Wednesday, March 27, 2013

CocoonCare Chicago: A Holistic Wellness Center for Pregnant ...

Your date nights and Sunday brunches with the girls have been replaced with play dates and nap times. While pregnancy and new mommyhood bring one of life?s greatest and most beautiful experiences, they are also accompanied by significant changes and transitions. With that in mind, CocoonCare?- Chicago?s only fitness and wellness center targeted to new and expectant moms ? was born. Founders Kiran Advani and Alok Jhamani fused their holistic approach to maternal health with a supportive and nurturing environment emphasizing comfort and community. ?When I was pregnant, I wanted a place where I could feel comfortable not only exercising, but learning about all components of pregnancy ? keeping my baby healthy, preparing for labor and delivery, and even socializing with other like-minded women,? Advani says.

Located in the River North neighborhood, CocoonCare?offers a variety of classes to help moms? bodies get strong and healthy before and after baby. Programming includes pre- and post-natal body toning, belly breathing, pre- and post-natal yoga and Pilates, as well as workshops on lactation and nutrition. All classes and workshops are led by certified experts. With the well-being of Mom always in mind, CocoonCare?plans to offer on-site childcare this spring so moms can continue their programs and classes as well as massages to soothe the body and soul.

In addition to the exercise and education programming and offerings, a driving principle of the center is community.??One of our goals is making connections with other women,? says Advani. ?Creating a ?village? to raise our children, seeing the same people again and again removes the awkwardness from forming a friendship. At CocoonCare, women consistently see each other and the awkwardness is gone. We created a lounge specifically for our clients to sit, chat and connect!?

CocoonCare?s three guiding principles says it all: strength, knowledge and sisterhood. It doesn?t get much more Cheeky than that.

For more information and updated class times, please visit www.cocooncare.com.

Source: http://cheekychicago.com/cocoon-care-chicago

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Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Wells Fargo bank site attack disrupts service

Wells Fargo's online banking site was experiencing problems Tuesday, with a denial-of-service attack likely the reason behind the slowdowns for some customers trying to access the site.

"Today we?ve seen an unusually high volume of website traffic which we believe is a denial of service attack," a bank spokesperson told NBC News. "The vast majority of customers are not impacted and customer information is safe."

Customers who are having problems logging on are encouraged to do keep trying, "as the disruption is usually intermittent," the spokesperson said. "We apologize to our customers for any inconvenience."

This isn't the first time the bank site has been under a denial-of-service attack, where hackers inundate a website with traffic to delay or disrupt it.

Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Ally Financial, and regional bank BB&T have also been hit with attacks in the past year. Sources have previously told NBC News and Reuters that the attacks may be part of an effort by Iranian hackers against major U.S. financial institutions and other corporate entities.

Last fall, a financial services industry group, the Financial Services Information Sharing and Analysis Center, issued an alert about the attacks to members, raising the threat level from "elevated" to high," because of "credible intelligence" about the potential for such attacks.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653377/s/2a05942a/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Ctechnolog0Cwells0Efargo0Ebank0Esite0Eattack0Edisrupts0Eservice0E1C90A87970A/story01.htm

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WatchESPN streaming reaches AT&T U-verse subscribers

U-verse News: WatchESPN Now Available to AT&T U-verse Customers

AT&T and ESPN today announced the availability of WatchESPN, enabling AT&T U-verse? customers to access ESPN networks live online at WatchESPN.com, on smartphones and tablets via the award-winning WatchESPN app, and through ESPN on Xbox LIVE to Gold members.

Just weeks ahead of the start of the MLB season and in advance of major sporting events like The Masters and NBA Playoffs, customers who receive ESPN's linear networks as part of their AT&T U-verse TV subscription can now stream live events and programming from ESPN, ESPN2, ESPN3 and ESPNU from the convenience of their computers, smartphones, tablets or Xbox. Additionally, customers can enjoy ESPN Goal Line and ESPN Buzzer Beater through WatchESPN when those channels are in season.

Customers with a supported smartphone or tablet can download the free app by visiting the iTunes App Store, Google Play Store or Amazon Appstore for Android. The app will prompt customers to enter their AT&T U-verse subscriber credentials before accessing live content from WatchESPN. On computers, customers can visit http://watchespn.com/activate/att and provide their AT&T U-verse IDs and passwords to access live programming online. Additionally, Xbox LIVE Gold members can download the ESPN experience and verify their subscription for access through their Xbox.

Disney Junior will be available to AT&T U-verse TV subscribers on Friday, March 29.

Additional authenticated products that include WATCH Disney Channel, WATCH Disney XD and WATCH Disney Junior ? accessible across a variety of platforms and devices both in-home and out-of-the-home ? will be coming soon to AT&T U-verse TV subscribers.

WatchESPN is available for use on the following mobile devices: iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad (must have OS 4.0 or later), and Android phones and tablets running version 2.3.3 and above.

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/25/watchespn-streaming-reaches-att-u-verse-subscribers/

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End of Iraq, Afghan wars offers opportunities

WIESBADEN, Germany (AP) ? The end of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan will give America's ground forces in Europe a chance to review and refocus training at a time of financial cutbacks throughout the military, the top U.S. soldier in Europe said Monday.

Nearly one-third of the U.S. Army units based in Europe fought in the Iraq and Afghan conflicts, and an armored cavalry squadron is due to rotate to Afghanistan this year for what is likely to be a final tour. President Barack Obama intends to withdraw all U.S. combat forces from Afghanistan by the end of next year.

Frequent rotations to combat zones over the past decade have strained U.S. forces and their families, including the nearly 40,000 soldiers stationed in Europe, mostly in southwestern Germany and Vicenza in northern Italy.

Lt. Gen. Donald M. Campbell, who assumed command of U.S. Army Europe in January, said the end of combat rotations will enable his command to "step back and look at training" in more creative ways, including computer simulations and using facilities of other NATO members.

It will also enable the U.S. force in Europe to accelerate its primary mission, which is to train with other NATO members to bolster the alliance's overall military capability.

The U.S. Army's presence in Europe is down dramatically from the Cold War, when about 250,000 ground troops faced off against the Soviet Union and its allies along the Iron Curtain. Although all Soviet forces returned home when the Cold War ended in the early 1990s, the U.S. maintained a force in Europe, in part as evidence of the U.S. commitment to Europe and to hold together the NATO alliance after the Soviet-dominated Warsaw Pact disappeared.

Forward-based troops also enabled the United States to maintain a credible force near flashpoints in the Middle East and North Africa.

Campbell said recent defense cutbacks so far have not forced the U.S. to scale down faster than planned, but commanders were mindful of the need to control spending. The U.S. will reduce its ground force in Europe to 30,000 by 2017.

It is also moving its longtime headquarters from Heidelberg to Wiesbaden, located west of Frankfurt, and plans to cluster remaining forces around seven towns ? five in Germany, as well as Vicenza and Chievres in Belgium.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/end-iraq-afghan-wars-offers-opportunities-141125822.html

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Monday, March 25, 2013

Girl Meets World: Cory & Topanga's Wedding Rings Revealed!

Source:

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Elvis Dumervil, Ravens Agree To Deal: Broncos Lose Out On Defensive End To Baltimore

DENVER -- Elvis Dumervil is putting his seven seasons in Denver and one bizarre fax fiasco behind him after agreeing to a five-year deal with the Baltimore Ravens on Sunday.

Dumervil tweeted his thanks to the Broncos and team owner Pat Bowlen shortly after rejecting the club's latest contract proposal.

"Can't say enough about the Broncos fans, my great teammates, equipment staff, training staff, media staff, Mr. Bowlen, Coach Fox, John Elway and the city of Denver. Its been an unforgettable 7 years. I am looking fwd to this next chapter of my career," Dumervil wrote.

So, after a second stinging loss to the Ravens this offseason, the Broncos find themselves in need of a new pass-rushing partner for Von Miller.

Elway, the Broncos football operations chief, issued a statement Sunday saying the Broncos "worked diligently over the last week" to re-sign Dumervil, a defensive captain, but "are now moving forward without him."

Free agents John Abraham, 34, and Dwight Freeney, 33, visited the Broncos last week and it's expected one of them will sign on soon to replace Dumervil, 29.

Dumervil collected 63 1/2 sacks in seven seasons in Denver, three of which ended with Pro Bowl berths. He was scheduled to fly from his offseason home in Miami to Baltimore to take his physical Tuesday and sign his new contract.

On March 15, Dumervil waffled but finally agreed to reduce his 2013 salary from $12 million to $8 million in Denver as part of a renegotiated three-year, $30 million contract. But the paperwork didn't reach the NFL offices in time and the Broncos were forced to release him to avoid having to pay him the full $12 million for next season.

Dumervil fired agent Marty Magid after that deadline debacle and hired agent Tom Condon.

The Broncos issued a new contract proposal to Dumervil and his new agent, but the Ravens swooped in and beat Denver for the second time this year ? they also upset the AFC's top-seeded Broncos 38-35 in double-overtime in January on their way to winning the Super Bowl.

The Ravens have suffered several blows since beating San Francisco for the Lombardi Trophy, losing wide receiver Anquan Boldin, safeties Ed Reed and Bernard Pollard, cornerback Cary Williams, linebackers Paul Kruger and Dannell Ellerbe and guard Bobbie Williams while also bidding star linebacker Ray Lewis and center Matt Birk good luck in their retirements.

Luring Dumervil ? and taking him from their AFC rivals ? eases some of that sting.

The Broncos, on the other hand, have been one of the league's big spenders in free agency, acquiring wide receiver Wes Welker, right guard Louis Vasquez, defensive tackle Terrance Knighton, cornerback Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie and linebacker Stewart Bradley ? all of whom could be starting for a team that went 13-3 in Peyton Manning's first year in Denver last season.

The debacle with Dumervil put a big blemish on the Broncos' otherwise stellar offseason makeover. Dumervil agreed to a $4 million pay cut two weeks ago but when the paperwork didn't get submitted on time, the Broncos had to cut Dumervil or else his $12 million salary for next season would have been fully guaranteed.

By cutting him, they took a nearly $5 million salary cap hit for next season, which factored into the latest offer from Denver that Dumervil ultimately rejected in favor of Baltimore's.

"As we have from the start of this process, we worked diligently over the last week to find a way for Elvis Dumervil to remain a Denver Bronco," Elway said in a statement Sunday. "Although we made multiple contract offers to Elvis after being forced to release him, we were unable to reach an agreement and are now moving forward without him.

"Elvis was a team captain and a talented player who made a great impact during his seven seasons in Denver. I appreciate all of his effort on the field and the work he did in the community," Elway added. "I wish Elvis all the best as he continues his NFL career."

Although Dumervil was often replaced on early downs last season, the Broncos weren't eager to jettison him. But they thought his $12 million salary for next season was out of whack, so they asked him to take a cut in pay. Dumervil earned $14 million in each of the last two seasons, part of a six-year, $61.5 million deal he signed in 2010 shortly before missing that entire season with a torn chest muscle.

Dumervil is a popular teammate who will be sorely missed in Denver, both on and off the field.

"I concern myself with everything and the locker room's a huge one because you're dealing with players," coach John Fox said at the NFL owners meetings last week. "But I think our guys understand there's two sides of football. ... I don't know if business is my favorite part or anybody else's favorite part. But it's a part of football and it usually occurs in the offseason. So, they understand that and I think guys separate that."

Dumervil, a fourth-round draft pick out of Louisville in 2006, had 20 1/2 sacks the last two seasons, making two trips to the Pro Bowl alongside Miller, the NFL's Defensive Rookie of the Year in 2011 who had 18 1/2 sacks last year, breaking the franchise record of 17 set by Dumervil in 2009.

Together they were dubbed "Doom & Gloom," and were the most prolific pair of pass-rushers in the league over the last two years.

Freeney, who played a decade with Manning in Indianapolis, has 107 1/2 career sacks in 11 seasons, all with the Colts. He had 13 1/2 sacks over the last two seasons.

Abraham has 122 sacks in 13 NFL season, six with the New York Jets and the last seven years with the Atlanta Falcons. He collected 19 1/2 sacks over the last two years.

___

Follow AP Pro Football Writer Arnie Melendrez Stapleton on Twitter: http://twitter.com/arniestapleton

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/25/elvis-dumervil-ravens-deal-broncos-lose_n_2948006.html

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Nerve mapping technology improves surgery for compressed nerves

Mar. 22, 2013 ? Nerve mapping technology allows surgeons to determine whether surgery has been effective for relieving pressure from compressed nerves, which often function poorly and cause sciatica or pain and weakness in muscles supplied by the nerve.

In a small study involving 42 patients at Henry Ford Hospital, lead author and orthopaedic surgeon Stephen Bartol, M.D., says that mechanomyography, or MMG, is effective with measuring nerve function and determining whether nerves are compressed. MMG, which functions by detecting muscle movement and sending real-time alerts to surgeons, measures the performance of nerves during surgery, thereby reducing the risk of inadequate surgery and eliminating the need for additional surgery.

While encouraged by his findings, Dr. Bartol urged caution that more research is needed involving larger patient populations.

"Traditionally, when we operated on someone who has nerve decompression, we didn't know if we had done enough during the surgery at the time. It was basically wait and see after the patient recovered," Dr. Bartol says. "With the MMG tool we can differentiate between normal and compressed nerves, and gauge the severity of the compression."

The study is being presented Friday at the American Academy of Orthoapedic Surgeons' annual meeting in Chicago.

It is estimated that back pain will affect eight of 10 people in their lifetime, and one-quarter of U.S. adults report having back pain lasting at least one day in the past three months. With the rise in minimally invasive procedures, physicians are craving the need for an effective tool to monitor nerve function during surgery.

Conventionally, surgeons assess nerve decompression using direct visualization or a probe called a Woodson elevator, methods Dr. Bartol describes as "purely subjective" and prone to error. Another method electromyography, or EMG, which monitors the electrical response of muscle, is unreliable because electrical noise in the operating room makes it difficult to quantify nerve responses, Dr. Bartol says.

MMG, Dr. Bartol says, monitors the same physiological effects as EMG but uses smart mechanical sensors that are not susceptible to electrical interference. He says clear signals of muscle movement can be detected at low electrical current thresholds.

In the study, researchers sought to test the electrical threshold of stimulation of 64 nerves in 41 patients by direct contact prior to and after decompression, during which a small portion of bone over the nerve root is removed, enabling the nerve root to heal without hindrance. Stimulation started at 1mA electrical current and gradually increased until an MMG response was achieved.

The findings: ? Prior to decompression, 89 percent of nerves had an elevated median threshold of 4.89mA. ? After decompression, nerves had a median threshold of 2.08mA and 70 percent had normal threshold of 1mA. ? After decompression, all 64 nerves had measurable increases in MMG response. ? After decompression, 98 percent of nerves with abnormal pre-compression values had a drop in threshold greater than 1mA.

Dr. Bartol says these findings show that MMG technology "allows the surgeon to make better decisions in the operating room. Inadequate decompression means patients will continue to experience pain after surgery. Better nerve testing during surgery should translate to better outcomes."

The study was funded by Henry Ford Hospital.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Henry Ford Health System.

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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/MYk-pEAVUZA/130323152444.htm

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Sunday, March 24, 2013

Apple ID accounts reportedly vulnerable to password reset hack, forgot password page taken offline for maintenance

Apple ID accounts reportedly vulnerable to password reset hack, forgot password page taken offline for maintenance

Gaping security holes are a pretty terrifying thing, especially when they involve something as sensitive as your Apple ID. Sadly it seems that immediately after making the paranoid happy by instituting two-step authentication a pretty massive flaw in Cupertino's system was discovered and first reported by The Verge. Turns out you can reset any Apple ID password with nothing more than a person's email address and date of birth -- two pieces of information that are pretty easy to come across. There's a little more to the hack, but it's simple enough that even your non-tech savvy aunt or uncle could do it. After entering the target email address in the password reset form you can then select to answer security questions to validate your identity. The first task will be to enter a date of birth. If you enter that correctly then paste a particular URL into the address bar (which we will not be publishing for obvious reasons), press enter, then -- voilà -- instant password reset! Or, at least that's the story. While we were attempting to verify these claims Apple took down the password reset page for "maintenance." Though we've received no official confirmation from Apple, it seems the company is moving swiftly to shut down this particularly troublesome workaround before word of it spreads too far.

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Comments

Source: The Verge

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/lgVNHKINtZM/

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February 25, 2013:
RT's Oscar Picks 2013 - Results
We at Rotten Tomatoes freely admit we're not the world's greatest Oscar prognosticators. Still, we...
February 24, 2013:
2013 Academy Awards Winners
The 85th Academy Awards are scheduled to take place on Sunday, February 24th in Los Angeles, and if...

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/django_unchained_2012/

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Who owns the Water? A tale of two Schools - fm4.ORF.at

22. 3. 2013 - 15:41

Reality Check Special: Chris Pearson of the NGO Build Africa tells us how his organization brings clean water to rural communities of Kenya & Uganda.

Build Africa is an NGO which works in East Africa, in particular, building classrooms, school programmes and helping with essential systems like water supplies in rural Kenya & Uganda. And they have a Water Campaign which is all about bringing clean water to children in rural communities. As our Saturday Reality Check includes the challenges developing countries often face, bringing clean water to their populations, we invited Chris Pearson of Build Africa to tell us about how his organization goes about its work.

Before and after the Build Africa tanks arrived

by Chris Pearson of Build Africa

"My name is Stephen and I am a 12 year old student at Kiatuni Primary School in the Machakos District of Kenya. I am sure that you have heard about the terrible problems we have with water in Kenya. The situation is very bad where I live, making life at school very difficult.

My parents are farmers who need to grow food to live. But the school gardens that they have helped to set up have failed to harvest because of a lack of water, as have their crops at home. As a result we no longer have meals every day. I have seen children sleeping in class because they have missed their breakfast and dinner the night before, while others don?t come in to school because they are looking for water with the elders."

Today 2.5 billion people in the world, including almost one billion children, live without even basic sanitation. Every 20 seconds, a child dies as a result of poor sanitation. That's 1.5 million preventable deaths each year. Source: Water Supply and sanitation Collaborative Council (WSSCC)

"Recently my friend was taken to hospital after he complained of stomach ache and diarrhoea. The teacher later told us that he was so desperate for water that he had been reduced to drinking water that was normally used for cleaning and washing. We have been warned in our health club about the dangers of dirty water, but sometimes there is no other water to drink."

In Kenya, diarrhoea kills over one in six children under the age of five, with unsafe water, poor sanitation and hygiene being the biggest risk factors related to this. Source: WHO (2010)

"I am anxious because I know that dirty water is one of the main causes of death in Africa, and most of the victims are young people like me. Also, in the past we had a rule that all pupils should take a bath and have their uniforms cleaned at least twice a week. But this is difficult because water is such a treasure in many homes. Children now often come to school dirty and smelling bad, with uniforms that need to be washed. But our parents need the water for cooking."

The UN suggests that each person needs 20-50 litres of water a day to ensure their basic needs for drinking, cooking and cleaning. Source: World Water Assessment Programme (WWAP)

"There are 250 boys and girls at the school and our parents sometimes need to use the water as well. I want to be in school rather than looking for water; I want my friends not to be tired and hungry; I want to spend my day at school learning about good things like English and science rather than terrible diseases like typhoid and dysentery."

A different school:

Water is life

Water brings a new life and new hope for children helped by the School Development Plan

Build Africa doesn?t believe in short fixes: we provide sustainable solutions in all areas of our work. That?s why we work with parents, teachers and pupils to identify the particular challenges facing each school, and develop a three year School Development Plan to tackle them. Understandably water and hygiene is high on most school lists, including Kiatuni?s.

Because of this partnership, the schools we work with have seen a dramatic rise in attendance and in the number of pupils going on to secondary school, not least because parents and staff form effective committees to take responsibility for the future maintenance and development of their boreholes and water tanks, as Mrs. Eunice Mutisya, headmistress at Kiatuni, was eager to tell us:

"The water tanks have now arrived and they are already having an impact on performance. Think how much better our pupils will perform now that we can use our new water supply for drinking, for washing the classrooms, in the kitchen and the toilets. We are also planning to develop the school garden so that we have a better range of vegetables (such as peas, maize and beans).

Our rainy seasons are unpredictable, but two of the three tanks are now full, while the other is filling up fast because of the current rains. When this is full we will have enough water to last us a year, especially since they are locked and supervised by a member of the School Management Committee.

Now the pupils can concentrate on their studies and turn up to school on time because they are not burdened with the search for water. They can even take water home if they are desperately in need and can use the water for construction, for example, saving their parents a trip to the river. Our community really has been transformed by our new water supply."

Reality Check's Saturday Special this week asks "Who Owns the Water", and looks at water problems and solutions in Africa, China, South America and Europe.

FM4 Reality Check Special

Saturday at 12.00, and after the show via Podcast or fm4.orf.at/realitycheck.

Source: http://fm4.orf.at/stories/1714783/

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Verizon Business Security Blog ? Blog Archive ? Weekly Intelligence ...

Dave Kennedy
March 22nd, 2013

On Wednesday afternoon, local time, the?Republic of Korea?suffered a cyber attack, perhaps?more than one. Analysis is still ongoing, but at this writing a?phishing attack?spread malware that contained a?logic bomb?with a trigger set for 2:00 p.m.The hard disks of infected systems were?corrupted. The volume of?bad intelligence?collected after this event was remarkable. Attribution is a hard problem and any reports of it in the first days should be treated with skepticism. Another cyber attack was revealed and reported by Hungary?s?CrySyS Lab?and?Kaspersky. It leveraged the support tool TeamViewer. Now called TeamSpy,?criminals operated a complex, but low profile campaign, for at least three years?and perhaps up to 8-1/2 years.? Neither the attack on the ROK nor TeamSpy seem to be especially sophisticated.?Norwegian telecom, Telnor?reported they were the victim of?industrial espionage. We?ve long recognized the potential for evil from unmanaged embedded devices, but we now have?intelligence?for how immense the problem really is.? Just because it?s bad, does not necessarily mean it?s also evil: customers of?Google,?Chase, and?LinkedIn?all suffered from noteworthy outages.

The paragraph above is taken from the executive summary of the RISK?Team?s weekly INTSUM report.Verizon security product customers should?access the full INTSUM via your portal.

?

Source: http://securityblog.verizonbusiness.com/2013/03/22/weekly-intelligence-summary-lead-paragraph-2013-03-22/

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Saturday, March 23, 2013

Spatial memory: Mapping blank spots in the cheeseboard maze

Mar. 21, 2013 ? IST Austria Professor Jozsef Csicsvari together with collaborators has succeeded in uncovering processes in which the formation of spatial memory is manifested in a map representation.

During learning, novel information is transformed into memory through the processing and encoding of information in neural circuits. In a recent publication in Neuron, IST Austria Professor Jozsef Csicsvari, together with his collaborator David Dupret at the University of Oxford, and Joseph O'Neill, postdoc in Csicsvari's group, uncovered a novel role for inhibitory interneurons in the rat hippocampus during the formation of spatial memory.

During spatial learning, space is represented in the hippocampus through plastic changes in the connections between neurons. Jozsef Csicsvari and his collaborators investigate spatial learning in rats using the cheeseboard maze apparatus. This apparatus contains many holes, some of which are selected to hide food in order to test spatial memory. During learning trials, animals learn where the rewards are located, and after a period sleep, the researchers test whether the animal can recall these reward locations. In previous work, they and others have shown that memory of space is encoded in the hippocampus through changes in the firing of excitatory pyramidal cells, the so-called "place cells."

A place cell fires when the animal arrives at a particular location. Normally, place cells always fire at the same place in an environment; however, during spatial learning the place of their firing can change to encode where the reward is found, forming memory maps.

In their new publication, the researchers investigated the timescale of map formation, showing that during spatial learning, pyramidal neuron maps representing previous and new reward locations "flicker," with both firing patterns occurring. At first, old maps and new maps fluctuate, as the animal is unsure whether the location change is transient or long-lasting. At a later stage, the new map and so the relevant new information dominates.

The scientists also investigated the contribution of inhibitory interneuron circuits to learning. They show that these interneurons, which are extensively interconnected with pyramidal cells, change their firing rates during map formation and flickering: some interneurons fire more often when the new pyramidal map fires, while others fire less often with the new map. These changes in interneuron firing were only observed during learning, not during sleep or recall. The scientists also show that the changes in firing rate are due to map-specific changes in the connections between pyramidal cells and interneurons. When a pyramidal cell is part of a new map, the strengthening of a connection with an interneuron causes an increase in the firing of this interneuron. Conversely, when a pyramidal cell is not part of a new map, the weakening of the connection with the interneuron causes a decrease in interneuron firing rate. Both, the increase and the decrease in firing rate can be beneficial for learning, allowing the regulation of plasticity between pyramidal cells and controlling the timing in their firing.

The new research therefore shows that not only excitatory neurons modify their behaviour and exhibit plastic connection changes during learning, but also the inhibitory interneuron circuits. The researchers suggest that inhibitory interneurons could be involved in map selection -- helping one map dominate and take over during learning, so that the relevant information is encoded.

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Journal Reference:

  1. David Dupret, Joseph O?Neill, Jozsef Csicsvari. Dynamic Reconfiguration of Hippocampal Interneuron Circuits during Spatial Learning. Neuron, 2013; DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2013.01.033

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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/5uyDGO3mco8/130322104258.htm

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US patent change angers inventors

INVENTORS in the US have caught up with the rest of the world ? but many don't like it.

Until last week the US Patent and Trademark Office ran a first-to-invent system. Date-stamped notes proved when a gadget was invented, trouncing any rival who might have filed first.

The rest of the world's patent offices operate a first-to-file system, in which the first inventor to file a valid patent gets the rights to the idea. To simplify patenting in global markets, on 16 March the US came into line with the rest of the world, and now operates a first-to-file system.

Small inventors complain that the loss of date stamping will help mega corporations invent around their ideas and patent first.

But that happens already, says Peter Finnie, a patent attorney in London: "First-to-invent favoured major corporations too because they are the ones with the resources to accurately record their work and get it legally countersigned."

This article appeared in print under the headline "A patent change"

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Giant squid all one species, study finds

Giant squid: Found in deep oceans all over the globe, the giant squid shows?surprisingly?little genetic diversity, say researchers.

By Stephanie Pappas,?LiveScience Senior Writer / March 21, 2013

Scientists estimate that giant squid can grow up to about 60 feet (18 meters) long, including their massive tentacles.

Mark Norman

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"Though they roam the deep sea around the globe, enigmatic giant squid are all part of the same species, new research finds.

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The new study reveals that the genetic diversity of?"giant squid?(Architeuthis) is remarkably low ? far lower than that of other marine species examined, said study researcher Tom Gilbert of the University of Copenhagen. The findings suggest that the squid intermingle and mate across the globe.

"The results are extremely surprising," Gilbert told LiveScience.

Monster of the deep

Giant squid are mysterious creatures. They dwell in the deep ocean, making them difficult to observe in their natural habitats. In fact, no one had?"observed a live giant squid?in the wild until 2004. The?"first video of a live giant squid?wasn't released until this year. The animals appear to grow as long as 60 feet (18 meters) and are carnivores that prey on fish and other squid.

Most of what scientists know about the creatures comes from corpses found washed up on beaches or in sperm whale stomachs (the giant squid are apparently a common whale meal). Once in a while, a fishing trawler will entangle a giant squid in its nets. No one had ever published data on giant squid genetics before now.

Gilbert and his colleagues wanted to know if genetics could open any windows into giant squid life, particularly the size and diversity of their populations. No one even knew for sure how many giant squid species might be out there. Estimates ranged from one all the way up to 21, though the highest numbers were unlikely. ["Release the Kraken! Giant Squid Photos]

Squid genes

The researchers extracted DNA from 43 soft-tissue samples from giant squid. Some of the samples came from?"squid found in whale stomachs?or washed ashore, whereas others were frozen samples from giant squid dredged up by fishing trawlers. The scientists analyzed mitochondrial DNA, or mDNA, which is found in tiny cell structures called mitochondria. These structures help cells convert energy into a usable form, and their DNA is separate from the DNA in a cell's nucleus; mDNA is inherited from the maternal line.

The mDNA sequences were extremely similar among all samples, the researchers found. The samples exhibited more than 20 times less genetic diversity than other local squid populations, Gilbert said, and there was no population structure. The results suggest that giant squid are all one species. Even more, they're all part of the same big population, meaning there don't seem to be groups of giant squid that interact only with one another. Geography doesn't seem to be a barrier to their breeding, to the extent that any giant squid in the world is a potential partner for any other giant squid in the global oceans.

That's amazing, Gilbert said, given that?"giant squid?vary substantially in body form and live everywhere except at the poles.

"It's very, very hard to explain," he said.

The researchers are now working to confirm the results using nuclear DNA from the giant squid, in order to rule out that possibility that the similarities in mDNA could be some quirk of evolution. If the results hold, they suggest the giant squid may have undergone a recent population expansion and that the young squid larvae disperse over massive distances, traveling randomly across the globe.

"There are huge unexplored questions," Gilbert said.

The researchers report their findings today (March 19) in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

Follow Stephanie Pappas on?"Twitter?and?"Google+.?Follow us?"@livescience,?"Facebook?&?"Google+. Original article on?"LiveScience.com

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

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/qf3GrbtHwVA/Giant-squid-all-one-species-study-finds

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Friday, March 22, 2013

Lebanese state news agency says PM to resign

BEIRUT (AP) ? Lebanon's state news agency says Prime Minister Najib Mikati will announce his resignation.

The National News Agency said late Friday that Mikati would soon give a speech announcing his decision, but gave no further details.

Lebanese media have speculated that Mikati would quit his post due to a parliamentary impasse over the extension of the tenure of Lebanon's police chief, Maj. Gen. Ashraf Rifi.

Shiite militant group Hezbollah, which dominates the parliament, considers Rifi a foe and has said it won't support the extension.

Mikati's resignation would need to be accepted by President Michel Suleiman before it becomes official.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lebanese-state-news-agency-says-pm-resign-185318701.html

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Senate vote: OK $85 billion cuts, avert shutdown

FILE - In this March 18, 2013 file photo, House Budget Committee Chairman Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis. is seen on Capitol Hill in Washington. The Senate pressed ahead Wednesday on a huge, bipartisan spending bill aimed at keeping the government running through September and ruling out the chance of a government shutdown later this month. The developments in the Senate come as the House resumed debate on the budget for next year and beyond. Republicans are pushing a plan that promises sharp cuts to federal health care programs and domestic agency operating budgets as the price for balancing the budget in a decade. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

FILE - In this March 18, 2013 file photo, House Budget Committee Chairman Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis. is seen on Capitol Hill in Washington. The Senate pressed ahead Wednesday on a huge, bipartisan spending bill aimed at keeping the government running through September and ruling out the chance of a government shutdown later this month. The developments in the Senate come as the House resumed debate on the budget for next year and beyond. Republicans are pushing a plan that promises sharp cuts to federal health care programs and domestic agency operating budgets as the price for balancing the budget in a decade. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

FILE - In this Jan. 31, 2013 file photo, Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo. speaks on Capitol Hill in Washington. The Senate pressed ahead Wednesday on a huge, bipartisan spending bill aimed at keeping the government running through September and ruling out the chance of a government shutdown later this month. Blunt said he's been promised a vote on an amendment ? eagerly sought by the meatpacking and poultry industries ? that would offer them relief from food inspector furloughs that threaten to intermittently shutter plants. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

Deputy Commerce Secretary for Resource Management Hari Sastry, left, looks over documents on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, March 19, 2013, during a break in his testimony in a joint hearing on sequestration held by House Oversight and Government Reform Committee's subcommittee on Economic Growth, Job Creation and Regulatory Affairs, and the subcommittee on Federal Workforce, U.S. Postal Service and the Census. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

(AP) ? The Senate approved legislation Wednesday to lock in $85 billion in widely decried spending cuts aimed at restraining soaring federal deficits ? and to avoid a government shutdown just a week away. President Barack Obama's fellow Democrats rejected a call to reopen White House tours scrapped because of the tightened spending.

Federal meat inspectors were spared furloughs, but more than 100 small and medium air traffic facilities were left exposed to possible closure as the two parties alternately clashed and cooperated over proposals to take the edge off across-the-board spending cuts that took effect on March 1.

Final House approval of the measure is likely as early as Thursday. Obama's signature is a certainty, meaning the cuts will remain in place at least through the end of the budget year on Sept. 30 ? even though he and lawmakers in both parties have criticized them as random rather than targeted. Obama argued strongly against them in campaign-style appearances, predicting painful consequences, before they began taking effect, and Republicans objected to impacts on Pentagon spending.

Without changes, the $85 billion in cuts for the current year will swell to nearly $1 trillion over a decade, enough to make at least a small dent in economy-threatening federal deficits but requiring program cuts that lawmakers in both parties say are unsustainable politically. As a result, negotiations are possible later in the year to replace the reductions with different savings.

The administration as well as Republicans picked and chose its spots in arguing for flexibility in this year's cuts.

"My hope is that gets done," Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said earlier in the week of the effort to prevent layoffs among inspectors that could disrupt the nation's food supply chain. "If it does not, come mid-July we will furlough meat inspectors," he added, departing from the administration's general position that flexibility should ease all the cuts or none at all.

The final vote was 73-26, with 51 Democrats, 20 Republicans and two independents in favor and 25 Republicans and Democratic Sen. Jon Tester of Montana opposed.

Political considerations were on ample display in both houses as lawmakers labored over measures relating to spending priorities, both for this year and a decade into the future.

Rep. Mark Mulvaney, R-S.C., said he had wanted the House to vote on Obama's own budget, but he noted the president hadn't yet released one. 'It's with great regret ... that I'm not able to offer" a presidential budget for a vote, he said. He added he had wanted to vote on a placeholder ? "34 pages full of question marks" ? but House rules prevented it.

Minority Democrats advanced a plan that calls for $1 trillion in higher taxes, $500 billion in spending cuts over a decade and a $200 billion economic stimulus package. Republicans voted it down, 253-165.

They are expected to approve their own very different blueprint on Thursday.

It calls for $4.6 trillion in spending cuts over a decade and no tax increases, a combination that projects to a balanced budget in 10 years' time. That spending plan would indeed be simply a blueprint, lacking any actual control over federal spending.

The issues were grittier in the Senate, where lawmakers grappled with the immediate impact of across-the-board cuts on individual programs.

Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., a deficit hawk, said he wanted to reopen the White House tours, shut down since earlier in the month. He said his proposal would take about $8 million from the National Heritage Partnership Program and apply it toward "opening up the tours at the White House, opening up Yellowstone National Park and the rest of the national parks."

White House press secretary Jay Carney told reporters previously the decision the cancel the White House tours was made by the Secret Service because "it would be, in their view, impossible to staff those tours; that they would have to withdraw staff from those tours in order to avoid more furloughs and overtime pay cuts."

But in remarks on the Senate floor, Coburn said, "This is a Park Service issue, not a Secret Service issue."

Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., said the funds involved in Coburn's amendment would not go to the Secret Service, and as a result the tours "would not be affected." He also said the Heritage program, a public-private partnership, helps produce economic development and should not be cut.

The vote was 54-45 against the proposal. Montana Sen. Max Baucus, whose state borders on Yellowstone National Park, was the only Democrat to vote with Republicans.

The Park Service has announced some parks may open late to automobile traffic this spring because budget cuts have reduced funds available to clear roads of winter snow.

The overall legislation locks in the $85 billion in spending cuts through the end of the budget year, yet provides several departments and agencies with flexibility in coping with them. It extends flexibility to the Pentagon, the departments of Homeland Security, Veterans Affairs, Justice, State and Commerce and the Food and Drug Administration.

But bipartisanship has its limits, and in private negotiations Republicans rejected Democratic attempts to provide flexibility for the rest of the government.

That set off a scramble among lawmakers to round up support for changes on a case-by-case basis.

The provision to prevent furloughs for federal meat inspectors had the support of industry as well as from both sides of the political aisle and cleared without a vote. It was supported by Sen. Mark Pryor of Arkansas, a Democrat seeking re-election next year, and Sen. Roy Blunt of Missouri, who quietly helped Democrats round up the votes they needed to clear the legislation over a procedural hurdle.

The effect was to transfer $55 million to the Agriculture Department's Food Safety and Inspection Service from other accounts within the department, including deferred maintenance.

"Without this funding, every meat, poultry, and egg processing facility in the country would be forced to shut down for up to two weeks," said Blunt. "That means high food prices and less work for the hardworking Americans who work in these facilities nationwide."

In contrast to Blunt, Sen. Jerry Moran, R-Kansas, opposed Democrats when they sought to overcome procedural hurdles earlier in the week.

In the days since, he repeatedly refused to let the bill advance unless he was given a chance to cancel about $50 million in cuts aimed at contract employees at more than 170 air traffic facilities around the country. In the end, his amendment was jettisoned without a vote.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-03-20-Budget%20Battle/id-cddf66236ea74bad8b97567ebc04c787

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Thursday, March 21, 2013

Novel insights into the evolution of protein networks

Mar. 21, 2013 ? System-wide networks of proteins are indispensable for organisms. Function and evolution of these networks are among the most fascinating research questions in biology. Bioinformatician Thomas Rattei, University of Vienna, and physicist Hernan Makse, City University New York (CUNY), have reconstructed ancestral protein networks. The results are of high interest not only for evolutionary research but also for the interpretation of genome sequence data.

Recently, the researchers published their paper in the online journal PLOS ONE.

The cells of all organisms consist mostly of proteins, which develop various functions through their complex interactions. These functions range from metabolism, maintenance and control of the cellular structure to the exchange of signals with other cells and the environment. Proteins rarely act alone -- only their system-wide network makes organisms viable. "The knowledge about function and evolution of these protein networks is currently one of the most fascinating questions in biology and relevant e.g. also to cancer research," explains Thomas Rattei, Head of the Department of Computational Systems Biology at the University Center Althanstrasse.

In pursuit of the blueprint of protein networks

The combination of 20 different building blocks -- amino acids -- results in an enormous variety of theoretically possible protein variants; many more than the estimated number of stars in the universe. The random formation of an interaction between proteins seems therefore extremely unlikely. Thomas Rattei, Professor of In-Silico Genomics at the University of Vienna, and Hernan Makse, Professor of Physics at the City University New York (CUNY), and their teams investigate how complex and manifold protein networks could still evolve in present-day organisms.

Starting point of the joint research project was a hypothesis emphasising the importance of the duplication of proteins in the course of evolution. If the gene encoding a protein is duplicated in the genome, which often happens in evolution, original and copy will interact with the same partners in the protein network. Once original and copy diverge over time, novel proteins with individual features and own partners in the network will emerge. Interactions in the network would thereby not be newly created but evolve through duplication and divergence from simpler ancestors.

Protein networks of extinct ancestors were reconstructed

The two workgroups around bioinformatician Thomas Rattei and physicist Hernan Makse tested and improved this hypothesis in an elaborate computational experiment. They developed a novel method for the reconstruction of protein networks of extinct evolutionary ancestors from the genomes and networks of present-day species. Data of seven species from various domains of life were used: from bacteria, fungi, plants, animals to humans.

Present-day networks -- complex structures through simple mechanisms

The comparison of these reconstructed ancient protein networks yielded a surprisingly clear result: the present-day networks can be explained almost exclusively through the mechanism of duplication and divergence. Novel interactions between proteins emerge on rare occasions. This principle seems to be universal in the evolution of species as it was confirmed by the data obtained from all species analysed in this study. This principle could also explain the dynamics of other biological networks and it explains special features of protein networks such as self-similarity (fractality) in a straightforward way.

Useful for the interpretation of genome sequences and evolutionary biology

The results of the joint research project of the University of Vienna and CUNY will not only be relevant for evolutionary biology. They particularly support the interpretation of genome sequence data, which has become a powerful tool in many areas of biology and medicine in the last years. This is also the goal of many other current research projects of the Department of Computational Systems Biology, which focuses on research on pathogens, microbial communities and molecular interactions between species adopting a system-oriented approach.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Vienna, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Yuliang Jin, Dmitrij Turaev, Thomas Weinmaier, Thomas Rattei, Hern?n A. Makse. The Evolutionary Dynamics of Protein-Protein Interaction Networks Inferred from the Reconstruction of Ancient Networks. PLoS ONE, 2013; 8 (3): e58134 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0058134

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/biochemistry/~3/LlArhdbutao/130321110929.htm

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Quantum computers counting on carbon nanotubes

Mar. 21, 2013 ? Carbon nanotubes can be used as quantum bits for quantum computers. A study by physicists at the Technische Universitaet Muenchen (TUM) has shown how nanotubes can store information in the form of vibrations. Up to now, researchers have experimented primarily with electrically charged particles. Because nanomechanical devices are not charged, they are much less sensitive to electrical interference.

Using quantum mechanical phenomena, computers could be much more powerful than their classical digital predecessors. Scientists all over the world are working to explore the basis for quantum computing. To date most systems are based on electrically charged particles that are held in an "electromagnetic trap." A disadvantage of these systems is that they are very sensitive to electromagnetic interference and therefore need extensive shielding. Physicists at the Technische Universitaet Muenchen have now found a way for information to be stored and quantum mechanically processed in mechanical vibrations.

Playing a nano-guitar

A carbon nanotube that is clamped at both ends can be excited to oscillate. Like a guitar string, it vibrates for an amazingly long time. "One would expect that such a system would be strongly damped, and that the vibration would subside quickly," says Simon Rips, first author of the publication. "In fact, the string vibrates more than a million times. The information is thus retained up to one second. That is long enough to work with."

Since such a string oscillates among many physically equivalent states, the physicists resorted to a trick: an electric field in the vicinity of the nanotube ensures that two of these states can be selectively addressed. The information can then be written and read optoelectronically. "Our concept is based on available technology," says Michael Hartmann, head of the Emmy Noether research group Quantum Optics and Quantum Dynamics at the TU Muenchen. "It could take us a step closer to the realization of a quantum computer."

The research was supported by the German Research Council (DFG) within the Emmy-Noether program and SFB 631.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Technische Universitaet Muenchen.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Simon Rips and Michael J. Hartmann,. Quantum Information Processing with Nanomechanical Qubits. Physical Review Letters, 110, 1205034 (2013) DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.110.120503

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/electricity/~3/wGXmjS4N5b0/130321141514.htm

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Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Syrian opposition elects Texan as new leader

ISTANBUL (AP) ? Syria's opposition coalition early Tuesday elected a little-known American-educated IT manager and Islamic activist to head an interim government to administer areas seized by rebel forces from President Bashar Assad's troops.

Ghassan Hitto received 35 votes out of 48 ballots cast by the opposition Syrian National Coalition's 63 active members during a meeting in Istanbul. The results were read aloud by coalition member Hisham Marwa to applause from a few dozen of his colleagues who had waited until after 1 a.m. to hear the results.

"I miss my wife and children and I look forward to seeing them soon," said Hitto, who has lived in the United States for decades and recently moved from Texas to Turkey to help coordinate aid to rebel-held areas.

When asked what his interim government's first priority would be, Hitto said he planned to give a speech later Tuesday outlining his plans.

Coalition members hope the new government will unite the rebels fighting Assad's forces on the ground and provide services to Syrians living in rebel-held areas, many of which have been battered by the country's civil war and suffer acute shortages of food, electricity and medical services.

But the new government faces huge challenges, starting with its ability to gain recognition from rebel factions on the ground.

As rebels have progressed in northern and eastern Syria, a patchwork of rebel groups and local councils have sought to fill the void left by the government's withdrawal by organizing security patrols, reopening bakeries and running courts and prisons. It is unclear if these groups, many of which have taken charge of their own towns, will accept an outside authority, especially if it is headed by someone who has spent decades abroad.

"How can a civilian come and tell these fighters on the ground, 'Drop your weapons. It's my turn to rule'?" asked Adib Shishakly, the coalition's representative to a group of Gulf nations known as the Gulf Cooperation Council, before the results were announced.

Hitto's election follows two failed attempts to form interim governments due to opposition infighting. Coalition members also say they received insufficient international support to allow them to project their authority to groups inside Syria. The new government could have the same problem.

"You have to find a way to cooperate with these groups and you can only rule by providing services, which requires funding," Shishakly said.

The council's creation of an interim government renders even more remote the chances of ending the war through negotiations with Assad's government ? the preferred solution of the U.S. and other world powers.

The U.S. has been cool to the idea of a rebel government to rival Assad's and supports a peace plan put forward by the U.N. and the Arab League that calls for the formation of a transitional government that represents both the regime and the opposition.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Tuesday reiterated his call for a political solution "while there is still time to prevent Syria's complete destruction."

On Monday, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry also said the Obama administration wants to leave the door open for a political solution. Regarding the rebels, he also said the U.S. would not "stand in the way of other countries that made a decision to provide arms, whether it's France or Britain or others."

French President Francois Hollande said last week that his country and Britain were pushing the European Union to lift its arms embargo on Syria so they can arm the rebels. Germany and other EU nations oppose the move, saying it will exacerbate the violence.

Coalition members in Istanbul rejected the idea of negotiating with the Syrian government before Assad leaves power.

"We've heard a lot about this 'peaceful solution,' but there are no positive, real steps from the regime," said Nizar Al Hrakey, a coalition member.

On Monday, the head of Syria's largest official rebel group, the Free Syrian Army, threw his weight behind the idea of an interim government.

"We consider it the only legal government in the country," Gen. Salim Idris told reporters in Istanbul.

However, Idris's authority within the country remains limited, with some of the most successful rebel groups on the ground rejecting his authority.

The Syrian government did not immediately comment on the Istanbul meeting. It blames the war on a foreign conspiracy to weaken Syria being carried out by terrorists on the ground.

Hitto did not receive a resounding mandate from the coalition, of which he is not a member. Of the group's 63 active members, only 48 voted. Four cast blank ballots and Hitto received 35 of the remaining votes.

Hitto was born in Damascus, the Syrian capital, in 1963, according to his official resume provided by the coalition. Little known in Syria, he has lived in the United States for more than two decades, most recently in Texas. He has academic degrees from Purdue University in Indiana and Indiana Wesleyan University.

He worked for a number of different technology companies and helped run a Muslim private school called the Brighter Horizons Academy. He is also a founding member of the Muslim Legal Fund of America, which was founded to give legal aid to Muslims following the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

He is married with four children.

Activist Ghassan Yassin, who watched the vote after traveling from the embattled city of Aleppo, said he saw "no reasons to be optimistic about the formation of an interim government."

Yassin said he had only heard of Hitto recently and doubted his government would have the resources to make a difference.

"The question is not whether there is an interim government, but whether there will be any support for it," Yassin said.

Syria's conflict began with political protests in March 2011, and has since spiraled into a civil war, with hundreds of rebel groups fighting Assad's forces across the country. The U.N. says more than 70,000 people have been killed and millions pushed from their homes by the violence.

Also on Monday, Assad's fighter jets struck targets near the town of Arsal, Lebanon, according to Lebanon's state-run National News Agency. The two countries share a porous border.

State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland confirmed that Syrian warplanes and helicopters had fired rockets into northern Lebanon, striking near Arsal.

"This constitutes a significant escalation in the violations of Lebanese sovereignty that the Syrian regime has been guilty of," Nuland said. "These kinds of violations of sovereignty are absolutely unacceptable.'

___

Associated Press writer Bradley S. Klapper in Washington contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syrian-opposition-elects-interim-prime-minister-233337659.html

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Osborne raises some cheer with beer duty cuts

By Neil Maidment

LONDON (Reuters) - Chancellor George Osborne scrapped the country's above-inflation beer tax rises on Wednesday and cut 1 pence off a pint, cheering drinkers and providing some relief for a pub sector still enduring 18 closures a week.

The much criticized beer duty escalator, put in place to push the levy up 2 percent on top of inflation every year until 2015, has seen the tax on beer increase 42 percent since the previous Labour government introduced it in 2008.

It means that more than a third of every pint pulled in a pub is now paid in duty and value-added tax (VAT).

"We will now scrap the beer duty escalator altogether, and instead of the 3 pence rise in beer duty tax planned for this year, I am cancelling it altogether," Osborne announced to big cheers in parliament.

"That's the freeze people have been campaigning for but I am going to take it one step further and I am going to cut beer duty by one pence. We are taking a penny off the pint."

The cuts will spare squeezed consumers another hit at a time when austerity measures and low wage growth are reducing discretionary spend and forcing pub companies to compete hard among each other and with much cheaper supermarkets.

Shares in Wetherspoon rose 3.4 percent to 544.5 pence on the news, while Enterprise Inns was up 2.6 percent at 112.85 pence at midday.

The British Beer & Pub Association said it was great news: "In abolishing the beer tax escalator, the chancellor has ended a hugely damaging policy that would have made Britain's beer the most heavily taxed in Europe," BBPA Chief Executive Brigid Simmond said.

Since the duty escalator was introduced in 2008, 6,000 pubs have shut and an average of 18 are still closing every week.

Recent research has said scrapping the escalator will save over 5,000 jobs in an industry that employs almost 1 million people. A study by Oxford Economics has also suggested that, despite a slight drop in beer duty revenue, the move will raise an additional 5 million pounds in revenue through higher employment tax contributions and reduced unemployment payments.

Osborne said the 1p cut would take effect this Sunday night. Ted Tuppen, chief executive of Enterprise, welcomed the news and said the benefit would be passed onto its customers immediately.

Not everyone was happy, though.

Osborne maintained a planned rise for all other alcohol duties, meaning wines and spirits will see above-inflation tax rises for a fifth straight year. Diageo said the British spirits maker was being punished for its success in a harsh economic climate.

(Reporting by Neil Maidment; Editing by Kate Holton and Tom Pfeiffer)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/osborne-raises-cheer-beer-duty-cuts-181652714--finance.html

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