Saturday, December 31, 2011

My New Year's Is 62 Million Times Bigger Than Yours, Said The Man From Beijing

The New Year comes, of course, at midnight. But because we have different time zones, we have many different midnights and some are much more crowded than others.

This morning I asked myself: who's got the biggest New Year's Eve on earth? By which I mean: which time zone has the most people in it. And the answer is clear.

If you look at this world time zone map, one zone, which we've highlighted it in yellow has, as you can see, all of China, all 1.3 billion of 'em, plus a hunk of Siberia, plus Taiwan, Hong Kong, the Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei, a chunk of Indonesia, Timor and a cut of Australia. Altogether, that's got to be at least 1.5 billion people who will greet 2012 at the very same moment.

Party-wise (assuming Confucian cultures pay our New Year's eve any mind, and I think they do), this is the hot and poppin' New Year's Eve Zone on our planet, bigger than the zone that transects Western Europe and Africa, bigger than anything in the Americas.

For Those Who Don't Go Out on New Year's...

But maybe you're the quiet type. Maybe you don't like a lot of noise and merry making on what is a purely odometer-like occasion. And maybe you are looking for a time zone that is next to empty where there's nobody around to irritate you. Well, I think we've got a zone for you.

This zone is two zones west of the Greenwich meridian. It is mostly empty ocean.

Yes, it does contain a hunk of Greenland, a bit of Brazil, and a few Atlantic islands (the Azores) but all those places have chosen ? and passed laws, attaching themselves to other time zones. They've opted out. So not a lot of people live in this zone's time. It's a vast stretch of uninhabited Atlantic, populated only by fish and whales who don't have, I presume, a special feel for Decembers or Januaries or clocks or midnights. It does, down near Antarctica, include two little dots of land: the South Georgia and the South Sandwich islands, but they don't, either of them, have many inhabitants. One website I looked at estimates a research population of about 24 people, in the summer months (which is around now).

No Need For Velvet Ropes

Meaning, if you invited everybody in this time zone (not including transient boat traffic, penguins or seals), the biggest crowd you could hope for is two dozen people.

So there you have it, two very different zones for different temperaments. And the differences aren't trivial: 1.5 billion people here, 24 people there.

That's the Chinese advantage over South Sandwich Island. Their zone has 62.5 million times more people. But here's the South Sandwich advantage (for shy people): their zone is 62.5 million times less crowded. Whichever way you like it, happy New Year!

Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/krulwich/2011/12/28/144382515/my-new-year-s-is-62-million-times-bigger-than-yours-said-the-man-from-beijing?ft=1&f=1007

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Mercer Island select team wins Redmond tournament | Sports brief

By MEGAN MANAGAN
Mercer Island Reporter Sports Writer
December 22, 2011 ? Updated 1:19 PM?

The Mercer Island sixth grade select ETL basketball team won the Redmond Select basketball Holiday Tournament in mid-December.

The team beat Issaquah in the championship game 54-27 to bring home the trophy. The Islanders won six games during the tournament.

The team includes: Justin Ho, Matt Boissoneault, Will Hamilton, Nate Hillard, Ethan Eason, Griffin Emanuels, Giovani Rocha, Greg Fuchs. Parker Simpson, Alex Platou, Reed Martinez and Hunter Bauman. They are coached by David Loutsis.

?

Contact Mercer Island Reporter Sports Writer Megan Managan at mmanagan@mi-reporter.com or (206) 232-1215 ext. 5054.

Source: http://feeds.soundpublishing.com/~r/mirsports/~3/6kcNAt-1Fkg/136100313.html

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E. Africa Warns of Possible Terror Attacks During Holiday Season

Companies and officials in East Africa are strengthening security and issuing safety warnings during the Christmas season due to worries about possible al-Shabab attacks in public places. The Kenyan government says it received a credible threat to assassinate a Kenyan minister and deputy speaker.

Securex Agencies communication officer in Nairobi, Brian Sagala, says his company is struggling to fill the demand for extra guards, dogs, metal detectors and other equipment.

"We are selling more walk-throughs - those are the ones when someone just passes [through] it, it beeps. Most companies that even have our guards are asking for the guards to be given the hand-held metal detectors. And we are also having more queries, people just asking us, which is the right thing to put in my building to vet people when they are coming in," Sagala stated.

Sagala says the demand for such equipment started last month, following two grenade attacks in Kenya's capital, and has accelerated.

The Kenyan government issued a warning advising people to be cautious during the Christmas season in shopping malls, hotels, places of worship and other public venues.

Kenya recently sent troops into Somalia, where they joined the African Union peacekeeping force AMISOM, to battle al-Shabab militants who had launched attacks inside Kenya. During the past few weeks, scores of al-Shabab fighters were reportedly killed by Kenyan troops in Somalia.

Two national newspapers are reporting a December 15 "Situation Report" from the Office of the President claims al-Shabab operatives had instructions to assassinate Minister of State for Defense Yusuf Haji and Deputy Speaker Farah Maalim.

When contacted by VOA, Kenyan government spokesman Alfred Mutua said his government's warning was only indirectly and distantly related to the alleged assassination threats and recent military battles. "We were going to do it [issue the warning] anyway. You know, just a normal, let us be careful during this holiday season. We have got some bad guys out there who do not really care much about human life," he said.

But Ugandan Army Spokesman Colonel Felix Kulayigye, whose country has troops in AMISOM in Somalia, says Kenyans have reason to worry.

"Of course, Kenya, being the latest entrant into the Somali fray, makes it the most recent target for al-Shabab. Certainly, Kenya is generally under threat from the al-Shabab bombing," Kulayigye said. "It therefore requires extra vigilance on the part of both the security agencies and the civilians."

Kulayigye says the same situation applies to Uganda. "Oh yes, we have concerns. We have concerns, and indeed, we are extra vigilant," he added.

Kulayigye says he thinks it is unlikely al-Shabab would specifically target the Kenyan minister and deputy speaker, rather preferring to carry out large-scale attacks in public places to cause panic and raise publicity. He says he received a death threat from al-Shabab last year, but the militant group instead bombed soccer fans watching the World Cup on television in a restaurant and a club, killing 74.

Source: http://feeds.bignewsnetwork.com/?sid=202182228

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Intel's 32nm Medfield SoC specs and benchmarks leak

Medfield
Intel's Medfield may still be a ways from breaking into the smartphone and tablet market, but we're finally starting to get some concrete details on its specs and capabilities. VR-Zone got the nitty gritty on Chipzilla's first true SoC and it looks almost ready to run with the big dogs. A reference tablet, running at 1.6GHz with 1GB of RAM (which also packs Bluetooth, WiFi and FM radio) was put through some Android benchmarks and held it's own against a Tegra 2 and a Snapdragon MSM8260 -- which pulled a 7,500 and 8,000 in Caffeinemark 3, respectively. The admittedly higher clocked Atom scored an impressive 10,500, though power consumption on the pre-production chips was a bit higher than anticipated. At idle, the fledgling Medfield was sucking down 2.6W and spiking to 3.6W under load. Ultimately Intel hopes to cut those numbers to 2W at idle and 2.6W while pushing out HD video -- not far off from current-gen ARM SoC. Lets not forget though, benchmarks only tell part of the story -- we'll be waiting to see working hardware before declaring a victor.

Intel's 32nm Medfield SoC specs and benchmarks leak originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 27 Dec 2011 16:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Netbook News  |  sourceVR-Zone  | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/27/intels-32nm-medfield-soc-specs-and-benchmarks-leak/

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Argentine leader's cancer forces her to delegate

Argentina's President Cristina Fernandez talks to Argentine governors at government house in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Wednesday Dec. 28, 2011. Fernandez, who on Tuesday was diagnosed with treatable thyroid cancer, will undergo surgery on Jan. 4 and then take 20 days of medical leave, during which Vice President Amado Boudou will run the country. (AP Photo/Eduardo Di Baia)

Argentina's President Cristina Fernandez talks to Argentine governors at government house in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Wednesday Dec. 28, 2011. Fernandez, who on Tuesday was diagnosed with treatable thyroid cancer, will undergo surgery on Jan. 4 and then take 20 days of medical leave, during which Vice President Amado Boudou will run the country. (AP Photo/Eduardo Di Baia)

Argentina's President Cristina Fernandez talks to a group of Argentine governors at the government house in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Wednesday Dec. 28, 2011. Fernandez, who on Tuesday was diagnosed with treatable thyroid cancer, will undergo surgery on Jan. 4 and then take 20 days of medical leave, during which Vice President Amado Boudou will run the country. Next to Fernandez is a scale model of an iron sculpture of Argentina's former first lady and second wife of President Juan Peron, Eva Peron. (AP Photo/Eduardo Di Baia)

Argentina's President Cristina Fernandez talks to a group of Argentine governors at government house in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Wednesday Dec. 28, 2011. Fernandez, who on Tuesday was diagnosed with treatable thyroid cancer, will undergo surgery on Jan. 4 and then take 20 days of medical leave, during which Vice President Amado Boudou will run the country. (AP Photo/Eduardo Di Baia)

Argentina's President Cristina Fernandez talks to a group of Argentine governors at the government house in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Wednesday Dec. 28, 2011. Fernandez, who on Tuesday was diagnosed with treatable thyroid cancer, will undergo surgery on Jan. 4 and then take 20 days of medical leave, during which Vice President Amado Boudou will run the country. Next to Fernandez is a scale model of an iron sculpture of Argentina's former first lady and second wife of President Juan Peron, Eva Peron. (AP Photo/Eduardo Di Baia)

Argentina's President Cristina Fernandez talks to a group of Argentine governors at the government house in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Wednesday Dec. 28, 2011. Fernandez, who on Tuesday was diagnosed with treatable thyroid cancer, will undergo surgery on Jan. 4 and then take 20 days of medical leave, during which Vice President Amado Boudou will run the country. Pictured at right is a portrait of Argentina's former first lady and second wife of President Juan Peron, Eva Peron. Next to Fernandez is a scale model of an iron sculpture of Peron. (AP Photo/Eduardo Di Baia)

(AP) ? Argentina's president cracked jokes and sounded optimistic Wednesday after her thyroid cancer diagnosis was announced, but she's clearly struggling with the need to delegate power while she recovers from next week's surgery.

Cristina Fernandez's thyroid removal operation, scheduled for Jan. 4, is expected to be as routine as cancer surgery can be. Doctors predict a speedy recovery, since papillary thyroid carcinoma detected before it spreads is highly curable without chemotherapy.

Still, the idea of leaving her vice president in charge for 20 days appears to pose a daunting challenge for Fernandez, who has never been comfortable delegating.

She praised her constitutional successor, former Economy Minister Amado Boudou, for sharing her political ideas, but jokingly warned him to "be careful what you do" as interim president and made clear that she'll be keeping a close watch on things while recovering at her home in Patagonia.

"The truth is that I ? everything is too much. You can't be in charge of everything," Fernandez acknowledged. "The body can't handle it."

Indeed. Despite the doctors' assurances, simply combining the words "cancer" and "Cristina" had Argentines worried about the mortality of a leader who has been virtually alone at the top. Even before the death of her husband, Nestor Kirchner, of a heart attack last year, she had grown accustomed to ruling through emergency decrees after consulting only a small circle of loyal advisers.

"It affects me deeply," said Cecilia Maldonado, a young office worker in downtown Buenos Aires. "Because if you begin to think about her having to leave the presidency, or something happening to her ... there isn't anybody who could replace all the energy that she's put into raising up this government."

Fernandez and Kirchner were Argentina's ultimate power couple, whose fervent supporters say they've done more for the country during their combined two terms in office than anyone since legendary strongman Juan Domingo Peron and his wife, Evita, used the country's post-World War II riches to move a generation of working people into the middle class.

Fernandez, 58, dispelled doubts about her survival skills after Kirchner's death and won re-election by a landslide in October, in part because voters saw the grieving widow as indomitable ? the only one capable of containing Argentina's social pressures and keeping on track the economy, which grew at more than 9 percent this year.

Argentina has come back strong from its disastrous devaluation and debt default a decade ago, reducing poverty, unemployment and the wealth gap, and directing billions of dollars in revenue to the poor through social programs. But many worry that such achievements could disappear when Fernandez leaves office.

"Just when it seems like we're getting a little better," complained Maldonado, reacting to the news. "Ten years ago, I lived through 2001, and I really suffered. ... Only now can you see things improving, and plan for the future."

The cancer diagnosis worries Argentines precisely "because it's a one-person government ... where only the president makes decisions," said Mariel Fornoni, director of the Management & Fit consulting firm. "That's why there's so much doubt about what might happen."

Still, Fornoni said, it's clear that the president's planned medical leave is irrelevant, and that no real decision will be made without consulting her.

Fernandez spoke of her cancer diagnosis as she announced new revenue transfers to provincial governments, seeking to project an image of normalcy. Several of the gathered governors and ministers who gave her an extended standing ovation said they were relieved to see her in good spirits and fully in command.

"She seems optimistic, making jokes. Clearly she's not going to let anything slow her down these next four years," said Jorge Capitanich, governor of the northern state of Chaco.

Just behind her during her speech was an architect's rendering of an image of Evita Peron that now towers over the widest avenue in Buenos Aires. Comparisons weren't lost on Argentines, who learn as children that Evita died in 1951 because she neglected her own health while caring for the poor, letting uterine cancer spread until it was incurable.

The president's doctors said Fernandez was told of her cancer on Dec. 22, the same day that her newly inaugurated Senate majority, racing to approve new laws ahead of its summer recess, significantly increased several executive powers.

And while Fernandez talked of delegating on Wednesday, she reversed herself practically in the same breath.

"We're going to keep going with the same energy we've always had. We need to face things as we've always done, taking charge of everything that's our responsibility, and everything else as well," she said. "I'm going to keep working the same as always, for Argentina, for nothing other than her, and for all the Argentines."

___

Associated Press writer Almudena Calatrava in Buenos Aires contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2011-12-28-LT-Argentina-President's-Health/id-245e720f204b47b6951214e23eed2d0f

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Japanese, U.S. troops to train each other in hand-to-hand combat

By Seth Robson

Stars and Stripes

Published: December 28, 2011

CAMP ZAMA, Japan ? Martial arts such as judo, jujitsu, kendo and karate are modern vestiges of Japan?s centuries-old warrior tradition.

Now soldiers stationed in Japan who master U.S. Army Combatives ? a hand-to-hand combat system that borrows many of its techniques from Japanese martial arts ? will have the chance to study at the Japan Self-Defense Force Physical Training School as part a new initiative between the JSDF and U.S. Army.

The opportunity came about when Maj. Gen. Makato Hatanaka, commandant of the Japanese school, observed a U.S. Army Combatives class in October and liked what he saw, according to Camp Zama-based instructor Leonardo Munoz.

Hatanaka and U.S. Army Japan commander Maj. Gen. Michael Harrison later agreed that senior U.S. Combatives instructors will train at the Japanese school, while Japanese troops will learn Combatives at Camp Zama, Munoz said. The first exchange is slated for February, he said.

?When I think of Japanese culture, I think of martial arts,? said Capt. Joseph Proctor, 33, a Level IV Army Combatives instructor at Camp Zama. ?Any opportunity to train with a Japanese master would be something to take back and really be proud of. It?s something you?d tell your grandkids about.?

Martial arts such as judo and jujitsu had their origin in the Samurai?s Bushido code ? the way of the warrior, Proctor said.

U.S. personnel don?t know much about the Japanese military?s hand-to-hand combat techniques but they are keen to learn, Proctor said.

?We work closely together here in Japan,? he said. ?In a combat situation where there is close-quarters fighting, it would be good to have an understanding of their capabilities and vice versa.?

Proctor said he?s interested to learn about Japanese rules of engagement, which would dictate situations in which they could escalate force and use lethal or nonlethal techniques.

?If (we are working together and) they expect us to immediately escalate to a technique and we are not familiar with it, we might be letting them down, he said.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/starsandstripes/general/~3/WvlIExux6y0/japanese-u-s-troops-to-train-each-other-in-hand-to-hand-combat-1.164619

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Shaheen?s second year as mayor an eventful one

WARNER ROBINS -- Warner Robins Mayor Chuck Shaheen and City Council members openly admitted in December 2010 that their first year together was chaotic. They pledged 2011 would be a fresh start.

But at their first council meeting this year, they argued. Four voted to dismiss longtime City Attorney Jim Elliott, as he sat nearby. Three days later, and after public outcry, councilmen reinstated Elliott.

Despite that rough start, Shaheen has reached the halfway mark of his term with a year that saw progress on major projects and in council relations.

With three new council members taking office in the new year, he and the current councilmen are hoping for even more progress in 2012. Terms for Councilmen Tom Simms Jr., Bob Wilbanks and John Williams end Dec. 31.

?I believe this new council -- we?re going to have a vision of how to move Warner Robins forward to the year 2040,? Shaheen said.

RDA reformation aids LEC project

Shaheen?s year started with a slight change in the way councilmen voted.

In much of 2010, Shaheen?s ideas tended to receive a 4-2 vote, with Councilmen Mike Daley, Daron Lee, Paul Shealy and Wilbanks voting together.

This year, Lee -- who served as mayor pro-tem -- began to cast his vote more often in agreement with Simms and Williams, leaving Shaheen as the deciding vote. Lee recently said he decided to work more cohesively with the mayor.

?Whatever my decision was, whether I was pro or against what the mayor said, that would be behind closed doors,? Lee said. ?But in the public?s eye, even if I didn?t agree, we acted professionally.?

One of the first decisions that showed the tide change was an April vote to reform the Redevelopment Agency board, which oversees most of the city?s major projects. Shaheen argued replacing mayor and council on the board with residents would ?take politics out of business decisions.?

Shaheen cast the deciding vote for the reformation when Daley, then the chairman of the board, Shealy and Wilbanks voted against the measure.

The reformation of the board made way for progress on the Law Enforcement Center, Shaheen said. One of his goals was to move forward on projects that had stalled for years before his term began, including the police headquarters.

The project had been discussed for years. In 2010, City Council settled on the Watson Boulevard and First Street location after considering two others. This year the building was redesigned, the property acquisitions were finalized and most of the needed land has been cleared.

?With this new RDA board under Gary Lee (the RDA executive director), we have taken politics out and put progress in,? Shaheen said, adding ?there?s no way? the project would be as far along if mayor and council were still on the board.

Shealy and Wilbanks recently said the new board has made tremendous strides, but they stand by their original votes. Daley did not mention the RDA in an e-mailed statement for this story.

?The people elected mayor and council, and I think there?s a responsibility there,? Shealy said. ?I think we could?ve represented the people a little better.?

Other projects

Also this year, the Georgia-Robins Aerospace Maintenance Partnership project received its needed finding of No Significant Impact from Air Force Materiel Command.

?G-RAMP had been talked about for 10 years before me,? Shaheen said. ?And we got that done in a year. That?s progress.?

The project is proposed to be a public-private partnership to include maintenance hangars for use by Robins Air Force Base, which local leaders say could bring thousands of jobs to the area.

But where the project goes from here is uncertain. Shaheen announced at a recent state-of-the-city address that he doesn?t think the city ought to be in charge of building the project, mainly because of the multi-million dollar price tag and the needed manpower. He proposed City Council review options to either give the land to Robins Air Force Base or sell it to a developer.

Daley and Shealy have said they agree other options should be considered in the new year now that the environmental assessment has shown the land is viable for the project. Williams also agreed but said it could be a hard sell.

?I just don?t know if a private contractor is going to want to do it,? Williams said.

Wilbanks said Shaheen?s proposals for G-RAMP are yet another example of the mayor going against City Council decisions. The project is a win-win for the city, Wilbanks said.

?Now, all of a sudden, he wants to sell that land to a developer,? the councilman said. ?The situation that we had out there -- we had the land, we build it up, we prepare it and the contractors come in and we benefit (from) the revenues and we benefit (from) the job creations. Why would we give that up??

Another project that progressed this year was a wastewater treatment plant extension. City Council voted this month to seek $28.5 million in bonds to fund the project, which will increase the capacity from 9 million gallons of wastewater per day to 12 million.

The expansion will not only lay the groundwork for future residential growth but also will attract industry, Shaheen said.

After laying new and replacing old sewer lines throughout the city this year, Shealy said, the plant expansion is the next big infrastructure necessity.

?That?s for the future,? he said.

In addition, Shaheen said he pushed to complete road projects earmarked for 2001 and 2006 special purpose local options sales tax funds, including those for Margie Drive, Willie Lee Parkway and North Davis Drive.

Lessons learned

Shaheen said some hard lessons were learned this year, specifically in communication. Both the mayor and councilmen said better communication was at the foundation of the calmer council relations.

For his part, Shaheen said he took advice from some Warner Robins? ?forefathers,? including former council members and interim mayors Henrietta McIntyre and Clifford Holmes.

?When you get new people in, it takes a little while for them to gel,? said Shealy -- who, along with Daley and Lee, joined council at the same time as Shaheen. ?We?re really just regular town folks; you don?t have the seasoned politicians.?

A lack of communication was the reason council blindsided Elliott at its first meeting, Lee said. Elliott was given no prior notice his job was on the line. Though specifics weren?t given regarding the brief termination, councilmen have said the issues they had have been discussed and resolved.

?Once you know better, you do better,? Lee said, adding he later apologized to Elliott. ?There are some things that we probably should have given a second thought.?

Shaheen, city engineers and public works employees also were schooled this year on being environmentally friendly when -- after a months-long investigation -- the Georgia Environmental Protection Division found permitting violations for work done at Bay Gall Creek.

The city was fined $50,000 and placed on a year probation. Shaheen said the investigation revealed some requirements he and city employees were unaware of.

?They were really understanding of where we were going,? Shaheen said of the EPD.

The councilmen agreed Shaheen, a former pharmaceutical salesman who had little political experience before running for mayor in 2009, has learned more about being the city?s leader.

?I think he?s learned a lot. I think he?s matured some,? Wilbanks said. ?I still think he?s going to have a challenge working within the city charter.?

Wilbanks said, as he has several times before, that Shaheen has a habit of ignoring majority votes he does not agree with. Wilbanks pointed to a sports complex that has not been built.

Shaheen has said he would like to see the complex, which previous councils have said would bring softball tournaments to Warner Robins, redesigned and moved from the approved location just northwest of the intersection of Russell Parkway and Ga. 247.

Wilbanks said Shaheen should follow through with the plans City Council approved at least 10 years ago.

Daley also mentioned Shaheen?s ability to follow through with majority votes in an e-mailed statement.

?The mayor has a big job and a huge responsibility,? Daley wrote. ?He is the chief executive officer and is responsible for the efficient administration of all the affairs of the city over which he has jurisdiction. However the M&C (mayor and council) is the governing body of the city of which the mayor is one of the members with the same powers as any one of the other six members and the M&C by majority vote set the direction of the city.?

Looking forward

The councilmen interviewed for this story all agreed Shaheen?s second year was better than the first. However, they said the third will be the best yet because the mayor has learned the ropes and three new councilmen are entering the picture. Simms did not respond to interview requests.

Carolyn Robbins, Mike Brashear and Mike Davis will be sworn in Dec. 29. They are replacing Simms, Wilbanks and Williams, respectively. Much unity is expected of these three, especially since they are replacing two councilmen who generated headlines for quirky and combative behavior. Williams is facing one federal and one Houston County Superior Court indictment, and it?s a rare occasion Wilbanks shies away from an argument.

?It?ll be that much better because you have a little camaraderie? with the new council members, Shealy said.

The three recently were challenged with quashing an argument between Shaheen and Wilbanks over the implementation of a payroll study. Instead of the tension that was present at the final precouncil meeting, the year?s last regular meeting ended with a 7-0 vote in which a compromise had been made.

Council approved a measure that said a payroll adjustment would be made -- as Wilbanks wanted -- but did not lock the city into a specific plan -- as the mayor wanted.

?I saw the incoming council and the ones already in council (who are returning) working hand-in-hand, and it really made me feel good? about being voted out, Williams said. ?We had oil and water on there for two years, and it didn?t mix.?

The continuing councilmen agreed next year should be a new start.

?We learn from the past, which hopefully makes us wiser for the future,? Daley wrote in his statement. ?I have enjoyed working with the mayor and present members of the council this past year and look forward to working with the newly elected members and the present midterm members next year.?

To contact writer Christina M. Wright, call 256-9685.

Source: http://www.macon.com/2011/12/26/1838796/shaheens-second-year-as-mayor.html

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

At last, school finance lawsuit number 4 (Offthekuff)

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Facebook unwelcome in Vietnam, but Zuckerberg OK

In this Dec. 26, 2011 photo, Facebook website founder Mark Zuckerberg rides a water buffalo in northern resort town of Sapa in Lao Cai province, Vietnam in this picture taken. Vietnam may block its citizens from using to Facebook, but that didn't stop website founder Mark Zuckerberg from spending his vacation there. Zuckerberg spent Christmas Eve in the popular tourist destination Ha Long Bay, local official Trinh Dang Thanh says. (AP Photo/VnExpress, Le Thanh Hieu) EDITORIAL USE ONLY

In this Dec. 26, 2011 photo, Facebook website founder Mark Zuckerberg rides a water buffalo in northern resort town of Sapa in Lao Cai province, Vietnam in this picture taken. Vietnam may block its citizens from using to Facebook, but that didn't stop website founder Mark Zuckerberg from spending his vacation there. Zuckerberg spent Christmas Eve in the popular tourist destination Ha Long Bay, local official Trinh Dang Thanh says. (AP Photo/VnExpress, Le Thanh Hieu) EDITORIAL USE ONLY

(AP) ? Vietnam may block its citizens from using Facebook, but that didn't stop website founder Mark Zuckerberg from vacationing in the communist country.

Zuckerberg spent Christmas Eve in the popular tourist destination Ha Long Bay, local official Trinh Dang Thanh says.

State-run media say Zuckerberg arrived in Vietnam on Dec. 22.

Zuckerberg spent Christmas Day at an ecolodge in the northern mountain town of Sapa and rode a buffalo, said Le Phuc Thien, deputy manager at Topas Ecolodge.

Zuckerberg, Facebook's 27-year-old CEO, founded the social networking site in 2004.

Vietnam's aggressive Internet censors block access to Facebook and other websites, but young Vietnamese easily bypass the restrictions.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-12-27-People-Zuckerberg/id-37f350308c244a7db2c50ec716d7e8bd

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Kid band Vazquez Sounds takes Mexico by storm (AP)

vaz MEXICO CITY ? Ten-year-old Angie Vazquez has become an Internet phenom belting out a soulful cover of Brit pop star Adele's "Rolling in the Deep." In an online video seemingly shot at home, her teenage brothers Abelardo and Gustavo play the keyboard, guitar and drums.

The video drew almost 18 million views, interviews on Mexico's major television networks and a mention on Good Morning America. Within weeks of its Nov. 11 posting, the so-called Vazquez Sounds signed a contract with Sony Music Mexico. They released their first album this week that includes another Internet smash cover, of Mariah Carey's "All I Want for Christmas is You."

Their nearly overnight success online evokes the now legendary saga of Canadian 'tween idol Justin Bieber, who was discovered after his mother posted online amateur footage of him crooning and strumming.

"We make a lot of videos of a lot of things, but my son Abelardo wanted to record this song and share it with friends and family," said father Abelardo Vazquez in a telephone interview from the family's hometown of Mexicali, on the California border. "We really didn't expect the cover to become such a phenomenon on the Web."

Before you call the Vazquez clan Mexico's version of Bieber-mania, consider this: The elder Abelardo Vazquez is a professional music producer instrumental in creating the sound of well-known Mexican bands such as Reik and Nikki Clan, also from the border.

The videos of Angie and her brothers in their home studio are also professionally produced, mixed and lighted, with slick camera work.

Abelardo Vazquez says he's not driving his kids into the music business, though he acknowledges they've had a leg up.

"My kids have had a musical education since they were very young, because I have worked producing groups for many years," the father said.

When the video sparked interest in a few million people beyond the Vazquez's immediate circle, the decision to cut a CD was natural, Vazquez said.

He added that he retains total control over the project, and Sony music is working as a distributor.

"The contract with Sony isn't the traditional type," Vazquez said. "It isn't the typical contract with record companies, in which they used to control the artists' career. This is a family project."

Although Vazquez has had an eight-year relationship with Sony, Roberto Lopez, president of the label, said he and his team were unaware of the Vazquez Sounds and first heard the group like everyone else ? on the Internet.

Working with such a young group poses special challenges and "very strong personal care," Lopez said.

"It is something special because they are children, and we want them to stay in school," he said. "The agreement was that their involvement in music, which has been going on for years now, would continue without affecting their lifestyle."

Vazquez said other record companies had expressed interest, but Sony was the only one that met his conditions for the kids. Cynics note that Sony is also the label that signed some of Vazquez's other acts.

The CD includes the original cover of "Rolling in the Deep," a remix of that crowd pleaser and, at least in its online version, a more wobbly cover of the Mariah Carey song. Coincidentally, it's the same song Bieber included in his holiday season "Under the Mistletoe" disc.

In the meantime, the Vazquez Sounds have been invited to perform on television programs in the United States, Italy and England.

But they can pick and choose.

"The kids are not obligated to do promotional work like other acts," said the elder Vazquez. "We want them to live a life like any other child their age."

___

Online:

http://bit.ly/seOgxp

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111224/ap_en_mu/lt_music_vazquez_sounds

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Kepler Telescope Narrows Hunt For Earth's Twin

Copyright ? 2011 National Public Radio?. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

IRA FLATOW, HOST:

This is SCIENCE FRIDAY. I'm Ira Flatow. If you're scanning the Milky Way for life, where do you look? Well, probably someplace not too different from planet Earth, right? So you want to find a planet about the same size as Earth to increase the chance it has a rocky surface, with oceans of course rather than being a giant ball of gas like Jupiter, and it should be just the right distance from its star, in what they call the Goldilocks Zone: hot enough to have liquid water but not so hot that the surface has completely scorched.

Well, this month, scientists using the Kepler Space Telescope announced the discovery of exoplanets that fit into each of these categories. How long before they find Earth's twin, a planet that fits both categories? And once they do, what's the next step to investigate whether or not it might harbor life?

Here to talk about it is William Borucki. He is principal investigator for the Kepler Mission and a space scientist at the NASA-Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, California. Welcome to SCIENCE FRIDAY.

WILLIAM BORUCKI: Hello, Ira, it's nice to be here.

FLATOW: Let's talk about these three new planets, Kepler-22B, -20E and -F. What's so special about them?

BORUCKI: Well, clearly the goal of the mission is to determine the frequency of Earth-size planets in and near the habitable zone of stars like the sun. And these are a major step toward that goal. First of all, Kepler-22B is a planet that is in the habitable zone of its star. It's the right temperature, but it's probably a little bit big. It's about 2.4 times the size of the Earth, and when we look at that, our suspicion is it probably is mostly a water planet, or maybe it has a lot of gas.

But we don't think it's a solid, rocky planet. It's in the habitable zone. Any moons that have - which might also - would also be in the habitable zone. But the other aspect of what Kepler has found this week are two planets that are Earth-sized.

So they are the right size, and we believe they are probably rocky, but they're too close to their star. They're too hot. So they're not in a habitable zone. So we're sort of finding planets all around the air that we want, and little by little, year after year, as Kepler gets better at this and finds more planets, we're getting closer to the major goal, Earth-sized planets in a habitable zone and in particular enough of them so that we can get an idea how frequent they are.

Are they common in the galaxy, or are they very rare? Because that's the real question, not just finding one or two but finding out are they common. If they're common, probably lots of life in our galaxy. If they're very infrequent, you know, we may be alone. So the frequency is important, and to get at the frequency, we've got to find planets in a habitable zone that are probably the size of the Earth or maybe up to twice the size of the Earth.

FLATOW: And we're up to, what, 2,300 exoplanets that have been found so far?

BORUCKI: We found some 2,326 candidates. These are stars that show us signals that look like planets. But we have to do ground-based observations to check them out, to make sure that it's not a small star crossing a big star or two stars in a background eclipsing one another.

And so of those 2,300 candidates, we've only been able to confirm 33 so far.

FLATOW: And I've heard that the Kepler satellite has been quoted - has been dubbed your baby. Would that be accurate?

BORUCKI: Well, I certainly advocated it starting in 1984 and built some photometers and worked with headquarters to find a mission that we could launch. And so over the years, I and Dave Koch and several others have worked to build this mission, and we were so delighted to find in 2001 that it was accepted as a mission.

It got launched in 2009, after a lot of work building this and testing it, and it's worked beautifully ever since.

FLATOW: So between 1986 and 2001, many years, you're telling me you got turned down all those times?

BORUCKI: Well, in 1984, I wrote the first paper on what we should be able to do, and I started building some photometers to prove it could be done. The missions that would allow this Kepler to fly didn't get started until 1992. And so we proposed in '92, in '94, '96, '98, and each time they turned us down because they thought it would be too expensive, or the detectors couldn't possibly work, or no one had done photometry of tens of thousands of stars simultaneously.

And Kepler does 150,000 stars simultaneously. So we had to go through many different steps to prove that this would work before we got permission to launch.

FLATOW: And look what they would have missed if they hadn't launched it.

BORUCKI: Yes, we wouldn't know anything about all these small planets. We're finding planets as small as Mars, a few that might be even smaller than Mars. We're finding, you know, thousands around all kinds of stars. So it's just been an enormous bounty of planets.

And people in the United States and people in Europe are all getting together, looking at these objects, trying to confirm them and writing lots and lots of papers. And we'll be rewriting the books on astronomy because what we've found is not what we expected.

FLATOW: What do you mean it's not what you expected?

BORUCKI: Well, everyone expected that we would find small planets close to their stars and big planets further away, just like in our solar system. That's not what we find. We find lots of big planets that are close to their stars, and we find planets, you know, whole groups of planets, six planets well inside the orbit of Mercury, very, very close to their stars, very, very hot, planets that are hotter than - as hot as molten iron, for example.

So just a huge range of planets bigger than Jupiter, planets smaller than Mars.

FLATOW: And you find some that - some of these last two that they orbit the - they orbit their sun in, what, six days?

BORUCKI: That's right.

FLATOW: Wow.

BORUCKI: And one that we found a little bit earlier called Kepler-10B orbits in less than a day, which means that if you got up in the morning, you know, it would be spring, and the trees would be blooming, and by noon it would be summer, and, you know, the leaves would be - you'd go out and pick tomatoes in the evening. Fall would occur, all the leaves would fall off, and that night it would be winter.

(SOUNDBITE OF LAUGHTER)

BORUCKI: So that, you know, years are one day, six days, a month. We find a huge range like that. Now, planets that close to a star of course are so hot that they couldn't possibly have life, but what I'm saying is that you have to imagine things so different on the planets that we're finding.

FLATOW: And you imagine that from what you're finding, there's got to be some planet like ours in that Goldilocks Zone, right?

BORUCKI: That's right, but, you know, to be in the Goldilocks Zone, for stars like the sun, the Earth is in a habitable zone, by definition, and it takes this Earth one year to go around the sun. So that gives you a first transit, first one and second one, and every year you get another transit. We need a minimum of three times to cross the star so the star dims. And that dimming tells you how big the planet is, and the repetition tells you how far away the planet is from the star.

And that tells you whether or not it's in the habitable zone because if it's close to the star, it's too hot. So for a planet like the Earth, around a star like the sun, it takes three years for us to make the measurements we need before we say oh, this is an interesting candidate, let's see if we can prove it's a real planet.

The spacecraft has not been operating three years yet. So those small planets at the habitable zone of the stars like the sun, you know, we will not have found yet. We're finding planets in the habitable zone, and we've found 48 candidates in the habitable zone so far, but they're stars smaller than the sun, cooler than the sun.

And so we're finding those, but they're not exactly sun-like. They're a little bit cooler and smaller. And our hope, then, is since we're finding those, and the stars aren't very much different, in the coming year or so, we'll be finding more planets like the Earth in a habitable zone of stars much more like that of the sun.

FLATOW: If you're finding only planets that pass in front of their stars, so you can see the shadow from them, or - how many stars are you missing?

BORUCKI: That's a very good question because for us to see the transit, the planets moving between the star and ourselves, you can calculate that the chance of doing that is equal to the diameter of the star over the diameter of the orbit.

Now for the planets with periods of the order of a few days or a few weeks, that's about 10 percent. So we would miss 90 percent of such planets. But if planets are out with orbital periods closer to a year, closer to the distance from the Earth to the sun, then we miss about 99 and a half percent. So every one that we find, there must be at least 99 more out there.

And so we use that geometrical correction to say we have found a certain number, and we can predict how many are out there.

FLATOW: And how close is the closest one that might, you know, be close to an Earth-kind of planet?

BORUCKI: Now, are you speaking of close in terms of size, temperature...

FLATOW: To the Earth. I mean, how close to the Earth, the distance to the Earth?

BORUCKI: The distance? OK, fine. I think we have found some that are within 50 light-years.

FLATOW: Fifty light-years?

BORUCKI: Yes. Now, these are planets. These are not Earth. They're just planets. But if you're saying I want to find an Earth, and I want to find it in a habitable zone, we haven't found any Earth yet in a habitable zone. We have found objects bigger than the Earth in a habitable zone, we found Earth-size too close to their stars to be in the habitable zone.

But the stars we look at are generally - for example, Kepler-22B, the one that's in the habitable zone that we announced, that's 600 light-years away. Now, the two Earth-sized planets that we found that we announced, that's 1,000 light-years away.

So those are - basically Kepler is a probe. It looks out into the galaxy and says what do we - what's out there? Future missions will look at just the closest stars because they'll have to look at the whole sky then. We look at just one portion, a big portion, but it's not the whole sky.

FLATOW: Will there be future missions?

BORUCKI: Oh, I'm sure there will be because...

FLATOW: What makes you - with the way the Congress has got budgets going these days, what makes you so sure?

BORUCKI: I believe that in Europe and the United States, we'll look seriously at our problems, and we will solve them and that we will get back to a much more productive, happy time in the future.

FLATOW: Well, you know, that's optimistic, and we can certainly hope for that, but there are no plans for another Kepler on our drawing board now is what you're saying.

BORUCKI: We have quite a few missions that people have ideas for and have been proposing. The problem with two that come to mind immediately is something called TESS, which is a terrestrial planet-finder, which is for the nearest stars. It actually finds bigger planets than Earth, but it looks at the whole sky to see which ones have planets.

And then the Europeans have one called PLATO, which does the same thing. So each continent, basically, has ideas. But the ones that both Europeans and the people of the United States are really looking forward to are ones that look at the atmospheres of these planets because if you find that these planets have atmospheres - and we don't know that ahead of time - that's important for life.

If the atmospheres have CO2 and water, that's important for plants. The CO2 is what they breathe, water is what they respire. So if you have plants, you could have life, and maybe the plants are building oxygen, in which case you might have even higher forms of life.

And so these future missions are designed to find the composition of the atmospheres.

FLATOW: Well, we'll have to look forward to them, and we want to wish you good luck and thank you for coming on to talk with us today.

BORUCKI: You're most welcome, my pleasure.

FLATOW: Have a happy holiday. William Borucki is principal investigator for Kepler Mission, space scientist at NASA-Ames Research Center in Moffett Field. We're going to take a break. When we come back, the war on cancer turns 40 today. Make you feel old? Harold Varmus is here to talk about how far we've come, where we're headed. Stay with us. We'll be right back after this break.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

FLATOW: I'm Ira Flatow. This is SCIENCE FRIDAY from NPR.

Copyright ? 2011 National Public Radio?. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to National Public Radio. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2011/12/23/144190089/kepler-telescope-narrows-hunt-for-earths-twin?ft=1&f=1007

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Apple?s iPhone 4S scores in U.S., Britain, but not the rest of Europe (Appolicious)

The release of the iPhone 4S has sparked some pretty big growth for Apple in the smartphone market. In the U.S., the device has sold quite a few million units since its October launch, and in Britain Apple is seeing similar gains.

Yet despite high popularity of the iPhone 4S isn?t being mirrored in every market. According to a story from GigaOM, in the rest of Europe, the iPhone 4S hasn?t been the runaway success that it has in places like the U.S. In the rest of Europe, Apple?s share of the smartphone market continues to decline as Google?s Android platform keeps growing.

In markets such as France, Germany, Spain and Italy, Apple?s share of the smartphone market isn?t increasing the way it is in the U.S. or emerging markets such as China. In fact, it has been declining for some time and is continuing to do so as 2011 comes to a close. Android devices are gaining a lot more traction there, and the issue for Apple (and boon for Google) could be something as simple as price.

Dominic Sunnebo, director of Kantar Worldpanel ComTech Global Consumer Insights, speculates that the economic troubles of the Euro zone might be hurting Apple?s market share in those countries. Lots of people in Euro-using countries may well be a little worried about spending a lot of money on smartphones when their economic futures aren?t too certain. Apple tends to provide premium devices at premium prices; meanwhile, Google devices cover a range of prices that many iPhones just can?t reach.

Apple?s share of the U.S. smartphone market has risen to 36 percent in the third quarter of 2011, from 25 percent during the same period last year. There was a similar hike in Apple?s share of the British market, as well ? rising to 31 percent in the third quarter of 2011 from 21 percent during the same period of 2010. Meanwhile, in France, Apple is losing ground. Its smartphone market share has fallen from 29 percent in the third quarter of 2010 to 20 percent this year; in Germany, Apple?s share fell from 27 percent in 2010 to 22 percent this year.

The iPhone 3GS holds a place on the low end of the price spectrum for Apple, but its losses in several countries suggest that two low-priced offerings ? the 3GS and the iPhone 4 ? aren?t enough to fight off the multiple low-priced entries Android offers. Europe is a fast-growing smartphone market, so you can bet that Apple will be working to make sure its devices perform well there. But as it stands, Apple needs to find a new way to beat out Android in a number of European countries.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/applecomputer/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/appolicious_rss/rss_appolicious_tc/http___www_appolicious_com_articles10579_apples_iphone_4s_scores_in_u_s_britain_but_not_the_rest_of_europe/43991928/SIG=13ichpb3k/*http%3A//www.appolicious.com/tech/articles/10579-apples-iphone-4s-scores-in-u-s-britain-but-not-the-rest-of-europe

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High surf advisory issued from central Oregon coast to Washington's Wahkiakum County

High surf advisory issued from central Oregon coast to Washington's Wahkiakum County

A look at the surf at Pacific City, Ore., Friday afternoon. (Courtesy of NWCN)

FOX12 Oregon

4:16 p.m. PST, December 23, 2011

PORTLAND ?

The National Weather Service has issued a high surf advisory from the central Oregon coast up to Wahkiakum County along the southern Washington coast from Friday afternoon into early Saturday morning.

The NWS is warning that waves of up to 22 feet will pound Oregon's shores and create dangerous conditions. The surf is expected to build from 2 p.m. Friday until 4 a.m. Saturday. As the waves get bigger and more powerful, they are warning that the surf zone will be especially dangerous as the tide goes in or out.

The waves are expected to arrive with a very long swell period, possibly as much as 18 seconds, carrying with them a large amount of energy.

The National Weather Service reminds beach goers to be careful under high surf conditions. The powerful waves have the potential to sweep people from jetties and rocks or to knock them down with logs and other debris.

Source: http://www.q13fox.com/news/kcpq-high-surf-advisory-issued-from-central-oregon-coast-to-washingtons-wahkiakum-county-20111223,0,3704806.story?track=rss

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Boxer Mayweather gets 90 jail days in Vegas case (AP)

LAS VEGAS ? Boxer Floyd Mayweather Jr. was sentenced Wednesday to 90 days in a Las Vegas jail after pleading guilty to a reduced battery domestic violence charge and no contest to two harassment charges.

The 34-year-old Mayweather also was ordered to complete 100 hours of community service and pay a $2,500 fine.

The plea deal avoids trial on felony allegations that the undefeated prizefighter hit his ex-girlfriend and threatened two of their children during an argument at her home in September 2010.

Prosecutor Lisa Luzaich told Justice of the Peace Melissa Saragosa that Mayweather has been in trouble before and hasn't been punished.

"He just continually gets himself into trouble and he is able to get himself out of it as well," she said. "Essentially it is because he is who he is and is able to get away with everything."

"The only thing that's going to get this man's attention is incarceration," the prosecutor said.

Mayweather stood still in a striped olive vest and showed no reaction when the judge imposed the sentence and told him he must report to the Clark County jail on Jan. 6.

Mayweather's lawyer, Karen Winckler, said she may appeal what she called an unusual sentence.

Mayweather would likely serve most of the 90-day sentence, but could serve several weeks less if he gets credit for good behavior, said Officer Bill Cassell, a Las Vegas police spokesman.

Mayweather and his manager, Leonard Ellerbe, declined comment outside the courtroom.

Winckler had argued that the public would benefit more if Mayweather performs 100 hours of community service with children.

The judge said she was swayed by Mayweather's admission that he hit Josie Harris and twisted her arm, and that two of their children, ages 9 and 10 witnessed the attack.

Saragosa noted that police reported Mayweather threatened to kill or make Harris "disappear," and that their 10-year-old son ran from the house and jumped a back gate to fetch security. Mayweather had taken cellphones belonging to Harris and the two boys, she said.

"Punishment is appropriate," Saragosa said. "No matter who you are, you have consequences to your actions when they escalate to this level of violence."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/celebrity/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111221/ap_en_ce/us_mayweather_felony_charges

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Taylor Swift?s Cover Girl Ad Has Been Pulled Over Complaints

A beauty advert featuring Taylor Swift has been pulled over complaints the shot was digitally enhanced. The Love Story hitmaker was appointed the new face of CoverGirl Cosmetics last year and fronted their print campaign for NatureLuxe Mousse Mascara. However, readers complained the image of Swift had been digitally altered, and officials at America’s National [...]

Source: http://www.celebritymound.com/taylor-swifts-cover-girl-ad-has-been-pulled-over-complaints/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=taylor-swifts-cover-girl-ad-has-been-pulled-over-complaints

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Breast cancer and heart disease may have common roots

Breast cancer and heart disease may have common roots [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 20-Dec-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Leslie Shepherd
shepherdl@smh.ca
416-864-6094
St. Michael's Hospital

Women who are at risk for breast cancer may also be at greater risk for heart disease

TORONTO, ON., Dec. 20, 2011Women who are at risk for breast cancer may also be at greater risk for heart disease, new research has found.

The majority of women with hereditary breast and ovarian cancer have a mutated form of the BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes, which normally suppress the growth of breast and ovarian tumours.

Dr. Subodh Verma, a cardiac surgeon at St. Michael's Hospital, said his research team was surprised to discover the genes also regulate heart function.

Following a heart attack, mice with the mutated BRCA1 gene had a three-to-five times higher rate of death. This was largely due to the development of profound heart failure, possibly because their heart attacks were twice as severe as those in mice who did not have the mutated gene.

A similar two-fold increase in heart failure was observed when mice with a mutated BRCA1 or BRAC2 gene were treated with doxorubicin, one of the most common chemotherapy drugs for patients with breast cancer. In addition to studies in mice, the authors also verified this observation in human tissues.

The researchers believe that the mutated BRCA1/2 prevents DNA repair in muscle cells that is essential to recovery after a heart attack.

Their findings were published in the journals Nature Communications and Journal of Biological Chemistry.

"Our findings suggest that individuals who are at risk of breast cancer may also be at a previously unrecognized risk of heart disease," Dr. Verma said. "More importantly, we now understand that breast cancer and heart disease -- the two leading causes of death for Canadian women have a common biological basis, a common soil."

Dr. Verma emphasized that these findings may have important implications for patients. Knowing that the BRCA1/2 gene is essential to DNA repair may lead to future treatments for anyone with heart disease, a leading cause of death worldwide. Women who carry this mutated gene now know they may also be at a higher risk for developing heart disease in addition to the risk of developing cancer.

Dr. Christine Brezden-Masley, an oncologist at St. Michael's and a co-author of the paper, said that while physicians knew doxorubicin was associated with heart failure, the new research shows women with the mutated BRCA1/2 gene are particularly sensitive to its toxicity.

"What this means is that when a patient has the mutated gene, I now have to think about how much doxorubicin I'm going to give them or whether we should consider an alternate therapy," Dr. Brezden-Masley said.

###

About St. Michael's Hospital

St. Michael's Hospital provides compassionate care to all who enter its doors. The hospital also provides outstanding medical education to future health care professionals in more than 23 academic disciplines. Critical care and trauma, heart disease, neurosurgery, diabetes, cancer care, and care of the homeless are among the Hospital's recognized areas of expertise. Through the Keenan Research Centre and the Li Ka Shing International Healthcare Education Center, which make up the Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, research and education at St. Michael's Hospital are recognized and make an impact around the world. Founded in 1892, the hospital is fully affiliated with the University of Toronto.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Breast cancer and heart disease may have common roots [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 20-Dec-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Leslie Shepherd
shepherdl@smh.ca
416-864-6094
St. Michael's Hospital

Women who are at risk for breast cancer may also be at greater risk for heart disease

TORONTO, ON., Dec. 20, 2011Women who are at risk for breast cancer may also be at greater risk for heart disease, new research has found.

The majority of women with hereditary breast and ovarian cancer have a mutated form of the BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes, which normally suppress the growth of breast and ovarian tumours.

Dr. Subodh Verma, a cardiac surgeon at St. Michael's Hospital, said his research team was surprised to discover the genes also regulate heart function.

Following a heart attack, mice with the mutated BRCA1 gene had a three-to-five times higher rate of death. This was largely due to the development of profound heart failure, possibly because their heart attacks were twice as severe as those in mice who did not have the mutated gene.

A similar two-fold increase in heart failure was observed when mice with a mutated BRCA1 or BRAC2 gene were treated with doxorubicin, one of the most common chemotherapy drugs for patients with breast cancer. In addition to studies in mice, the authors also verified this observation in human tissues.

The researchers believe that the mutated BRCA1/2 prevents DNA repair in muscle cells that is essential to recovery after a heart attack.

Their findings were published in the journals Nature Communications and Journal of Biological Chemistry.

"Our findings suggest that individuals who are at risk of breast cancer may also be at a previously unrecognized risk of heart disease," Dr. Verma said. "More importantly, we now understand that breast cancer and heart disease -- the two leading causes of death for Canadian women have a common biological basis, a common soil."

Dr. Verma emphasized that these findings may have important implications for patients. Knowing that the BRCA1/2 gene is essential to DNA repair may lead to future treatments for anyone with heart disease, a leading cause of death worldwide. Women who carry this mutated gene now know they may also be at a higher risk for developing heart disease in addition to the risk of developing cancer.

Dr. Christine Brezden-Masley, an oncologist at St. Michael's and a co-author of the paper, said that while physicians knew doxorubicin was associated with heart failure, the new research shows women with the mutated BRCA1/2 gene are particularly sensitive to its toxicity.

"What this means is that when a patient has the mutated gene, I now have to think about how much doxorubicin I'm going to give them or whether we should consider an alternate therapy," Dr. Brezden-Masley said.

###

About St. Michael's Hospital

St. Michael's Hospital provides compassionate care to all who enter its doors. The hospital also provides outstanding medical education to future health care professionals in more than 23 academic disciplines. Critical care and trauma, heart disease, neurosurgery, diabetes, cancer care, and care of the homeless are among the Hospital's recognized areas of expertise. Through the Keenan Research Centre and the Li Ka Shing International Healthcare Education Center, which make up the Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, research and education at St. Michael's Hospital are recognized and make an impact around the world. Founded in 1892, the hospital is fully affiliated with the University of Toronto.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-12/smh-bca122011.php

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