

A U.S. Customs and Border Protection spokesman said the vertical metal tubes were sunk into the ground and filled with cement along what officials firmly believed was the border. But a routine aerial survey in March revealed that the barrier protrudes into Mexico by as much as two metres.

James Johnson, whose onion farm is in the disputed area, said he thinks his forefathers may have started the confusion in the 19th century by placing a barbed-wire fence south of the border. No one discovered their error, and crews erecting the barrier may have used that fence as a guideline.

"It was a mistake made in the 1800s," Johnson said. "It is very difficult to make a straight line between two points in rugged and mountainous areas that are about two miles apart."

The Mexican government was notified and did what any landowner would do: They sent a note politely insisting that Mexico get its land back.

"Our country will continue insisting for the removal (of the fence) to be done as quickly as possible," the Foreign Relations Department said in a diplomatic missive to Washington.

This was found at Canoe CNews.

Friday, June 29, 2007

Potential cure for HIV discovered

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by Mira Oberman Thu Jun 28, 2:39 PM ET

CHICAGO (AFP) - In a breakthrough that could potentially lead to a cure for HIV infection, scientists have discovered a way to remove the virus from infected cells, a study released Thursday said.

The scientists engineered an enzyme which attacks the DNA of the HIV virus and cuts it out of the infected cell, according to the study published in Science magazine.

The enzyme is still far from being ready to use as a treatment, the authors warned, but it offers a glimmer of hope for the more than 40 million people infected worldwide.

"A customized enzyme that effectively excises integrated HIV-1 from infected cells in vitro might one day help to eradicate (the) virus from AIDS patients," Alan Engelman, of Harvard University's Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, wrote in an article accompanying the study.

Current treatments focus on suppressing the HIV virus in order to delay the onset of AIDS and dramatically extend the life of infected patients.

What makes HIV so deadly, however, is its ability to insert itself into the body's cells and force those cells to produce new infection.

"Consequently the virus becomes inextricably linked to the host, making it virtually impossible to 'cure' AIDS patients of their HIV-1 infection," Engelman explained.

That could change if the enzyme developed by a group of German scientists can be made safe to use on people.

That enzyme was able to eliminate the HIV virus from infected human cells in about three months in the laboratory.

The researchers engineered an enzyme called Tre which removes the virus from the genome of infected cells by recognizing and then recombining the structure of the virus's DNA.

This ability to recognize HIV's DNA might one day help overcome one of the biggest obstacles to finding a cure: the ability of the HIV virus to avoid detection by reverting to a resting state within infected cells which then cease to produce the virus for months or even years.

"Numerous attempts have been made to activate these cells, with the hope that such strategies would sensitize the accompanying viruses to antiviral drugs, leading to virus eradication," Engelman wrote. "Advances with such approaches in patients have been slow to materialize."

New experiments must be designed to see if the Tre enzyme can be used to recognize these dormant infected cells, he wrote.

"Although favorable results would represent perhaps only a baby step toward eventual use in patients, the discovery of the Tre recombinase proves that enzymatic removal of integrated HIV-1 from human chromosomes is a current-day reality," he said.

The researchers who developed the enzyme were optimistic about their ability to design additional enzymes which would target other parts of the virus's DNA.

However they warned that there were significant barriers to overcome before the enzyme could be used to help cure patients.

"The most important, and likely most difficult, among these is that the enzyme would need efficient and safe means of delivery and would have to be able to function without adverse side effects," wrote lead author Indrani Sarkar of the Max Planck Institute for Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics in Dresden.

"Nevertheless the results we present offer an early proof of principal for this type of approach, which we speculate might form a useful basis for the development of future HIV therapies," Sarkar concluded.

This was found at Yahoo! News.

Man Pays $4.88 for Plasma TV at Wal-Mart

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(06-28) 18:21 PDT Monroe, La. (AP) --

While Wal-Mart is known for dropping its prices, one West Monroe man took the ad campaign seriously when he dropped the price of a plasma television from $984 to $4.88. Police arrested Chandon L. Simms, 23, on Tuesday at the retail store on a charge of felony theft.

According to police reports, Simms carried a 42-inch Sanyo Plasma TV to a self-checkout aisle after switching the original price tag of $984 with one for only $4.88. Wal-Mart Loss Prevention officers witnessed the alleged transaction and called police.

When the store officers stopped Simms on his way out the door, he produced a receipt for a television purchased at the West Monroe Wal-Mart, authorities said.

Simms told officers that he purchased a TV from the West Monroe store and planned to return that one and keep the one he purchased for only $4.88 from the Monroe store. He was then arrested and booked into the Ouachita Correctional Center.

This was found at sfgate.com

Steer's owner ticketed for "Excessive Mooing"

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By Jana Shortal, KARE 11 News

You can accuse Wally the steer of a lot of things.
His kisses are a little sloppy and his nudges might be a little too much.
But these days Wally's crazy ways are going beyond the pasture because Wally is apparently a nuisance. Why? Because Wally, shockingly, is mooing and apparently he's mooing loudly.
"I'm being charged with a criminal complaint," Wally's owner Karyl Hylle said.
That's right the Washington County Sheriff's Department cited Hylle, who owns the 33 acre farm where Wally resides, with a misdemeanor. The ticket specifically cites her for ongoing nuisance cow mooing.
"I honestly am speechless," Hylle said.
It seems Hylle's next door neighbor has called authorities more than 20 times claiming Wally is a moo-maniac. But in the more than an hour we were on the farm, we couldn't get Wally to make a peep.
"I mean he does moo, he's a cow, but it's rare and it's few and far between," Hylle said.
Karyl says Wally lets out a moo about twice a day. Hardly enough, she thinks, to warrant 21 complaints that have been filed with Washington County by the neighbor.
It's important to note too that Karyl's land is a zoned farm. She could have 50 head of cattle if she wanted to.
The beef on the complaints is the mooing but when officers showed up to the farm, the complaint says the cow didn't moo for them either.
So after one court appearance Karyl faces a $1,000 fine and or 90 days in jail for Wally daring to do what all steer have done before. Moo.
The Hugo city attorney says in his 15 years of prosecuting for the city he has never seen a case like this. He says the next step is to find out if this really is an enforceable citation. He says his hunch is, that it isn't.

This was found at kare11.

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Paddle-maker sees himself on mission

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By Michael Aubele
VALLEY NEWS DISPATCH
Monday, December 16, 2002

NEW KENSINGTON: Don't do it out of anger. Don't swing too hard and always hug your child when you're done — when you're done spanking him or her using a wooden paddle signed, "Love Joey."

New Kensington resident Joey Salvati, 39, a father of two, was in the shower about a month ago when he first heard God speak to him about the matter. Whether it was an external or internal voice, he wasn't sure. He tried to ignore it, but it kept coming back, day after day, until he realized he had to do something about it. The message was for Salvati to make wooden paddles for corporal punishment and give them to parents who need help disciplining their children.

"I'm just going all by my heart," he said this week while sitting at his kitchen table. In the next room his mother watched TV in complete disagreement with everything he was doing, certain he would go to jail because of it. Upstairs his son worried that his friends at school would label his father a loon.

Salvati, on the other hand, did not have those concerns. His objective was to obey the message. "I believe it was given to me, and I'm sure I'll be buying a lot of timber," he said confident that many parents will agree with what he's doing. Many people disagree, however, including authorities on child discipline. According to the American Academy of Pediatrics, "Spanking has negative consequences and is no more effective than other forms of discipline. In fact, there's often a gray area between when spanking ends and child abuse begins."

The academy found in 1996 that 44 percent of parents who participated in a survey said they used corporal punishment, and that half of those parents said they were angry at the time. A high percentage of parents admitted to having a high level of anger when punishing their children. In addition, the academy has called for a ban on corporal punishment in schools. Most schools that do allow corporal punishment do not spank children without parental consent.

Riverview Superintendent Charles Erdeljac said corporal punishment is not used in the distinct.

He also said he's against its use.

"I am supportive of other means to help make a learning situation for younger persons, rather than teaching them that the world is a violent place," Erdeljac said.

Realizing that many people will link the paddles with abuse, Salvati has taken steps to educate parents on using the paddles properly. On a Web site he launched this week with the help of local Web developer Bill Hall, Salvati outlines the proper way to use the paddles.

The first suggestion is for parents to calibrate the force of their swing by testing it on themselves. "There is only one way to measure effectively —swat yourself on the rump and adjust your swing appropriately," the instructions explain. Also on the site are suggested punishment guidelines. The minimum, one spank, is called for when the child is disrespectful. The maximum, five spanks, is called for when the child does something more serious such as endangering someone's safety or is caught using drugs. Salvati said he did not research the subject or consult parenting experts before launching the site. He is instructing parents with the guidelines he said God gave to him.

Appointment slips are available on the site for parents to download and have their children fill out when they misbehave. Parents are supposed to explain to the child what he or she did wrong and that the child is being punished out of love. "This is all out of love," Salvati said. "A bad person is going to use a baseball bat." Although he has given about 25 paddles away stamped with the words, "Love Joey," above the handle, Salvati said he is going to start stamping the paddles with a red anti-abuse message that reads, "Never in anger."

Salvati said he did not spank his children while they were growing up —until recently. About a week ago, Salvati said his 15-year-old son, Bobby, was disrespectful and was forced to fill out an appointment slip and endure one swat. "I told (Bobby), 'I'll be damned if I'm going to tell other parents to do this and not use it on you,'" Salvati said. Embarrassed about the incident, Bobby said he's less inclined to misbehave again although his father didn't swing too hard.

"I think it's a good idea because it changes me," Bobby said. Seeing a growing problem with children, Salvati, who said he was spanked on occasion but never abused, thinks parents should give up on the popular Time-Out discipline procedure and take a harder line with their children. Playing on a well-know proverb, Salvati said, "Spare the rod and you spoil the child."

To order a paddle

New Kensington resident Joey Salvati has made 85 wooden paddles intended only for disciplining children and is giving them away. The paddles, which weigh about 13 ounces and are about 2 ½ feet long, can be ordered Online at www.Spare-Rods.com at a cost of $5.75 for shipping. Information about using the paddles is included in the Web site. Salvati also has been giving the paddles away in the former Burger King parking lot along Tarentum Bridge Road. He has no plans to ever sell the paddles.

This was found at Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Clinton's Clock

A guy dies and goes to heaven. It's a slow day for St. Peter, so upon passing the entrance test, St. Peter says "I'm not very busy today. Why don't you let me show you around?"
The guy thinks it's a great idea and graciously accepts the offer. St. Peter shows him all the sights: the golf course, reading room, library, observation room, cafeteria and, finally, a HUGE room full of clocks.
"What's up with those clocks, Peter?"
"Everyone on earth has a clock that shows how much time he has left on earth. When a clock runs out of time, the person dies and comes to the Gates to be judged."
The guy thinks this makes sense, but notices that some of the clocks are going faster than others. He asks why that is.
"Every time a living person tells a lie, it speeds up his clock." This also makes sense, so the guy takes one last look around the room before leaving and notices one clock in the center of the ceiling. On this clock, both hands are spinning at an unbelievable rate.
"What's the story with that clock?"
"Oh, that," St. Peter replies. "That's Bill Clinton's clock. We decided to use it as a fan."

Mini-golf - is it really a sport?

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By Erin K. McNamara
edge staff writer

BANGOR AND BAR HARBOR — Pastime, hobby, activity – but a sport?
There are some who would argue that mini-golf is, in fact, a sport. Alan Ashley, of Blackbeard’s Family Fun Park in Bangor, is one of them.
“You work on your putting skills, just the same as any golfer would,” Ashley said. “We have a lot of people bring their own clubs in.”
Ashley’s not the only person who considers it a sport. There’s the actual U.S. ProMiniGolf Association which represents the United States in the World Minigolf Sports Federation. They hold the Masters National ProMiniGolf Championship tournament every September in Myrtle Beach, S.C.
But for most of us in Maine, mini-golf is still just something to do on a really nice weekend when the sun is out and there’s nothing else going on. There are very few things more entertaining than going out with a bunch of friends and trying to get a little ball into a little hole by putting it across artificial turf, over a bridge, through a treasure chest and under a castle drawbridge.
Many places in Maine offer what they call “adventure golf,” which is essentially pirates- or medieval-themed courses. Pirate’s Cove Adventure Golf in Bar Harbor and Blackbeard’s in Bangor are two great local spots for a day trip. Both offer pirate-themed adventure golf, but with very different courses.
Both establishments have two 18-hole courses to choose from. At Pirate’s Cove, you have a choice between the original course and “Blackbeard’s Challenge,” which is slightly more difficult. Signs are posted along both courses giving historical facts about Blackbeard, one of the most famous pirates ever to sail the seven seas, arrgh.
And I can tell you, Blackbeard’s Challenge is just that - there are some really weird holes on the course with obstacles that include putting over a small stream and through the “hold” of a pirate ship. With a 6-stroke limit per player on each hole, you really have to think about where you’re going to hit the ball before you do it. A poorly executed stroke can put your ball back at the start, costing you valuable yardage (okay, maybe feet) and strokes.
At Blackbeard’s, not only can you pick from the two courses, but if you or some of your friends or family don’t really feel like golfing, you can climb an outdoor rock wall, race go carts, play with remote control pirate ships or use their baseball and softball batting cages to pass the time.

This was found at The Maine Edge.

What are dogs thinking? Maybe more than we knew

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By ROB STEIN

Research shows pups, like humans, imitate behaviors

Dog owners have long maintained that their pooches have a lot more going on between their furry ears than scientists acknowledge. Now, new research is adding to the growing evidence that man's best friend thinks a lot more than many humans have believed.

The provocative new experiment indicated that dogs can do something that previously only humans, including infants, have been shown capable of doing: decide how to imitate a behavior based on the specific circumstances in which the action takes place.

"The fact that the dogs imitate selectively, depending on the situation — that has not been shown before," said Friederike Range, of the University of Vienna, who led the study. "That's something completely new."

'Breaking down the lines'
The findings come amid a flurry of research that is revealing surprisingly complex abilities among dogs, chimps, birds and many other animals long dismissed as having little intellectual or emotional life.

"Every day, we're discovering surprises about animals and finding out animals are far more intelligent and far more emotional than we previously thought," said Marc Bekoff, an animal behaviorist retired from the University of Colorado. "We're really breaking down the lines between the species."

The study was inspired by research with human infants. Fourteen-month-olds will imitate an adult turning on a light with her forehead only if they see her doing it with her hands free. If the adult is clutching a blanket, infants will use their hands, presumably because they can reason that the adult resorted to using her forehead because she had no choice.

Testing the dogs
To determine whether an animal could respond similarly, Range and her colleagues trained Guinness, a female border collie, to push a wooden rod with her paw to get a treat. A dog generally does not use its paws to do tasks, preferring to use its mouth whenever possible. So the key question was whether dogs that watched Guinness would decide how to get the treat depending on the circumstances.

After making sure the owners could not influence their pets' behavior, researchers tested three groups of dogs. The first 14, representing a variety of breeds, did not watch Guinness. When taught how to use the rod, about 85 percent pushed it with their mouth, confirming that is how dogs naturally like to do things.

The second group of 21 dogs watched Guinness repeatedly push the rod with her paw while holding a ball in her mouth. In that group, most of the dogs — about 80 percent — used their mouth, imitating the action but not the exact method. That suggested the dogs — like the children — decided Guinness was only using her paw because she had no choice.

The third group of 19 dogs watched Guinness repeatedly use a paw on the rod with her mouth free. Most of those dogs — 83 percent — imitated her behavior exactly, using their paws and not their mouth. That suggested they concluded there must be some good reason to act against their instincts and do it like Guinness.

"The behavior was very similar to the children who were tested in the original experiment," said Zsofia Viranyi, of Eotvos University in Budapest, who helped conduct the experiment, published in the journal Current Biology. "Whether they imitate or not depends on the context. It's not automatic, insightless copying. It's more sophisticated. There's a kind of inferential process going on. "

Viranyi and her colleagues said more research is needed to confirm the results and to explore what the findings say about the canine brain.

 

This was found at The Houston Chronicle.

Millions opt to do without bank accounts

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By JEANNINE AVERSA
Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Grandma stuffing money under the mattress isn't the only one living outside the banking system.

As many as 28 million people in the United States are forgoing traditional financial institutions because of mistrust, cultural and language barriers or a belief that by the time all the bills are paid there will be nothing left for an account.

That can be expensive and risky. People can run up big fees to cash checks, pay bills and meet their other financial needs. Walking around with large amounts of cash can make them a target for thieves.

The bankless are estimated to earn hundreds of billions of dollars a year in income. Seeing a business opportunity, banks are trying to draw in these potential customers. So, too, are check-cashing businesses and retailers, including Wal-Mart.

Many people, however, still resist, preferring to remain in the financial shadows.

They tend to be minority — Hispanic or blacks especially — as well as low income and young.

According to the Federal Reserve, about one in 12 families — 8.7 percent — does not have a bank account.

The number is higher for the poorest — nearly a quarter of families earning less than $18,900, the Fed said, citing 2004 data.

For some, like Rosa Alvarez, the financial choices can be bewildering.

"I don't understand about this bank stuff," says Alvarez, 54. A nagging fear that she might make a mistake "if I don't keep up with it right or something" keeps her from opening an account. She had one once, briefly. But she had trouble keeping track of her balance. She thinks that when the account closed, she owed the bank $12.

Carlos Maren, 25, a cook, is afraid that if he opens a bank account in the U.S., he will get hit with fees for not keeping in enough money or for taking out more money than he has.

"My uncle sometimes says that it's expensive ... because if you don't have money in the account, (the bank) is going to be charging you," Maren says.

Leonel Mendoza, 32, a hospital worker, is not comfortable with banks in this country.

Both he and Maren do their financial transactions at a check-cashing outlet in the Adams Morgan neighborhood of Washington, D.C. They say it is convenient and they like knowing upfront what they will be charged to cash their paychecks, buy money orders, and, in Maren's case, wire money to his native Mexico. He has a bank account there.

"It's not real expensive," Maren says.

Yet those charges can add up.

A Consumer Federation of America survey of check-cashing outlets, found that on average it cost $24.45 to cash a $1,002 Social Security check last year. A blue-collar worker pays an average $19.66 every week to cash a $478.41 handwritten paper check.

Having a bank account can be expensive, too, if it is not managed wisely.

Failure to keep track of an account balance can incur a penalty of $20 to $35 each time a check is bounced or an account is overdrawn.

"It can be costly to be outside the banking system. The poor pay more," says John Caskey, economics professor at Swarthmore College.

"On the other hand, if all you did is take that low-income person, living paycheck to paycheck and moved them into the banking system and they are bouncing checks and incurring fees, you haven't done much and you may not have done them a favor," Caskey says.

Although there is no federal requirement for banks to offer low-cost, no-frill accounts, some do.

"Some have very low dollar accounts. Some have accounts that have to maintain a minimum balance," says James Ballentine, director of community and economic development at the American Bankers Association.

Ballentine's advice: "Do some shopping around."

The share of families without bank accounts decreased gradually from 1989 to 2001, then leveled off, the Fed said.

Banks have an economic interest in reeling in people outside the banking system — 10 million to 28 million individuals who earn $510 billion a year — and turn them into customers who eventually may need loans to buy homes, cars and other items.

Banks are working through community groups to ease fears, build trust and to educate people about financial options. It is a challenge that can take years, bank officials say. Moreover, what may work in Houston does not necessarily prove fruitful in Fresno, Calif.

Adding to the challenge, the bankless are slowly spreading out. Hispanics and immigrants have moved beyond traditional ports of entry, such as big cities on the coasts and in border states; they are settling in Tennessee, North Carolina and Indiana. In the same way, people without bank accounts have move around.

The FDIC has spearheaded a project to help bring the bankless into the financial mainstream. Financial institutions, community groups and others are teaming up in nine markets — including parts of Alabama, Chicago, Los Angeles and Wilmington, Del. — to provide services including affordable small loans, check cashing, savings and financial education and for wiring money outside the U.S.

Nationwide, there are fewer banks in poor neighborhoods versus wealthy ones but the difference is small, according to the Federal Reserve.

In some neighborhoods, however, there are no banks conveniently located. Federal banking regulators just weeks ago identified 3,500 middle-income neighborhoods in rural areas — from parts of Clarke, Ala., to parts of Washakie, Wyo. — that they consider to be underserved by financial institutions.

Federal Reserve research found that the most common reason families gave for not having checking accounts was that they did not write enough checks to make it worthwhile. Many people said they did not like dealing with banks.

Some — regulators could not provide a percentage — are in the country illegally. Without some proof of identification such as a driver's license or a passport, they cannot set up a bank account.

Check cashers and other outlets give them a financial lifeline.

"You purchase the transactions you need, when you need them. Prices are posted. There are no surprises," says Joseph Coleman, president of Rite Check Cashing Inc., which operates stores in New York City's Harlem neighborhood and the borough of the Bronx.

New York is among the roughly two dozen states plus the District of Columbia that regulate check-cashing fees.

"We are like financial oxygen. People in our communities rely on us," says Coleman, who once worked for Citibank. He hires people who speak languages in addition to English, easing communications with the customer.

Is the average 2 percent fee that customers pay for cashing a paycheck too high?

I would say no," says Cynthia Vega, spokeswoman for the Financial Service Centers of America, whose members include check cashers. Customers pay for the convenience of having quick access to their cash, she says.

Over the years, technological innovations have spurred a range of products for people without bank accounts.

Some employers, not wanting to deal with the expense of paper checks, load employees' paychecks onto electronic cards that can be swiped at the supermarket, restaurant and other places or used to pay bills. These cards have federal protections, such as liability limits for unauthorized use, says Jean Ann Fox, director of consumer protection at the Consumer Federation of America.

Check-cashing outlets also sell electronic cards on which money from paychecks or a tax refund can be loaded. These cards on average cost $10.86, the federation says. Fox says some of these cards can carry usage fees and may not have the same protections by bank-issued debit or ATM cards.

Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer, recently announced it will sell for $8.94 each a prepaid Visa debit card. This step is aimed partly at shoppers who do not have bank accounts. Those cards have protections against theft and loss.

Alvarez, a cake decorator, does not bother with any of these options. She cashes her check for free at the supermarket where she works and hides her cash in books at home.

"When I need money for gas, I get a little bit out," she says. "When I pitch in for groceries, I get it out. But sometimes I'm scared the house can burn down. My money will be burned with it," she says. Or, there could be a break-in, she worries.

Some of the potential perils for the bankless include theft, forgetting where you stashed your cash or losing your money.

"If you have most of your money in a bank. You have protection. If you are carrying it all in cash, it is easy to lose, easy to be stolen and easy to spend," Fox says

In Prince William County, Va., there were 351 robberies last year and more than 40 percent involved Hispanic victims — many of whom were new to the country — who had large amounts of cash on them, says Police Chief Charlie Deane. Many of the robberies occurred on paydays — Thursday or Fridays.

"The criminal element is aware that many of these people do not put their money in a bank," Deane says. "Many of these individuals are living in conditions where they have to share common space, so they often don't have ways of securing their cash where they live. So therefore they carry the cash with them," he says.

The robbers, when caught, have told police they targeted the victims because "they knew they were carrying cash," he said.

There also is a long-term impact for those who opt to do without banks.

"The ability to sock away money for a rainy day and to cover emergency costs are enhanced if somebody is using a mainstream financial institution and begins to get on a pattern of regular savings," says Barry Wides, deputy comptroller of community affairs at the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.

The ability to establish good credit through a bank is crucial to getting competitive interest rates on loans for homes, cars and other items. Those with spotty credit are charged higher rates.

Despite all her fears about banks, Alvarez says one day she would like to become a steady bank customer. She thinks it will help her build a nest egg and feel more financially secure.

"When I cash my check, I'd maybe put $25 in savings that would never get touched until something like an emergency happens," she says.

This was found at The Houston Chronicle.

Saturday, June 23, 2007

Japanese firm tests brain-controlled toys

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HATOYAMA, Japan (AP) -- Forget the clicker: A new technology in Japan could let you control electronic devices without lifting a finger simply by reading brain activity.

The "brain-machine interface" developed by Hitachi analyzes slight changes in the brain's blood flow and translates brain motion into electric signals.

A cap connects by optical fibers to a mapping device, which links, in turn, to a toy train set via a control computer and motor during one recent demonstration at Hitachi's Advanced Research Laboratory in Hatoyama, just outside Tokyo.

"Take a deep breath and relax," said Kei Utsugi, a researcher, while demonstrating the device on Wednesday.

At his prompting, a reporter did simple calculations in her head, and the train sprang forward -- apparently indicating activity in the brain's frontal cortex, which handles problem solving.

Activating that region of the brain -- by doing sums or singing a song -- is what makes the train run, according to Utsugi. When one stops the calculations, the train stops, too.

Underlying Hitachi's brain-machine interface is a technology called optical topography, which sends a small amount of infrared light through the brain's surface to map out changes in blood flow.

Although brain-machine interface technology has traditionally focused on medical uses, makers like Hitachi and Japanese automaker Honda Motor have been racing to refine the technology for commercial application.

Hitachi's scientists are set to develop a brain TV remote controller letting users turn a TV on and off or switch channels by only thinking.

Honda, whose interface monitors the brain with an MRI machine like those used in hospitals, is keen to apply the interface to intelligent, next-generation automobiles.

Real-world applications

The technology could one day replace remote controls and keyboards and perhaps help disabled people operate electric wheelchairs, beds or artificial limbs.

Initial uses would be helping people with paralyzing diseases communicate even after they have lost all control of their muscles.

Since 2005, Hitachi has sold a device based on optical topography that monitors brain activity in paralyzed patients so they can answer simple questions -- for example, by doing mental calculations to indicate "yes" or thinking of nothing in particular to indicate "no."

"We are thinking of various kinds of applications," project leader Hideaki Koizumi said. "Locked-in patients can speak to other people by using this kind of brain-machine interface."

A key advantage to Hitachi's technology is that sensors don't have to physically enter the brain. Earlier technologies developed by U.S. companies like Neural Signals required implanting a chip under the skull.

Still, major stumbling blocks remain.

Size is one issue, though Hitachi has developed a prototype compact headband and mapping machine that together weigh only about two pounds.

Another would be to tweak the interface to more accurately pick up on the correct signals while ignoring background brain activity.

Any brain-machine interface device for widespread use would be "a little further down the road," Koizumi said.

He added, however, that the technology is entertaining in itself and could easily be applied to toys.

"It's really fun to move a model train just by thinking," he said.

 

This was found at CNN.

Friday, June 22, 2007

Missing: Large lake in southern Chile

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SANTIAGO (Reuters) - A lake in southern Chile has mysteriously disappeared, prompting speculation the ground has simply opened up and swallowed it whole.

The lake was situated in the Magallanes region in Patagonia and was fed by water, mostly from melting glaciers.

It had a surface area of between 4 and 5 hectares (10-12 acres) -- about the size of 10 soccer pitches.

"In March we patrolled the area and everything was normal ... we went again in May and to our surprise we found the lake had completely disappeared," said Juan Jose Romero, regional director of Chile's National Forestry Corporation CONAF.

"The only things left were chunks of ice on the dry lake-bed and an enormous fissure," he told Reuters.

CONAF is investigating the disappearance.

One theory is that the area was hit by an earth tremor that opened a crack in the ground which acted like a drain.

Southern Chile has been shaken by thousands of minor earth tremors this year.

This was found at Reuters

Mugger goes from robber to robbed

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BERLIN (Reuters) -- A 20-year-old would-be thief went from predator to victim when he tried to mug a taxi driver but ended up having his own wallet snatched, and arrested.

After the man stole the driver's wallet, a scuffle broke out in which the cabbies recovered his property but also took his attacker's wallet, police said yesterday.

The driver then locked himself in his taxi and called police, who found the mugger waiting for them near the taxi. "He wanted his wallet back," a police spokesman said.

 

This was found at Reuters.

Thursday, June 21, 2007

Area woman annoyed by fiancé's use of "excuse me"

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Contributed by Ian R. F. Crowlington III

Alfred — Jillian Hanson of Alfred, Maine, formerly of Millinocket was irritated earlier this morning by behavior recently adopted by her fiancĂ©, Ian Crowley. "He started doing it just to annoy me", claimed Hanson when reached by myMaineToday.com journalists.

The behavior causing this irritation? "Every time he passes gas he says 'excuse me'", stated Hanson. "He passes a lot of gas, but he never used to say it. He only started saying it because it gets on my nerves."

Though a simple "excuse me" after gas is passed may sound harmless enough, relationship expert Matthew Poirier warns that such constant politeness can "create tension between two people about to be married, especially if the relationship has been ongoing for multiple years."

"We've been together for over 2 years", said Hanson. "We've been talking about marriage for almost that long. We're close enough to each other that we don't need to worry about saying excuse me when we're gassy... I certainly don't bother."

When confronted with Hanson's allegations via telephone, fiancé Ian Crowley seemed genuinely confused. "What? Why would she be mad that I say excuse me when I fart? I'd think she'd prefer me to be polite than to just lift a leg and not say a word. The idea that I only say it to annoy her is positively ridiculous."

Crowley defended his use of the unnecessary politeness, claiming that he lives with his brother's young children, and wants to set a positive example. "With my niece and nephew around, I feel it's important to set a good example for them to follow. They both seem to think their Uncle Ian is a cool guy, and I don't want them to think it's cool to be rude."

Hanson, however, thinks his explanation is nothing but a transparent cover story. She claims that Crowley has lived with the children for over a year, but only recently adopted the behavior. "He only started about a month ago, and now that he knows it annoys me, he makes sure he does it every single time. I don't know if I can go through with the marriage if this doesn't end soon!"

Liam, 6, and Moira, 4, were unable to be reached for comment.

 

This was found at MaineToday.com

Chewing gum habit 'poisons' woman

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By RUTH HILL - The Dominion Post | Thursday, 21 June 2007

Abigail Cormack thought she was dying from a mystery illness. She never realised her daily chewing gum habit was probably poisoning her.

The sugar-free gum contained aspartame, a food additive widely used in thousands of products, including gum, diet soft-drinks and tea and coffee.

The additive is prompting debate in the international medical world about its safety.

When Ms Cormack, 25, of Wellington, began suffering crippling muscle cramps and tingling in her hands and feet about five months ago, she feared she was having a heart attack.

She started suffering heart palpitations, anxiety attacks, depression and skin rashes, was unable to sleep and had to take sick leave.

But, despite a battery of tests, doctors could not pinpoint the cause.

"They thought it might be a salt imbalance, maybe I was over-training at the gym.

"I was prescribed anti-inflammatories and Valium to help me sleep but it just got worse and worse. I thought I was dying."

Finally, an internet site alerted her to the possibility of aspartame poisoning.

Under the brandname NutraSweet, aspartame is used in more than 5000 foods and beverages worldwide.

For the past few years, Ms Cormack has chewed through up to four packets of chewing gum a day.

She did not suspect the seemingly innocuous habit could be slowly poisoning her.

Aspartame is digested into aspartic acid, phenylalanine and methanol, which converts into formaldehyde - a deadly neurotoxin used as embalming fluid.

The food industry says these are all "naturally occurring" substances in foods and the amounts are too small to be harmful.

No study has found a definitive link between the compounds and serious effects in humans, but some research has found higher incidences of chronic fatigue, migraines and other conditions.

Ms Cormack admits her chewing gum consumption was "excessive".

"But there were no warnings it could be doing me harm."

Her GP, Penny Rowley, was at the point of referring her to a neurologist when she heard about the gum habit.

She confirmed aspartame poisoning as the likely culprit, and within 24 hours of giving up gum, Ms Cormack's symptoms disappeared.

Dr Rowley said it was the first case she had seen.

"I was certainly surprised but it seems to have worked."

Clinical pharmacologist Professor Carl Burgess, from the Wellington School of Medicine, said that though someone would have to take "megadoses" of aspartame for it to be toxic, some people were more susceptible to allergic reactions.

The New Zealand Food Safety Authority says there is no scientific evidence of any significant harm from a large daily intake of aspartame.

This was found at stuff.co.uk

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Myspace and Sony launch Minisode Network

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LOS ANGELES, June 19 (UPI) -- Myspace and Sony Pictures Television have teamed up to the launch The Minisode Network.

Minisodes are about three to five minutes long and follow the same story arc as the full episode of the TV show they came from, according to a news release from the companies.

Http://www.myspace.com/minisodenetwork opened Tuesday for all Myspace Video users.

"Now MySpace users can discover classic TV shows in a stylized, modern format," said Chris DeWolfe, MySpace's chief executive officer. "Teaming with Sony to debut The Minisode Network exclusively on MySpace gives our millions of users yet another reason to make MySpace Video a daily destination."

The Minisode Network will launch with episodes from "Partridge Family," "Starsky & Hutch," "TJ Hooker," "Charlie's Angels," "Diff'rent Strokes," "Facts of Life," "Silver Spoons," "Who's the Boss?," "What's Happening!!," "Dilbert," "Sheena," "Fantasy Island," "Police Woman," "VIP" and "Ricki Lake."

This was found at United Press International.

DHS acknowledges own computer break-ins

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By TED BRIDIS,

Associated Press Writer

The Homeland Security Department, the lead U.S. agency for fighting cyber threats, suffered more than 800 hacker break-ins, virus outbreaks and other computer security problems over two years, senior officials acknowledged to Congress.

In one instance, hacker tools for stealing passwords and other files were found on two internal Homeland Security computer systems. The agency's headquarters sought forensic help from the department's own Security Operations Center and the U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team it operates with Carnegie Mellon University.

In other cases, computer workstations in the Coast Guard and the Transportation Security Administration were infected with malicious software detected trying to communicate with outsiders; laptops were discovered missing; and agency Web sites suffered break-ins.

The chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., said such problems undermine the government's efforts to encourage companies and private organizations to improve cyber security.

"What the department is doing on its own networks speaks so loudly that the message is not getting across," Thompson said.

Congressional investigators, expected to testify Wednesday during an oversight hearing about the department's security lapses, determined that persistent weaknesses "threaten the confidentiality, integrity and availability of key DHS information and information systems," according to a new report from the Government Accountability Office being released later in June.

The Homeland Security Department's chief information officer, Scott Charbo, assured lawmakers his organization was working to prevent such problems.

"We need to increase our vigilance to ensure that such incidents do not happen again," Charbo wrote in testimony prepared for Wednesday's hearing. "The department takes these incidents very seriously and will work diligently to ensure they do not recur."

The computer problems disclosed to the House Homeland Security subcommittee occurred during fiscal 2005 and fiscal 2006, and occurred at DHS headquarters and many of the department's agencies, including TSA, the Coast Guard, Federal Emergency Management Agency, Customs and Border Protection and others.

The subcommittee's chairman, Rep. Jim Langevin, D-R.I., said break-ins to government computer networks and theft of information are "one of the most critical issues confronting our nation, and we must deal with this threat immediately."

All the problems involved the department's unclassified computer networks, although DHS officials also have acknowledged to lawmakers dozens of incidents they described as "classified spillage," in which secret information was improperly transmitted or discussed over nonsecure e-mail systems.

This was found at Yahoo! News.

Japan announces new name for Iwo Jima

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TOKYO, June 19 (UPI) -- Japan has changed the name of the Pacific island of Iwo Jima to Iwo To.

The Japanese Geographical Survey Institute announced the name change on Monday for the island that was the site of a famous World War II battle between Japanese and U.S. forces in 1945, the Mainichi Daily News reported.

Iwo To is the island's original name given to it by its inhabitants, the Daily News reported.

Iwo To will appear on a map that will go on sale Sept. 1. Both "jima" and "to" mean island in Japanese, the Daily News reported.

Iwo To is one of the Ogasawara islands, which are part of Tokyo.

This was Found at United Press International.

Ind. Teen Dead After Shooting 2 Officers

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By RYAN LENZ, Associated Press Writer

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

(06-19) 13:25 PDT Georgetown, Ind. (AP) --

A 15-year-old boy who had been arguing with his mother shot at deputies arriving at the family's home, killing one and seriously wounding the other, authorities said.

The teen, Tyler Dumstorf, was found early Tuesday inside the home, dead of a self-inflicted gunshot, police said.

Prosecutor Keith Henderson said that minutes after the deputies were shot late Monday, Dumstorf posted a message on his MySpace page saying: "I just killed two cops. Goodbye."

The deputies had gone to the southern Indiana home Monday evening to investigate a call from the teen's mother about a confrontation with her son.

"There was nothing to indicate to the officers that it was anything more than a routine domestic call," Henderson said. He said the boy had been due in court Tuesday on a misdemeanor marijuana charge, adding that hearing was part of the discussion with his mother.

As the officers were talking to his mother and an aunt in the driveway, the boy fired from an upstairs window, striking each deputy in the back, Henderson said.

Deputy Frank Denzinger, a four-year veteran of the sheriff's department, died hours after the shooting, Floyd County Sheriff Darrell Mills said. Deputy Joel White, who has been with the department 17 months, was hospitalized Tuesday in serious condition, Mills said.

Sheriff's Lt. Frank Loop said the boy's mother was not injured.

Dumstorf had just completed his freshman year at Floyd Central High School in nearby Floyds Knobs, said school spokesman Dave Rarick. He gave no other information about the boy, citing federal privacy laws.

Entries on Dumstorf's MySpace page indicated he was an honors student and that he liked classic rock.

 

This was found at SFGate.com

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Unwanted Result of Ballot Confusion: A Beerless Town

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By MICHELLE YORK

Published: June 19, 2007

POTTER, N.Y., June 16 —This sleepy Finger Lakes town, which does not lay claim to any actual lakefront, misses much of the tourism that helps support the picturesque region. Agriculture is the main industry here in this dot of a town of 1,800, where drivers have to yield to roosters that wander onto the road.

Without help, the nearest six-pack will soon be 10 miles from Potter.

There are no bars or liquor stores, but the town does have three restaurants and one small grocery, which has long sold beer, lots of beer.

Residents say that nearly two years ago they made a sobering mistake that has bedeviled them ever since. While trying to grant one of the restaurants permission to serve beer and wine with meals, voters unwittingly banned the sale of all alcohol in the town’s 37 square miles.

“It got all screwed up,” said Katie Brown, the manager of Federal Hollow Staples, a grocery owned by her father, Frederick Brown, that was the first in town to get a liquor license, more than 30 years ago, and now relies on beer sales for 78 percent of its annual revenue. “We’re a farming town, you know?”

Since that 2005 vote, some townspeople have tried repeatedly to reverse the ban before Federal’s license expires on July 1 and the town effectively becomes dry again. A second referendum, in 2006, asked for permission to sell hard liquor, which residents approved — only to hear later from state officials that the new law did nothing to undo the ban.

A letter-writing campaign ensued, and the State Legislature recently passed a law extending Mr. Brown’s liquor license through November, and allowing the town to put the first proposal back before the voters this fall, waiving the state restriction that says a municipality must wait three years between such votes. [Christine Pritchard, a spokeswoman for Gov. Eliot Spitzer, would not say whether the governor would sign the bill. “We’ll review the legislation when it is delivered to our office for consideration,” she said on Monday.]

Before the mix-up, people here could buy beer in two places, the Federal Hollow and the Hitchin’ Rail, a combination convenience store, ice cream stand and restaurant.

Owners of the Hitchin’ Rail, a fixture here for decades, wanted to add wine and beer to the menu at the restaurant, where hearty meat loaf and pot roast entrees top out at $8.95.

It was not as simple as it seemed. state alcoholic beverage control laws require that whenever a town wants to expand the way it sells alcohol, it must ask voters five questions — “stupid questions,” according to the town supervisor, Leonard Lisenbee, a retired federal game warden who has been in office six years and who characterized the state-mandated wording as post-Prohibition-era legalese.

The questions, requiring more than 300 words, ask whether alcohol should be allowed in a variety of settings, including a hotel and, separately, a “summer hotel.” “Shall any person be authorized to sell alcoholic beverages at retail to be consumed on premises licensed pursuant to the provisions of Section 64 of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Law?” was the relevant one to the Hitchin’ Rail. But there was also “Shall any person be authorized to sell alcoholic beverages at retail, not to be consumed on the premises, where sold in the town of Potter?” which relates to stores like the Federal Hollow.

“I read it and I couldn’t understand it, and I’ve got a college education,” Mr. Lisenbee said. “When voters get confused, they vote no.”

And they did.

The voters said no to all five questions, not only keeping the Hitchin’ Rail’s restaurant from serving beer and wine, but also blocking both stores from selling it, upon the expiration of their current licenses. Which means that on July 1, when the Federal’s license expires, the closest six-pack available for purchase will be in a town 10 miles away.

The Hitchin’ Rail has already had to pull the beer from its convenience store, because its liquor license expired when a new owner, David Spampinato, took over last year.

“It really created a lot of hostility in this small town,” said Mr. Spampinato, who bought the Hitchin’ Rail between the 2005 and 2006 votes and has seen total revenue drop by a third since the beer ban. Despite the 2006 referendum, no one has stepped up to sell hard liquor.

The Browns returned to door-knocking, encouraging people to write to their legislators. State Senator George H. Winner Jr., a Republican from Elmira, whose district includes Potter, said letters pleading for help began to pour in, so he sponsored the bill providing the waiver and extension. “It’s extraordinarily unusual,” Mr. Winner said of the endeavor.

The Browns said they were confident that voters would understand the proposition this third time around and pass it.

“This is the only place where you can buy beer close to home,” said Bryan Brink, 32, who was among those to vote no on the first ballot and then regret it, as he stopped by the Federal Hollow on Saturday to buy a six-pack of Killian’s Irish Red.

Another customer, Ron Chapin, 45, picked up a six-pack of Labatt Ice on his way to visit his brother. “Why would somebody want to make this a dry community?” he asked as he stood in the summer sun. “It’d be a bummer.”

This was found at The New York Times.

Saturday, June 16, 2007

Scramjet hits 10 times the speed of sound

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An experimental jet engine traveling at up to 10 times the speed of sound reached an altitude of 530km in a 12-minute test flight in the Australian outback today.

Scientists hope the engine will ultimately propel the next generation of supersonic planes, with predictions a flight between Sydney and London could take just two hours.

The scramjet engine spent 12 minutes and 15 seconds in the air today after being launched from the Woomera rocket range in South Australia's north.

It reached speeds of Mach 10 - about 11,000km/h - during re-entry to the earth's atmosphere.

The scramjet is an air-breathing supersonic combustion ramjet engine and was tested in a collaborative experiment by Australia's Defense Science and Technology Organization (DSTO) and the United States' Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).

"The test has obtained the first-ever flight data on the inward-turning scramjet engine design," DARPA spokesman Steven Walker said.

"We are pleased ... and believe that a hypersonic airplane could be a reality in the not too distant future."

DSTO scientist Dr Warren Harch said besides the high travel speeds, the scramjet would also offer fuel efficiencies in the future.

"This technology has the potential to put numerous defense and civilian aerospace applications within our reach during the next couple of decades," Dr Harch said.

Likely defense applications included long-range, time critical missions, while civilian uses included low-cost satellite launching as well as high-speed passenger aircraft, he said.

Data from today's test flight would take up to two weeks to analyze, he said.

This was found at The Sydney Morning Herald.

Grind's almost over for perfect balls

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By Rob Taylor

THEY will be the Earth's roundest spheres, crafted by Australian scientists as part of an international hunt to find a new global standard kilogram.

Ever since scientists discovered that the current standard - a bar of platinum and iridium held in a French vault since 1889 - was slowly deteriorating, the search has been on for a replacement.

Using a single crystal of silicon-28 grown by Russian and German scientists over three years, a team of Sydney scientists and engineers will grind and polish two silvery balls, each weighing precisely one kilogram, with imperfections of less than 35 millionths of a millimetre.

"We are doing everything to really create a perfect object. It's not only near-perfect in roundness, but also the crystal purity, the atomic species and so on," project leader Walter Giardini said today.

"Silicon is a very nice material to use that we understand well, makes good crystals and can be worked," said Mr Giardini, from Australia's National Measurement Institute.

The two balls will take 12 weeks to create and, because they are made from a stable element, they will not fall victim to moisture, corrosion and contamination like the current kilogram standard, known as the International Prototype.

The spheres will be a step along the perfect kilogram road, with the project's ultimate aim to re-define the kilogram in terms of numbers of atoms, rather than an object open to damage from earthquake or environmental changes.

"The aim is not to change the value of the kilogram, but to ensure its stability for all future times," Mr Giardini said.

"It will no longer depend on an actual physical object and this is going to allow us to relate the mass to the individual atoms."

The project is a collaboration involving scientists from Russia, Germany, Italy, Belgium, Japan, the United States and Australia, in co-operation with the International Bureau of Weights and Measures.

On completion, the spheres will be measured for volume in Australia, Germany and Japan, then measured for mass. Belgian scientists will look at the molar mass of the crystal used to calculate the number of molecules in each sphere.

Australian scientists have the most expertise in grinding near-perfect spheres, having been turning them out for clients including NASA since the early 1990s.

"We have developed technology so that we can see what we are getting, whether they are slightly oval or flat. We are trying for an accuracy of two parts in 100 million," Mr Giardini said.

 

This was found at The Sunday Telegraph.

High-tech armour from widow spider silk?

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Agençe France-Presse

LOS ANGELES: The prospect of super-strength military body armour inspired by silk from deadly black widow spiders has moved a step closer.

U.S. scientists at the University of California, Riverside, outside Los Angeles, have identified the genes and DNA sequences for two key proteins used in the "dragline" silk of the tiny, but lethal, spiders found in the region.

The university said in a news release that the discovery could lead to a variety of new materials for industrial, medical and military uses.

Dragline silk from black widows is regarded as superior to that from other spiders because of its strength and extensibility, which enable the silk to absorb enormous amounts of energy.

Lightweight body armour

The silk's properties have interested the military, medical and sporting worlds, who are keen to explore the possibility of copying the structure of the silk for lightweight body armour, medical devices and athletic attire.

The genetic discovery was made by UC Riverside professor Cheryl Hayashi and a team of researchers and is detailed this week in the journal PloS One.

There are currently no products on the market based on the dragline silk of spiders.

"There's nothing quite as good yet as natural dragline silk, but we should get a lot closer now that we have the full genetic recipe," Hayashi said.

Now the genetic blueprint of the silk has been identified it may be possible to synthetically produce the proteins by inserting the genetic sequences into host organisms such as bacteria, plants or animals, she said.

The next challenge would be attempting to spin the proteins into silk fibres that have the same properties as spider spun silk.

This was found at Cosmos Magazine.

Fees hike angers prisoners

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By BETTY ADAMS
Staff Writer

AUGUSTA -- One week, Cajun Shrimp Ramen Noodle soup cost 55 cents through the commissary at the Kennebec County jail. The next week, it cost 90 cents.

Atomic Fire Balls went from 70 cents to 90 cents.

Almost every one of the 132 items on the commissary list went up at least a few cents this past week as a private vendor took over the operation at the Augusta jail, which typically houses 180 inmates.

The price hikes came in conjunction with a new system -- with a fee -- that enables people to send money to inmate's accounts.

The inmates are unhappy about the changes. One of them labeled the higher prices "highway robbery."

Officials say the new system is saving taxpayers money. Rather than the county paying the salary of a commissary officer, the inmates are footing the bill through the higher prices charged by the private vendor now overseeing the contract.

Cory Watts, 39, an inmate working as a trusty in the kitchen, said prisoners learned of the new system when they got back their orders and found requested items were missing or their was less change than expected.

"Everybody who got canteen was short items and money," he said earlier this week. "We were told by the corrections officers these are the new prices. A few people did grievances."

Watts, who is originally from New Hampshire and is serving a seven-month sentence for violating probation in Kennebec County, has spent time behind bars in other states, including Massachusetts.

"It's expensive here," Watts said as he sat in the jail library, the same room that is used for video arraignment. "I thought it was because it was Maine."

He went down a commissary bubble sheet -- filled out by each inmate on Sunday night and then processed on Monday -- and compared prices. "In the last four years I've been incarcerated, I've seen a lot of different commissary slips," he said.

Canned fish -- $1.70 under the old list and 20 cents more on the new list -- is $1 elsewhere. A three-pack of decaffeinated coffee -- $3.85 on the new list -- is $2.45 in another states, Watts said.

Watts orders four soups a week, and likes to mix in some fish.

In a letter to the Kennebec Journal, Larry Simms, an inmate, complained "the new canteen system imposed is highway robbery. We are being robbed blind."

He cited the 62 percent increase in soup prices. "We are U.S. citizens," Simms wrote. "Also, we are paying our debts to society. We don't need to be taxed like this."

Some inmates order 20 to 30 soups a week, and Sheriff Randall Liberty said they're one of the chief bartering items in the jail.

Watts was worried, too, about what he could buy for the upcoming week. His commissary account balance was less than $5.

He had expected an additional $50 from his fiance in North Adams, Mass.

She told him she sent it through www.jpay.com, the new method for sending money to inmates in the county jail, but he had yet to see it. A balance sheet printed for him early in the week showed no recent deposits.

Liberty, who sat through the interview with Watts, acknowledged that inmates are upset with change.

The Jpay system allows people to send commissary money to inmates overnight by Internet, by phone, by ACE Cash Express Stores (available at most Wal-Marts) or by a kiosk (soon to be set up in the jail lobby). However, there's a fee for each deposit, ranging from $3 to $11.95, depending on method and amount.

Watts objects both to the method and to the fees.

"Some families don't have computers," he said. "Some people don't have credit cards, and some people may not live near a Wal-Mart."

The fees can swallow up much of the money. It can cost $8.95 to send an inmate $10 via a cash express store.

"We shouldn't be charged to receive our own money on top of the mark-up (on commissary goods)," wrote another inmate in a letter read by Watts.

Liberty maintains the new system is fair and a better deal for county residents who support the jail through property taxes.

"Rather than the taxpayers paying for (commissary staff) through salaries, the inmates pay the cost of managing the commissary system," Liberty said.

Liberty said inmates receive three hot meals a day, and corrections officers eat the same food. Liberty said he has a meal there each day, which allows him to monitor quality.

Capt. Richard Wurpel, jail administrator, said the county receives a fee from the vendor, Keefe Commissary Network of Edison, N.J.

The commissary operation goes out to bid, and contracts are approved by the county commissioners. Under the current contract, the fee is 10 percent of the sales.

"We had a higher percentage (22 percent) before we vended this out completely," Wurpel said.

Previously, county corrections officers staffed the commissary and ordered the products from Keefe.

Now, the county's former commissary officer works for Keefe and manages the ordering and the inmates' money from a small office near the jail's kitchen.

"They do it all now," said Robert Devlin, county administrator. "Before, we had employees doing this and we've gotten out of the business. The percentage is a little smaller because we're not staffing it any more."

Devlin said Department of Corrections regulations govern the cost of commissary items.

"We are tied to what the normal price of things is locally under DOC regulations," he said. "Prices are consistent with what you would see in local stores."

This was found at The Morning Sentinel.

Chinese Internet addict kills mother over money

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BEIJING (Reuters) - A teenage boy in southern China, "heavily addicted" to the Internet, killed his mother and severely injured his father with a kitchen knife after he was refused money to go to a cybercafe, state media said on Thursday.

Wang, from Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong province, stabbed his mother to death at home during a heated argument, the Beijing Youth Daily said.

"After his father got home, Wang hacked at him causing serious injury. Seeing what he had done, Wang went to his room and sat on his bed," the paper said.

Wang's father ran bleeding to his brother's house, who then alerted the police, it said.

Wang had resolved to kill his parents a month earlier, and had once prepared to kill his father with an iron bar. He had also recently bought sleeping pills, the paper said.

Wang, who was "less than 16" but had left school a year before, would spend his spare time in Internet cafes when not working for his father who made a living selling barbecue food in their neighbourhood.

He had dreamed of being an outstanding politician or economist and believed his parents were stifling his development, the paper said.

China has seen an alarming rise in the number of Internet addicts in recent years, who it says may be responsible for up to 80 percent of juvenile crime.

In recent months, China has banned the opening of new cybercafes in 2007 and issued orders limiting the time Internet users can spend playing online games.

This was found at Reuters.

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Pluto Smaller Than Nearby Dwarf Planet Eris, Study Finds

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Anne Minard
for National Geographic News

June 14, 2007

Poor Pluto just keeps getting downgraded.


The beleaguered former planet has been dwarfed again by a new study that finds its neighbor Eris is significantly bigger.


That makes Eris—formerly known as 2003 UB313 and then Xena—the largest so-called dwarf planet in the solar system.


Eris was the catalyst for Pluto's demotion last summer, when the International Astronomical Union redefined the term "planet" and created the category of dwarf planet for objects such as Eris and Pluto.


Using the Keck Observatory and the Hubble Space Telescope, Michael E. Brown and Emily Schaller at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena have now put the mass of Eris at a third more than Pluto's.


The paper appears in this week's issue of the journal Science.


Modest Moon
The key to finding Eris' mass was its tiny moon, Dysnomia. Brown and Schaller used Keck and Hubble to capture images of the moon's position over time.


The data suggest that Dysnomia is Eris' only moon and orbits every 15 days.


The researchers also calculated the total mass of the pair—about 1.27 times that of Pluto—and revealed that the objects are made of around 70 percent rock, making them as dense as Pluto and Triton, a moon of Neptune.


Pluto itself has been described as a ball of rock and ice just bigger than Texas.


Alan Stern is principal investigator of NASA's New Horizons mission to Pluto. When he first read the paper, he said the researchers compared "apples to oranges" by putting Pluto in the ring with two objects—Eris and its moon.


But Brown said that Dysnomia is so small that its mass doesn't throw things off.


"Really, the interesting comparison is Eris to Pluto, rather than the system to the system," he said.


"And since the mass of Dysnomia is insignificant compared to Eris ... we really are just calculating the mass of Eris."


Nail in Pluto's Coffin?
Along with Eris, Brown is also the discoverer of 2003EL61, Sedna, Orcus and Quaoar, and 2005 FY9, which is only a little smaller than Pluto.


All of these objects reside in the far-flung area beyond Neptune's orbit known as the Kuiper Belt, named after 20th-century astronomer Gerard Kuiper.


Brown's work on the region helped spur the International Astronomical Union to make the decision to distinguish between planets and dwarf planets.


With that, Pluto became the ambassador for all of its neighbors in the Kuiper Belt: planetary science's next frontier. But ambassador is a step down from Pluto's planet status and even its more recent conciliatory title, "King of the Kuiper Belt."


Objects in the Kuiper Belt orbit 30 to 50 times farther from the sun than Earth—Pluto is about 3 billion miles (4.8 billion kilometers) from the sun, while Earth orbits 93 million miles (150 million kilometers) away.


Astronomers are intrigued by the region, because it's the source of many comets and it contains frozen evidence from the birth of the solar system. (Related: "Far-Flung Space Crash May Help Solve Mystery of Moon's Formation" [March 15, 2007].)


Meanwhile, Wikipedia has dubbed Brown "Pluto's worst nightmare," and he doesn't seem to mind.


"Pluto sort of had one last chance," he said of his new paper. "Maybe, just maybe, it would be more massive after all. And now we've done it in for good."


Not So Fast
Michael A. Burstein is president of the Society for the Preservation of Pluto as a Planet, which goes by the acronym SP3. The group of astronomy buffs formed in the spring of 2006, when rumors first started circulating that Pluto was in trouble.


Burstein preferred the IAU's initial idea for a planet definition, which was never voted upon at their solar-system-shattering meeting last August. (Related: "Pluto to Get Partners? New Definition of 'Planet' Proposed" [August 16, 2006].)


By that definition—that a planet should directly orbit a star and be massive enough to be round—Pluto would still be a planet, as would dwarf planets Eris and Ceres, a large, round asteroid orbiting near Jupiter.


It's fine if we end up with 50 or even 100 planets as new objects are discovered, Burstein said. We could keep the math easy by calling the old guard, including Pluto, "classical planets," he added.


For now, Burstein's group is laying low to see what the pros do—under the guidance of New Horizons' Alan Stern. Stern is leading the charge of professional astronomers to dismiss the IAU's ruling.


"People just aren't using the IAU definition because it's so substantially flawed," he said. "Even their own members, and I'm one, aren't using the IAU definition."


 The debate over a better definition was a hot topic at the April meeting of the European Geophysical Union. And it's already part of the agenda for the February 2008 meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

 

This was found at National Geographic News.

Squirrel goes on rampage, injures 3

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BERLIN (Reuters) - An aggressive squirrel attacked and injured three people in a German town before a 72-year-old pensioner dispatched the rampaging animal with his crutch.

The squirrel first ran into a house in the southern town of Passau, leapt from behind on a 70-year-old woman, and sank its teeth into her hand, a local police spokesman said Thursday.

With the squirrel still hanging from her hand, the woman ran onto the street in panic, where she managed to shake it off.

The animal then entered a building site and jumped on a construction worker, injuring him on the hand and arm, before he managed to fight it off with a measuring pole.

After that, the squirrel went into the 72-year-old man's garden and massively attacked him on the arms, hand and thigh," the spokesman said. "Then he killed it with his crutch."

The spokesman said experts thought the attack may have been linked to the mating season or because the squirrel was ill.

This was found at Reuters.

Farm mascots stolen once again

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By DAVID LEAMING
Staff Writer

UNITY -- A family known for giving has for the second time become a victim of someone with a habit of taking.

Styrofoam figurines Jolly Green Giant and sidekick Sprout apparently were taken by thieves from a wooden tower above the Mesarics' family vegetable garden on the Thorndike Road, according to Mark Mesaric.

Mesaric said his family has been upset since his wife, Patsy, discovered the mascots missing on Saturday. It was the second time thieves have ripped off the mascots. The family put them up for the enjoyment of passersby.

The large garden supports the family and extra food is donated to food pantries, according to Mesaric.

The Styrofoam figurines stood on a tower erected by Mesaric to discourage thieves after the first Jolly Green Giant mascot was taken in 2005. That time, the mutilated mascot was found in a trash bin behind a church in the nearby town of Knox.

Mesaric said he is angry and amazed at the determination and boldness of the thieves who likely stole the figures in daylight.

"There had to be more than one person, maybe two, to lift someone off the ground 10 feet and cut the strings," Mesaric said.

He said Maine State Police have been notified about the theft.

"We have put $500 into the figures and tower," Mesaric said. He now doubts that the family will continue the gesture that people enjoyed at the sight of the smiling figures.

"It's getting too expensive," he said. "I could have taken that $500 and given it right to a food pantry."

Mesaric said he believes the thieves must be young people with too much time on their hands. "Both thefts occurred around graduation time and it may be related to students. It is too bad that kids are blamed for these things but it looks that way," he said.

"It's disappointing that we can't put up something positive without it getting stolen," he said. "You can't make money from them. They (figures) are probably in somebody's bedroom. I hope the parents (of the thieves) get involved."

"People already miss them," Mesaric added. "Kids loved seeing them."

This was found at MaineToday.com

Suicides overtake executions on California's death row

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The latest death at San Quentin Prison marked a gruesome landmark: Suicides have now supplanted executions as the second leading cause of death on California's death row.

Tony Lee Reynolds' death on Sunday was the 14th suicide, one more than the number of condemned inmates executed in California, since the state reinstated capital punishment in 1978.

Thirty-eight inmates have died of natural causes, the leading cause of death.

In October, the California prison system instituted a series of reforms to cut the high rate of inmate suicides, which reached a record 43 last year.

A federal judge is overseeing the state's treatment of mentally ill and suicidal inmates as a result of a class-action lawsuit by prisoners alleging inadequate care.

There are now 666 inmates on death row, according to the Department of Corrections.

One reason for suicides surpassing executions as a cause of death is that executions have been halted for 16 months now, since a federal judge ordered prison officials to revise their lethal injection procedures to ensure inmates do not suffer unnecessarily.

The temporary moratorium will stay in place at least until state prison officials finish construction of a new death chamber designed to address the judge's concerns.

U.S. District Court Judge Jeremy Fogel said he wants to inspect the new death chamber in October if it is completed by then.

"The number of executions is absurdly low," said Kent Scheidegger, director of the Criminal Justice Legal Foundation, a victims' rights group based in Sacramento.

"The number of executions is low because of the great hostility the federal courts have with the death penalty."

San Quentin Prison spokesman Lt. Eric Messick said guards found Reynolds, 25, hanging from a bed sheet tied to his bunk bed Sunday night and he was rushed to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

Reynolds had been sent to death row only 30 days ago for the rape and murder of a pregnant woman. Messick said the average stay on death row is 17-and-a-half years before execution.

A mental health expert at the Illinois juvenile hall where Reynolds served time as a teen testified at the trial in his behalf that Reynolds was diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic.

Prosecutors challenged that diagnosis and a judge agreed with a jury's recommendation to sentence Reynolds to death.

Messick said a mental health report received by the prison staff did not show any diagnosis of paranoid schizophrenia and Reynolds was not considered a suicide risk.

"This guy didn't give us any indication," he said.

Reynolds' attorney at trial didn't return a telephone call Tuesday.

 

This was found at Daily Mail

Wal-Mart losing $3 billion a year from thefts

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The Associated Press
Jun. 13, 2007 11:38 AM

NEW YORK - Shoppers at Wal-Mart stores across America are loading carts with merchandise - maybe a flat-screen TV, a few DVDs and a six pack of beer - and strolling out without paying. Employees also are helping themselves to goods they haven't paid for.


The world's largest retailer is saying little about these kinds of thefts, but it's recent public disclosures that it is experiencing an increase in so-called shrinkage at its U.S. stores suggests that inventory losses due to shoplifting, employee theft, paperwork errors and supplier fraud could be worsening.


The hit is likely to rise to more than $3 billion this year for Wal-Mart Stores Inc., which generated sales of $348.6 billion last year, according to retail consultant Burt Flickinger III.

Flickinger and other analysts say the increase in theft may be tied to Wal-Mart's highly publicized decision last year to no longer prosecute minor cases of shoplifting in order to focus on organized shoplifting rings. Former employees also say staffing levels, including security personnel, have been reduced, making it easier for theft to occur. And a union-backed group critical of the retailer's personnel policies contends general worker discontent is playing a role.


Wal-Mart declined to offer any explanations for the rise in losses, but denied it has cut security staff and said employee morale is rising rather than falling.


Although Wal-Mart declined to reveal its shrinkage rate, analysts suspect Wal-Mart - which for years had a theft loss rate that was half that of its peers - is getting closer to the industry wide average. Theft is a big problem for all retailers, costing them $41.6 billion last year, according to a joint study released Tuesday by the National Retail Federation and the University of Florida. The study found that the shrinkage rate as a percentage of sales ticked upward slightly to 1.61 percent of sales in 2006 from 1.60 percent in 2005.


Whatever the cause, such theft - which late founder Sam Walton once called one of retailers' top profit killers - adds one more challenge when Wal-Mart is already struggling with sluggish sales at its established stores due to an overall economic slowdown as well as its own stumbles in its home and apparel merchandising strategies.
Eduardo Castro-Wright, president and CEO of Wal-Mart's U.S. store division, briefly acknowledged the theft problem in a mid-May conference call with analysts. He cited shrinkage as well as increased markdowns and higher inventory for dragging down first-quarter profit margins.


"We are concerned about shrinkage and are investigating the cause and are taking steps to correct it," Castro-Wright said. Company officials won't comment on those countermeasures.


The industry's shrinkage rate has been generally declining since the mid-1990s as retailers have been investing in new technology such as closed circuit TVs, according to Richard Hollinger, professor of criminology at the University of Florida.


About 47 percent of the dollars lost came from employee theft, while shoplifting accounted for about 32 percent, according to the National Retail Federation report. Administrative errors account for 14 percent, while supplier fraud accounts for 4 percent. The remaining 3 percent is unaccounted for.


In one of the more brazen employee thefts, a man wearing dark clothing and a ski mask entered a Port Clinton, Ohio, Wal-Mart store last January at midnight unnoticed by employees and stole $45,000 from the store safe. The store's night manager, Dana Walker, 30, was later arrested for the crime. He became a suspect because he knew the combination to the safe, police said.


The company's vociferous critic WakeUpWalMart.com, funded by the United Food and Commercial Workers which have been for years tried to organize the retailer's workers, publicized the company's decision last year to relax its zero-tolerance policy on shoplifting. The new policy seeks prosecutions of first-time offenders only if they are between ages 18 to 65 and steal at least $25 worth of merchandise.


That change may have emboldened some folks to shoplift, said Mark Doyle, president of Jack L. Hayes International, a retail consultancy on loss prevention.


WakeUpWalMart.com and some former employees said Wal-Mart may also have been trying to appease complaints by some police departments that its stores tied up police with too many shoplifting calls. Wal-Mart has denied that.


Wal-Mart also may have been spooked by worries about lawsuits from wrongful death, unlawful imprisonment and other legal issues related to aggressively chasing down shoplifters. In March, Wal-Mart agreed to pay $750,000 to the family of a suspected shoplifter who suffocated to death as loss prevention workers held him down in a parking lot outside a store in Atascocita, Texas. The shoplifter died in August 2005 in a parking lot, according to published reports.


The change in policy came at the same time the company began using more part-time workers - in part because of a new scheduling system that matches staffing more closely to peak shopping hours - and shifting security personnel, analysts and critics say. That has left the discount chain without an experienced and loyal staff to monitor what's strolling out its back and front doors, analysts and some former employees supplied by WakeUpWalMart.com said.


"The business is being run by bean counters. I am shocked at the Spartan level of staffing," said Flickinger, managing director of Strategic Resources Group. He added, "There are also morale issues. Workers feel that the company is taking care of itself."
While Wal-Mart denies that it has cut anti-theft jobs overall, it said it has adjusted staffing to put more personnel in stores in high-crime areas and fewer in stores with less trouble.


However, Dan Meyer, a former district loss prevention supervisor for several Wal-Mart stores in New Jersey disputes that. Meyer, who said he accepted a buyout last fall after almost 12 years with the company, said Wal-Mart reduced the number of loss prevention staff in each store last year and redesigned their jobs in a way that was less active and more administrative.


"That's why shrinkage is up," he said.


Meyer said he averaged 13 apprehensions a month during most of his time at Wal-Mart. That number dropped to three to four a month in the months before he left last October. Meyer said his totals dropped because there were fewer security staff and less support from his managers for aggressively rooting out theft.
WakeUpWalMart.com has linked rising theft to its claims that the company offers skimpy pay and benefits. Wal-Mart also faces a class-action lawsuit alleging female workers were passed over for men in pay and promotions.


"I am not the type to steal, but because we are so mistreated, when I saw things I just didn't do anything," said Gina Tuley, a former Wal-Mart bakery worker, who quit her job at the Seagoville, Texas, store in March. A big complaint was that her hours had been cut, reducing her take-home pay.


Wal-Mart defends its pay as competitive and its health care coverage as better than most retailers, and has denied gender discrimination.


Simley said an April survey of employees that showed rising job satisfaction suggests Tuley's attitude does not represent most Wal-Mart associates.


Even so, several former associates said in interviews that their bonuses have declined because of the rise in inventory losses. Wal-Mart's Simley disputes these claims, saying shrinkage was dropped from the bonus formula about a dozen years ago. It was Walton's idea to tie associates' bonuses to their store's theft levels to give

them a vested interest in keeping theft in check.
Tuley said her bonus last year was $300, down from $800 the previous year.


Still, she said, "People would walk out with bags of merchandise ... I heard the alarms go off and people wouldn't even look," she added.

 

This was found at AZCentral.com