Saturday, December 31, 2011

Moon countdown: Hours until 1st NASA probe arrives (AP)

LOS ANGELES ? NASA is counting down the seconds until its twin spacecraft bound for the moon make back-to-back arrivals over the New Year's weekend.

The washing machine-size probes have been cruising independently toward their destination since launching in September aboard the same rocket on a mission to measure lunar gravity.

Approaching the moon from the south pole, the Grail spacecraft ? short for Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory ? won't land on the surface, but will survey from orbit.

On New Year's Eve, Grail-A was poised to fire its engine for more than a half hour to slow itself and get captured into orbit. Grail-B will follow suit on New Year's Day.

Deep space antennas in the California desert and Madrid will track the tricky maneuvers and feed real-time updates to ground controllers.

"The anxiety level is heightened," project manager David Lehman of the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory said earlier this week.

Grail is the 110th mission to target the moon since the dawn of the Space Age including the six Apollo moon landings that put 12 astronauts on the surface. Despite the attention the moon has received, scientists don't know everything about Earth's nearest neighbor.

Why the moon is ever so slightly lopsided with the far side more mountainous than the side that always faces Earth remains a mystery. A theory put forth earlier this year suggested that Earth once had two moons that collided early in the solar system's history, producing the hummocky region.

Grail is expected to help researchers better understand why the moon is asymmetrical and how it formed by mapping the uneven lunar gravity field that will indicate what's below the surface.

"It seems that the answer is not on the surface," said chief scientist Maria Zuber of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "We think that the answer is locked in the interior."

Previous lunar missions have attempted to study the moon's gravity ? which is about one-sixth Earth's pull ? with mixed results. Grail is the first mission devoted to this goal.

Once in orbit, the near-identical spacecraft will spend the next two months refining their positions until they are just 34 miles above the surface and flying in formation. Data collection will begin in March.

The $496 million mission will be closely watched by schoolchildren. An effort by Sally Ride, the first American woman in space, will allow middle school students to use cameras aboard the probes to zoom in and pick out their favorite lunar spots to photograph.

Despite the latest focus on the moon, NASA won't be sending astronauts back anytime soon. The Obama administration last year nixed a lunar return in favor of landing humans on an asteroid and eventually Mars.

A jaunt to the moon ? about 250,000 miles away from Earth ? is usually speedy. It took the Apollo astronauts three days to zip there aboard the powerful Saturn V rocket. Since NASA wanted to economize by launching on a small rocket, it took Grail a leisurely 3 1/2 months to make the trip covering 2 1/2 million miles.

NASA's last moonshot occurred in 2009 with the launch of a pair of spacecraft ? one that circled the moon and another that deliberately crashed into the surface and uncovered frozen water in one of the permanently shadowed lunar craters.

___

Online:

Mission: http://grail.nasa.gov

___

Follow Alicia Chang's coverage at http://www.twitter.com/SciWriAlicia

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/science/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111231/ap_on_sc/us_sci_nasa_moonshot

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LG to Show Off 84-Inch ?Ultra Definition? TV at CES

Apparently, a 55-inch OLED television isn't wowing enough. So, in addition to the TV we reported on Tuesday, LG will also be unveiling at CES what it describes as the world's largest 3-D "Ultra Definition" television -- an 84-inch, 3840x2160 resolution 3-D display.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/GearFactor/~3/U4xm6SKipB4/

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Bold ideas for next Winter Classic include Colorado, Florida

The Winter Classic is morphing into a prestige and money-laden event that represents hockey?s best answer to the Super Bowl. In its first five years, the event has bounced around Northeastern cities, but the calls for more exotic locales have been picking up with each passing year.

Here are two especially interesting ideas from today?s round of stories.

Taking the Winter Classic out West

Avalanche beat writer Adrian Dater paints an intriguing picture of a Winter Classic game in Colorado for Sports Illustrated:

Can you picture this?

It?s 25 degrees outside on an early January night and the Detroit Red Wings are taking to the ice against the Colorado Avalanche under the silhouette of the Rocky Mountains. More than 76,000 fans are packed inside Sports Authority Field in Denver, including ? brace yourselves ? TIM TEBOW.

One of the greatest rivalries in sports history ? not just the NHL ? is revived for one day at least. And in case the current Avs and Wings wouldn?t be enough of an attraction, there is the alumni game to consider.

I?m not quite sure the NHL should base its Winter Classic planning on the drawing power of a quarterback who might be old news by next year (Tebow), but the overall idea has some appeal. The alumni game would indeed be a beauty since many of those greats just recently retired. (Mike Keane was playing until 2010.)

Florida + retractable roof = gold?

The Miami Marlins have made a lot of noise during their transformation in the MLB?s off-season, so attempting to attract a Winter Classic to their new ballpark seems in character. It almost doesn?t sound completely ridiculous thanks to the building?s retractable roof, either.

Here are some interesting details about the bold idea via a great blog post by George Richards of the Miami Herald.

First, the ballpark would have toclose its retractable roof for about two weeks with the air conditioning running ? and humidity lowered ? while the ice sheet is built and maintained.

On game day, the roof would open for the outdoor affect.

One can only imagine the scenery an outdoor hockey game in the tropics would produce for a worldwide television audience. That imagery is what the Panthers would sell to the league. It?s a hook no other market has. Sure, Los Angeles has sun and palm trees; it doesn?t have the retractable roof.

Sure, the retractable roof seems kind of like cheating, but Richards writes that it would afford an opportunity to have NHL-quality ice. (That?s not necessarily a claim that could always be made during some of the rougher stretches of some Winter Classic games.) Beyond that, the lure of going to Miami for a combination of a New Year?s celebration and outdoor hockey is so stunning that my liver hurts just thinking about it.

***

As Richards wrote later on in that piece, a Winter Classic in Florida remains highly unlikely. That being said, the fact that the technology is in place to make that even feasible is exciting enough.

Moving on, tell us: where would you like to see the next Winter Classic? Feel free to base your choice(s) on whatever standards you?d like, from best overall experience to highest degree of difficulty and anything in between.

Source: http://prohockeytalk.nbcsports.com/2011/12/30/bold-ideas-for-next-winter-classic-include-colorado-florida/

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Texas AIDS deaths decline, but more youths HIV-positive

Texans diagnosed with HIV are living longer, but the growing number of teens and young adults testing positive will result in a greater demand on the health care system in the future, according to the latest state profile tracking the virus that causes the deadly disease.

The 2010 annual report on HIV from the Texas Department of State Health Services reveals fewer AIDS deaths statewide but points to trouble ahead with an increasing rate and number of infected young adults 15 to 24.

Overall, the number of HIV-positive Texans has increased by 36 percent since 2004 - from 47,986 to 65,077. About a third of those with the virus live in the greater Houston area.

"This is the result of people living longer with the disease. That, in turn, is a challenge for prevention because there's the potential for more transmission if more people have it," said Jeff Hitt, the state health department's manager for HIV/STD prevention.

The disease continues to disproportionately affect Texans of African descent as well as gay and bisexual males.

Of the 4,242 Texans diagnosed last year, 42 percent were black, 31 percent were Hispanic and 25 percent were Anglo. More than half of Texans living with the virus received HIV through male-to-male sexual contact.

"What you could do 40 or 50 years ago as an 18-year-old, you cannot do anymore," said Jeffrey Campbell, prevention development director at Houston's St. Hope Foundation, which provides medical care for people with HIV. "You're talking about young people who are coming into their sexual prime who probably aren't doing anything different than young people years ago, but now we're living in a world with HIV."

22,000 infected here

The report shows roughly 22,000 people living with HIV in the greater Houston area. Among Texas cities, Houston, the state's largest, had the most HIV and AIDS diagnoses in 2010. Harris ranked No. 1 among counties for new HIV infections, AIDS cases and people living with HIV while having the second-highest HIV case rate behind Dallas County.

The Houston health department's HIV prevention bureau focuses on the young gay and bisexual male population, said Karen Chronister, epidemiologist supervisor for the agency's HIV/STD surveillance program. She also noted that the city's annual new infections have remained relatively stable over time, another testament to local transmission-fighting strategies.

"There are new efforts to try to make testing more routine and get more and more people tested, which then means people are aware of their status, get into care and get the services that they need," Chronister said.

The state report shows that Texas continues to struggle with late HIV diagnoses and connecting people with the virus to medical care.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that 1 in every 5 people with HIV nationwide are unaware of their infection. On average, it takes a decade for untreated HIV to progress to AIDS. Roughly one-third of Texans get late diagnoses, meaning they learn they have HIV, then AIDS in the same year. Thirty-eight percent of new HIV cases became late diagnoses in 2003, compared with 32 percent in 2009.

Still, there remains a striking disparity among Texas Hispanics with HIV - 42 percent received an AIDS diagnosis the same year, compared with 32 percent of Anglos and 31 percent of blacks with the virus.

"There are some studies that suggest that a lot of the transmission of HIV occurs from those people who are undiagnosed. They are more likely to be infectious if they're not on medications and they're less likely to protect partners because they assume they're not infected," Hitt said.

A new urgency

The report also notes that about one-third of diagnosed Texans do not have HIV-related health care. The medical need is even greater for black and Hispanic men, adults 25 to 44 and people diagnosed while living in the Houston area or along the U.S.-Mexico border.

For several years, Houston has received CDC grants to make HIV screening part of routine medical care in local health settings.

There is a new urgency to controlling the spread of HIV with Texas becoming a majority-minority state in the 2010 Census. The report concludes that "more attention should be directed towards preventing HIV infections among the youngest age cohorts, especially among racial and ethnic minorities."

The St. Hope Foundation has been reaching young people with HIV testing at night spots and pushing prevention through social networking.

"Whether we are on a college campus or at a club, when we find a person who is positive, they walk away with cell numbers of at least two people from our staff who are going to get them into a process to get linked to care," Campbell said. "We need to take the stigma of sex away from HIV and talk about it like it is - a chronic disease that's killing people."

?

cindy.george@chron.com

Source: http://feeds.chron.com/~r/houstonchronicle/topheadlines/~3/6jht7ix-5JM/Texas-AIDS-deaths-decline-but-more-youths-2429673.php

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'Forrest Gump' to be preserved in US film registry (omg!)

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Forrest Gump's oft-imitated line, "My momma always said, 'Life was like a box of chocolates. You never know what you're gonna get' " will be immortalized among the nation's treasures in the world's largest archive of film, TV and sound recordings.

The Library of Congress on Wednesday announced that 1994's smash hit "Forrest Gump" starring Tom Hanks was one of 25 films chosen to be included this year in the National Film Registry.

The oldest reels are silent films both from 1912. "The Cry of the Children" is about the pre-World War I child labor reform movement and "A Cure for Pokeritis" features the industry's earliest comic superstar John Bunny.

Also from that silent era is Charlie Chaplin's first full-length feature, "The Kid," from 1921.

Under the terms of the National Film Preservation Act, each year the Librarian of Congress names 25 films that are "culturally, historically or aesthetically" significant. This year, 2,228 films were nominated.

"These films are selected because of their enduring significance to American culture," Librarian of Congress James H. Billington said in a statement. "Our film heritage must be protected because these cinematic treasures document our history and culture and reflect our hopes and dreams."

For each title, the Library of Congress Packard Campus for Audio Visual Conservation works to ensure that the film is preserved for future generations. That comes either by the Library's massive motion-picture preservation program or through collaborating with other archives, motion-picture studios and independent filmmakers.

The most recent film chosen is "Forrest Gump," which won six Academy Awards including for Best Picture.

Also starring in that movie about an everyman who ended up being part of the most iconic events of the 1960s and 1970s was Sally Field. Her perhaps most famous role playing "Norma Rae" in the movie of the same name from 1979 also made the list. She won an Academy Award for her portrayal of a poorly educated single mother who fought successfully to make her Southern textile mill a union shop.

Making the list is the animated Disney classic, "Bambi," made in 1942 about a deer's life in the forest, "The Big Heat" from 1953, a post-war noir film, and 1991's disturbing, "The Silence of the Lambs," which won Oscars for stars Jody Foster and Sir Anthony Hopkins. Hopkins plays cannibalistic serial killer Hannibal Lecter in the psychological and violent thriller.

The original "War of the Worlds" from 1953 also will be preserved along with "Porgy and Bess," ''Stand and Deliver" and John Ford's epic Western, "The Iron Horse," from 1924.

Lesser known films were chosen for their significance to the art.

"A Computer Animated Hand" from 1972 is by Pixar Animation Studios co-founder Ed Catmull. The one-minute film that is one of the earliest examples of 3D computer animation displays the hand turning, opening and closing, pointing at the viewer and flexing its fingers.

Making the list were notable documentaries as well.

"Crisis: Behind a Presidential Commitment," focuses on Gov. George Wallace's attempt to prevent two African-American students from enrolling in the University of Alabama and the response of President John F. Kennedy. "Growing Up Female" from 1971 was one of the first films to come from the women's liberation movement.

Also included was "The Negro Soldier," produced by Frank Capra. It showed the heroism of blacks in the nation's wars and became mandatory viewing for all soldiers from spring 1944 until World War II's end.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/news_forrest_gump_preserved_us_film_registry053423194/44016787/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/forrest-gump-preserved-us-film-registry-053423194.html

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Oil price falls as Saudis trump Iran threat

(AP) ? Oil prices fell on Wednesday, after Saudi Arabia said it will offset any loss of oil from a threatened Iranian blockade of a crucial tanker route in the Middle East.

The U.S. Navy warned that any disruption of traffic through the vital Strait of Hormuz "will not be tolerated."

In New York, benchmark crude fell $1.98, or about 2 percent, to finish at $99.36 a barrel.

Brent crude fell $1.71 to end at $107.56 a barrel in London.

On Tuesday Iran's vice president said that his country was ready to close the Strait of Hormuz ? a vital waterway through which a third of the world's tanker traffic flows ? if western nations embargo the country's oil because of Iran's ongoing nuclear program. The head of the country's navy added on Wednesday that his fleet can block the strait if need be. His comments came as Iran held a 10-day drill in international waters near the strategic route, which is 21 miles wide at its narrowest point.

A Saudi oil ministry official told The Associated Press that Saudi Arabia and other Gulf producers are ready to provide more oil if Iran tries to block the strait. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the issue. He didn't specify other routes that could be used to transport oil, although they would likely be longer and more expensive for getting crude to the region's customers.

"Anyone who threatens to disrupt freedom of navigation in an international strait is clearly outside the community of nations; any disruption will not be tolerated," said Lt. Rebecca Rebarich, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Navy's Fifth Fleet, which is responsible for naval operations in the Persian Gulf, the Red Sea and the Arabian Sea.

Some analysts think the Iranian threats are more rhetoric than reality. "We doubt political posturing will turn into action," energy consultant and trader Stephen Schork said in a report.

"Shutting down the strait ... is the last bullet that Iran has and therefore we have to express some doubt that they would do this and at the same time lose their support from China and Russia," said analyst Olivier Jakob of Petromatrix in Switzerland.

Iran is the fourth largest oil exporter in the world, according to the Energy Department. Most of its crude goes to Asia, with China its biggest customer. Oil provides half of Iran's revenue. Last year that amounted to about $73 billion.

Oil prices were also undercut on Wednesday by persistent worries about Europe and future demand for oil as the region's economy weakens. The European Central Bank said the continent's banks parked a record $590.72 billion overnight with the ECB, reflecting distrust in the European banking system.

In other energy futures trading, heating oil fell 2 cents to finish at $2.89 a gallon, gasoline fell 4 cents to end at $2.65 a gallon and natural gas fell 3 cents to finish the day at $3.08 per 1,000 cubic feet.

____

AP writers Ali Akbar Dareini in Teheran, Tarek El-Tablawy in Cairo, Abdullah Shihri in Riyadh, Adam Schreck in Dubai and Pablo Gorondi in Budapest contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/apdefault/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-12-28-Oil%20Prices/id-12bae80c08584e60ab97174fa7ad59ac

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Idaho teen loses cancer fight after delivering son

POCATELLO, Idaho (AP) -- Jenni Lake gave birth to a baby boy the month before her 18th birthday, though she was not destined to become just another teenage mother.

That much, she knew.

While being admitted to the hospital, she pulled her nurse down to her at bed level and whispered into her ear. The nurse would later repeat the girl's words to comfort her family, as their worst fears were realized a day after Jenni's baby was born.

"She told the nurse, `I'm done, I did what I was supposed to. My baby is going to get here safe,'" said Diana Phillips, Jenni's mother.

In photographs, the baby's ruddy cheeks and healthy weight offer a stark contrast to the frail girl who gave birth to him. She holds the newborn tightly, kissing the top of his head. Jenni, at 5 feet and 4 inches tall, weighed only 108 pounds at the full term of her pregnancy.

A day after the Nov. 9 birth, Phillips learned that her daughter's decision to forgo treatment for tumors on her brain and spine so she could carry the baby would have fatal repercussions. The cancer had marked too much territory. Nothing could be done, Phillips said.

It was only 12 days past the birth - half spent in the hospital and the other half at home - before Jenni was gone.

Even so, her family and friends insist her legacy is not one centered in tragedy, but rather in sacrifice.

This month, her family gathered at their ranch style home in Pocatello, where a Christmas tree in the living room was adorned with ornaments picked out just for Jenni, including one in bright lime green, her favorite color. She had passed away in a bedroom down the hall.

Recalling Jenni's infectious laugh and a rebellious streak, her mother held the baby close, nuzzling his head, and said, "I want him to know everything about her, and what she did."

---

The migraines started last year, when Jenni was a 16-year-old sophomore at Pocatello High School. She was taken to the family doctor, and an MRI scan found a small mass measuring about two centimeters wide on the right side of her brain.

She was sent to a hospital in Salt Lake City, some 150 miles south of Pocatello, and another scan there showed the mass was bigger than previously thought.

Jenni had a biopsy Oct. 15, 2010, and five days later was diagnosed with stage three astrocytoma, a type of brain tumor. With three tumors on her brain and three on her spine, Jenni was told her case was rare because the cancer had spread from her brain to another part of her body with no symptoms.

Her parents, who are divorced, remember they were brought into a room at the hospital and sat down at a long table as doctors discussed her chances of survival.

"Jenni just flat out asked them if she was going to die," said her father, Mike Lake, 43, a truck driver who lives in Rexburg, north of Pocatello.

The answer wasn't good. With treatment, the teen was told she had a 30 percent chance to make it two years, Lake said. While he was heartbroken, Lake marveled at how strong she seemed in that moment. "She didn't break down and cry or anything," he said.

But her mom recalled Jenni did have a weak moment that day.

"When they told her that she might not be able to have kids, she got upset," said Phillips, 39.

Jenni started aggressive chemotherapy and radiation treatments, while also posting videos on a YouTube site titled "Jenni's Journey," where she hoped to share her story with updates every other day. She managed to upload only three videos, though, as her treatments left her tired and weak.

On her second video, posted Nov. 20, 2010, Jenni appears distraught while a family friend records her having lunch with her mom.

"Last night, like, I was just lying in bed and I was thinking about everything that was going on and it just like, it just hit me, like everything, and I don't know, it made me cry," Jenni says on the video.

Her mom is shown burying her face in her hands. "Do you know how hard it is to be a mom and know that she's sick and there's nothing you can do," she says, before collapsing into tears.

Jenni persists: "It's hard. It's like, I don't know how long this is going to last and I just want it to go away ... I feel like this is holding me back from so much ..."

By March of this year, the tumors had started to shrink, the family said.

In a picture taken at her prom in early May, Jenni is wearing a dark blue strapless dress and gives the camera a small smile. There's a silver headband in her hair, which is less than an inch long. Chemotherapy took her shoulder-length blond tresses.

Her boyfriend, Nathan Wittman, wearing a black dress shirt and pants, is cradling her from behind.

---

Jenni started dating Nathan a couple of weeks before she received her diagnosis. Their adolescent relationship withstood the very adult test posed by cancer, the treatments that left her barely able to walk from her living room to her bedroom, and the gossip at school.

"The rumors started flying around, like Nathan was only with her because she had cancer," said Jenni's older sister, Ashlee Lake, 20, who tried to squelch the mean-spirited chatter even as the young couple ignored it.

They were hopeful, and dreamed of someday opening a restaurant or a gallery.

Jenni had been working as an apprentice in a local tattoo shop. "She was like our little sister," said the owner, Kass Chacon. But in May, Jenni's visits to the shop grew less frequent.

She had been throwing up a lot and had sharp stomach pains. She went to the emergency room early one morning with her boyfriend and when she returned home, her family members woke up to the sound of crying. "We could hear Jenni just bawling in her room," said her sister, Kaisee, 19.

She had learned that she was pregnant, and an ultrasound would show the fetus was 10 weeks old.

Jenni's journey was no longer her own.

From the start of treatment, she was told that she might never have children, her mother said, that the radiation and chemotherapy could essentially make her sterile.

"We were told that she couldn't get pregnant, so we didn't worry about it," said Nathan, 19.

Jenni, the third of her parents' eight children, had always wanted to be a mom. She had already determined to keep the baby when she went to see her oncologist, Dr. David Ririe, in Pocatello two days after she found out she was pregnant.

"He told us that if she's pregnant, she can't continue the treatments," Phillips said. "So she would either have to terminate the pregnancy and continue the treatments, or stop the treatments, knowing that it could continue to grow again."

Dr. Ririe would not discuss Jenni's care, citing privacy laws, but said, generally, in cases in which a cancer patient is pregnant, oncologists will consider both the risks and benefits of continuing with treatment, such as chemotherapy.

"There are times during pregnancy in some situations, breast cancer being the classic example, where the benefits of chemotherapy may outweigh the risk to mother and baby," Ririe said. "There are other times where the risk outweighs the benefits."

There was no discussion about which path Jenni would choose. Her parents didn't think of it as a clear life or death decision, and Jenni may not have, either. They believed that since the tumors had already started to shrink earlier, she had a strong chance of carrying the baby and then returning to treatment after he was born.

"I guess we were just hoping that after she had the baby, she could go back on the chemotherapy and get better," her mother said.

---

Jenni and Nathan named the baby Chad Michael, after their dads. Nathan has legal custody of the child, who is primarily cared for by Nathan's mother, Alexia Wittman, 51.

"Nathan will raise him," she said. She brings the baby to Jenni's house to visit her family whenever they ask.

Jenni didn't show regret for her decision, not in the final weeks of her pregnancy as she grew weaker, and not when she started to lose her vision as the cancer took its course, her family said.

Jenni's last words were about her son as he was placed beside her a final time, her father said. As she felt for the baby, she said: "I can kind of see him."

---

Jenni's Journey: www.facebook.com/jennis.journey

Jenni's YouTube videos: http://www.youtube.com/jennisjourney

Source: http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_JENNIS_JOURNEY?SITE=ALTAL&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Nintendo Animal Crossing Wild World

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Video: Christmas around the nation, world

Christians the world over celebrated the birth of Christ, and around the U.S., people from all walks indulged in the familiar rituals of church, presents and feasting. NBC?s Ron Mott reports.

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/45788047/

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

NBA: Los Angeles Lakers (0-2) fall to Sacramento Kings

Posted:?12/26/2011 09:44:30 PM PST


Marcus Thornton scored 12 of his 27 points in the fourth quarter and the Sacramento Kings opened the season in grand fashion, beating the Los Angeles Lakers at home for the first time in more than three years, 100-91 on Monday night.

Kobe Bryant scored 29 points for the Lakers, who opened the season with consecutive losses for the first time since 2002-03, putting a damper on the start of coach Mike Brown's tenure.

"It's not a rivalry," Bryant said. "We beat them every year. Oh my God. I don't care if they beat us tonight. I like (Kings owners Joe and Gavin Maloof). I hope they enjoy this."

Kings rookie Jimmer Fredette entered to a loud ovation midway through the first quarter and then committed a double dribble the first time he touched the ball. He finished with six points.

Otherwise, it was nothing but a positive start to the season for the Kings. They went on an 11-0 run around halftime and then put together a strong finish to the third quarter led by DeMarcus Cousins. Playing with four fouls, Cousins scored eight points in the final 3:20 of the third to give Sacramento a 78-64 lead heading into the fourth.

"It was wild in there, and our players really liked the feeling of that game," Kings coach Paul Westphal said. "The fans were just fantastic."

Nuggets 115, Mavericks 93: Ty Lawson scored 20 of his 27 points in the first half and Denver faced little resistance in beating Dallas.


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class="bodytext">The reigning champion Mavericks were drubbed at home for a second straight game, routinely giving up easy baskets in both. They allowed Denver to score 20 consecutive points in the second quarter -- prompting boos during a particularly lousy part of that drought -- and were down by 33 late in the third quarter.

One night after the Miami Heat pounded the Mavericks, the Nuggets scored on 19 of their 25 possessions in the second quarter.

Thunder 104, Timberwolves 100: Kevin Durant scored 33 points to lead Oklahoma City past host Minnesota.

Ricky Rubio of Spain had an impressive NBA debut for the Timberwolves with six assists, six points and five rebounds in 26 minutes.

The Timberwolves led 96-95 with three minutes to play when Oklahoma City's Russell Westbrook drove the length of the floor, hit a layup and the free throw for a three-point play to put the Thunder ahead.

Blazers 107, 76ers 103: LaMarcus Aldridge had 25 points and seven rebounds to lead host Portland past Philadelphia.

Hornets 85, Suns 84: Eric Gordon made a 20-footer from the top of the key with 4.2 seconds to play in his New Orleans debut to push the Hornets past host Phoenix.

Gordon was part of the trade that sent Chris Paul to the Los Angeles Clippers.

Spurs 95, Grizzlies 82: Manu Ginobili scored 24 points as host San Antonio got some payback after its stunning playoff collapse last season, beating Memphis to start what could be Tim Duncan's final season.

The Grizzlies upset the 61-win Spurs in the first round last season.

Raptors 104, Cavaliers 96: No. 1 draft pick Kyrie Irving out of Duke had a rough NBA debut for host Cleveland, scoring six points on 2-for-12 shooting.

TV ratings: The five Christmas games on opening day averaged 6.2 million viewers based on fast national ratings, up from 6 million last year. The Bulls-Lakers matchup was the third most-watched regular-season game ever on ABC.

Paul's Clippers debut in the nightcap against the Warriors earned a 2.2 rating, up 69 percent over last year's Portland-Golden State telecast in the same slot.

Monday, December 26, 2011

2011-12 Timberwolves preview: New coach is worth a howl

There is -- quite possibly for the first time since Latrell Sprewell wondered aloud just how he would feed his family on $21 million -- a buzz crackling and humming around these Timberwolves.

You can feel it after so many seasons of indifference at Target Center, where more than 12,000 people gathered for a preseason game and 2,500 arrived for a free, lunch-hour scrimmage.

You can sense it on your Facebook page, where one friend proudly posts a cellphone photo of herself posed with Spanish sensation Ricky Rubio at Seven in downtown Minneapolis on a Saturday night.

Yes, it's true the beauty of sports means every season brings optimism, but ...

"People say things will be better every year because you don't expect to be bad, ever," Wolves forward Anthony Tolliver said. "But at the end of the day, I know some things for a fact: Everybody has a different attitude coming in this year than we did the last."

There are many reasons Tolliver claims to know what he knows, the arrival of Rubio and Derrick Williams among them. But foremost is one that Tolliver expresses simply by pointing across the practice floor, his finger directed at new coach Rick Adelman.

"That guy right over there," he said.

"That guy" ranks eighth on the NBA's all-time list of coaching winners, and his 945 career victories with Portland, Golden State, Sacramento and Houston are 240 more than the Wolves have won in their entire history.

David Kahn's 2 1/2 years as Wolves president of basketball operations have had their share of suspect moves, but his patient recruiting of Adelman to replace fired and failed Kurt Rambis was September's slam-dunk punctuation mark on a transformational summer, one where Kahn also signed Rubio after a two-year courtship and picked Williams second in the June draft.

First impressions

With one unexpected move, Adelman's signing for $5 million a year brought the franchise something it has lacked since Kevin Garnett starred for it.

In a word: credibility.

"You start with the head coach and by going with Rick Adelman, the sky is the limit," said NBA TV analyst Chris Webber, who played six-plus seasons for Adelman on Sacramento teams that battled the Lakers and Garnett's Wolves in the playoffs.

So when Adelman spoke to his new players for the first time, they listened to a brutally honest man whose teams became known for their efficient, effective ball movement and underrated for their defense.

He wrote on a marker board the telling details of last year's 17-victory season and ticked off evidence -- points allowed, assist-to-turnover ratio, etc. -- simply pulled directly from the 30-team league's stats.

"It wasn't hard," Adelman said. "It was 30th in a lot of areas."

He also presented evidence culled from a specialized scouting service that showed last season's team on average ran the court from offense to defense more than a second slower than it did the other way around.

"A whole second? In our league, you got no chance," said assistant coach Terry Porter, who helped compile the talking points Adelman offered that first day. "You could tell by the looks on guys' faces that it was something they'd never realized before."

Forward Michael Beasley summarized Adelman's introductory address as "what we did wrong, the few things we did right last year and the things we won't do this year" delivered by a man he calls "quiet," a "straight shooter" and a man with a unique voice who makes his point heard at any volume.

"We can hear him," Beasley said. "It's something we got instilled in our brains. As soon as he talks, you hear him a mile away."

Speak softly and ...

That voice -- "A little raspy," Beasley said -- sounds like a 65-year-old who has spent a lifetime yelling too much, except for one thing:

"I've never been like that," Adelman said. "I can't yell. I don't have the voice for it. There's always a time and place for that. You try and pick and choose so that when you do it, they're very aware that something's gone wrong. You can reach people the other way, too.

"You can reach them individually. You can reach them as a team. It's just a trust you have to build as the season goes on. You don't have to yell."

Not even when his children were small?

"Well, on occasion," his son R.J., the Wolves' director of player personnel and game preparation, said with a grin. "Every coach has his own style. He just is who he is. If you're going to coach in this league and you're trying to be someone you're not, players see right through that. If you watch practice, when he speaks, they're listening because he speaks in a very honest, very specific way.

"The bottom line is, he knows what he's doing. His coaching style is reflective of his personality. He's not going to change and he shouldn't, because obviously he has been successful wherever he has gone."

Louder than words

His teams have made the playoffs 16 of his first 20 seasons as an NBA head coach. Those teams have won 50 or more games 11 times in those 20 seasons. The only place he didn't win was at Golden State, a two-year stop in the mid-1990s that he said taught him a coach needs talent.

Webber said Adelman's coaching style "empowers" players with its freedoms while also demanding "personal responsibility."

"If you're open and don't shoot it, you're going to come out of the game," Webber said. "He knows Minnesota isn't going to win a championship anytime soon. What he will do is work on the personality, the character and the play of his team, and he will build for the future. He's a unique coach in that he can take a team to a championship, and he's also one of the first guys to call to build a team that hasn't done so well. He's prepared for success."

Those 945 victories, two trips with the Trail Blazers to the NBA Finals and a .633 winning percentage with a Sacramento team that never could get past the Lakers in the playoffs speak louder for him with players than that nasally voice ever will.

"We listen and he tells us what he thinks and wants us to do, and we either do it and are successful or we don't do it," Tolliver said. "It's a pretty simple conclusion. I guess it's like that with all coaches, but it's a different level when you're talking about a coach who's gone out and won 900-some games in his career.

"It's kind of hard to sit back and say, 'That's not right' with him. You have to listen and you better listen, because his record speaks for itself."

Source: http://www.startribune.com/sports/wolves/136211758.html

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State of Denial: How New York May Squander Its Energy Boom

The Great North American Energy Renaissance is going full-bore, and it offers finally the prospect of true American energy independence. ?This renaissance is due to the application of relatively recent technologies, such as horizontal drilling and fracking, to hitherto commercially unviable sources of fossil fuel deposits, such as oil sands and shale rock formations.

Two recent stories -- ironically from the same source, the New York Times -- illustrate federalism in action. ?Together, they describe how two different states have reacted to this energy renaissance.

The first piece reports the continued economic transformation to North Dakota due to shale drilling operations. ?It describes how mini-communities are springing up on the Northern Prairie to house the (primarily male) workers. ?The story talks about two such "man camps," each housing around 3,700 workers.

The problem, you see, is that North Dakota -- with an unemployment rate of 3.5%, the lowest in the country and less than half the national average -- has so many fossil fuel energy jobs open that men are flooding in from elsewhere in the nation, and flooding in so quickly that the housing for them has to be cobbled together on short notice. ?These "man camps" are usually made from prefab modular buildings.

The story reports that the explosive growth of the man camps is not surprisingly putting stress on the state's infrastructure and environment.

There are several North Dakota counties in which an amazing one third of the population lives in man camps. ?Two such counties have already put a moratorium on any more worker camps.

As the old saying has it, there can be too much of a good thing. ?Here, the good thing is high-paying blue-collar work. ?In the oil industry, many of these jobs pay well over $100,000 a year. ?Men are moving in so fast that motel rooms are booked to the hilt, rents have gone up fourfold, and the man camps are packed. ?The North Dakota cops have to warn wannabe workers not to try living in their cars in the infamous North Plains winters.

All of this is reminiscent of the frontier days, when gold-hunters would flood an area, looking for the elusive metal. ?There are the occasional fights, and many of the man camps have to outlaw guns, booze, and -- well, how to put it? -- "unauthorized women." ?But luckily, twelve-hour shifts at physically demanding work tend to keep the men from becoming too obstreperous.

The second story concerns New York. ?New York State -- famous for its hordes of "progressive liberals" who claim to worry so much about the working class -- could also be economically humming by creating those high-paying blue-collar jobs so desperately needed in this "he-cession." ?It could also be doing its part in freeing this country from its reliance on foreign sources of energy -- from oil produced in places such as the Middle East and Venezuela to solar panels produced in China.

But no -- of course, New York's environmentalists are up in arms about fracking (and every other method of energy production that actually works -- i.e., reliably produces low-cost energy). ?This has led to quite a battle, indeed.

Governor Cuomo's administration is being bombarded from both sides as it comes up to the crunch point when it must decide whether to allow gas production by fracking. ?Energy companies are pouring money into lobbying firms, ad agencies, and campaign war chests, hoping to sway Albany to start approving such operations. ?The environmentalist groups are spending tons of money the same way, as well as deploying their myrmidons on the streets to demonstrate, all to get the state government to refuse any permits for drilling.

The warring sides seem to be mirrored in Gov. Cuomo's very soul. ?He plays the New Deal Democrat who wants jobs for the proletariat, but he also plays the New-Left Hippie Environmentalist oh-so-concerned about the ecosystem. ?He has positively begged both sides to be moderate, saying, "I know that the temperature is high. ?We have a process. ?Let's get the facts. ?Let the science and the facts make the determination, not emotion and not politics."

Now, I know that the prospect of a progressive pleading for politics and emotion to be put aside is on the face of it risible. ?Progressive liberal governance is all about machine politics and cheap emotional appeals. ?However, I am moved by this spectacle to make a suggestion -- one that I think will help the governors of blue states fearful of allowing energy development because of the anti-development environmentalists. ?However, those governors will hate me for mentioning it.

Let's start with an observation. ?The states of this nation divide into two groups: the energy-makers and the energy-takers. ?The environmentalists dominate the politics of the energy-taking states, such as New York and my own wacky state of California. ?The energy-takers love the fact that they can import most of their energy, all the while keeping their environments pristine. ?In that sense, they have the best of all worlds. ?The energy-makers, such as Alaska, Texas, Wyoming, Louisiana, West Virginia, and now North Dakota, freely allow the exploitation of their fossil fuel resources, and bear disproportionately the costs of such production. ?But they are also able to prosper from it as well, as shown by their generally lower unemployment rates and more robust economies.

I think that it would help prompt the self-indulgent energy-takers be more supportive of the nation -- more patriotic, in the truest sense of the term -- if the federal government eliminated the state tax deduction for federal taxes. ?After all, the governors of those states are already facing resistance to higher taxes. ?If the taxpayers of those states could no longer write off the state taxes, those taxpayers would become even more adamantly opposed to higher taxes.

Taking away the deduction for state taxes would thus force the "progressive" states into a dilemma: cut programs, or enhance revenues by increasing economic growth (which would have to involve easing regulations). ?But the former option would cost the progressive politicians a lot of support from their base.

I make this suggestion with a shudder: I hate to think of how much my own taxes would rise from such a change.? But my sense of justice leads me to advocate it.? It is simply unfair that the high-state tax states can force the lower-tax states to pick up much of the tab for the former's underperforming economies.

Depriving New York and California residents in particular of that deduction would help motivate them to pay more attention to the narcissistic anti-energy, anti-growth policies their leaders have chosen. ?It would help motivate the ordinary citizenry fight the environmentalists. ?New York could do like Pennsylvania, Ohio, and elsewhere and let its shale reserves be tapped. ?California could do like Texas, Alaska, and Louisiana and let its offshore reserves be more thoroughly exploited, by at least allowing exploration for new reserves natural gas. ?But the political leaders in both states are largely opposed as things stand now.

The best way to make eliminating the state tax deduction possible would be by moving to a flat tax, where federal tax rates are lowered on the upper brackets in exchange for the elimination of all deductions. ?As Steve Forbes can tell you, this is a tough sell, but it at least has a chance.

Philosopher Gary Jason is a senior editor for Liberty Unbound and the author of the new book Dangerous Thoughts (available at GaryJasonBooks.com).

Source: http://www.americanthinker.com/2011/12/state_of_denial_how_new_york_may_squander_its_energy_boom.html

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Built-in 'self-destruct timer' causes ultimate death of messenger RNA in cells

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Researchers at Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University have discovered the first known mechanism by which cells control the survival of messenger RNA (mRNA) ?arguably biology's most important molecule. The findings pertain to mRNAs that help regulate cell division and could therefore have implications for reversing cancer's out-of-control cell division. The research is described in today's online edition of the journal Cell.

"The fate of the mRNA molecules we studied resembles a Greek tragedy," said the study's senior author, Robert Singer, Ph.D., co-director of the Gruss Lipper Biophotonics Center and professor and co-chair of anatomy and structural biology at Einstein. "Their lifespans are determined at the moment of their birth." The study was carried out in yeast cells using advanced microscope technology developed previously by Dr. Singer that has allowed scientists, for the first time, to observe single molecules in single cells in real time.

Directions for making proteins are encoded in the DNA sequences of genes, which reside on chromosomes in the nucleus of each cell. But for proteins to be made, a gene's DNA code must be copied, or transcribed, onto mRNA molecules, which migrate from the nucleus and into the cytoplasm where the cell's protein-making machinery is located. For as long as it exists, an mRNA molecule can act as a template for making copies of a protein. So scientists have long suspected that cells must have ways for degrading mRNAs when, for example, a protein starts accumulating to harmful levels. "The cell somehow decides to destroy its mRNA on cue, but nobody knew how this happens," said Dr. Singer.

In their search for such a mechanism, Dr. Singer and his colleagues focused on two genes, SWI5 and CLB2, which code for proteins that regulate the cell cycle?the complex series of steps during which a cell divides, first duplicating its genetic material and then distributing it evenly to two daughter cells. To properly choreograph the cell cycle, the levels of the proteins encoded by the SWI5 and CLB2 genes must be exquisitely controlled?suggesting that the mRNAs made from these genes would be prime candidates for purposeful degradation. Remarkably, the researchers found that these mRNAs are, in effect, born with molecular "self-destruct timers" that ultimately destroy them.

When genes are transcribed, a part of the gene called the promoter region has the job of switching on the gene so that DNA will be copied into mRNA. The Einstein scientists found that the promoter regions of the SWI5 and CLB2 genes do something else as well: they recruit a protein called Dbf2p, which jumps onto mRNA molecules as they're being synthesized.

These mRNAs?transcribed from the SWI5 and CLB2 genes and bearing the Dbf2p protein?make their journey from the nucleus into the cytoplasm. Here a protein called Dbf20p joins Dbf2p aboard the mRNA molecules?and the two proteins together call for the molecules' precipitous decay.

"Our findings indicate that genes making proteins whose levels must be carefully controlled contain promoter regions that sentence their mRNA molecules to death even as the mRNA is being born," said Dr. Singer. "The promoter regions do that by 'marking' the newly made mRNA with the protein Dbf2p?the common factor between mRNA synthesis and its ultimate decay. Dbf2p stays attached to the mRNA from its birth and then, responding to a signal indicating that no more protein should be made, orders mRNA's destruction."

While these observations pertain to yeast cells, Dr. Singer said he is confident that the process governing mRNA decay in humans "will prove to be very similar" and could be relevant for combating cancer. "Once you gain insight into the mechanisms controlling the cell cycle and cell division," he noted, "you can propose targeted therapies for regulating the uncontrolled cell division that characterizes cancer."

###

Albert Einstein College of Medicine: http://www.einstein.yu.edu

Thanks to Albert Einstein College of Medicine for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/116279/Built_in__self_destruct_timer__causes_ultimate_death_of_messenger_RNA_in_cells

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Michael Buble brings "Christmas" to "CityVille" (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) ? Singer Michael Buble is taking his "Christmas" spirit into the virtual realm, collaborating with popular Facebook game "CityVille" and giving an interactive gift to his fans over the holidays.

"CityVille" players will be able to socialize with Buble's personal avatar, which will talk and sing in different settings including a holiday bonfire, as well as hunt for presents that Buble himself would like under his own Christmas tree.

"Social gaming has opened up a new door for artists to connect with their fans," Buble told Reuters, adding that "CityVille" players will "see a different side of me in the game and also connect with me in a really personal way."

"CityVille," developed by social network game company Zynga, allows players to create and grow their own towns, and according to Appdata.com, is the No. 1 game on Facebook. It can also be played through Google Plus and smartphones.

The collaboration with Buble follows Zynga's partnership with Lady Gaga earlier this year, who had her own town called GagaVille on Zynga game "FarmVille." It featured unicorns, crystals and unreleased songs, coinciding with the release of her album "Born This Way."

Grammy-winning Buble, 36, is currently enjoying a fourth week at the top of the Billboard 200 album chart with his holiday record "Christmas," which features a selection of festive classics.

"I set out to record a classic Christmas album in the old style recorded off the floor in the studio. I wanted it to sound and feel authentic," said Buble of his holiday album.

"I think no matter what a person's musical taste is, there is always room to enjoy a great holiday record," he said.

After releasing "Christmas" in October, sales of the album were boosted in the run-up to the holidays, with Buble fending off competition from Rihanna, The Black Keys and Amy Winehouse to keep the top spot on the album chart.

"I don't really look at is as a contest against other artists or releases," said the Canadian singer, adding that he was "thrilled" with the public's enthusiastic response to it.

(Editing by Jill Serjeant and Bob Tourtellotte)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/music/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111223/music_nm/us_michaelbuble_cityville

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

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AMD updates Fusion A-Series chips, offers overclockers two new options

AMD Fusion A-Series
Just in time for the holidays AMD is fleshing out its lineup of Fusion A-Series APUs. The chips, which only got official in June, already saw their laptop-loving Llanos get a minor spec bump. Now their desktop brethren are catching up. The two stars, though, are clearly the A6-3670K and A8-3870K, which feature unlocked CPU and GPU clocks for the avid overclockers out there. Both are 100W quad-core parts with 600MHz Radeon graphics cores, but the A8 runs its CPU at 3GHz while the A6 starts at a more modest 2.7GHz. The 3870K also has the edge in GPU cores -- packing a grand total of 400 to the 3670K's 320. Head on after the break for the complete PR and all the nitty gritty details of the latest AMD APUs.

Continue reading AMD updates Fusion A-Series chips, offers overclockers two new options

AMD updates Fusion A-Series chips, offers overclockers two new options originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 22 Dec 2011 03:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Friday, December 23, 2011

U.N. urges Libya to sell off uranium cache (Reuters)

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) ? U.N. experts are urging Libya to get rid of a large cache of "yellowcake" uranium because the warehouse where it is being kept is neither safe nor secure enough for long-term storage, the U.N. envoy to Libya said on Thursday.

Inspectors from the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) completed an inspection of the Tajura nuclear facility in Tripoli and a warehouse in Sabha that stores yellowcake, a concentrated uranium powder, on December 9, U.N. special envoy to Libya Ian Martin told the Security Council.

"In an initial debriefing the IAEA conveyed its overall conclusion that none of the previously reported nuclear materials in either facility had gone missing," Martin told the 15-nation council via video-link from Tripoli.

Former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi had a clandestine nuclear weapons program, which he abandoned in December 2003. IAEA and U.S. experts verified at the time that the program was fully dismantled.

While there appears to be no immediate health or radiation risk posed by the uranium, Martin said, the IAEA is encouraging Libya to sell and transfer the 6,400 barrels of yellowcake out of the country because the barrels are deteriorating and the site is not secure enough.

"The present safety and security measures at the facility are not deemed sufficient longer-term," Martin said. "There appears, however, to be no risk of proliferation given the weight and state of the barrels."

Yellowcake uranium, which is not highly radioactive, cannot be used for nuclear weapons unless processed and purified.

MISSING WEAPONS

Martin also confirmed a U.S. finding from last month that Libya's missing stocks of shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles - "man portable air defense systems" or MANPADS - appear to be still in the country.

"While the focus of international concern continues to be the potential proliferation of MANPADs, as yet there seems to be little evidence of such weapons systems appearing in neighboring countries," he said.

"Visits at weapon storage sites and brigades throughout Libya suggest that most looted arms may be held by revolutionary brigades or local militias within a limited distance from the looted sites, thereby rendering it primarily a national Libyan arms control and disarmament concern," Martin said.

He added that the U.N. Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) had agreed with Libya's Defense Ministry to set up a task force on MANPADS to "facilitate a country-wide mapping of weapons and storage sites and to coordinate the identification, collection and disabling efforts."

The U.N. mission is also working to register MANPADS held by revolutionary brigades, Martin said.

Separately, the United States is working with Libya's Defense Ministry to create an inventory and destroy superfluous conventional weapons around in Libya, he said.

In the chaotic fighting to end Gaddafi's rule, local militias trying to overthrow him raided arms depots and took the weapons for themselves.

The militias are largely loyal to the Western-backed government now in power, but there are questions over how securely they are storing the weapons.

Security experts have said that MANPADS could be acquired by militants or smugglers and taken across Libya's porous southern borders into neighboring Algeria, Mali, Mauritania and Niger.

Martin also said that the Netherlands-based Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) was making progress in accounting for chemical weapons and materials found at two previously undeclared sites in Libya.

He said that Libya's government submitted to the OPCW in late November a detailed declaration of the materials, which were transferred to the officially declared storage site. The OPCW plans to return in mid-January to work with the government on safe storage for the materials.

(Reporting By Louis Charbonneau; Editing by Eric Walsh)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111222/wl_nm/us_libya_un

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