Monday, November 28, 2011

Sony Ericsson to shut down Sync service, recommends Google Sync instead

Like bubbles casually floating on the horizon, Sony Ericsson's Sync service is about to fade into obscurity. Last week, the company formerly known as Sony Ericsson confirmed that Sync will be shut down on December 29th, in favor of similar offerings from Google and other companies. In a statement posted to its site, the manufacturer explained that the service had to be cut, "since it was meant for old generation phones and our aim is to create a more enhanced and integrated smartphone experience for you." Sony Ericsson suggests using Google Sync as an alternative, though Plaxo and UNYK are also viable. Check out the source link below for detailed instructions on how to make the transition.

Sony Ericsson to shut down Sync service, recommends Google Sync instead originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 28 Nov 2011 05:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sunday, November 27, 2011

3 American students arrested in Cairo leave Egypt (AP)

CAIRO ? Three American students arrested during a protest in Cairo caught flights out of Egypt early Saturday, according to an airport official and an attorney for one of the trio.

The three were arrested on the roof of a university building near Tahrir Square last Sunday. Officials accused them of throwing firebombs at security forces fighting with protesters. On Thursday, a court ordered them released. All three were studying at the American University in Cairo.

Luke Gates, 21, and Derrik Sweeney, 19, left the Egyptian capital Saturday on separate flights to Frankfurt, Germany, an airport official in Cairo said. Gregory Porter, 19, also left the country, his attorney said.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to brief reporters.

Attorney Theodore Simon, who represents Porter, a student at Drexel University in Philadelphia, said police escorted the three students to the Cairo airport Friday. Simon later said his client was on a flight.

"I am pleased and thankful to report that Gregory Porter is in the air. He has departed Egyptian airspace and is on his way home," Simon said, though he declined to say when Porter was expected back in the U.S.

Simon said he and Porter's mother both spoke by phone with the student, who is from the Philadelphia suburb of Glenside.

"He clearly conveyed to me ... that he was OK," Simon told The Associated Press.

Gates is a student at Indiana University. It wasn't clear when he was expected back in the U.S.

Joy Sweeney told the AP her son, a 19-year-old Georgetown University student from Jefferson City, Mo., would fly from Frankfurt to Washington, then on to St. Louis. She said family will meet him when he arrives late Saturday.

"I am ecstatic," Sweeney said Friday. "I can't wait for him to get home tomorrow night. I can't believe he's actually going to get on a plane. It is so wonderful."

Sweeney said she had talked with her son Friday afternoon and "he seemed jubilant."

"He thought he was going to be able to go back to his dorm room and get his stuff," she said. "We said, `No, no, don't get your stuff, we just want you here.'"

The university will ship his belongings home, she said.

Sweeney had earlier said she did not prepare a Thanksgiving celebration this week because the idea seemed "absolutely irrelevant" while her son still was being held.

"I'm getting ready to head out and buy turkey and stuffing and all the good fixings so that we can make a good Thanksgiving dinner," she said Friday.

___

Associated Press writers Sandy Kozel in Washington; Kathy Matheson and Maryclaire Dale in Philadelphia; and Dana Fields in Kansas City, Mo., contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111126/ap_on_re_us/us_egypt_american_students

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Companies give GOP, regulators, different messages (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Large and small companies have told Republican-led congressional committees what the party wants to hear: dire predictions of plant closings and layoffs if the Obama administration succeeds with plans to further curb air and water pollution.

But their message to financial regulators and investors conveys less gloom and certainty.

The administration has clouded the picture by withdrawing or postponing some of the environmental initiatives that industry labeled as being among the most onerous.

Still, Republicans plan to make what they call regulatory overreach a 2012 campaign issue.

The Associated Press compared the companies' congressional testimony to company reports submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission. The reports to the SEC consistently said the impact of environmental proposals is unknown or would not cause serious financial harm to a firm's finances.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/uscongress/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111125/ap_on_go_co/us_clean_air_politics

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Saturday, November 26, 2011

Olympus ex-CEO Woodford in tense boardroom talks (Reuters)

TOKYO (Reuters) ? The ex-CEO of Japan's disgraced Olympus Corp attended what he called a tense but civilized board meeting on Friday with the directors who had sacked him, and said all hoped the firm could avoid being delisted over the scandal engulfing it.

But Michael Woodford, still an Olympus director despite being fired as CEO a month ago and blowing the whistle over the accounting scam, said there had been no talk of him returning to lead a clean-up of the once-proud maker of cameras and endoscopes.

"We had a constructive and honest exchange," Woodford, a Briton, told about 50 reporters and TV crews that had waited for him to emerge from Olympus's central Tokyo headquarters.

"There is clearly a shared desire that the company's not delisted," added a calm and jovial Woodford, back in Japan for the first time since fleeing the country immediately after his October 14 sacking.

Olympus had fired Woodford, a rare foreign CEO in Japan, alleging he had failed to adapt to Japanese culture and the company's management style. Woodford says he was axed for questioning dubious merger and acquisition payments.

Woodford later said in a group interview that the directors at the meeting had sought to be civilized, but tension was in the air. There were no handshakes -- and no apology, he added.

"There was a tension in the room, but there seemed to be an understanding that it was in no one's interest to raise the temperature," he said. "They didn't shake my hand and I didn't offer mine. We said good morning and goodbye."

The 51-year-old freckle-faced Briton had left Japan after his dismissal citing concerns for his safety, amid speculation that organized crime was involved in the scandal.

Olympus first denied any wrongdoing, but later admitted it had hidden investment losses from investors for two decades and used some of $1.3 billion in M&A payments to aid the cover-up.

TOP PRIORITY: AVOID DELISTING

Woodford said after Friday's board meeting that the top priority was for Olympus to meet a December 14 deadline for filing its financial statements for the six-months to September -- after which, he added, current management should go.

"The priority is that we re-present our accounts on the 14th of December which is a prerequisite that the company can remain tradeable," Woodford said.

The 92-year-old company would be automatically delisted if it misses the December 14 deadline, though the Tokyo Stock Exchange might still delist the firm, depending on the scale of its past misstatements or if a link is found to "yakuza" gangsters.

A third-party panel appointed by Olympus to look into the accounting scam said this week that it had not yet found any evidence of involvement by organized crime.

The board meeting followed news on Thursday night that two Olympus directors and an internal auditor blamed for the scandal had quit and that the current management was ready to step down once the firm's recovery was on track.

But Woodford wants the rest of the board to go as well, and soon. He said after the meeting that current president Shuichi Takayama should stay until December 14, but that changes could start thereafter.

Backed by some big shareholders, Woodford has repeatedly said he is willing to reclaim the top job and lead a clean-up.

Woodford also said Japanese authorities probing the scandal, whom he met in Tokyo on Thursday, wanted to talk to him again.

Tokyo police, prosecutors and regulators have launched a rare joint probe of the scandal, which has revived concerns about lax corporate governance at Japanese firms.

The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation and Britain's Serious Fraud Office are also looking into the affair.

Olympus shares have rallied over the past two weeks on speculation that it will escape delisting and be able to save its core business. They soared as much as 25 percent on Friday and last traded around 14 percent higher. The stock is still trading at about half of its pre-scandal level.

"Today's rise is just a continuation of those willing to take a risk to make a profit, buying what they think is an oversold share," said Fujio Ando, senior managing director of Chibagin Asset Management.

"It's too early to make conclusions about what will happen to the company. The investigations are just beginning, and the management situation is still unclear."

(Writing by Linda Sieg; Editing by Mark Bendeich)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111125/bs_nm/us_olympus

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91% The Descendants

All Critics (141) | Top Critics (41) | Fresh (129) | Rotten (12)

One of the year's best films, a bubbly meditation on family and responsibility that weighs just enough to matter.

With so many balls in the air the temptation is to rush from one plot strand to another, but Payne takes the opposite approach. He also captures the complexity of emotional reactions that grief stirs.

It's a lovely, heartfelt character study of common, everyday people trapped on the horns of an uncommon but not unheard-of dilemma.

The latest exhibit in Payne's careful dissection of the beached male, which runs from Matthew Broderick's character in "Election" to Jack Nicholson's in "About Schmidt" and Paul Giamatti's in "Sideways."

This mature, well-acted dramatic comedy is deeply satisfying, maybe even cathartic.

A tough, tender, observant, exquisitely nuanced portrait of mixed emotions at their most confounding and profound -- all at play within a deliciously damp, un-touristy Hawaii that's at once lush and lovely to look at.

A heartbreaking story with satisfying emotional payoffs, and truly beautiful Hawaiian photography.

George Clooney and Shailene Woodley are terrific as lost-soul dad and old-soul daughter in Alexander Payne's funny, thoughtful film.

Marked by stellar performances and an incisive screenplay, The Descendants packs a real Hawaiian punch.

The best thing here is Clooney, cleverly dropping some of his man's man mannerisms to make Matt less of an idea and more of a human.

It's smart, funny, heartbreaking, heartwarming, wise, and, despite some sad moments, genuinely optimistic. I experienced more feelings watching it than I usually get from ten movies.

Well-acted and touching with a mild eye for human foibles, this is one of the better-written films of the year.

What's so special about Payne's approach in The Descendants is how acutely observed and subtle the movie is, especially since the previews are selling it as a broader, more absurd comedy.

If you see The Descendants, see it for Clooney (and Woodley), but don't believe the hype that it's one for the ages.

A lot of The Descendants is affecting, but its mushier tone is often less emotionally resonant than the bitter sarcasm of Payne's earlier work.

This unforgettable movie succeeds by making audiences feel like a part of the family. Clooney knocks it out of the park with a marvelous performance. Woodley makes a strong bid for a supporting actress nomination. The supporting players are all given...

Here's where I am right now: The Descendants is the best movie of 2011. It is the movie of the year, in many ways beyond its simple superlative overall excellence.

(Clooney) is at the top of his game in his scenes alone with the comatose Elizabeth. Asking questions that are unable to be answered, his pain at his loss and her betrayal is heartbreaking.

Audiences will argue about whether it's a comedy or a drama, but they'll agree they saw a wonderful film.

The Descendants finds Payne, now 50, having arrived in midlife with a new maturity, eschewing solipsism and snickers for a deeper engagement with the world.

Clooney has never been better, displaying more range and less actor-ego than ever before... The Descendants would still be a splendid movie without him; with Clooney, it's one of 2011's very best.

It's good, but far less than you'd expect from the guy who started his career with the gleefully provocative Citizen Ruth and Election.

In the hands of writer-director Alexander Payne, Clooney has rarely seemed so much at home.

There are ample opportunities for the film to soak in pathos, righteousness, farce, or pictorialism, and Payne manages to nod at those pitfalls without falling into them.

More Critic Reviews

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_descendants_2011/

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Friday, November 25, 2011

Macy?s Thanksgiving Day Parade app now in the App Store

Macy?s Thanksgiving Day Parade app is now available in the App Store. If you are planning on heading out to watch it, this could be invaluable. This year is the 85th Annual Macy?s Day Thanksgiving Parade so if you want to ensure you do not miss a...


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/K6M4iAJQSXo/story01.htm

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Thursday, November 24, 2011

Newt Gingrich could draw GOP ire on immigration (tbo)

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Judge denies Jackson doc's bid for new testing

FILE - In this file photo taken Tuesday, Nov. 1, 2011 Dr. Conrad Murray waits to leave the courtroom during the final stage of his defense in his involuntary manslaughter trial in the death of singer Michael Jackson. Jail is just one of many problems looming for the Murray convicted of being responsible for Jackson?s death: lawsuits, medical licensing issues and possible payments to Jackson?s family await.(AP Photo/Kevork Djansezian, Pool, File)

FILE - In this file photo taken Tuesday, Nov. 1, 2011 Dr. Conrad Murray waits to leave the courtroom during the final stage of his defense in his involuntary manslaughter trial in the death of singer Michael Jackson. Jail is just one of many problems looming for the Murray convicted of being responsible for Jackson?s death: lawsuits, medical licensing issues and possible payments to Jackson?s family await.(AP Photo/Kevork Djansezian, Pool, File)

(AP) ? Just days before the scheduled sentencing of the doctor convicted of causing Michael Jackson's death, a judge denied a request Monday to have an independent laboratory test the contents of a key vial of evidence.

Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor said defense attorneys for Dr. Conrad Murray could have sought the testing months ago or even during the doctor's six-week trial but chose not to.

Murray's attorneys wanted a lab to test a small amount of liquid found in a vial of the anesthetic propofol that authorities contend was used to help Jackson sleep on the day he died. Murray had been giving Jackson nightly doses of propofol to help the singer sleep as he prepared for a series of comeback concerts.

Defense lawyer J. Michael Flanagan argued the results would reveal the accuracy of a theory by a prosecution expert who testified that Murray left Jackson's bedside while the singer was on an IV drip of propofol and the painkiller lidocaine.

Deputy District Attorney David Walgren contended there was no legal basis for the testing and said Murray received a fair trial.

Pastor examined the propofol vial, which was found in the closet of Jackson's bedroom, before issuing his ruling.

Flanagan said it didn't occur to him that the contents of the vial should be tested until after the conclusion of Murray's trial, which ended Nov. 7 with the conviction of the cardiologist on an involuntary manslaughter charge.

Flanagan said if prosecution expert Dr. Steven Shafer's theory is correct, the small amount of liquid that remained in the vial should contain lidocaine. In that case, "that's the ballgame" and would prove Murray did leave the singer alone on an IV drip, Flanagan said.

Flanagan also argued that Shafer didn't tell jurors that he believed Murray injected lidocaine into the propofol vial until Shafer was called as a rebuttal witness in the final moments of testimony.

Walgren said Shafer and other witnesses acknowledged that they didn't know exactly what happened in Jackson's bedroom before the singer's death on June 25, 2009. Shafer was one of several experts who told jurors that he could only theorize on events based on toxicology results, Murray's statements to police and evidence found at the scene.

"Whether there was lidocaine in that bottle or not is completely irrelevant," Walgren said.

Murray is set to be sentenced on Nov. 29.

Murray remains jailed and faces a possible sentence ranging from probation to up to four years.

___

Anthony McCartney can be reached at http://twitter.com/mccartneyAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2011-11-21-Michael%20Jackson-Doctor/id-2813fbf90407495e9ef625f8e021a761

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Wednesday, November 23, 2011

NASA develops new game-changing technology

ScienceDaily (Nov. 21, 2011) ? Two NASA California centers have been selected to develop new space-aged technologies that could be game-changers in the way we look at planets from above and how we safely transport robots or humans through space and bring them safely back to Earth.

NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., will use advanced compound semiconductor materials to develop new technologies for the High Operating Temperature Infrared Sensor Demonstration. The higher the temperature at which an infrared detector can operate, the less power is required to cool it. Reduced power needs can translate into operational cost and system weight savings. If successful, this sensor technology could be used in many future NASA Earth and planetary science instruments, as well as for U.S. commercial and defense applications.

"The technology demonstration effort is different in the fact that we're focused on affordability concurrently with performance," said Sarath Gunapala of JPL, who is project manager for the High Operating Temperature Infrared Sensor Demonstration. "This technology has excellent potential for transitioning from laboratory demonstration to NASA and commercial product lines."

The overall goal for this technology development effort is to achieve 100 percent cost savings as compared with traditional cryogenically cooled infrared sensors. The weight and volume savings allow for more compact instruments -- an important consideration for a spacecraft's payload size and cost. This state-of-the-art technology also will have spinoff applications for commercial instrument manufacturers.

Seeking to radically change the way heat shields protect spacecraft during atmospheric entry, NASA's Ames Research Center at Moffett Field, Calif., is developing the Woven Thermal Protection System. The project is a revolutionary approach to thermal protection system design and manufacturing for extreme environments. Ames is the lead center for the project, partnering with NASA's Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va.

Partnering with the U.S. textile industry, NASA is employing an advanced, three-dimensional weaving approach in the design and manufacture of thermal protection systems. Today, lightweight aircraft parts are being manufactured using similar weaving technologies. This will be expanded to include spacecraft heatshield applications. The system will enhance performance using advanced design tools with cost savings from a shortened product development and testing cycle.

"Woven TPS has the potential to significantly impact future NASA missions by changing heat shield development from a challenge to be overcome into a mission-enabling component," said NASA Langley's Ethiraj Venkatapathy, principal investigator of the project. "By delivering improved heat shield performance and affordability, this technology will impact all future exploration missions, from the robotic science missions to Mars, Venus and Saturn to the next generation of human missions."

NASA's Game-Changing Technology Division focuses on maturing advanced space technologies that may lead to entirely new approaches for the agency's future space missions while finding solutions to significant national needs. NASA Langley oversees project management of the Game Changing Technology programs.

JPL is managed for NASA by the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.

For more information on the Game-Changing Technology Division, visit: http://go.usa.gov/IQn .

For more information about JPL technology, visit: http://scienceandtechnology.jpl.nasa.gov/ .

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


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

Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/11/111121135804.htm

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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Solar eclipse this Friday could wow small audience

This Friday (Nov. 25), a rather large partial eclipse of the sun will be on view ? but only for a relatively small audience.

This will be the fourth time that a new moon will orbit between the sun and Earth to cause a solar eclipse in 2011, just one eclipse shy of the maximum for the number of solar eclipses in a given year.?

The first eclipse on Jan. 4 coincided with sunrise across Europe.

Some Alaskans and Canadians shared a view of a partially obscured sun on the afternoon of June 1. [Photos: The First Solar Eclipse of 2011]

And perhaps just a few penguins experienced a very slight eclipse a month later off Lutzlow-Holm Bay on the coast of Antarctica.

On Friday, the moon's penumbral, or outer, shadow will brush the southern belly of the Earth, initially touching down in the South Atlantic Ocean, about 600 miles (1,000 kilometers) a southwest of Cape Town, but only managing to encompass the southern and western portion of South Africa, completely missing Lesotho and barely grazing the border of Namibia. The sun will be seen rising with a dent in its upper right rim.

The axis of the Earth's shadow, containing the cone of darkness known as the umbra, from where we could see a total solar eclipse, misses Earth entirely, passing at its nearest, only about 0.05 of the Earth's radius, or about 210 miles (340 km) out in space.

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So the depth of this partial eclipse is greater than the three others that preceded it. At greatest eclipse, 90.5 percent of the sun's diameter will be covered as seen from the place nearest to the shadow axis, at a point in the Bellingshausen Sea along the west side of the Antarctic Peninsula.

Here, the sun will be seen to dip to the southern horizon at the "midnight" of its 24-hour southern late spring day, and as it slowly ascends still very low to the south-southeast horizon it turns into a delicate boat-shaped crescent in eclipse; the horizon along which the dazzling boat goes rocking is that of "The Ice" (a nickname for Antarctica, being "on the ice").

As the penumbra slides under the bottom of the Earth, the partial eclipse is visible in varying extent across the icy land continent and just as it begins to slide back out into space it (just barely) manages to pass over Tasmania as well as portions of New Zealand's South Island. In fact, the last contact of the shadow with Earth occurs just to the west of the South Island, in the Tasman Sea.

Coming attractions
If you have already obtained a calendar for 2012, be sure to put a big red circle around May 20.?

That is the date of the next solar eclipse and it promises to be a spectacular event. It will be an annular ("ring") eclipse that will be visible from parts of eight western U.S. states during the late-afternoon hours.?

For those living in parts of New Mexico and west Texas, the setting sun will be transformed into a blazing "ring of fire," in some cases lasting for more than five minutes. And across much of North America, the exception being those near and along the Atlantic Coast, the sun will appear partially eclipsed.?

Across the Pacific for parts of China and Japan, the annular eclipse will also be visible (Tokyo is directly in the eclipse track), although for Asia, being positioned to the left (west) of the International Date Line, this event will take place on the morning of May 21.?

Needless to say, in contrast to next Friday, next May's solar eclipse will have a huge viewing audience.?

Editor's note: If you snap a photo or video of the eclipse and want to share it with SPACE.com for a story or gallery, please email Clara Moskowitz at cmoskowitz@space.com and Denise Chow at dchow@space.com.

Joe Rao serves as an instructor and guest lecturer at New York's Hayden Planetarium. He writes about astronomy for The New York Times and other publications, and he is also an on-camera meteorologist for News 12 Westchester, N.Y.

? 2011 Space.com. All rights reserved. More from Space.com.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45389490/ns/technology_and_science-space/

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Are We Biologically Inclined to Couple for Life?

Image: Jamie Carroll/iStockphoto

Are we biologically inclined to couple for life?
?Chelsea Brennan, Minneapolis

Jeannine Callea Stamatakis, who is an instructor at ?several colleges in the San Francisco Bay Area, ?responds:

"Till death do us part? is a compelling idea, but with the divorce rate exceeding 50 percent, many people would very likely agree that humans have a biological impulse to be nonmonogamous. One popular theory suggests that the brain is wired to seek out as many partners as possible, a behavior observed in nature. Chimpanzees, for instance, live in promiscuous social groups where males copulate with many females, and vice versa.

But other animals are known to bond for life. Instead of living in a pack like coyotes or wolves, red foxes form a monogamous pair, share their parental and hunting duties equally, and remain a unit until death.

For humans, monogamy is not biologically ordained. According to evolutionary psychologist David M. Buss of the University of Texas at Austin, humans are in general innately inclined toward nonmonogamy. But, Buss argues, promiscuity is not a universal phenomenon; lifelong relationships can and do work for many people.

So what distinguishes the couples that go the distance? According to several studies, a range of nonbiological factors can help pinpoint which pairings are built to last?those who communicate openly, respect each other, share common interests and maintain a close friendship even when the intense attraction wanes.

John Gottman, a psychologist emeritus at the University of Washington, developed a model to predict which newlywed couples will remain married and which will divorce, a method that he claims is 90 percent accurate. He found that most divorces happen at critical points after a couple unites. The first period occurs after seven years, when pairs tend to feel the strain of their relationship (does the Seven Year Itch ring a bell?). After 20 years, couples may encounter ?empty nest syndrome??a lonely feeling that can take over when children leave home, causing a rift in the marital bond.

A couples? therapist recently shared with me one key question that he always asks his clients: ?Tell me about your wedding day.? An answer composed of positive memories is a good sign. A couple that instead begins talking about the rain and stress is also offering a telling clue.


Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=6a742bbca815178e5c9c37b53a6ea611

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Monday, November 21, 2011

Fearing job security, employees come to work sick

Getty Images stock

By MyHealthNews

Sick employees who try to fight through their runny noses and sore throats while on the job might seem like workplace troupers, but new research shows they may actually be suffering from a bad case of insecurity.

A new Concordia University study found that employees who were insecure about their jobs also were more likely to attend work while ill ? making them present in body but not in spirit.

"Secure employees don't fear retribution for an occasional absence because of sickness," Gary Johns, the study's author and a management professor at Concordia's John Molson School of Business in Montreal, said.

According to the research, over six months employees reported trekking into the office three times while sick; comparatively, they called in sick and stayed home only about one and a half days in that same time period.

Some professions, including caregivers and people working in early education, showed higher rates of employees coming to work while sick. Those working on interdependent projects or in teams also showed higher levels of what the study refers to as "presenteeism."

"Often, a person might feel socially obligated to attend work despite illness, while other employees feel organizational pressure to attend work despite medical discomfort," Johns said.

Although companies have long dealt with issues of increased cases of sick days from employees, Johns said his research suggests businesses actually should be doing more to curb employees? perceived workplace obligation to be at the office when they?re under the weather.

"Estimating the cost of absenteeism is more tangible than counting the impact of presenteeism," Johns said. "Yet a worker's absence ? or presence ? during illness can have both costs and benefits for constituents."

The full study, which included surveys of more than 400 employees, was published in a recent issue of the Journal of Occupational Health Psychology.

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Source: http://lifeinc.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/11/21/8930863-fearing-job-security-employees-come-to-work-sick

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Sunday, November 20, 2011

2 arrests made in Ohio in suspected murder plot

(AP) ? When a South Carolina man answered a Craigslist ad seeking a farmhand in Ohio, there was no job waiting for him. There was a freshly dug grave.

The man was shot and wounded in what investigators say was a murderous robbery scheme that used bogus help-wanted ads to lure victims. He escaped, but another job-seeker was later found dead in a shallow grave nearby. And two suspects ? a man and a 16-year-old boy ? are under arrest.

Neighbors living near the property where the graves were dug were shocked by the bloodshed. Some figured the arrests had closed the case, while others, like Angie Noll, put credence in rumors of more bodies to be found.

"We're a rural community, maybe there's 15 houses up here, and right in our backyard this stuff is going on," said Noll, a 28-year-old maintenance production clerk who lives just a few houses away from the neighbor whose door the South Carolina man knocked on after escaping. "I feel kind of dumbfounded about it."

The sheriff said it is unclear how long the ad had been online or whether there are other victims.

The wooded piece of land sits on the former site of a strip mine and is owned by a coal company and rented out to hunters. It is isolated, with no lights and only one-lane gravel roads running in and out.

"It's an ideal place to get rid of a body," said Don Warner, a rancher who lives nearby.

A judge issued a gag order in the case Friday, and the names of the two victims and the adult suspect were not released.

Before the order was imposed, Sheriff Stephen Hannum said that the South Carolina victim was taken Nov. 6 to the desolate area, where he managed to deflect a gun cocked at the back of his head and ran. Wounded in the arm, he hid in the woods for hours, then showed up covered in blood at the first well-lighted place he could see, a farmhouse outside Caldwell, about 80 miles east of Columbus.

This week, cadaver dogs were brought in, and authorities found one hand-dug grave they believe was intended for the South Carolina man and a second grave that held the body of a Florida man.

The Akron Beacon Journal identified the suspects as a 52-year-old man from Akron, about 90 miles away, and a high school student from the Akron area. The teenager was charged Friday with attempted murder. While his name appears in court documents, The Associated Press generally does not report the names of minors charged with crimes.

No charges were immediately brought against the man.

The South Carolina man who escaped to a neighbor's house told the homeowner, Rose Schockling, that he had answered an ad on Craigslist for a job and was told he would be erecting fences for a cattle farm.

But Schockling said there is no farm of the size the man described nearby, with most of the surrounding countryside either woods or strip mines.

The man had been told to bring his belongings with him to Ohio because he would be living at the farm, the sheriff said. Investigators believe robbery was the motive.

A few days after the man went to the police, authorities received a call from the Florida man's sister, concerned that her brother had not been heard from for weeks. The sister said her brother had responded to what she believed was the same Craigslist ad, for a caretaker for cattle on a 688-acre farm.

"We brought in cadaver dogs thinking that a possibility that the person that was advertising on Craigslist and lured this guy down here may very well have lured someone else to the same area," the sheriff said. "Our hunch was correct."

Investigators have not disclosed the cause of the Florida man's death.

___

Associated Press writers Thomas J. Sheeran in Cleveland, Kantele Franko in Columbus and Associated Press researcher Monika Mathur in New York contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-11-18-Craigslist-Jobseeker%20Killed/id-91b2bb45e84743d4979ed186a6baf159

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Nigeria fines British Airways, Virgin Atlantic (AP)

LAGOS, Nigeria ? An official tells The Associated Press that the Nigerian government has fined air carriers British Airways $135 million and Virgin Atlantic $100 million over what it says are unfair trade practices.

The official, who spoke to the AP Thursday on condition of anonymity, said the fines came after a six-month investigation into ticket prices from Lagos' Murtala Muhammed International Airport to London's Heathrow Airport. The official said the carriers levied unreasonable fuel surplus prices on consumers.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity citing the sensitivity of the fines.

Officials with the two airlines declined to immediately comment.

The fines come as Nigeria is engaging in talks with the United Kingdom over a Nigerian carrier losing spots at Heathrow.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111117/ap_on_bi_ge/af_nigeria_aviation

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Saturday, November 19, 2011

What the Alien Auto Aficionados Can Teach Us about Cell Shape

We cell biologists get around.

After being awarded our PhD, we tend to move from lab to lab, taking on whatever new project is on offer. Like guns for hire, we follow the stimulating scientific puzzles from city to city, and often from country to country.

The variety of cell biology out there is staggering. Cells can be part of a human being, or a turkey, or a frog, or a worm. Cells can fly solo, as do single-celled baker?s yeast. Cells can go awry in diseases ranging from Alzheimers to zygomycosis. You can study cells in the context of an organism, an organ, a tissue, or as single tiny machines made up of thousands of working parts ? or you can just study one of those parts, such as a single gene. So moving to a new lab can be like entering a brand-new galaxy of opportunity and adventure.

As I?ve negotiated my own path through various labs over the years, explaining my project to my family and friends used to be easy:

I?m studying a cat virus that invades cat cells and makes them into cancer cells.

I?m studying a molecular switch that causes out-of-control cells to commit suicide.

I?m studying a chicken virus protein that slaughters tumor cells but leaves their normal healthy counterparts unscathed.

But my current stint has been giving me problems in the making-conversation-at-cocktail-parties department. In fact, I?ve begun to dread the usual question, So what is it you do, exactly?

The thing is, I don?t study one discrete disease, or organism, or particular gene any more. I?m studying a condition of cells: their shape. Animal cells are incredibly plastic and dynamic ? they can spread, contract, round up, split in two, crawl around, send out ruffles and fingers and spikes and ripples. Their shape is controlled by a complex network of scaffolding, motors, moving parts and regulators in a way that?s been studied intensely for years but that we don?t yet entirely understand at a whole-systems level. The way cells move and take up various shapes is absolutely crucial for carrying out their function, and if this goes wrong, disease can result. For example, the UFO shape of our blood cells is important for allowing them to be whisked around our arteries and veins in an efficient, streamlined fashion, and diseases that mess around with the UFO shape (like sickle-cell anemia) lead to dangerous obstructions in our circulatory system.

So far so good: that?s all understandable. But it?s the way I?m investigating them that makes it difficult to explain to my mother. I?m doing a so-called ?reverse genetic screen? to work out what makes an animal cell take up the particular shape that it does ? a sort of brute-force approach where you can study hundreds or even thousands of an animal?s 20,000+ genes in one single experiment. ?Genetic?, because I?m looking at the effect of various genes; a ?screen?, because I?m surveying a large number of genes at one time, in the hope that a few interesting ones will pass through my intellectual filter. And ?reverse?, because I?m going about it backwards. Instead of the classic method of looking at a cell effect and then trying to work out what genes are responsible, I?m doing it the other way around: messing around with the genes and then seeing what effect that has on the cell.

The way I think about screens has been permanently colored by a lovely analogy that was doing the rounds when I was in graduate school in Seattle in the 1990s, about alien auto aficionados. (Other great analogies have since been used too, such as Yuri Lazebnik?s paper about shooting radios with BB guns, but I like the car version because cars, like cells, are dynamic and move around.) Imagine you?re an alien from across the galaxy, observing Earth and trying to figure out what a car is and how it works. You?ve noticed that cars can do a wide variety of things: open up to allow humans to enter and leave, start up, move, brake, turn, reverse. Some of a car?s behavior is easy to work out by detailed observation: the car door and its handle are simple mechanical devices and it?s clear how they allow their passengers in and out. The wheels clearly allow the car to roll. Other processes, however, are more complex and mysterious: how does the car engine start? What makes the wheels turn, or brake? Using simple observational techniques, the aliens soon reach the limits of what they can understand easily.

Clearly a shift in scientific tactics is needed. So, after a little brainstorming session, the aliens decide to gather up thousands of cars, as many as there are working parts inside a single car. They systematically damage a different component in each of the otherwise identical car, and watch what happens. Alien scientists soon realize that snapping off a wing mirror has no effect on ignition, but removing the distributor abolishes it completely. Assuming they?ve press-ganged some human guinea pig drivers to their scientific cause, they would soon see that removing the steering wheel leads to loss of directional control, and breaking the axle causes the wheels to fall off ? they gradually learn to distinguish between mechanical effects and regulatory effects. Some damaged parts can be clustered into the same category: sabotaging the pedal, master cylinder and brake discs all lead to the same outcome: failure of the car to stop when it needs to. So these three parts are probably all in the same ?pathway? ? in other words, they control the same ultimate effect, so you can guess that they might work together in the same subsystem. Our aliens might initially place the wing mirror into a ?useless? category ? until, in its absence, some guinea pig drivers were seen to crash into other cars.

Putting together the results of all of the thousands of breakages, together with their older observational studies, the aliens would probably be able to get a fairly good idea how many car parts work, and a rough idea about what makes a car do what it does. Dr Lazebnik, in the BB gun/radio paper I cited above, gives a very thoughtful explanation about the limitations of this approach, and how biologists are sometimes misled by these sorts of screens, and the mentality behind them. In my view, I agree that screens aren?t perfect, but they can be a productive first step. For example, having established that the wing mirror wasn?t just a piece of shiny, decorative bling but was somehow involved in preventing collisions ? unlike the hood ornament, whose damage had no effect in all tests ? the aliens could abandon the crude screen method, and set up a team to study how the mirror worked in more detail.

Despite all the frailties and limitations of their approach, I?ve been emulating the alien auto aficionados now for the past few years. Instead of studying thousands of cars, I?m growing cells in thousands of individual partitions. In the image below, each of those black plates contains 384 wells, and in turn, each tiny well can grow about 3000 cells comfortably ? I can use as many plates as I need.

Then, using a technique called RNA interference, I?ve been systematically switching off the function of one individual gene in the group of cells growing in each individual well. So in each well of cells, I?m studying the effect of removing one working part of the cell, and seeing what happens to cell shape and movement as a result.

I started off doing this with fixed images ? imagine our aliens breaking a car part, putting a driver inside and then taking a static photo of the resulting effect a few hours afterwards. Here is an example of what normal cells (top) look like compared to cells where I?ve silenced a gene called Citron (bottom).

As you can see, the silenced cells have multiple nuclei instead of just the one they are supposed to have ? which makes sense because we?ve known for years that Citron helps the cell body divide in two: if the cell body doesn?t divide properly, then you get two copies of the genome stuck inside one big cell.

But looking at still images is pretty crude, especially for subtle or rare behaviors. An alien would have to be pretty lucky to catch a wing mirror-less car in the act of colliding, for example. So after a first pass with fixed images, I repeated my entire screening experiment using a microscope set-up for timelapse video. If you?re studying movement (like how a car steers, accelerates and breaks), this approach is going to be a lot more useful. Similarly, if you want to know how a cell wiggles its membranes or divides into two, a video is going to be a lot more informative than a still photo taken at an arbitrary time. In the first video below is an example of how my normal cells look on film ? and in the second video, you can see what happens when you silence Rac1, a gene that helps make dynamic protrusions or ruffles at the edge of the cell. In the absence of Rac1, the cell edge is a lot less mobile.

So how successful has this approach been? The underlying principles of RNA interference ? using a small piece of ribonucleic acid to ?silence? any gene you want ? is based on a cellular defense mechanism first discovered in the 1990 by Napoli and colleagues, and later, researchers began exploiting this phenomenon for genetic screens. Since then, the technique has become routine and highly automated, with the use of robotics to perform the experiment and computers to analyze the data. Unfortunately we started out our project a few years before all the high-tech solutions became routine, so I?ve been going about things in a more old-school way ? with smaller robots, and more reliance on what my eyes can see. But that?s okay. Although staring at many gigabytes worth of image data can sometimes be tedious ? and was probably single-handedly responsible for my recent drastic shift of spectacles prescription ? I?ve nevertheless enjoyed seeing first-hand what my cells are getting up to. This was never more true than with results that are spectacularly beautiful as well as informative:

This past summer I published the results of my screen for cell shape, and currently I?m studying a wing mirror of my own in more detail ? a gene whose silencing doesn?t seem to have much effect, until you catch it in the act during cell division. If viewed at just the right time, shows one of the most bizarre defects in cell division that I?ve ever seen:

What is going on here? I wish I knew. The DNA, which was replicated before division commenced, is supposed to partition evenly into two daughter cells. Instead, both sets of DNA go into one daughter cell, and the other re-spreads without any DNA at all. And herein lies the limits of a genetic screen: the screen has told me that this gene is important for faithful cell division, but it cannot tell me how. For this, I?ve got to go back to more traditional techniques to study how the gene might be doing what it?s doing: biochemistry, forward genetics and molecular biology. Screens, for all their hard work and cinematic scope, are only the first step.

Which is why, sometimes, we cell biologists take a break and relax at cocktail parties. So forget my work: let?s talk about you.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=75559e03ef6ab47ffb652f0b01e2af3e

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Friday, November 18, 2011

Romney campaign: Mass. governor helping Obama (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney's top aide suggested Thursday that Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick was "running a dirty tricks shop" and that his office had become "an opposition research arm" of President Barack Obama's re-election campaign.

In a letter to Patrick, Romney campaign manager Matt Rhoades blamed the Democrat's administration for being behind a Boston Globe report Thursday that documented Romney's efforts to leave no email records behind when he left office in 2007.

The report, which included documents obtained from Patrick's office, described how former Romney officials took their computers with them when they left their jobs and how Romney aides replaced email servers and computers before leaving office. The report said that 11 of Romney's top aides purchased 17 state-issued computers for $65 each when they left their jobs. Several of Romney's top aides in the governor's office later worked for his 2008 presidential bid.

The Massachusetts public records law doesn't apply to the governor's office, so there appears to be nothing illegal with the Romney-era move. Other records from Romney's four years as governor remain archived, although his critics note 461 of the 633 boxes filed with the state archivist are not public. Among the items being kept closed: Romney's press releases, proclamations and speeches.

Rhoades' letter to Patrick ? released by Romney's campaign ? was a clear attempt to turn the tables on Patrick and shift the focus from the critical report.

"At a time when unemployment is at unacceptably high levels, both here in Massachusetts and around the country, the people of Massachusetts deserve to know that you are focused on alleviating joblessness ? not running a dirty tricks shop for your friend, President Obama," Rhoades wrote.

"It is evident that your office has become an opposition research arm of the Obama reelection campaign," he added.

As proof, Rhoades pointed to the Boston Globe report, noting that Patrick's chief legal counsel, Mark Reilly, gave the newspaper copies of cancelled checks from 2006 ? which are public records ? that documented how former Romney administration officials bought their computers.

Rhoades called on Patrick to release all records of contact between his office and Obama advisers David Axelrod, David Plouffe and Jim Messina.

Patrick's office said it would do so.

"We have fulfilled over 250 public records requests in our five years in office and we will be happy to fulfill this one," Reilly told The Associated Press.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111117/ap_on_el_pr/us_romney_patrick

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As Glaciers Melt, Bhutan Faces Risk of 'Mountain Tsunamis' (Time.com)

This post is in partnership with Worldcrunch, a new global-news site that translates stories of note in foreign languages into English. The article below was originally published in Le Monde.

(THIMPU) ? The Kingdom of Bhutan, tucked between India and China in the foothills of the Himalaya mountain range, is paying the price for global industrialization. To the north of the country, a chain of Himalayan glaciers is rapidly retreating ? by between 20 m and 30 m per year. Experts blame climate change and predict that by 2035, the glaciers could be gone altogether.

Water flows from these melting glaciers until it breaks the natural ice dams that hold it in place. That, in turn, can result in devastating floods like the one that occurred in 1994, when a torrent of mud killed dozens of people in Bhutan and wiped out entire villages. Western scientists call this phenomenon a glacial-lake-outburst flood, or GLOF. With 24 of its 2,674 glacial lakes considered unstable, Bhutan is preparing in the coming years for even deadlier "mountain tsunamis," as the phenomenon is sometimes referred to.

Bhutan is one of the first countries in the world to make GLOF prevention a national priority. In 2005, the government received environmental-protection funds financed in part by the U.N. Development Programme. The money was earmarked in part to help Bhutan drain water from Thorthormi Glacial Lake and reinforce its natural dams. But at that high altitude, the work is difficult, dangerous and ultimately costly. (See photos of Bhutan's new king.)

The air is too thin for helicopters to be of much use. Instead, a group of some 350 residents had to hike 10 days in order to set up a base camp at 5,000-m elevation. From there, volunteer students, retired soldiers and traditionally clothed villagers work knee-deep in glacial water, using the few tools they have to try to open a drain canal and build stone walls to reinforce the lake. Every year their efforts are interrupted by the arrival of winter.

"Thanks to satellite imagery, it's possible to identify the most dangerous glaciers. But it's impossible to say when or where a catastrophe will happen," says Pradeep Mool, an engineer with the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development, based in Kathmandu, Nepal.

Researchers take various factors into account when assessing GLOF risk: topography, the likelihood of avalanches that could cause a lake to overflow, how solid a glacial lake's natural dikes are and the volume of water the lake contains.

The causes of glacial floods are various and difficult to evaluate. And at high altitude, in extreme-climate conditions, collecting such information can be extremely dangerous. Dowchu Dukpa, an engineer with Bhutan's Ministry of the Environment, recalls how scientists struggled to measure water levels on Thorthormi Lake. "The winds were extremely strong and almost capsized [the researchers'] boat," he says. (Read about Bhutan's royal wedding.)

Authorities have identified certain high-risk zones and, in an effort to save lives, prohibited construction in those areas. They now plan to set up an electronic alert system. Sensors placed in the glacial lakes will keep track of water levels. If the level quickly drops, a message will be relayed by SMS so that residents ? alerted via cell phones ? will know to seek shelter.

Water Woes for 750 Million?
Although these "tsunamis from above" may be the most immediate danger, they are not the only threat facing the people of Bhutan. As the Himalayan glaciers disappear, so too will the rivers on which the kingdom depends. Water, after all, is the country's most precious resource. Bhutan depends on it to irrigate its fields, which support thousands of farmers, and to feed its hydroelectric plants, which generate about 40% of the country's wealth each year. Water is to Bhutan what oil is to Kuwait.

Decreasing water levels in the rivers will also have an impact on countries farther downstream, potentially affecting the entire region. Members of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change calculate that the melting of the Himalayan glaciers will cause water supply problems for some 750 million people.

Even though Bhutan is hardly responsible for climate change, it nevertheless wants to be a world leader in sustainable development. Thanks to the forests that cover 82% of its territory, it is one of the few countries on the planet to absorb more greenhouse gasses that it emits. Written into the constitution, in fact, is a commitment to keep at least 60% of its territory forested.

Says Ugyen Tshewang, who directs Bhutan's national environmental commission: "We're threatened by the melting glaciers, yet we cannot exert any pressure on the industrialized countries."

Also from Worldcrunch:

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? La Stampa

Is There a Pedophilia Gene?
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As Harvest Approaches, Colombia Faces Shortage of Coffee Pickers
? Am?rica Economia

Watch TIME's video on democracy in Bhutan.

See if Bhutan's antismoking laws go too far.

View this article on Time.com

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/science/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/time/20111115/wl_time/08599209896000

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Thursday, November 17, 2011

Experts pay tribute to Yugoslav war crimes court (AP)

THE HAGUE, Netherlands ? Legal experts are hailing the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal as a trailblazing institution that will underpin global efforts to end impunity long after it closes its doors.

The court is aiming to close in 2014. Analysts say legal precedents set during dozens of trials will live on at the world's first permanent war crimes tribunal, the International Criminal Court.

Alison Cole, of rights group the Open Society Justice Initiative, told a conference Tuesday the tribunal "led the way in forging a new path to justice."

Greeted with skepticism when it was established by the Security Council in 1993 with war still raging in the Balkans, the tribunal has taken into custody all 161 suspects it indicted, including key political and military leaders.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111115/ap_on_re_eu/eu_war_crimes_tribunal_legacy

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Sandusky proclaims innocence in NBC interview (AP)

NEW YORK ? A former Penn State football assistant coach charged with sexually abusing eight boys in a scandal that has rocked the university said Monday that there was no abuse and that any activities in a campus shower with a boy were just horseplay, not molestation.

In a telephone interview Monday night on NBC News' "Rock Center," Bob Costas asked Jerry Sandusky if he's a pedophile and Sandusky responded, "No."

Meanwhile, The New York Times reported on its website late Monday that close to 10 additional suspected victims have come forward to authorities since Sandusky's arrest, according to people close to the investigation. The paper said police were working to confirm the new allegations.

Sandusky, once considered veteran coach Joe Paterno's heir apparent, was arrested more than a week ago and is charged with sexually abusing eight boys, some on Penn State property, over a 15-year span.

"I am innocent of those charges," the 67-year-old Sandusky said. "... I could say that I have done some of those things. I have horsed around with kids. I have showered after workouts. I have hugged them, and I have touched their legs without intent of sexual contact."

Asked whether he was sexually attracted to underaged boys, he said "Sexually attracted, no. I enjoy young people, I love to be around them, but, no, I'm not sexually attracted to young boys."

Asked if there was anything he had done wrong, Sandusky said, "I shouldn't have showered with those kids."

Athletic director Tim Curley and Penn State vice president Gary Schultz are charged with perjury but maintain their innocence. Paterno and president Graham Spanier were ousted from their jobs for not doing enough after Sandusky was accused of assaulting a young boy in the showers of the campus football complex in 2002. Paterno is not the target of any legal investigation, but he has conceded he should have done more. Spanier, who remains a tenured member of the faculty, has said he would have reported a crime if he'd suspected one had been committed.

The interview with Costas was Sandusky's first public comment on the charges. He had previously maintained his innocence through his attorney, Joe Amendola.

A spokesman for Pennsylvania Attorney General Linda Kelly declined to comment on the interview, citing the active investigation.

Sandusky's remarks came the same night that Amendola, told CNN that his client was just behaving like "a jock."

"Jerry Sandusky is a big overgrown kid," Amendola said. "He's a jock, and for anybody who's ever played sports, you get showers after you work out."

Wide receivers coach Mike McQueary told a grand jury that in March 2001 when he was a graduate assistant, he saw Sandusky sodomizing a boy about 10 years old in a shower at the Nittany Lions' practice center. McQueary did not go to police but instead told Paterno, Curley and Schultz, although it is unclear how detailed a description he gave. Schultz, in turn, notified Spanier.

Sandusky told NBC that only "horseplay" was involved.

"We were showering and horsing around, and he actually turned all the showers on and was actually sliding across the floor, and we were, as I recall, possibly like snapping a towel ? horseplay," he said.

Amendola accused the attorney general's office of having "thrown everything they can throw up against the wall." He said some of the allegations, such as putting a hand on a boy's knee, do not constitute criminal conduct and other cases include no direct complaint by the boy.

"They have other people who are saying they saw something, but they don't have actual people saying, `This is what Jerry did to me," Amendola said. "We're working to find those people, and when the time comes, and if we are able to do that, we think this whole case will change dramatically."

The Associated Press has made several efforts to reach Sandusky by phone and through Amendola, but messages haven't been returned. The AP also knocked on Sandusky's door and left messages at least three times over the past week.

When Sandusky retired in 1999, at just 55, he cited his desire to devote more time to The Second Mile, a charity he founded in 1977 to help at-risk kids. According to the grand jury report, however, Sandusky was a sexual predator who used the charity and his Penn State connections to prey on young boys.

Though he was not particularly close with Paterno, he remained a familiar sight around the Penn State football complex. He was given an office in the East Area Locker building, across the street from the football building, as part of his retirement package, and would take Second Mile kids around the football facilities.

Sandusky said Paterno never asked him about his behavior or what he might have done.

The Sandusky interview came on the day when it was announced the president of The Second Mile had resigned. Jack Raykovitz, a practicing psychologist who had led the group for 28 years, said he hoped his resignation, accepted Sunday, would help restore faith in the group's mission. The Second Mile also announced it had hired Philadelphia's longtime district attorney as its new general counsel.

Separately, the Big Ten has decided to take Paterno's name off its championship trophy. League commissioner Jim Delany said that it is "inappropriate" to keep Paterno's name on the trophy that will be awarded Dec. 3 to the winner of the conference's first title game.

The trophy had been named the Stagg-Paterno Championship Trophy. Paterno had more wins, 409, than any other major college coach while football pioneer Amos Alonzo Stagg won 319 games in 57 years at the University of Chicago.

The trophy will now be called the Stagg Championship Trophy.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111115/ap_on_sp_co_ne/fbc_penn_state_abuse

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Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Chelsea Clinton is hired by NBC News

In this Feb. 9, 2011 photo, Chelsea Clinton attends amfAR's annual New York Gala at Cipriani Wall Street in New York. Clinton is going to work for NBC News. The network said Monday, Nov. 14, 2011, that it has hired the 31-year-old Clinton to work on projects for the "NBC Nightly News" and Brian Williams' newsmagazine "Rock Center." She will do projects in the "Making a Difference" series, generally positive stories about individuals and companies. (AP Photo/Evan Agostini)

In this Feb. 9, 2011 photo, Chelsea Clinton attends amfAR's annual New York Gala at Cipriani Wall Street in New York. Clinton is going to work for NBC News. The network said Monday, Nov. 14, 2011, that it has hired the 31-year-old Clinton to work on projects for the "NBC Nightly News" and Brian Williams' newsmagazine "Rock Center." She will do projects in the "Making a Difference" series, generally positive stories about individuals and companies. (AP Photo/Evan Agostini)

(AP) ? Chelsea Clinton began work at NBC News on Monday, the second daughter of a former president at the network. NBC said it had hired the 31-year-old Clinton to work on projects for "NBC Nightly News" and Brian Williams' newsmagazine, "Rock Center." She will report stories for the feel-good "Making a Difference" series.

The only child of former President Bill Clinton and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton is pursuing a doctorate at Oxford and working for the Clinton Foundation and Clinton Global Initiative.

Former President George W. Bush's daughter Jenna Bush Hager does stories for the "Today" show.

NBC said Chelsea Clinton wasn't available for an interview, but issued a statement: "People who imagine and implement solutions to challenges in their own lives, in their communities, in our country and in our world have always inspired me."

Recent "Making a Difference" stories highlighted a 7-year-old boy raising money for a friend with cancer by racing go-karts, a marathon runner raising money for his mother who suffers from Parkinson's disease and rock star Bon Jovi opening a restaurant where people who cannot pay for meals can do volunteer work to earn food.

Besides Clinton and Hager, NBC News also has just hired Meghan McCain, author of "Dirty Sexy Politics" and daughter of 2008 GOP presidential candidate John McCain. She will be an analyst for MSNBC.

NBC News President Steve Capus was not available for an interview, the network said Monday. He told The New York Times that he was approached this summer through an intermediary about Chelsea Clinton and asked her in for a meeting.

"Given her vast experiences, it's as though Chelsea has been preparing for this opportunity her entire adult life," Capus said in a statement Monday.

Star power can be attractive to a news network, although it has pitfalls. ABC News was criticized a decade ago for airing an interview with President Clinton conducted by actor Leonardo DiCaprio. NBC notes that Chelsea Clinton will be reporting features, not breaking news, for the network.

The hiring also raises the question of whether that may give NBC News an edge in getting future stories involving her parents, or at least the appearance of one. Jenna Bush Hager's father gave his first post-presidency interview to NBC's Matt Lauer.

___

NBC is owned by NBC Universal.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2011-11-14-US-People-Chelsea-Clinton/id-396a29ba1bd2491ab0e308bd4cef6155

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