Thursday, February 28, 2013

Metal ions regulate terpenoid metabolism in insects

Feb. 28, 2013 ? Max Planck scientists in Jena, Germany, have discovered an unusual regulation of enzymes that catalyze chain elongation in an important secondary metabolism, the terpenoid pathway. In the horseradish leaf beetle Phaedon cochleariae a single enzyme can trigger the production of two completely different substances depending on whether it is regulated by cobalt, manganese or magnesium ions: iridoids, which are defensive substances the larvae use to repel predators, or juvenile hormones, which control insect's development. Insects unlike plants do not have a large arsenal of the proteins called isoprenyl diphosphate synthases. Therefore they may have developed another efficient option to channel metabolites into the different directions of terpenoid metabolism by using metal ions for control.

Natural products: 40,000 terpenes

Apart from the primary metabolism which produces substances that ensure the survival of the cells, there are additional biosynthetic pathways in all organisms. Their products may be less important for a single cell, but they can nevertheless be essential for the whole organism. These pathways are summarized as secondary metabolism. One of them is the terpenoid pathway: with more than 40,000 different known structures it generates one of the largest classes of natural products. Terpenoid molecules have diverse functions and can act as components in molecular signaling pathways, as toxins, fragrances or hormones.

The basic unit of all terpenes is a simple molecule containing five carbon atoms that can be joined to chains of different length. There are monoterpenes (C10 units, 2 x C5), sesquiterpenes (C15, 3 x C5), and even polymers, such as natural rubber, which comprises several hundred C5 units. Special enzymes mediate chain elongation. These enzymes have attracted the curiosity of scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology, Jena, and the Leibniz Institute for Plant Biochemistry in Halle. They studied mechanistic alternatives of how chain elongation is regulated.

Metal ions instead of specialized enzymes

Enzymes involved in chain elongation belong to the group of isoprenyl diphosphate synthases. Such an enzyme was isolated from larvae of the horseradish leaf beetle Phaedon cochleariae. It raised the interest of Antje Burse, project group leader in the Department of Bioorganic Chemistry at the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology.

Experiments with larvae in which the enzyme encoding gene was silenced showed that the protein was involved in the formation of the C10 monoterpene chrysomelidial that larvae produce to defend themselves against predators. The larvae accumulate this monoterpene in special glands and release it as a defensive secretion when they are attacked by their enemies, such as ants.

However, surprising results emerged after comprehensive biochemical characterization of the enzyme. "After we had conducted an in vitro analysis of the protein, including measurements of product formation in the presence of different metal ions as co-factors, we were surprised to discover that only geranyl diphosphate (C10), a precursor for the defensive substance chrysomelidial, was produced after addition of cobalt and manganese ions. On the other hand, adding magnesium ions resulted in the formation of farnesyl diphosphate (C15), a potential precursor for juvenile hormones, which is 5 carbon atoms longer," says the scientist. All three metals were found in larval tissue, leading to the assumption that enzyme catalysis is directed by the different metal co-factors in the larvae, whichever is predominant in amount: Towards toxin or hormone ? physiologically a major difference.

Sequence comparisons cannot replace a thorough biochemical analysis

How the different metal ions modify the product range of the enzyme is still unclear. It is very likely that the varying atomic radii of the metal ions involved in the catalysis effect changes in the spatial structure of the enzyme, which prevent or allow the admission of a third C5 unit and hence result in the production of C10 or C15 molecules.

"Our experiments provide two important findings," says Wilhelm Boland, director at the Max Planck Institute. "First, the directing influence of metal ions on the product formation of isoprenyl diphosphate synthases is a novel "control element" in the regulation of the terpene metabolism which should be included in future experimental settings. And secondly: The diversity of terpenoid molecules cannot be attributed solely to the broad substrate specificity of some enzymes in the last steps of the metabolic pathway, but is in fact already inherent in early biosynthetic steps." Nature continues to provide interesting answers to the question how organisms manage to produce tens of thousands of different secondary metabolites.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. S. Frick, R. Nagel, A. Schmidt, R. R. Bodemann, P. Rahfeld, G. Pauls, W. Brandt, J. Gershenzon, W. Boland, A. Burse. Metal ions control product specificity of isoprenyl diphosphate synthases in the insect terpenoid pathway. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2013; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1221489110

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/ZoYNlp3uNmI/130228103440.htm

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Syrian clashes reach 12th century Aleppo mosque

AAA??Feb. 28, 2013?5:56 AM ET
Syrian clashes reach 12th century Aleppo mosque
AP

Free Syrian Army fighters from the Knights of the North brigade move to reconnaissance a Syrian army forces base of al-Karmid, at Jabal al-Zaweya, in Idlib province, Syria, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013. Syrian warplanes carried out airstrikes on rebels trying to storm a police academy outside Aleppo on Wednesday, while jihadi fighters battled government troops along a key supply road leading to the southeastern part of the city, activists said. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

Free Syrian Army fighters from the Knights of the North brigade move to reconnaissance a Syrian army forces base of al-Karmid, at Jabal al-Zaweya, in Idlib province, Syria, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013. Syrian warplanes carried out airstrikes on rebels trying to storm a police academy outside Aleppo on Wednesday, while jihadi fighters battled government troops along a key supply road leading to the southeastern part of the city, activists said. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

A Free Syrian Army fighter from the Knights of the North brigade moves to reconnaissance a Syrian army forces base of al-Karmid, at Jabal al-Zaweya, in Idlib province, Syria, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013. Syrian warplanes carried out airstrikes on rebels trying to storm a police academy outside Aleppo on Wednesday, while jihadi fighters battled government troops along a key supply road leading to the southeastern part of the city, activists said. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

Free Syrian Army fighters from the Knights of the North brigade move to reconnaissance the Syrian army forces base of al-Karmid, at Jabal al-Zaweya, in Idlib province, Syria, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013. Syrian warplanes carried out airstrikes on rebels trying to storm a police academy outside Aleppo on Wednesday, while jihadi fighters battled government troops along a key supply road leading to the southeastern part of the city, activists said. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

A Free Syrian Army fighter, Abu al-Yaman, left, a commander of Knights of the North brigade, cheers as he leaves with other rebels one of their caves to reconnaissance a Syrian army forces base of al-Karmid, at Jabal al-Zaweya, in Idlib province, Syria, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013. Syrian warplanes carried out airstrikes on rebels trying to storm a police academy outside Aleppo on Wednesday, while jihadi fighters battled government troops along a key supply road leading to the southeastern part of the city, activists said. The Arabic words in the cave entrance read:"Knights of the North brigade". (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

Free Syrian Army fighters from the Knights of the North brigade move to reconnaissance a Syrian army forces base of al-Karmid, at Jabal al-Zaweya, in Idlib province, Syria, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013. Syrian warplanes carried out airstrikes on rebels trying to storm a police academy outside Aleppo on Wednesday, while jihadi fighters battled government troops along a key supply road leading to the southeastern part of the city, activists said. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

BEIRUT (AP) ? Syrian activists say rebels are clashing with government forces around a historic 12th century mosque inside the walled old city of Aleppo.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says the clashes Thursday are concentrated around the Umayyad Mosque with rebels controlling part of it and government troops holding another part.

The Observatory, which relies on reports from activists on the ground, also says rebels continue to battle troops for control of a police academy west of Aleppo.

Aleppo, Syria's commercial capital, has been a key battleground in the civil war since rebels entered in July.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-02-28-Syria/id-7b50476175bd43f6bf8cb226c881cb0a

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GOP's Pat Anderson: I support gay marriage; Republicans should, too (Star Tribune)

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Gecko's Michael Quillen Awarded Prestigious National Restaurant ...

Tuesday, February 26th, 2013 ?

Gecko's Michael Quillen Awarded Prestigious National Restaurant Association Honor

Gecko's Mike Gowan and Michael Quillen

Gecko's Michael Quillen Awarded Prestigious National Restaurant Association HonorSarasota, FL? (RestaurantNews.com)? Gecko?s Grill & Pub is proud to announce that Co-Owner, Michael Quillen, has been awarded the 2013 National Restaurant Association?s Restaurant Neighbor Florida Cornerstone Humanitarian award.

Each year, the National Restaurant Association recognizes outstanding restaurants around the country with these prestigious national awards. The awards honor restaurants that go above and beyond in community service and aims to inspire other restaurateurs to get or stay involved in their local communities.

Gecko?s Grill & Pub and Quillen are Business Partners with dozens of schools in Sarasota and Manatee County, providing Super Student Free Meals to thousands of elementary students and supporting untold numbers of teams, projects, and events in area schools. Gecko?s is a benefactor of the non-profit Y Youth Shelter, which serves children 10-17 years of age who are homeless, and Operation Second Chance, which serves America?s wounded, injured and ill combat veterans. Working with his lifelong friend and business partner, Mike Gowan, through the five Gecko?s restaurants to benefit scores of other charitable groups, Quillen also personally serves on several community Boards, and is the current President of The Argus Foundation, a public policy community foundation which harnesses business leadership for effective community building.

Quillen will now compete with other state winners across the United States for the national prize. One national winner will receive a $5000 award to help support their favorite charity, to be awarded in April in Washington, D.C.

Gecko?s Grill & Pub (www.geckosgrill.com) has been locally owned and operated since 1992, and employs over 300 Floridians. Look for Quillen and Gowan?s new venture, S?macks Burgers & Shakes, to open in Spring, 2013. Founded in 1919, the National Restaurant Association is the leading business association for the restaurant industry, which comprises 980,000 restaurant and foodservice outlets and a workforce of more than 13 million employees. For more information, please contact 941-921-3924, or office@geckoshospitality.com.

Contact:
Anne Rollings
941-921-3924
office@geckoshospitality.com


Source: http://www.restaurantnews.com/geckos-michael-quillen-awarded-prestigious-national-restaurant-association-honor/

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Microsoft's Office 365 subscription service is now available for businesses

Back when Microsoft released its Office 365 subscription service for home users, it said the business version would be arriving on February 27th. Sure enough, today's the 27th, and Microsoft's issued a press release explaining the pricing for Office 365 ProPlus, Midsize Business and Small Business Premium.

At the least expensive end of the spectrum is ProPlus, which includes Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote, Outlook, Publisher, InfoPath and Access. Like the Home Premium version of Office 365, a user can install the software on up to five devices, though IT controls are of course more of selling point here than they are on the consumer version. That costs $144 per user for a one-year subscription.

Moving on, the medium-sized-business sku costs $180 per user per year, and adds Exchange Online, SharePoint Online, Lync Online and a few IT tools. It, too, is based on the same five-device-per-user model as ProPlus. As for the small business version, you get all the basic Office apps, plus email, shared calendars, website tools and videoconferencing. Pricing there is $150 per user per year. Sorry, though, no dice on the five-device, ProPlus thing -- that's not included in the small biz version.

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Source: Microsoft

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/wuE1utgKcmA/

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Holiday Like A Rock Star

When we dream of living the high life, we tend to dream big. And more often than not, the dream, for many of us, is to live like a rock star. Not a musician a rock star. Because (and this is something we acknowledge from childhood, when our great big dreams start to form), the key difference between the two career paths is the lifestyle. In essence, the musician will often be found carting their own gear in and out of venues, busking on the street and trying to make a break, while the rock star will be living up a lavish life with luxury surroundings and tonnes of adoring fans. Let's face it; everyone wants to live it up like a rock star. Think about it the fancy hotels, plush room service, flashy cocktails and worldwide travel... being able to write a good lyric has little to do with it, at the end of the day. And this, of course, is good news because it means anyone can have a taste of the rock star lifestyle! Just book your holidays wisely, be prepared to splash out and spoil yourself, and enjoy the comforts of superstardom...

To really get a taste of the rock and roll dream, your best bet is to take a trip to the United States of America, where rock n' roll was born, back in the heyday of the 1940s and 50s. This is the country of Elvis and Little Richard, Aerosmith and Kings of Leon. The land of the extravagant, the extreme, and the super-sized. To really get the show on the road, head to Orlando for a night or two to live out your dreams of rock stardom with all the mod cons, room service at your beck and call, and of course, hanging out by the pool with your entourage.

Frankly, theme parks and rock n' roll go hand in hand (just ask the Red Hot Chili Peppers who wrote the song Love Rollercoaster) this is where thrills, excitement and fun are the main draw, and if you're looking for a place that merges the two on one site, you want Disneyland. Here, right at the end of the park's Sunset Boulevard, you'll find the super-fast Rock n' Roller coaster, in which riders will follow the rock band Aerosmith (who rewrote their biggest hits for the ride's soundtrack the rock and roll seal of approval) through fictional recording studio sessions, limo rides, and then on to a live gig. The rollercoaster goes from 0 to 57 miles per hour in just 2.8 seconds that's sure to give you the thrill of life in the fast lane.

Certainly, life doesn't get much crazier than in Las Vegas, where the stakes are high and the hotels higher, with some of the world's biggest hotels and casinos located here on The Strip. Many a rocker has let loose on the City of Sin over the years, rolling dice in the casino, playing gigs, or simply having a blow out at one of the huge resorts. Some big name bands even hail from the Nevada city, such as The Killers, proof that Las Vegas is not only a great party spot for the rock and roll lifestyle, but it can also spawn some of the industry's biggest acts. Hotels here allow you to experience luxurious accommodation with king-sized beds, sprawling flat-screen televisions and oversized showers. Enjoy more space than you'd ever really need, without even leaving your hotel room.

If you're more of a laid-back rocker or a chilled-out roller, than perhaps the Big Apple is more your bag. Living the life of a superstar doesn't necessarily mean being in the spotlight - subtle opulence might be more your thing, in which case New York is the place to go. As the song goes, if you can make it here, you can make it anywhere. After all, living the rock and roll dream is not about the music it's all about the lifestyle, baby!

About the Author:
Steve Alexander has been writing about some of the most lavish holidays around. Visit Hotels4U for great deals on hotels in Orlando, or take a look here for more information on accommodation in Disneyland.

Source: http://www.articlesnatch.com/Article/Holiday-Like-A-Rock-Star/4457078

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Russia wants U.S. to urge Syria rebels into peace talks

MOSCOW/ BERLIN (Reuters) - Russia called on the United States on Tuesday to press the Syrian opposition to hold direct talks with Damascus, saying President Bashar al-Assad's opponents must appoint negotiators.

The crisis in Syria made up "the bulk of the conversation" between Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry at talks in Berlin on Tuesday, U.S. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said.

After talks she characterized as "really serious and hard-working", Moscow and Washington sounded a rare note of accord over efforts to launch talks to end the nearly two-year-old conflict, in which 70,000 people have been killed.

Lavrov said the new U.S. top diplomat seemed to grasp the gravity of the crisis in Syria and that the former Cold War foes had agreed to do everything in their power "to create the best conditions to facilitate the soonest possible start of a dialogue between the government and the opposition."

He said Russia wanted to see the Syrian opposition name its representatives for talks with the government at a meeting in Rome this week between the Syrian opposition, and Western and regional powers favorable to their cause.

Moscow and Washington have been at loggerheads over whether the Syrian opposition's calls for Assad to step down should be a pre-condition for talks.

Lavrov, ahead of the meeting with Kerry, said he would urge Washington to lean on the Syrian opposition to drop requests for Assad to go, a demand he characterized as "unrealistic".

Russia has been one of Assad's staunchest ally and, with China, has blocked three U.N. Security Council resolutions aimed at mounting pressure on him to end the violence that began with a crackdown on street protests against his rule.

Washington has sided with the Syrian opposition in seeking Assad's removal from power.

Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moualem said in Moscow on Monday that the government was ready for talks, but opposition leaders and rebel commanders insist Assad must go first.

Kerry responded dismissively to Moualem's offer, saying it was hard to understand how people having Scud missiles fired at them would take an offer of dialogue seriously. Syria denies using ballistic missiles in the fighting.

He also appeared to promise more concrete support to Assad's opponents, without saying whether the United States might rethink its earlier aversion to arming or training them.

"We are determined that the Syrian opposition is not going to be dangling in the wind," Kerry said in London on Monday.

Lavrov also signaled on Tuesday that the prospects for direct talks in Syria had receded in the past few days, voicing fears "extremists" now have the upper hand among Assad's foes.

"A few days ago it seemed that conditions for the sides to sit down for talks ... were getting clearer," he said.

"But then came denials of such an approach. It seems extremists, who bet on a military solution to Syria's problems and block initiatives to start dialogue, have for now come to dominate in the ranks of the Syrian opposition, including in the so-called (Syrian) National Coalition."

Western countries and some Arab states have accused Russia, a long-standing arms supplier to Damascus, of shielding Assad.

Moscow has hit back by saying it has worked hard to try to persuade the two sides in Syria to start talks and accusing its Western allies of failing to do enough to support those efforts.

It also says support for the rebels plays into the hands of militant Islamists, a theme Assad himself often evokes.

(Additional reporting and writing by Alissa de Carbonnel; Editing by Jon Hemming)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/russia-wants-u-help-foster-dialogue-syria-115137924.html

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Stephen Curry Makes George Hill Fall Down With Crossover During Warriors-Pacers Game (VIDEO)

By Chris Yuscavage, Complex Sports

Hey, George Hill, we've got just one word for you: RICE.

That stands for Rest, Ice, Compression, and Elevation.

After what Stephen Curry did to you earlier tonight during the Pacers/Warriors game (just before the fight broke out!), your ankles are gonna need it in the morning.

Get well soon.

WATCH VIDEO ABOVE

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/27/stephen-curry-george-hill-crossover-video-ankles_n_2770809.html

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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Qatar poet remains in prison for 'offensive' verse

DOHA, Qatar (AP) ? A poet jailed for a verse considered offensive to Qatar's ruler harshly denounced the Gulf nation's legal proceedings on Monday after an appeals court reduced his life sentence but still kept a 15-year prison term.

The rant in court ? rare in the tightly controlled Gulf Arab states ? underscored the free speech battles across the region as Western-backed authorities take strict measures against perceived political dissent in the wake of the Arab Spring.

From Kuwait to Oman, dozens of people have been arrested in the past year for social media posts deemed insulting to leaders or calling for political forms. For Qatar, the case also could bring added pressure from rights groups looking into labor conditions and other preparations for football's 2022 World Cup, which will be by far the most prominent international event hosted in the Gulf region.

"Unjust," shouted poet Muhammad ibn al-Dheeb al-Ajami in the heavily guarded courtroom in Qatar's capita, Doha, after his appeal to drop the conviction was denied. The court cut the life sentence handed down in November and imposed a 15-year term instead.

Al-Ajami faced specific charges from a poem posted online in 2010 that discussed the traits needed for a good leader ? which apparently was seen by authorities as a challenge to Qatar's emir and the ruling family.

He was more widely known for an Internet video of him reciting "Tunisian Jasmine," a poem lauding that country's popular uprising, which touched off the Arab Spring rebellions across the Middle East. In the poem, he said, "we are all Tunisia in the face of repressive" authorities and criticized Arab governments that restrict freedoms, calling them "thieves."

Al-Ajami still can appeal the remaining prison term to a higher court.

"This sentence will not stand," said his brother Hasan. "When you strip away everything, this is just a case about power and pressure."

Qatar's attorney general, Ali bin Fetais al-Marri, told Al-Jazeera English that state prosecutors also will seek to restore the life sentence.

"We accept the ruling," al-Marri told the network. "However, we, as public prosecution, will resort to the Supreme Court to challenge the judgment, hoping to restore it as was, a life term. However, in any case, we will honor the (decision) of the court."

Earlier this month, a Kuwait court sentenced three former opposition lawmakers to three years hard labor for insulting the country's ruler during speeches at political rallies. In January, a Kuwait blogger and online journalists received two-year sentences in back-to-back convictions for posts deemed "insulting" to the emir.

In November, the United Arab Emirates set stricter Internet monitoring and enforcement codes. They include giving authorities wider leeway to arrest Web activists for offenses such as mocking the country's leadership or calling for demonstrations.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/qatar-poet-remains-prison-offensive-verse-072500475.html

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Samsung's comically large Galaxy Note 8.0 smartphone: purely a brand play, if nothing else

Samsung's comically large Galaxy Note 80 smartphone purely a brand play, if nothing else

The doors to this year's Mobile World Congress have just barely been opened, but you might say the show is already won. And, perhaps unsurprisingly, it's Samsung doing the winning. For those who were far too busy enjoying their Saturday evenings to notice, I should point out that Samsung has just taken the wraps off of the world's largest smartphone. The global version of Galaxy Note 8.0's fantastically (hilariously?) large display is indeed embedded onto a device that will not only surf the soothing waters of the world wide web, but also make phone calls for those brazen enough to toss it upside their noggin'.

The question, obviously, is "Why? But as I let the announcement wash over me, the answer became all too clear: "Because it can."

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/xAI3tH0Q3BM/

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Monday, February 25, 2013

Types of Dental Treatment - Bimbo's Health and Fitness Reviews

dental careOne of the popular in the world of health care is dental treatments. Healthy teeth and good will give more value on someone?s face. Healthy and beautiful teeth will make people more confident to smile and communicate. Dental problems can not be separated from performance problems. Dental care is also not cheap, so you should definitely choose a good and reliable care that your money is not wasted and the results obtained also satisfy you.

Some of the popular dental treatments are:

1. Teeth Bleaching
This is the most popular type of treatment because many people use this type of treatment. This type of care aims to get teeth whiter and brighter. If you have a dull and stained teeth, maybe you could try curing it.

2. Root Canal Treatment
This is dental care for the well-known healing where infected or damaged pulp (core) of a fallen tooth. In this method, after removing the infected pulp, pulp chamber and root canals filled and sealed.

3. Scaling
Scaling is used to remove calculus or tartar and plaque that attach to the tooth surface. The rest of the food there on the sidelines of the teeth, if left alone, and not in the clear then the bacteria will digest the food, which will lead to cavities. Tartar on the teeth which can only be in the clear with scaller, or extractor tool by dentists.

4. Dental Implants
This is the kind of care for the treatment, in which an artificial tooth root placed into the jaw to hold a replacement tooth or bridge. Dental implants are also a great choice for people who have lost their teeth due to injury, accident or any other reason.

5. Dental Bridges
This is a method commonly used by dentists to fill the gap created by a missing tooth (or teeth). The method is also quite a lot of treatments used by people who have lost their teeth and not likely to grow back teeth.

The five methods of dental care above are some of the many treatment methods that exist in the world of dentistry. You can choose the type of the method according to the condition of your teeth. But you should consult with your dentist first before deciding to use dental care methods that you will choose.

By : Medical Tourism in Lithuania

Source: http://www.bimbopatrol.com/types-of-dental-treatment/

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Dan Le Batard: UM had to deal with a Ponzi schemer first, now the NCAA

Scream. It?ll make you feel better. Complain. It?ll release the poisons. Throw a justified temper tantrum in public, like the University of Miami?s president did last week, and feel stronger as consensus gathers behind you with uncommon support. Purging outrage can feel good when it doesn?t feel bad. But then slink back to your corner, defeated, and realize that your path is littered with beaten screamers and complainers and temper-tantrum throwers who expired exhausted without ever making so much as a dent. And then wait for the fear to return.

The worst part? The helplessness. UM President Donna Shalala is a powerful person unaccustomed to feeling powerless. So her angry screed toward the NCAA about its investigation last week echoed from coast to coast, but it wasn?t so much an uprising as it was one tiny, furious woman yelling into a canyon. An angry letter, that?s all this was, though personal because this particular president felt wronged after decades and decades of university presidents enabling, empowering and emboldening the NCAA?s ridiculous rights.

So many powerful people have fed this bloated, ugly beast for so long, and now one of them was finally complaining about being bitten. But she wouldn?t have been this kind of passionate if she worked at the University of Florida instead. And that?s one of the frustrations here: Unfairness must be felt by the motivated many before fairness can be felt by the first few.

Shalala?s statement got huge backing locally because it gave the powerless a voice, and made all those weary UM fans feel heard, but this was just a street crowd gathering and yelling, ?Fight! Fight!? Celebrating that she hit the old tank with a pebble from her slingshot ignores all the bodies strewn behind her and all the awful yet up ahead.

You can?t get consensus on much of anything in sports, arguments starting over the silliest of hair-splitting, but the consensus for decades has been that the NCAA is an absurd, unjust artifact that belches out unfairness. And yet here it still stands, undefeated. Not only that, you can make the argument it has never been more powerful given the way it trampled due process in gutting Penn State ? and to applause, no less. We like the behavior of the all-powerful when we agree with it. We don?t like it so much when it is our school on the wrong end.

Inside or outside of sports, you will have a hard time finding anything railed against as long as the NCAA with so little impact. Dictatorships come to mind. But never mind overthrow; nobody can get the NCAA to even change. Why? Money, of course. The NFL and NBA have free minor-league systems, and rich boosters fund big athletic departments, so we keep trafficking on the inner cities and rationalize these cartels by filing it neatly under ?education? ? this as freshman Heisman winner Johnny Manziel makes an estimated $37?million for his university and now (cough, cough, wink, wink) takes his classes online. If the labor is free, and the rich and powerful keep getting paid, what incentive is there to fix anything about shamateurism? You are insulated from noise outside when you work inside a bank vault.

Still, Miami is in the middle of what feels like a small movement. There is some solace in that. An assistant USC football coach is suing the NCAA for corruption in its investigative arm. Ed O?Bannon is suing on behalf of all student-athlete-indentured-servants for using his likeness in a video game for profit. The governor of Pennsylvania is suing for what happened at Penn State, and you can rest assured Shalala will be suing if her school is hit with even more penalty than it self-imposed. The more lawsuits, the better. It is what finally brought change to an NFL that had been discrediting doctors linking the game to concussions. And Miami is armed with something unusual ? the omnipotent NCAA admitting actual wrong-doing by firing employees over conduct in the UM investigation.

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/02/23/3250747/dan-le-batard-um-had-to-deal-with.html

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

Carly Rae Jepsen Music Video Release: "Tonight I?m Getting Over You"

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/02/carly-rae-jepsen-music-video-release-tonight-im-getting-over-you/

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Inhabitat's Week in Green: P1 hybrid supercar, asteroid attack lasers and mosquito inoculators

Each week our friends at Inhabitat recap the week's most interesting green developments and clean tech news for us -- it's the Week in Green.

DNP Inhabitat's Week in Green tktktk

Coffee is what fuels us in the morning -- but it turns out that a cup of Joe can do much more than perk up sleepy office workers; this week a truck that runs entirely on coffee set a world record for the highest speed ever attained by a java-powered vehicle. That isn't the only green car news that broke this week -- with the Geneva Motor Show fast approaching, we've been keeping an ear to the ground for the latest from Switzerland. McLaren is set to officially unveil its 903-horsepower P1 hybrid supercar at the Geneva show, and Volkswagen will show off its new XL1 plug-in hybrid, which gets a whopping 261 miles to the gallon. Volvo, meanwhile, just launched the world's first car with external airbags to help protect pedestrians from serious injuries. But if you prefer bikes over cars, then you'll want to check out Bicycled Bikes, a unique set of bikes that are manufactured in Spain from upcycled car parts.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/BOBGSwezW18/

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

Via Licensing welcomes China Mobile and Deutsche Telekom to its LTE supergroup

Via Licensing welcomes China Mobile and Deutsche Telekom

Via Licensing is amassing quite a deep well of patents from which its members able to pull. All in the name of keeping standards-essential LTE technology accessible to those willing to play ball. Now China Mobile and Deutsche Telekom are joining the ranks of industry giants like AT&T and NTT DoCoMo in an effort to guard themselves against litigation and ease the act of licensing each other's patents. Others have tried and failed where Via Licensing seems to be succeeding in building a coalition around sharing standard-essential patents. Though, while plenty of big names have signed on, there are still quite a few notable holdouts.

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Source: TechCrunch

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

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BEACON STREET UNION ~ ?The prophet ?

Garage rock and psychedelic stuff...

?In the ?60?s, people took acid to make the world weird. Now the world is weird and people take Prozac to make it normal.?
(All content on this site is copyrighted and/or trademarked, and all rights are reserved by the respective authors.)

Source: http://psychedelicway.tumblr.com/post/43837569152

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San Bernardino hire has twice declared bankruptcy

LOS ANGELES - The bankrupt city of San Bernardino has hired a new city manager who, according to court filings, has twice declared personal bankruptcy and was recently ousted from the board of a small community's water company after being sued by shareholders.

The city council voted unanimously on Tuesday night to hire Allen J. Parker, 71, as its city manager on an annual salary of almost $222,000. He replaces an interim city manager who resigned last month because, according to friends, she was exasperated by the city's internal divisions.

The interim city manager, Andrea Travis-Miller, could not be reached for comment.

Pat Morris, the mayor of the city in California, praised Parker's "wealth of city management experience" and expressed "great confidence" in his ability to oversee the city's affairs. Parker, who began working in the job on Wednesday, will be crucial in guiding the city of 210,000 people through municipal bankruptcy, in a case that could set a national precedent for Wall Street bondholders and pension funds in future municipal bankruptcies.

The mayor and council members knew about both of Parker's personal bankruptcies -- the first in 1991 and the second in 2011 -- and the litigation surrounding his water board tenure before they interviewed him, according to the mayor's chief of staff. They discussed both issues with him when they interviewed Parker last Friday. They say the issues were no impediment: the council interviewed two final candidates but voted unanimously to hire him.

The California newspaper The Press-Enterprise reported on Thursday that Parker filed in 2011 for personal bankruptcy. In comments to the paper, Parker said that his bankruptcy and his ability to handle the city's fiscal problems were "apples and oranges."

Calls and emails to Parker asking about his bankruptcy filings and his tenure on the water board went unanswered. An email to Parker asking if his wife Sara, with whom he jointly filed for bankruptcy in the 2011 petition, would comment also did not elicit a response.

The bankruptcy of San Bernardino, a city 65 miles east of Los Angeles, is a national test case as to whether the pensions of government workers take precedence over other payments in a municipal bankruptcy -- a high stakes issue for pension plans and their beneficiaries, and for the Wall Street bondholders who lend money to governments.

City managers are central to any city's quest to seek bankruptcy protection, because they have a pivotal role in answering questions from creditors and the court. The judge overseeing San Bernardino's case must still rule on whether the city is eligible for bankruptcy before the case proceeds.

Legal dispute
A 2009 lawsuit brought by a shareholder in the Banning Heights Mutual Water Company, where Parker was a director and then president of the board between 2004 and 2010, resulted in Parker being voted off the board in February 2010 after a court-ordered special election.

Banning Heights is a tiny unincorporated community 85 miles east of Los Angeles. The water company was formed in 1913 to provide water and today it serves about 250 residents.

Despite its small size, the water rights and land upon which the community sits are worth millions of dollars, according to John McClendon, the water board's general counsel. At one point under Parker's tenure on the water board, an entity called The Tahiti Group had placed $7 million in an escrow account to purchase the company, according to correspondence attached to court filings.

Court filings in the 2009 lawsuit, and a subsequent separate lawsuit brought by the water company allege that Parker, along with others, used their position on the board to try to sell the water company, against the wishes of shareholders.

Parker and others were also accused of withholding information from shareholders, according to those court filings. The shareholder sued in 2009 because he said Parker and others ignored the results of previous shareholder elections when they were voted off the board. Parker is not a defendant in the second lawsuit which is still active.

According to one court filing by the water company dated September 20, 2010, when shareholders gained access to the water company's office after Parker and others were voted off the board, computers were missing, hard drives had been wiped and bags of shredded documents sat on the floor.

In a deposition dated November 9, 2010 relating to the 2009 lawsuit, Parker said he never shredded documents and did not believe anyone "during our regime" on the water board shredded any documents.

After a judge ruled against Parker and others in the 2009 lawsuit and ordered a special shareholder election, they were voted off the board by shareholders in February 2010.

Background check
According to his resume, which does not mention Banning Heights Water Company, Parker has long experience as a local manager in several other California cities such as East Palo Alto, Half Moon Bay, Seal Beach and Compton.

Jim Morris, the son and chief of staff to Pat Morris, San Bernardino's mayor, said the city had done its own thorough background check on Parker before he was interviewed by the council, last Friday. His bankruptcies, and the Banning Heights Mutual Water Company litigation, were known about by the time the interview took place, Morris said.

"We talked to the attorneys involved, and pulled the court filings. These were disputes over election results," Morris said. He said the Banning Heights litigation did not involve serious issues, and that such disputes occur on small entities such as the water board all the time.

Morris said there was no reason why Parker should have included his tenure on the water board on his resume. "He wasn't employed by the water board," Morris said. "His resume was an employment resume. If someone was a member of their local homeowners' association you wouldn't expect that to be on their resume."

Parker filed for personal bankruptcy in 1991 in San Mateo, Calif., according to court records. No further details were available. In February 2011, he filed for bankruptcy with his wife, in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Central District of California.

According to the 2011 bankruptcy filing, Parker and his wife listed among their debts two home mortgages with unsecured balances of $267,500, as well as bank and credit card debt of $137,252.

Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/bankrupt-san-bernardino-picks-twice-bankrupt-manager-1C8499972

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Salt + Light live in Rome

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Greg Burke,?Senior Communications Advisor for the Vatican Secretary of State, and Fr. Thomas Rosica, CSB discuss media relations for the upcoming conclave on the terrace of the Secretary of State with St. Peter?s Basilica in the background.

In this exciting time in the life of the Church, Salt + Light is playing a key role.? Fr. Thomas Rosica has been asked by the Vatican to act as Assistant to the Director of the Holy See Press Office (Federico Lombardi, SJ).? Fr. Rosica will be running the English press briefings over the next few weeks until a new pope is elected.? Sebastian Gomes is also in Rome working for the Holy See as a media relations assistant and consultant.? Salt + Light is planning massive coverage of the upcoming events in Rome.? You can stay up to date on the latest news from the Vatican by following Fr. Rosica and Sebastian on Twitter at @saltandlighttv and @churchaliveshow.

-
SL Photo / Sebastian Gomes

Source: http://saltandlighttv.org/blog/fr-thomas-rosica/salt-light-live-in-rome

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Friday, February 22, 2013

Five killed in Islamist car bomb attacks in north Mali

GAO, Mali (Reuters) - Five people were killed in a remote Malian town on Friday in car bomb attacks by Islamists on Tuareg MNLA rebels with close links to French forces, a spokesman for the Tuareg fighters said.

Violence in northern Mali underscores the risk of French and African forces becoming entangled in a messy guerrilla war as they try to help Mali's weak army counter bombings and raids by al Qaeda-linked Islamist militants.

Friday's car bomb attacks in In Khalil, 1,700 km (1,000 miles) northeast of the capital Bamako, came a day after a car bomb killed two people in the northern city of Kidal and French and Malian troops killed 15 Islamists on the streets of the city of Gao.

Sporadic gunfire was also heard in Gao on Friday, and a Malian officer said an Islamist fighter was still holed up near the banks of the Niger River.

Moussa Ag Assarid, a Paris-based representative of the pro-autonomy MNLA Tuareg fighters, said suspected Islamists had first tried to drive into a building in In Khalil, but the car was destroyed by fighters ahead of impact.

A second car then drove into the group's local operations center and exploded.

Aside from the two bombers, Ag Assarid said three MNLA fighters were killed and three others wounded. It was not possible to independently verify the report.

The MNLA swept across northern Mali in April, taking advantage of a power vacuum left by a coup in Bamako. But its revolt was eclipsed by a loose alliance of Islamist jihadists, including al Qaeda's North African wing, AQIM.

France is six weeks into an offensive to clear Islamist fighters from Mali's north, which Paris said was in danger of becoming a springboard for attacks on the region and the West.

In the meantime, the MNLA says it has retaken control of Kidal and towns around the Adrar des Ifoghas mountains, where Islamists are believed to be hiding near the Algerian border.

FRENCH WITHDRAWAL PLAN

France has established close links with Tuareg rebels on the ground and has set up a base at Kidal's airport but has kept a low profile in the town.

In Gao, the hub for French and Malian military operations in Mali's north, Malian government troops were carrying out house-to-house searches on Friday after a day of fighting.

"The buildings must be filled with dead enemy who still have unexploded grenades, guns and Kalashnikovs in their hands," Colonel Massaoule Samake told Reuters TV.

French army chief Admiral Edouard Guillaud, visiting Ottawa, told Reuters he was not surprised by the latest attacks and said he expected more to come.

"It's simply the continuation of attacks by MUJWA, which will probably want to try more attacks in the coming days. It was sadly predictable and the next attacks will fail just like they did yesterday."

MUJWA is a splinter faction of al Qaeda's North African wing AQIM which, in loose alliance with the home-grown Malian Islamist group Ansar Dine, held Mali's main northern urban areas for 10 months until the French offensive drove them out.

Paris has said it plans to start withdrawing some of its 4,000 troops from Mali next month. But rebels have fought back against Mali's weak and divided army, and African forces due to take over the French role are not yet in place.

Asked whether France still planned to start withdrawing troops in March, Guillaud replied: "This is obviously conditions-based, that's obvious. But ... I don't see any reason not to begin some drawdown."

(Reporting by Joe Penney in Gao, John Irish in Dakar, David Ljunggren in Ottawa and Nicholas Vinocur in Paris; Writing by John Irish; Editing by David Lewis and Andrew Roche)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/five-killed-islamist-car-bomb-attacks-north-mali-192116177.html

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Obama Solicits Stories of ?Gun Violence? (Powerlineblog)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

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Thursday, February 21, 2013

NASA Mars rover ready to eat, analyze rock powder

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida | Wed Feb 20, 2013 6:46pm EST

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) - NASA's Mars rover Curiosity, dispatched to learn if the planet ever had ingredients for life, drilled its first bit of powder from inside a potentially water-formed ancient rock, scientists said on Wednesday.

The robotic geology station, which landed inside a giant impact basin on August 6 for a two-year mission, transferred about a tablespoon of rock powder from its drill into a scoop, pictures relayed by the rover Wednesday showed.

"We're all very happy to get this confirmation and relieved that the drilling was a complete success," Curiosity engineer Scott McCloskey of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, told reporters on a conference call.

On February 8, the rover used its powerful drill, the first instrument of its type to be sent to Mars, to bore inside a flat, veined piece of bedrock, which appears to contain minerals formed by flowing water.

The sample, retrieved from at least 2 inches beneath the surface of the rock, will be sieved and portions of it processed inside two onboard science instruments.

The gray powder is strikingly different than the ubiquitous red dust that covers the planet's surface, a result of oxidation from solar ultraviolet radiation.

"Having a rock-drilling capability on a rover is a significant advancement," said Louise Jandura, chief engineer for Curiosity's sample system.

"It allows us to go beyond the surface layer of the rock, unlocking a kind of time capsule of evidence about the state of Mars going back 3 or 4 billion years," Jandura told reporters.

The drill is the last of Curiosity's 10 science instruments to be tested since the rover landed inside Gale Crater, located near the planet's equator.

The site was selected because of a three-mile (5-km) high mound of what appears to be layered sediments rising from the crater's floor.

Rather than driving directly over to the mountain, scientists decided to explore an area in the opposite direction that showed intriguing signs of past water.

Water is believed to be a key ingredient for life.

"The rocks in this area have a really rich geologic history and they have the potential to give us information about multiple interactions of water and rock," said Curiosity scientist Joel Hurowitz, also with the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

The fine-grained rocks are filled with veins and spherical deposits, including what appears to be calcium sulfate, a mineral which forms on Earth when water flows through fractures in rock. Mars is the planet in our solar system most like Earth.

"When you find exactly these sorts of conditions on Earth ... and everything still goes right, it's still an accident of fate to preserve organics," Curiosity's lead scientist John Grotzinger of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena told Reuters.

"So we'll have to separate at some point the pursuit of what may have been a habitable environment from what may or may not be an environment that preserves organics," he said.

"Obviously we're interested in the organics ? but right now we're sort of on the pathway to hopefully characterizing this place as a habitable environment," Grotzinger said.

(Editing by Kevin Gray and Stacey Joyce)

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/scienceNews/~3/7o5Ac2HULV4/us-space-mars-idUSBRE91J1FE20130220

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St. Genevieve High honors former President Jimmy Carter

PHOTOS


A statesman, author and diplomat, Jimmy Carter hasn't often found himself at a loss for words.

But on Tuesday, facing a wall covered with photos and mementos of his friendship with the community at St. Genevieve High School, the nation's 39th president found it difficult to express himself.

"It's just breathtaking! I hardly know what to say!" he exclaimed, his recognizable Georgia drawl coming through loud and clear.

In Southern California for a fundraiser for the nonprofit Carter Center for Human Rights, the former president and wife Rosalynn took a side trip to Panorama City, where they toured St. Genevieve's, and got a close-up look at the newly completed tribute wall. It celebrates trips that students from St. Gen's have made to the Carters' home in Plains, Ga., and the visit that Jimmy Carter made to the school in 2010, thanks to the efforts of Principal Dan Horn.

In 1986, while teaching at a public school outside of Washington, D.C., Horn wrote a fan letter to Rosalynn Carter after he read her autobiography, and the former first lady responded. On a whim, Horn asked if he could come to Georgia to meet her, and Rosalynn invited him to come have lunch in Plains.

Horn and Rosalynn Carter continued to correspond, forging a bond that blossomed into a friendship between

the Carters and the St. Genevieve family.

In 2005, after attending a character-building conference in Atlanta, Horn and four students drove to Plains and saw the Nobel Peace Prize winner teach a Sunday school class at his Maranatha Baptist Church.

Four years later, a group of St. Gen students returned to Plains to film a documentary about the former president, to perform for his 85th birthday and to stage a production of "Singin' in the Rain.

Carter returned the favor in 2010, visiting the campus and talking to students about politics and history during a Q&A session in the school gym.

During a trip to Plains in 2012, the school performed "Carousel," said to be Carter's favorite musical. On a lark, Horn invited Shirley Jones, who starred in the 1956 film version. She not only accompanied the students, but opened the show.

Jones and Helen Reddy, another longtime friend of Horn, performed again for the Carters on Tuesday night.

Hours before the Carters arrived via motorcade, students clad in their gray-and-navy uniforms escorted visitors through the campus, politely introducing themselves and making small talk. It's that kind of discipline that helped earn St. Gen's the designation as a National School of Character in 2003.

Accompanied by seniors Emmanuel Tapia and Anarelli Olivos, the Carters walked through the freshly polished hallway to the wall outside the state-of-the-art library, where the tribute was ceremoniously unveiled.

Carter was reminded that during his 2010 trip, he'd remarked that he considered St. Genevieve's his favorite high school of all those he's visited.

"I have not changed my mind about that," he said.

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Source: http://www.dailynews.com/news/ci_22625299/st-genevieve-high-honors-former-president-jimmy-carter?source=rss

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Bolivia leader unable to visit Chavez at hospital

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) ? Bolivian President Evo Morales said Wednesday that he was unable to meet with his friend and ally Hugo Chavez when he came to the military hospital in Caracas where the Venezuelan president is undergoing unspecified cancer treatment.

Morales had arrived at the hospital on Tuesday night along with Vice President Nicolas Maduro in a convoy of vehicles escorted by troops on motorcycles, and the Bolivian leader left later on without speaking to journalists who were waiting outside the hospital.

"I wasn't able to meet him," Morales said at a news conference at the United Nations. "I was only able to meet the head doctor and his family, but my understanding is that they are very encouraged."

Morales added, however, that Chavez has been going through "the most difficult moments in his life" and is still facing serious health problems.

"Now that he's returned to Caracas it's a great relief," Morales said.

Chavez's return to Venezuela from Cuba was announced by the government on Monday after a 10-week stay on the island during which he underwent a fourth cancer-related surgery and treatment for complications including a severe respiratory infection.

The government hasn't released any images of the president since his return, and Chavez's long absence from public view has been stirring renewed speculation about a possible new presidential election if his illness eventually forces him to relinquish power. Chavez hasn't spoken publicly since before his Dec. 11 surgery.

It was the second time that Morales has tried to see Chavez since his latest surgery. The Bolivian leader traveled to Havana in December but later gave few details about the quick trip. The visits underscore Chavez's importance to a generation of Latin American leftists who consider the Venezuelan president the heir of Fidel Castro and his efforts to stand up to what they consider U.S. imperialism.

Morales sidestepped a question on whether he would take a more prominent role in the region, along with Ecuador's leftist President Rafael Correa, now that Chavez has been sidelined at least temporarily. But he became nostalgic when discussing how much Chavez and Castro had helped him institute policies of nationalization and other reforms when he first took office in 2006.

"It really does pain me that Fidel Castro is no longer president, and particularly as well now that my brother president Chavez is in a very difficult spot with his health," Morales said.

In Venezuela on Wednesday, Maduro spoke on television about the jubilation among Chavez's supporters who celebrated his arrival in the streets.

"Venezuela is filled with love and happiness because we have commander Hugo Chavez Frias here in our homeland," Maduro said. He recalled that Chavez had personally told his government officials in Havana that it was time for him to return home to continue his "complementary treatments" in Venezuela.

It remains unclear what treatments Chavez is currently receiving, though medical experts say it could be more chemotherapy or other sorts of drug treatments, depending on the type of pelvic cancer he is fighting.

His supporters have been showing their support writing celebratory slogans on the windows of buses and cars in Caracas, such as "Chavez is alive" and "He's back."

The Venezuelan government also sought to buttress the official stance that Chavez remains in charge by issuing a statement strongly criticizing the U.S. State Department for a spokeswoman's remarks about a possible transition in the country.

The Venezuelan government said the comments by State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland "constitute a new and rude interference by the government in Washington in the internal affairs of Venezuela."

Nuland referred to the possibility of a new presidential election in Venezuela when asked on Tuesday about Chavez's return from Cuba.

"It is obviously a matter for Venezuelans to decide how the transition is going to take place," Nuland told reporters in Washington. "Should President Chavez become permanently unavailable to serve, our understanding is that the Venezuelan Constitution requires that there be an election to seek a new president."

She said the U.S. government "would hope that that election would be free and fair and balanced."

Chavez's government said Nuland's statements "have generated deep indignation among the Venezuelan people." It said that "the only transition being proposed is the transition toward Bolivarian socialism" being pursued by Chavez's government

Venezuela's sharply worded statement contrasted with recent remarks by Foreign Minister Elias Jaua, who said in a televised interview on Sunday that Chavez has instructed diplomats to seek improved relations with the United States.

The U.S. Embassy in Caracas has been without an ambassador since July 2010, when Chavez rejected the U.S. nominee for ambassador accusing him of making disrespectful remarks. That led Washington to revoke the visa of the Venezuelan ambassador.

Despite such diplomatic tensions, the United States remains the leading buyer of Venezuelan oil.

___

Edith M. Lederer reported from the United Nations. Ian James in Caracas and Eva Font at the United Nations contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bolivia-leader-unable-visit-chavez-hospital-234531976.html

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