Monday, November 28, 2011

Macs in your business: InfoWorld's expert management guide (InfoWorld)

San Francisco ? Macs may be a minority of PCs in any business, but these days they are used by most businesses. And as more companies roll out "choose your own PC" and "bring your own PC" policies, IT will only need to be more familiar with managing Mac OS X systems.

To help IT manage Macs, InfoWorld has put together an 18-page "Business Mac" Deep Dive PDF special report that's chock-full of hands-on tips, techniques, and tools for managing everything from user access to security from our roster of Mac experts. The Deep Dive report gives special attention to the newest Mac operating system: Mac OS X 10.7 Lion and its Server counterpart.

To continue reading, register here to become an Insider. You'll get free access to premium content from CIO, Computerworld, CSO, InfoWorld, and Network World. See more Insider content or sign in.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/applecomputer/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/infoworld/20111128/tc_infoworld/179135

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Colleges defend humanities amid tight budgets (Providence Journal)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/166718339?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Ministry of Truth ? Blog Archive ? Beware the Cancer Quack

Before getting to the meat of this post, I want to kick things off with some eminently sensible pictorial advice

Believe it or not, this particular poster, by Max Plattner, dates to the period from 1936 to 1938 and yet, as the events of this week have shown, it remains as relevant today as it was is the year if was first published; a year which also saw Jesse Owens win four gold medals at the Berlin Olympics, much to the chagrin of a certain Mr A. Hitler. 1936 also saw the the publication of the very first Billboard magazine charts, from which i discovered, somewhat curiously, that I have copies of three of five recordings* that achieved the highest chart positions during that year.

*For the the record, the three that I have are Billie Holliday?s recording of Gershwin?s ?Summertime? and Robert Johnson?s ?Cross Road Blues? and ?Sweet Home Chicago?.

Returning to the 21st century, the story that serves as a reminder of the value of the advice given in that poster is, of course, that of Billie Bainbridge, a four year old girl with a rare and inoperable form of brain cancer.

Actually, if truth be told, the story I?m most interest in isn?t, strictly speaking, about young Billie. It?s actually about the American clinic, the Burzynnski Clinic, that Billie?s family hopes she will be able to attend, if they can manage to raise $200,000 to cover the costs. And its also about the manner in which a PR flack who claims to represent that clinic reacted when a blogger started raising some very pertinant questions about the clinic operating practices and the effectiveness of the treatments it offers.

I really don?t to revist ground that already been well enough covered elsewhere over the last few days, so if you?re coming to this for the first then you need to start with the following posts by Andy Lewis of The Quackometer:

The False Hope of the Burzynski Clinic

The Burzynski Clinic Threatens My Family

I?d also suggest that you pick up Dorothy Bishop?s article, ?The weird world of US ethics regulation?, David Colquhoun?s commentary, which covers some of the ?science? behind the activities of this clinic and shows it to be, quite literally, taking the piss, Cancer Research UK?s commentary. ?Hope or False Hope?? and this post, by Josephine James, which includes a fairly comprehensive collection of links to other articles covering this same story.

Last, and by no means least, Zeno?s been looking at some of the business/financial aspects of this story in a post which also includes the following table of the Burzynski clinic?s claimed response rates for common cancers:

Now, I?m no oncologist but I?ve read enough alt-med research papers over the years to know what scientifically meansingless data looks like, and Burzynski?s objective response rate data looks pretty meaningless to me.

For starters, Burzynski does a pretty lousy job of identifying exactly what it he claims to be treating, for example, lung cancer comes in five histological types; Non-small-cell carcinoma (NSCLC), small-cell carcinoma, carcinois, sarcoma and unspecified and each of these histological types may have their own sub-types ? NSCLC sub-types include squamous cell carcinoma, adenocarcinoma, bronchioalveola carcinoma, carcinoid and other. Lung cancers are highly heterogenous malignancies in which is its not unusal for tumors to consist of more than one subtype and so, if you look at some of the credible published research in this area what you will invariably find is that researchers go to quite some considerable length to spell out just exactly what kind of tumors they?ve been working on as not all types/subtypes respond equally well to particular treatments.

Cancer is a very complicated disease, or rather category of diseases, and its therefore necesssary for researchers to be very specific as to the type, and sub-type. of cancer they been working on, when presenting their findings, if their results to have any real scientific value.

So, already we?re off to a rather mediocre start in terms of the quality of the evidence on offer and that was enough to prompt me to do a bit more background reading on the subject of research standards which, perhaps, unsurprisingly, threw up another anomaly that merits further investigation.

In clinical trials of non-surgical cancer treatments, how do we assess whether or not the treatment is having any actual effect, given that, in many, if not most cancers, its relatively unusual for a treatment to be so successful that it entire eradicates the tumors?

The answer is that we look for evidence of shrinkage in the size of the tumor(s) and in order to do that we need some sort of objective standard against which measure this shrinkage, if it occurs, and decide whether its significant enough to provide evidence of a definite response to treatment. That, in very simple terms, what the objective response rate is used for ? it measures the percentage of patients who exhibited a clincially significant response to the treatment based on standard assessment criteria, and for cancers thist standard is determined by a set of published rules called RECIST (Research Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumours), which was initally published in 2000 (version 1.0) and then revised in 2008 (version 1.1). If you?re at all interested, then a full copy of the guidelines can be accessed here, and for our purposes you should take a good close look at section 4.3, ?Response Criteria?, which starts on page 5 of the pdf, or page 232 if you?re going from the page numbers on the actual pages.

Burzynski?s data table includes the following list of definitions in relation to his table of figures:

OR: Objective Response, includes CR, PR, MR, & IM.

CR: Complete Response. Complete disappearance of all signs of cancer in response to treatment of 4 weeks or longer.

PR: Partial Response. More than 50% decrease in the size of the tumors (the sum of cross-sectional area of the tumors), in response to treatment of 4 weeks or longer.

MR: Mixed Response. Significant decrease (more that 25%) in the size of tumors wifi simultaneous increase in size of some of the other tumors.

IM: Improvement. Decrease in size of the tumors, not confirmed yet by the second follow-up radiological measurement.

SD: Stable Disease. Hb decrease or increase in the size of the tumors, but no progression, in response to treatment of 12 weeks or longer.

PD: Progressive Disease. More then 50% increase in size of the tumors (the sum of cross-sectional area of the tumors), in response to treatment of 4 weeks or longer.

EP: Evaluable Patients. Patients who remained on treatment long enough to enable an objective evaluation of the response.

So, Burzynski?s claimed ?objective response? includes any/all patients who had either a complete, partial or mixed response to treatment or who showed an improvement, even if this had not been verified by a second, follow-up, radiological measurement*

*Ideally, measurements should be taken via a CT scan although measurements can also be taken from X-ray photographs for some lung cancers, provided certain conditions are met, i.e. the X-ray photograph must provide an unobsrtructed view of the tumor.

If, however, you consult the RECIST guidance you?ll find no reference whatsoever to any kind of ?mixed response? category and, of course, researchers shouldn?t be including results in their data before they?ve been propery verified, so there?s no ?improvement? category either.

What you will come across, if you go beyond the guidelines and look at a few journal papers for recent studies conducted using the RECIST standards, are references to a ?minor response? category, as here:

PATIENTS AND METHODS: Per protocol, the first three disease assessments were done at 2, 4, and 6 months. For the purpose of the analysis (landmark method), disease response was subclassified in six categories: partial response (PR; > 30% size reduction)*, minor response (MR; 10% to 30% reduction), no change (NC) as either NC- (0% to 10% reduction) or NC+ (0% to 20% size increase), progressive disease (PD; > 20% increase/new lesions), and subjective PD (clinical progression).

*I should point out, before anyone become confused by the numbers here that under the RECIST standard, the size of a tumour is measured in terms of the sum of its diameters in two planes of measurement and not by its cross-sectional area, as used by Burzinski, and the two measures amount to near enough the same thing as makes no difference for our purposes, or those of cancer researchers.

Now all this raises a couple of rather important questions about Burzynki?s response rates.

One is that his data appears to be off protocol in so far as his ?mixed response? category is not the same as the ?minor reponse? category that is fairly commonly used by other researchers, even if its not part of the formal RECIST standard, as the latter make no reference whatsoever to any tumours showing an increase in size at the same time as other showing a measurable decrease, albeit one too small to categorised as a partial response. It also, noticably, includes results that haven?t, at the time of publication, been properly verified, which is also a bit of a no-no.

Burzynski also published his ?objective response rate? without any further qualification ? there is no data given to show what proportion of the patients who did exhibit a response of some kind fall into each of his four categories, and from the point of view of cancer patients, that?s pretty important information because the figure that they?re naturally going to be most interested in is the ?complete response? category as that shows the number of patients for whom the treatment was a complete success.

So, we have no way of knowing exactly how much of Burzynski?s claimed response rate is based on results that have yet to be properly verified at the time of publication and, equally, no way of knowing how much of this same rate is accounted for by his off protocol ?mixed response? category, the clinical value of which is, to day the least, distinctly dubious as, ultimately, a treatment which shrinks some tumours, but not others, is only ever going to be of limited value to patients unless it can be used as part of a combination therapy with other treatments that successfuly target the tumours that Burzynski?s treatments fail to reach.

To me that all looks just a bit dodgy, especially as Burzynski appears to be touting his wholly unproven antineoplastion therapy as something of a one-size-fits-all miracle cure.

Then, as I was researching this post, the plot thickened even further as I happened across on of Burzynski?s less than happy former customers, Wayne Merritt, who was diagnosed with stage IV pancreatic/liver cancer in 2009. Of everything on the Merritt?s site, one claim, in particular, caught my eye:

Along with the long list of other meds that were supposed to work in conjunction with each other, the Burzynski Clinic gave my husband standard chemotherapy medications. We were never told that two of the medications were conventional chemo medications. We discovered from our local pharmacy that one medication the Burzynski Clinic had charged us over $2300.00 for could have been purchased from the pharmacy for around $170.00.

Leaving aside the alleged 1250% markup, what the Merritt?s are alleging ? and this is only an allegation at this point ? is that Burzynski has been mixing standard chemotherapy meds in with his antineoplastion therapy without telling his patients.

If this is true then it is an extremely serious breach of medical ethics and it raises further questions about Burzynski?s claimed response rates as, without proper controls, there would be absolutely no way of establishing the extent to which any of his claims may be attributable to to the covert adulteration of his treatments with conventional chemotherapy medications, particularl when you consider that a ?mixed response? is pretty much what you?d expect to see in patients who received partial chemotherapy.

Footnote.

Incidentally, Wayne Merritt is still alive and seemingly doing pretty well even if the very obvious lessons of hsi encounter with the Burzynski clinic haven?t struck home. The ?what are we doing now? link on his site leads to a webpage which stands as veritable cornucopia of cancer woo but which whooly omits an mention of the single most salient detail in his story:

Monday 12 September 2011

I have great news! We saw the oncologyst today to get the results of the CT Scan Wayne had last week. The results are as follows: There has been no change. No growth. No new areas of suspect. Total inactivity! What does that mean? Well,? it?s kind of hard to say but we are accepting the fact and believing that the tumors have died! The doctor said she and the doctor who diagnosed would discuss doing a second biopsy to deturmine if there are any live cells within the tumor. If that happenes, and the results are that the tumors are truely dead, then we hope to be able to discuss ceasing the chemotheropy treatments!

So, that?s a win for medical science then?

Sadly, no ? not according to the Merritt?s, as their journal entry continues?

We?ve prayed and believed so long and hard for a miracle?. believing that it would come the way our human minds picture it?? instantly. However God has choosen to give us this miracle in bits and pieces. Bit by bit, a little each day. He did not take these tumors away all at once,? but left them there as evidence that they were in fact there,? life threatening,?. and now it appears?.. STOPPED IN THEIR TRACKS BY THE POWER OF PRAYER AND FAITH!!!

God has taken us on this journey for a reason. And while we still don?t know where or how the journey will end?? we will declare till the end that God is a miracle working God!

Yes, witness the miraculous power of the cognitive bias and its unmatched ability to blind people to the obvious.

Source: http://www.ministryoftruth.me.uk/2011/11/28/beware-the-cancer-quack/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=beware-the-cancer-quack

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Sunday, November 27, 2011

"Twilight" lights up box offices for 2nd week (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) ? The "Twilight" vampire movie hovered at the top of box office charts for a second straight week, beating a revival of "The Muppets" and other family fare during the Thanksgiving holiday weekend.

"The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn: Part 1" earned an estimated $42 million at U.S. and Canadian theaters from Friday through Sunday, according to studio estimates compiled by Reuters.

"The Muppets," a movie that returns Kermit, Miss Piggy and their puppet friends to the big screen for the first time in 12 years, finished in second place with $29.5 million over three days. Third place for the weekend belonged to 3D animated film "Happy Feet Two," which brought in $13.4 million.

Walt Disney Co released "The Muppets." Privately held Summit Entertainment distributed "Breaking Dawn: Part 1." "Happy Feet Two" was distributed by Time Warner Inc unit Warner Bros.

(Reporting by Lisa Richwine; Editing by Bill Trott)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/movies/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111127/en_nm/us_boxoffice

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Globalization, oil and terror (hamptonroads)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/166595740?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Global supermarkets wary of fine print on India invite (Reuters)

NEW DELHI (Reuters) ? Global supermarket chains welcomed a long-awaited invitation from India to invest in the country's $450 billion retail market, but they fear the small print may keep a lid on investment in the short term.

The government on Thursday approved 51 percent foreign direct investment in supermarkets, paving the way for firms such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc, Tesco and Carrefour to enter one of the world's largest untapped markets.

Shares in Indian retailers jumped -- bucking the weaker stock market trend -- in anticipation of interest from those big foreign retailers.

The move may breathe new life into the government of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who ushered in free market reforms 20 years ago but has been bogged down by corruption scandals and was starting to be seen as a lame duck.

As well as appealing to India's burgeoning urban middle class the reform will draw in much-needed new investment to a sputtering economy. Policymakers say spending on cold-storage and warehousing will ease supply-side pressures that have driven inflation close to a double-digit clip.

"It's important not only for raising overall growth, but also for containing inflation and improving the quality of life for over 50 percent of the population," said central bank Governor Duvvuri Subbarao.

Investment could exceed $5 billion in the next 5-7 years as hundreds of hypermarkets are opened, said Vijay Karwal, head of retail at the Royal Bank of Scotland.

"There may be a degree of 'catch up' with foreign flows into India retail possibly starting to match, if not exceed, those into China as development picks up pace," he said.

The move carries risk for Prime Minister Singh, whose party must contest five state elections next year. It is opposed by millions of small shop owners who fear for their livelihoods, and prompted an uproar in India's parliament, which was forced to close until Monday.

Some politicians threatened extreme action to prevent supermarkets opening.

"If Wal-Mart tries to open its mall anywhere, I will burn it myself," said Uma Bharti, a former state chief minister from

the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), local media reported.

An India-wide group representing small traders said it was planning protests for next week.

"They should have worked on some kind of protectionist mechanism for smaller traders," said Praveen Khandelwa, the head of the confederation of all India traders.

RIDERS

To appease its opponents, the government insisted foreign retailers source almost a third of their produce from small industries, invest a minimum of $100 million in India and spend half of that on "back end" infrastructure.

An official at one major international retailer said the company was concerned about the numbers the government had mentioned.

"Some of the conditions look quite stringent. The investment in particular -- it's all quite big money. We'd need to know the details, and how that would be accounted for," the official said on condition of anonymity.

Foreign stores will only be permitted in cities of more than 1 million people, and individual states will decide whether to allow the global giants on to their patch. [ID:nD8E7LL01S]

That could, for example, exclude investor-favorite states like Gujarat, which is run by the Hindu nationalist BJP that opposes new foreign supermarkets.

Sharma said new investment would create 10 million jobs in the next three years and would not affect small shops, a claim scorned by parties on both the left and right who predict that millions of jobs will be lost.

"We are sitting on a time bomb in terms of employment," said economist Jayati Ghosh. She said India should upgrade public and cooperative supply infrastructure, not rely on corporations.

The head of Wal-Mart's local cash-and-carry joint venture praised the move, but also struck a note of caution.

"We will need to study the conditions and the finer details of the new policy and the impact that it will have on our ability to do business in India," said Raj Jain, CEO of Bharti Wal-Mart.

TOUGH GOING

Domestic retail chains have operated in India for years but have struggled to expand due to funding difficulties, a lack of expertise and poor roads and cold storage facilities.

If political opposition mounts, foreign firms could find the going tough.

India's biggest listed company, Reliance Industries, was forced to backtrack on plans in 2007 to open Western-style supermarkets in the state of Uttar Pradesh after huge protests from small traders and political parties.

Bijou Kurien, a senior executive at Reliance Retail, said the mood had changed.

"The regulatory and non-regulatory pressures in India are the way of life," he said. "So any person running a business in India has to be able to figure out how to steer their way through all the obstacles that can be in their path."

He said the back-end and sourcing rules may stop big-box electronics stores from coming into India for now, but said the rules would likely soften in the medium term.

The conditions could also deter smaller international retail chains, said Himanshu Pal, global data manager at consultants Kantar Retail. However he said India should appeal to budget chains.

"The Indian shopper is at the moment starved of a discounted, value product offer. A Lidl or an Aldi could be very successful in India."

Thomas Varghese, CEO of another Indian retailer, Aditya Birla, said the power given to states could be a short-term hurdle, but he predicted most would say yes to supermarkets.

"It most definitely will have an impact and reduce the number of places where foreign retailers can set up shop, but it will still not reduce the interest because 51 cities have a million-plus population," he said.

In the past, big-ticket reforms have been held back by the devil in the detail.

In 2008, the government passed the U.S. civilian nuclear deal aimed at opening up India's nuclear power market to foreign players, hailed as the cornerstone of India's warming ties with the United States.

But investments have since languished due to stringent accident liability clauses that U.S. companies say make it too risky to invest.

(Additional reporting by Henry Foy and Nandita Bose in Mumbai and Mark Potter in London; Writing by Frank Jack Daniel; Editing by John Chalmers and Nick Macfie)

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

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Saturday, November 26, 2011

Court: Nigeria drug agency must pay comedian $165k (AP)

LAGOS, Nigeria ? The lawyer of a popular Nigerian comedian who was held as a drug suspect for weeks says a court has ordered the drug agency to pay him $165,000.

Bamidele Aturu said Thursday that a Lagos court has ordered Nigeria's National Drug Law Enforcement Agency to pay the comedian known as Baba Suwe damages for "violating (his) personal liberty."

He said the court also told the agency to publish a public apology in two national newspapers.

Investigators held the actor, whose real name is Babatunde Omidina, for more than three weeks after his Oct. 12 arrest at Nigeria's busiest airport. They accused him of swallowing narcotics before boarding a flight to Paris, but found no drugs.

The popular 53-year-old comedian often plays a befuddled butler or security guard for comic relief in Nigeria's Nollywood movies.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111124/ap_on_re_af/af_nigeria_comedian_arrested

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DNA to flutter by

Monarchs? genetic instructions help meet migration, navigation needs

Web edition : 2:10 pm

Scientists have deciphered the complete genetic instruction book of monarch butterflies. It is the first butterfly genome completed and the first of a long-distance migrating insect.

Within the butterfly?s genetic archive, neurobiologist Steven Reppert of the University of Massachusetts Medical School in Worcester and his colleagues found genes that may help the insects sense the position of the sun and navigate to fir trees in Mexico, where they spend the winter. Reporting in the Nov. 23 Cell, the team also notes that monarchs make more of certain small genetic molecules, called microRNAs, that are involved in building muscle, regulating temperature sensitivity and storing fat when in migration mode.

The 273 million DNA units that make up the monarch genome also include a complete set of genes for producing juvenile hormone, which summer butterflies use to kick-start reproduction. Migrating male monarchs use different strategies than females do to turn off the hormone, the team discovered.

Monarchs have genes similar to ones that silk moths use to sense mating chemicals called pheromones. Those genes may aid social interactions between monarchs in their wintering grounds, Reppert says.

The scientists also unearthed from the genome a gear previously thought to be missing from the butterfly?s daily, or circadian, clock, which helps the monarchs maintain a straight path. ??


Found in: Genes & Cells

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/336438/title/DNA_to_flutter_by

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Wildfire hits more than 20 homes in SW Australia (AP)

PERTH, Australia ? More than 20 homes have been destroyed or damaged by wildfire in Australia's southwest after authorities lost control of a planned forest-burning operation.

Emergency services officials say hundreds of people have been evacuated from townships in the Margaret River region of Western Australia state as more than 100 firefighters battle the blaze on Thursday, assisted by aerial water bombers.

The state government has confirmed that the blaze began Wednesday morning when a controlled burning operation in a nearby national park got out of control.

Authorities try to reduce wildfire risk by burning off dead wood and grass in controlled operations aimed at preventing the flames from spreading beyond a contained area.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111123/ap_on_re_as/as_australia_wildfire

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Friday, November 25, 2011

Europeans report contact with Russia's Mars probe

The European Space Agency reported Wednesday that a ground station in Australia has re-established contact with Russia's Phobos-Grunt probe, two weeks after a mysterious post-launch glitch.

The report sparked a glimmer of hope for a mission that Russian officials were close to giving up on.

The $170 million Phobos-Grunt ("Phobos-Soil") mission was designed to land on Phobos, the larger of Mars' two moons, scoop up a soil sample and return it to Earth. The spacecraft is also carrying China's first interplanetary probe, Yinghuo 1, which is supposed to be dropped off in Martian orbit.

  1. More space news from msnbc.com

    1. Astronomers?rate the habitability of alien worlds

      Science editor Alan Boyle's Weblog: Which worlds beyond our own are the most habitable? Astronomers come up with two new indexes to rate alien planets and moons.

    2. Life and death in the galaxy next door
    3. Europeans report contact with Russia's Mars probe
    4. NASA rover to look deep into Mars' past

Before its Nov. 9 launch from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, the Phobos-Grunt mission was heralded as a sign of Russia's resurgence in interplanetary exploration.

The 13-ton spacecraft reached Earth orbit but did not fire its engines as scheduled to start its months-long cruise toward the Red Planet. Russian controllers have been trying to contact the probe for days, aided by ESA as well as NASA.

On Tuesday, the Interfax news agency quoted Russia's deputy space chief, Vitaly Davydov, as saying that "chances to accomplish the mission are very slim." Then ESA said its tracking station in Perth, Australia, made contact with the probe late Tuesday (around 20:25 GMT, or 3:25 p.m. ET).

ESA explained on its website that the job was particularly challenging because it was hard to get a precise fix on the spacecraft for a narrow-beam transmission, and because Phobos-Grunt's antenna was optimized to receive low-power transmissions in deep space.

"In the past few days, ESA's Perth dish was modified by the addition of a 'feedhorn' antenna at the side of the main dish so as to transmit very low-power signals over a wide angle in the hopes of triggering a response from the satellite," the space agency said.

The response came in the form of confirmation from the probe that it had executed commands to switch on its transmitter. Additional contact opportunities are available from Australia on a twice-daily basis.

"ESA teams are working closely with engineers in Russia to determine how best to maintain communication with the spacecraft," the agency said.

Now what?
It's not clear what options are still available for continuing Phobos-Grunt's mission. Some reports from Russia have suggested that the opportunity for a round trip to Phobos and back has been lost. Davydov, however, said Russian engineers had until the end of the month to fix the probe's engines and send it on a path to Phobos.

Russian scientists could fix the problem if the probe failed because of a software flaw, but some experts think that the failure was rooted in hardware that's difficult to fix.

Even if Phobos-Grunt can no longer execute its sample return mission, it could still conceivably take on a one-way trip to Mars and its moon, or head for a different destination, such as the moon or an asteroid.

If the mission fails, that could affect Russia's priorities for space research. The Russian space agency would more likely focus on moon research instead of studying Mars, Davydov said.

Davydov said that if engineers can't take control of the spacecraft, it could crash to Earth sometime between late December and late February. The site of the crash cannot be established more than a day in advance, he said.

"If you calculate the probability of it hitting somebody on the head, it is close to zero," he said.

More about Mars:

This report includes information from msnbc.com and The Associated Press.

? 2011 msnbc.com

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45413483/ns/technology_and_science-space/

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Can Bieber retire with 'Mistletoe' earnings?

If Justin Bieber's Christmas album does well, will he never have to work again??The Third Woman, via the inbox

Bieber likely has earned enough to retire already ? or at least take a long vacation ? even without that song about how I'mma be under the mistletoe with you, shawtay. (Confidential to Bieber: Don't you threaten me.) For singers, Christmas albums are the gift that keeps on giving. To them. To the tune of...

VIDEO: Justin Bieber Has Mistletoe For You

Hundreds of thousands of dollars, if not millions.

Because look: Some albums do so well that they not only sell for the Christmas season, but also return to the top of the album charts every Christmas.

Such as? Well, let's put it this way. You know how Mariah Carey mentions her kids every chance she can get? (I refuse to say "dem babies.") Well, thanks to her "Merry Christmas" album, she likely has enough money to send both of them to college. On Mars. For the rest of their lives.

"That album re-entered the Billboard 200 albums chart" just last week, Billboard's Keith Caulfield tells me. In fact, the album has sold 5.1 million copies since Nielsen SoundScan started tracking such things back in 1991. Now, let's just say that Carey has a superstar royalty rate of, say, 10 to 20 percent.

Do not make me, a member of the 99 percent, do that math. Let's just say that many times a star of that caliber will earn upwards of 90 cents per record sold.

RELATED: Bieber Will Not Be Buying Baby Stuff for Christmas

If those figures make you jealous, do not read the following sentence: Josh Groban's Christmas album, "Noel," has sold 5.3 million copies. Even Andrea Bocelli has a Christmas album that has sold 2.6 million copies.

And of course, we haven't even begun to discuss the earnings that Carey types make as songwriters. "All I Want for Christmas Is You," which Carey co-wrote, has been covered by everyone from Lady Antebellum to Michael Buble to the "Glee" kids. It's a moneymaker all by itself.

Where does Bieber fit in to all this? Well, his holiday album, "Under the Mistletoe," entered the Billboard 200 chart at No. 1, with opening week sales of 210,000 copies ? promising Bieber enough cash to buy candy canes for a whole lot of shawtays.

PHOTOS! What Do Stars Want for Christmas?

? 2011 E! Entertainment Television, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45410269/ns/today-entertainment/

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Jagger, Richards share new love for 'Some Girls' (AP)

NEW YORK ? Keith Richards equates the rush to release the Rolling Stones' seminal album "Some Girls" as "the same as cutting off your baby's head."

"We couldn't release a double album and we were on deadline," the guitarist said of the 1978 recording. "Sometimes you're really getting into tracks you want to finish, but they don't make (it) because time was up."

Now many of those songs will be included when the album is re-released on Tuesday as a double disc with previously unreleased material. A box set from the album also is being released.

Mick Jagger said "Some Girls" was a pivotal album for the band.

"The records that came before this were not as good. This was better," Jagger said, referencing the heavily produced "Goats Head Soup," and "It's Only Rock and Roll," which preceded it.

At the time, punk rock and disco were threatening the old "dinosaur rockers," as Richards said, so the band had to get back to its basic stripped-down sound.

"The punks started to kick us ... the Sex Pistols, and The Clash, and other bands were coming out and we realized we were already in a second generation," Richards said.

One of the album's biggest hits, and also the most criticized at the time, was the dance track "Miss You."

"It's not like we wanted to make a career out of disco; it just happened to be that beat, and Mick came up with this beautiful idea. If you're ever gonna do disco, you got to do it now. It was like a one-off," Richards said.

Jagger, who says he loves all forms of dance music from the 1930s to house music, didn't know why it mattered.

"I never thought for one minute that people would criticize you for doing something with a dance beat," Jagger said. "So the idea of it being `Bob Dylan going electric' never occurred to me."

The song went to No. 1 on the Billboard chart, and spawned a variety of dance mixes.

Next year, the band will celebrate its 50th anniversary, and there's a great deal of speculation as to whether the band will tour for their milestone.

"I'm hoping to do something about it. Right now, I don't want to go too much into it. I'm pulling the boys together and (will) see what happens. It's a work in progress. I'm not Nostradamus on this, but we all want to do something for the big 5-0," Richards said.

All Jagger would say is that "we have a lot of things planned, who knows what will come to fruition."

According to Richards, he and Jagger recently mended fences after Richards revealed too much about his songwriting partner in his autobiography earlier this year.

"He's a brother, a best friend, and probably the most contentious person I know. All collaborations are like that. Nothing goes totally smoothly, but we always patch it up. We patched it up now. The thing is we enjoy working with each other; it's the idea of it that's frightening," Richards laughed.

The duo has written most of the Rolling Stones music, and though Jagger usually sings them, Richards does have his signature tracks. Among them is "Before They Make Me Run" from "Some Girls"; it has become one of his favorite songs to perform.

"It's pretty autobiographical. ... I was feeling a little hounded, so I think it came out of feeling that. I was on the run, basically. Very few countries would accept me at the time," said Richards, who was facing a potentially long prison sentence at the time because of a heroin possession charge in Toronto.

Other major hits from the album include, "Shattered," the Temptations cover of "Just My Imagination (Running Away With Me)," and "Beast of Burden."

While Richards said the unreleased music was ready to go, Jagger did say he tinkered with the remixes.

"'Claudine' and `Tallahassee Lassie' were all more or less as (they) were. I just listened and said, `Do they need a bit of percussion or a harmony vocal?,' but apart from that they're fine," Jagger said.

Richards is just happy that the band gets to release "Some Girls" with the songs they wanted to include.

"In a way it's interesting to put the head back on the baby," Richards said.

____

Online:

http://www.rollingstones.com

____

John Carucci covers entertainment for The Associated Press. Follow him at http://www.twitter.com/jcarucci_ap

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111122/ap_en_mu/us_music_rolling_stones

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Thursday, November 24, 2011

Merkel, Sarkozy, Monti meet to try to stem crisis (AP)

STRASBOURG, France ? The leaders of Germany, France and Italy are set for debate on the European Central Bank's role in the region's debt crisis and on how to align eurozone economic policies.

It's the first time Italy's new prime minister, Mario Monti, is meeting German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy since Monti took charge last week, amid market panic about Italy's huge debts.

The meeting in Strasbourg, France on Thursday comes amid signs that even Germany and France ? the eurozone's biggest economies, and key to bailouts of weaker countries ? are also under strain.

Sarkozy's government is pushing for the ECB to play a more active role, something that Merkel strongly opposes.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111124/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_europe_financial_crisis

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Sound of Music comes to Salzburg

Move over Mozart. Toes in Salzburg are tapping to a new beat as residents finally embrace the Hollywood musical that put them on the map nearly half a century ago.

Playing for the first time in this haughty town of opera lovers, "The Sound of Music," has been met with surprisingly positive reactions in what is commonly considered a last bulwark of resistance to the iconic show.

"A wonderful performance," enthused Johann Fink as he waited at the coat check at the end of a recent performance at the ornate Salzburg State Theater.

Such a reception in Salzburg is hardly a given despite the global popularity of the musical that was based on a true story and immortalized by the 1965 multiple Academy Award winning movie.

Fans around the world may know every word of every song performed by Julie Andrews as the governess of seven children who charms ? then weds ? their widowed father Baron von Trapp, before the singing family flees the Nazis.

But this city resonates to another sound of music ? the music of Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms.

And it has a different concept of culture.

While residents earn millions each year from the tourists who come for sing-along tours of sites featured in the film, they traditionally view the visitors with benign disdain ? and occasionally as pests.

Residents of the upscale Salzburg neighborhood where the von Trapp home is located tried ? and failed ? to block attempts to turn the edifice into a hotel, fearing tourists would tie up traffic and make a nuisance of themselves. A museum dedicated to the film is still looking for a home after more than 600 residents in another neighborhood signed a petition three years ago against it, telling the city council they feared that local streets would be jammed with tour buses.

Resistance persists even though the city would literally be poorer without the musical's magnet effect.

Peter Proetzner, who guides daily buses full of tourists on pilgrimages of the sites immortalized by the film, cites a poll showing the Sound of Music as the city's second biggest draw ? right after the dozens of classical music events that resonate through its cobblestoned alleys.

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"The Sound of Music is better known than Mozart worldwide," he asserts.

South Koreans learn the songs as part of their English lessons. Some foreigners think "Edelweiss" ? composed for the musical by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein ? is Austria's national anthem. And Austrian tourism surveys show that three out of four American visitors to Salzburg come because of the musical.

Australian Dianne Cole says she knows "absolutely nothing" about Austria ? and will probably go home still ignorant of the country's cultural, scenic and culinary delights.

"This is why I came to Austria," she said recently, as her Sound of Music tour bus set out for its first stop ? Leopoldskron Lake (where Maria and the children capsized their boat). "The sole reason is to do this tour."

In contrast, most Salzburgers don't even know the musical. In a city that traditionally raps American culture as trashy, residents prefer to be associated with Mozart, Salzburg's favorite son, instead of a film many write off as Hollywood kitsch.

And then there is the troubling Nazi component of The Sound of Music ? a reminder, reinforced by the Swastika flag and storm troopers on stage, that not only Mozart, but Hitler, too, was Austrian.

Austria has long shed its self-fabricated myth that it was a victim of Nazi atrocities instead of one of its most fervent supporters. Restitution panels have returned homes and precious artworks. Millions of euros (dollars) have been doled out to Holocaust victims and their descendants, and schoolbooks now deal in depth with this nation's complicity in the crimes of the Nazi dictator, born just 50 kilometers (30 miles) north of Salzburg.

"I think that this is truly the right moment in time, when Austrians are actually ready to deal with their past," says Andreas Gergen, who directed the German-language production.

Still, anti-Semitic sentiment remains. A survey of 1,070 Austrians conducted earlier this year showed that 12 percent want their country "free of Jews." Backed by the country's neo-Nazi fringe, the country's rightist FPO party is the second-strongest in the country ? although it now exploits Islamophobia instead of anti-Jewish sentiment.

And the sight of Nazis on stage may remind some older audience members of uncomfortable historical facts. Over 99 percent of Austrians voted in favor of their country becoming part of the Third Reich in 1938; proportionally more Austrians than Germans were Nazi party members, and many of Hitler's closest henchmen were Austrians.

Like the Salzburg version, the first full Austrian showing in Vienna in 2005 featured actors dressed as Nazi storm troopers standing guard at exits and a theater box filled with mock Nazi dignitaries ? clearly too painful for some. Back then, some elderly audience members who last witnessed brown-shirted men wearing swastika arm bands as children were so troubled they hastily left the theater without watching the performance.

Six years later, reactions to the Nazi theme are mixed.

"Of course it's not so pleasant for us Salzburgers to be confronted with it," said Judith Herbst. But the smartly dressed woman in her mid 60s said that as far as she was concerned the role of Austria in Hitler's crimes was no longer debatable.

For others, though, the sight of men in forbidden Nazi garb entering the theater remains traumatic.

"It was horrible for a moment ? almost unbelievable," said theatergoer Fink. "Thank God this era is in the past!"

But there were no gasps of dismay regarding the rest of the show.

Some hummed its ear-candy melodies at the coat check after the performance.

"Kitsch? I was afraid that would be the case," said Helmi Popeter. "But once you see it, you realize that's not so."

___

George Jahn can be reached at http://twitter.com/georgejahn

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45400066/ns/travel-destination_travel/

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AP source: BYU, Big East end negotiations (AP)

Brigham Young won't be part of the Big East's westward expansion.

Negotiations between the rebuilding conference and BYU have broken off, a person familiar with the talks told The Associated Press. The person spoke Tuesday on condition of anonymity because the conference and school have not been making their talks public.

"BYU to the Big East is dead. It's not going to happen," the person said.

BYU athletic department spokesman Brett Pyne said in an email that school officials declined a request for comment.

The Big East was trying to add BYU as part of its plan to become a 12-team football league.

The deal-breaker was television rights. The person says BYU wanted to retain the rights to its home football games and the league could not agree to that.

No other school in a major conference has such a deal.

BYU, based in Provo, Utah, left the Mountain West Conference after last season to become a football independent. The school entered its other sports in the West Coast Conference and struck an eight-year-deal with ESPN. BYU also has its own television network.

The Big 12 had courted BYU earlier this year when it was looking to replace Texas A&M and later Missouri, but working out a television agreement prevented a deal.

The Big East ultimately ran into the same problem as it tried to persuade the school to become a football-only member.

Big East Commissioner John Marinatto had been talking to BYU about joining the league for weeks. But the school's desire to retain the TV rights to its home games did not come up until late in the discussions, the person said.

Negotiations between the league and school ended in the last 48 hours, the person said.

The fruitless negotiations with BYU have held up the Big East's expansion plans. The conference for weeks has been courting Boise State, Air Force and Navy as football-only members, and Conference USA schools SMU, Houston and Central Florida to join in all sports.

Boise State and Air Force play in the MWC. Navy is a football independent.

The move west for the Big East was prompted by the announced departures of Syracuse and Pittsburgh to the Atlantic Coast Conference in September.

Then West Virginia announced late last month that it was ditching the Big East for the Big 12, leaving the Big East with five long-term football members and opening another spot. Adding BYU then became a priority.

Now that BYU is off the table, the Big East will move on to other schools.

Temple, which plays in the Mid-American Conference and was once in the Big East, has been trying to get back in. East Carolina, another C-USA school, publicly announced it had applied for membership, and C-USA rival Memphis has also been pushed by some in the Big East for its excellent basketball program, most notably Louisville coach Rick Pitino.

But Boise State, which is nearly 1,900 miles away from the closest current Big East member ? Louisville ? would prefer the Big East bulk up its new western division. Provo is 382 miles from Boise, Idaho.

CBSSports.com reported Tuesday that San Diego State of the Mountain West is the Big East's next western target.

San Diego State Athletic Director Jim Sterk told The San Diego Union-Tribune through a spokesman on Tuesday that there was nothing new regarding the Big East, but the school did have preliminary discussions with the conference several weeks ago.

The Big East has been trying to convince potential members that joining will lead to more television revenue, greater television exposure and access to an automatic BCS bid.

The Big East is one of six conferences with automatic qualifying status in the Bowl Championship Series through the 2013 season. But beyond that, there is no guarantee the conference will have an automatic BCS bid.

Even if the Big East can complete its expansion plans and bring in seven new schools, the new-look league might not debut until 2013. There are stumbling blocks that could prevent most of the potential new members from joining next year.

Marinatto has been adamant about making Syracuse, Pittsburgh and West Virginia honor the Big East's 27-month notification period, which would keep those schools in the conference until 2014.

West Virginia has sued the Big East in its effort to join the Big 12 by next football season. The Big East filed its own lawsuit to force West Virginia to stay.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111123/ap_on_sp_co_ne/fbc_big_east_byu

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Wednesday, November 23, 2011

[OOC] Idea's here brah!

Forum rules
This forum is for OOC discussion about existing roleplays.

Please post all "Players Wanted" threads in the Roleplayers Wanted forum!

This topic is an Out Of Character part of the roleplay, ?The Elementalists 2?. Anything posted here will also show up there.

Topic Tags:

Forum for completely Out of Character (OOC) discussion, based around whatever is happening In Character (IC). Discuss plans, storylines, and events; Recruit for your roleplaying game, or find a GM for your playergroup.

You know what to do >_>
No but seriously... don't be scared to add any ideas. We all want this rp to last. So yeah!

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Campbell Soup 1st-quarter net income falls (AP)

NEW YORK ? Campbell Soup Co. said Tuesday that its first quarter net income fell 5 percent as the company worked to turn around its soup business in the U.S. and expand internationally.

Profit was better than expected, mainly due to lower spending on advertising and fewer shares outstanding. But revenue missed expectations as volume declined due to higher prices. The company, like other food makers, has raised prices to offset higher costs for ingredients and other materials.

Shares fell 6 percent in midday trading.

"Consumers continued to be impacted by the challenges in the global economy," during the quarter, said CEO Denise Morrison during a call with analysts. "There's little doubt that the pronounced caution and restraint that have characterized consumer behavior since the onset of the financial crisis are now the `new norm' for the food and beverage sector."

The Camden, N.J.,-based company is trying to regain lost ground after several years of declining soup sales. U.S. soup sales fell 4 percent during the quarter as higher prices hurt volume. Shoppers have curbed their soup consumption, stopped stocking pantries or shifted to competitor's brands. Campbell is in the early stages of a turnaround plan that includes adding high-end soups and broadening offerings in its snack, beverage and other categories.

The company lowered prices on soup last year in promotions, causing tough comparisons for this year. Campbell Soup also cut its advertising spending, shifting ad dollars to later in the quarter to more closely correspond with soup season.

Despite higher prices, Morrison said the sales decline was not as pronounced as expected, helping profitability. Morrison said Campbell is aiming to stabilize the soup division's profitability and will then try to drive revenue growth.

Sales were weak in other categories as well. U.S. beverages sales slipped 3 percent as the company's V8 brand was hurt by higher prices for juice concentrate and packaging and increased competition in the vegetable juice sector.

Sales volumes dropped for the Australian Arnott's biscuit brand, and sales of the soup, sauce and beverage division declined in Europe.

A bright spot was Goldfish crackers and Pepperidge Farm's Milano Melts and new Cracker Chips, which sold well. Sales in the global baking and snacking unit rose 4 percent to $568 million.

Overall, net income fell to $265 million, or 82 cents per share, in the quarter ended Oct. 30, from net income of $279 million, or 82 cents per share, in the same period last year.

There were about 5 percent fewer shares outstanding at quarter's end than a year ago, which helps boost earnings per share.

Analysts polled by FactSet expected 79 cents per share.

Revenue fell less than 1 percent to $2.16 billion from $2.17 billion. Analysts expected revenue of $2.21 billion.

Campbell affirmed its guidance for fiscal 2012. It expects revenue to be flat to up 2 percent, which translates to revenue of $7.72 billion to about $7.87 billion. It predicted adjusted earnings of $2.35 to $2.42 per share.

Analysts expect net income of $2.38 per share on revenue of $7.83 billion.

Shares fell $1,85, or 5.5 percent, to $31.76 in midday trading. When adjusted for dividends, the stock price was almost unchanged this year through Monday's close.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/earnings/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111122/ap_on_bi_ge/us_earns_campbell_soup

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Fed announces third round of bank stress tests

(AP) ? The Federal Reserve announced on Tuesday that it will conduct a third round of stress tests to determine if major U.S. banks can withstand a downturn in the economy.

The latest round of tests comes at a time when many are concerned about U.S. banks' exposure to the European debt crisis, which could throw that region into a recession and rattle global financial markets.

Vice Chairman Janet Yellen last week said the Fed would pursue the stress tests in coming weeks.

The Fed performed the first stress tests in the spring of 2009. The country's 19 largest banks participated. The initial stress test reassured investors that America's biggest banks had the resources to get through the recession and the fallout from the 2008 financial crisis.

For the latest test, the field has been expanded to 31 banks. The financial regulatory overhaul passed last year requires banks with at least $50 billion in assets to take part.

The Fed said that the banks would be required to test their ability to withstand a recession beginning at the end of this year that would drive unemployment up to more than 13 percent by early 2013. The jobless rate now stands at about 9 percent. The central bank said the parameters of its test would reflect a sizable drop in economic activity not only in the United States but in the global economy.

Sabeth Siddique, a former assistant director of banking supervision at the Federal Reserve who is now at accounting and consulting firm Deloitte, said that the central bank has designed reasonable economic criteria to use for this year's stress test. He said in some ways the economy is facing greater hurdles than it was in 2009.

"Back in 2009, we were in a difficult environment, but the economy was looking up," he said. "Right now, unemployment and economic growth continue to be anemic and the prospects of a quick recovery over the next two years don't seem that likely."

Wall Street has pummeled bank stocks recently because concerns over U.S. banks' exposure to Europe's debt crisis. Last week, Fitch Ratings said it believes that unless Europe's debt crisis is resolved in a timely and orderly manner, the "broad outlook for U.S. banks will darken."

Siddique also said that the threats to the U.S. financial system were being exacerbated by a debt crisis in Europe where countries such as Greece are having trouble meeting payments on their debt, which is putting at risk banks, primarily in Europe, that hold that debt.

The Fed is expected to release results of the latest stress test on the top 19 banks by late March. That will be a change from the 2011 test in which firm-by-firm results were not released.

Banks have until Jan. 9 to submit the information to the Fed. They must show they have enough capital reserves to withstand projected loan losses from an economic downturn.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-11-22-US-Fed-Stress%20Tests/id-80b1eea8df234d21b8911dd3427eb449

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Correction: Books-Libraries story

(AP) ? In a Nov. 21 story about digital book security, The Associated Press erroneously reported on the publishers involved in Amazon.com's Prime lending program, which allows members to rent one book a month from a selection of titles. Books from Penguin Group (USA) are not included.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2011-11-22-Books-Libraries/id-ffd0a0a7ce064a848c4b2cae9b65ad2b

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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Stop the Genetic Dragnet

Image: Illustration by Edel Rodriguez

In 2009 the San Francisco police arrested Lily Haskell when she allegedly attempted to come to the aid of a companion who had already been taken into custody during a peace demonstration. The authorities released her quickly, without pressing charges. But a little piece of Haskell remained behind in their database.

Haskell is one of hundreds of thousands who have had their DNA extracted as part of an enormous expansion of what were once categorized as criminal data banks. Police in about 25 states and federal agents are now empowered to take a DNA sample after arresting, and before charging, someone. This practice occurs even though many of those in custody are never found guilty. If they are cleared, their DNA stays downtown, and they must undergo a cumbersome procedure to clear their genetic records.

Courts nationwide are now wrestling with the civil-liberties implications. Some have held that the practice violates the Fourth Amendment protection against ?unreasonable searches and seizures.? Other courts, including one that heard a legal challenge brought by Haskell, have agreed with law-enforcement officials that lifting DNA is no different from taking a fingerprint, an established routine even for those not convicted. Ultimately the U.S. Supreme Court will probably decide this matter.

The ability of DNA technologies to match a tiny sliver of tissue left at a crime scene to a suspect gives them an undeniable allure to law enforcement. For critics, the unreasonableness of this ?search? relates to the information-rich nature of DNA. It does more than just ID people. It also has the potential to furnish details about appearance, disease risk and behavioral traits. The laws establishing DNA databases attempt to guard privacy by limiting inspection to only 13 relatively short stretches of DNA among the billions of ?letters? of code that make up the genome. Yet that protection may not be enough. Once those 13 markers are extracted, law-enforcement agencies continue to store the larger biological sample. Civil-liberties organizations worry that officials may eventually mine these samples for personal details or make them available for medical research without consent.

New genetic technologies are opening up possibilities that did not arise when the samples were first collected. For instance, a technique called familial searching can match DNA from the crime to someone in the database who is not a suspect but possibly a close relative of one?the database hit would be a near but not identical match to the DNA at the crime scene. The police would then have a whole new set of potential leads who would come under scrutiny as possible perps.

Although this process may nab criminals who would otherwise elude capture, it may also ensnare the innocent. Most of the possible leads produced by searches in partial database matches will have done nothing wrong. These persons of interest are likely to be concentrated in minority communities whose denizens represent a disproportionate fraction of the databases. Moreover, the seeming infallibility of DNA may prompt police to place too much reliance on familial search methods instead of considering nongenetic evidence that may steer an investigation toward other leads, notes New York University School of Law professor Erin Murphy.

The need is acute for legislative safeguards that protect privacy while also allowing police to solve crimes using these powerful tools. DNA samples should not be taken until a suspect is convicted, and even then the original DNA sample should be destroyed once the relevant markers are in the computer to guard against any future temptation to delve into someone?s private life. Finally, familial searches should be undertaken only as a last resort after other investigative leads have been tried?an approach that California has adopted and that other states should follow.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=b24aaa366d1d08021e32fafbdb9b92d4

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