Saturday, April 20, 2013

Same protein that fires up cancer-promoting erk also blocks its activation

Apr. 19, 2013 ? A protein which is intimately involved in cancer-promoting cell signaling also keeps a key component of the signaling pathway tied down and inactive, a team led by scientists from The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center reports this week in Nature Structural Molecular Biology.

Shc, pronounced "schick," plays a key role in activating signals which lead to cell proliferation (and cancer) when cells are stimulated, however it unexpectedly turns out to be a tumor-suppressor, keeping Erk under wraps when a cell is less active, said senior author John Ladbury, Ph.D., professor in MD Anderson's Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.

"Shc is a checkpoint to prevent out of control cell growth, binding to Erk when a cell is not being stimulated by growth factors," Ladbury said. "Otherwise, the lower-level background signaling that's always present in a cell would be uncontrolled."

Keeping Erk in check while the cell idles

Overexpression of Erk occurs in many types of cancer, including ovarian and prostate cancer and Hodgkin lymphoma, so cellular control of its activity is important.

In the absence of external stimulation by growth factors, cells remain active but lower levels of cell signaling occur, which Ladbury compares to a car idling, ready to roll. Under these conditions control mechanisms are in place to prevent the cell kicking into gear. Shc turns out to be one of these controllers.

"We're essentially looking at the cell in a resting, but ready, state," Ladbury said. "I would argue that's probably more like a cell behaves in tissue, it's not normally getting a slug of growth factors as is often the way when we investigate signaling in experiments in the lab. There's still a lot going on in the cell, basically background activity." These findings point to a number of therapeutic possibilities, including the measurement of Shc concentration levels as a diagnostic tool and of finding small molecule drugs that block growth-factor signaling to Shc, keeping it bound to Erk, Ladbury noted.

Growth factors provide double boost for Erk

When the appropriate growth factor receptor is stimulated Erk is activated in the MAP Kinase pathway. It dives into the cell nucleus and turns on a variety of genes, actions that contribute to cancer proliferation, blood vessel production and metastasis when signaling is out of control.

When receptor tyrosine kinases on the cell surface connect with growth factors, they normally send a signal via Shc that sets off a chain of actions leading to Erk activation. Ladbury and colleagues looked at Shc's connections to epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) signaling.

The team found in mammalian cell lines that:

  • Under non-stimulated conditions Shc binds to Erk in the cell cytoplasm at binding sites that are unique on both proteins.
  • Stimulation via EGFR reduces this connection, but not by competing with Shc at the Shc-Erk binding site.
  • Instead, on stimulation from outside the cells, EGFR adds phosphate groups to itself at specific sites. One of these forms a binding for Shc, which distorts the protein's shape, making it impossible for Erk to bind.
  • Overexpression of Shc decreases the amount of activated Erk, because Shc mops up free Erk molecules.
  • Depleting Shc expression with short hairpin RNA resulted in higher levels of activated Erk.
  • When separated from Shc, Erk moves into the nucleus and activates genes even when the cell is not receiving a stimulus. Thus without the controlling influence of Shc, Erk can run riot in the cell giving rise to unrestrained cell reproduction.

Shc-Erk connection confirmed

Ladbury and colleagues then tested their results in the C.Elegans, a worm model frequently employed in biological research. Both Shc and Erk are greatly similar between humans and the worms.

Experiments showed that Shc blocks Erk function by sequestering it away from the Ras-Raf-Mek MAPK pathway in the worms. Without the Shc-Erk connection, the MAPK pathway is activated, causing excessive Erk activation.

EGFR stimulation not only sets off the normal activation of Erk via Shc and the MAPK pathway, Ladbury said, but also frees Erk for greater availability for activation by breaking the tie to Shc.

Co-authors with Ladbury are first author Kin Man Suen and Chi-Chuan Lin, Ph.D., Fernando Melo, Ph.D., Zamal Ahmed, Ph.D., and Stefan Arold, Ph.D., all of MD Anderson's Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology; Roger George, Ph.D., of the London Research Institute of Cancer Research UK; Eleanor Biggs, of the University of Bath, Bath, UK; and Melanie Drake and Swathi Arur, Ph.D., of MD Anderson's Department of Genetics.

Suen is a graduate student in The University of Texas Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, which is run jointly by MD Anderson and The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston. Ladbury and Arold also are affiliated with the Center for Biomolecular Structure and Function at MD Anderson.

Funding for this research was provided by grants from the U.S. National Institutes of Health (GM98200), the G. Harold and Leila Y. Mathers Charitable Foundation and the MD Anderson Cancer Center Trust. MD Anderson also receives a Cancer Center Support Grant from the National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health (P30 CA016672).

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Kin Man Suen, Chi-Chuan Lin, Roger George, Fernando A Melo, Eleanor R Biggs, Zamal Ahmed, Melanie N Drake, Swathi Arur, Stefan T Arold, John E Ladbury. Interaction with Shc prevents aberrant Erk activation in the absence of extracellular stimuli. Nature Structural & Molecular Biology, 2013; DOI: 10.1038/nsmb.2557

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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/ZYwNcwUze0A/130419171603.htm

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Thursday, April 18, 2013

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Source: http://forums.ferra.ru/index.php?showtopic=55502

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Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Laser liposuction melts fat, results in tighter skin

Apr. 15, 2013 ? A new, minimally invasive treatment that uses lasers to melt fat could replace the "tummy tuck," suggests research on more than 2,000 people being presented at the Society of Interventional Radiology's 38th Annual Scientific Meeting in New Orleans.

Without the risks of a surgical procedure (such as the tummy tuck) and when used in combination with standard liposuction, the fat-melting action of laser lipolysis, a minimally invasive treatment, has the added benefit of producing new collagen (collagen is the main protein that gives the skin its tone and texture). Additionally, the laser causes the collagen to contract, which tightens the skin. This tightening alleviates the fear of skin sagging, a common complaint after standard liposuction. Laser lipolysis also enables the removal of more fat than standard liposuction.

"Many women who have standard liposuction are discouraged because often the skin sags after the fat is removed," said Abbas Chamsuddin, M.D., lead author of the study and an interventional radiologist at the Center for Laser and Interventional Surgery in Atlanta, Ga. "Ultrasound-assisted guidance of a fiber-optic laser during laser lipolysis can be used on many parts of the body and results in excellent sculpting with tight skin," he added.

"Liposuction has been around for more than 20 years. Many people don't try it because they have heard that the skin often sags after the fat is removed. This is especially true for individuals who want to lose abdominal fat, but also need the skin to retract. Traditional liposuction also has a limitation to the volume of fat that could potentially be removed," said Chamsuddin. "Combining traditional liposuction with laser lipolysis has now been shown to produce well-sculpted bodies with tight skin. We are able to give people things such as a tighter abdomen without the need for surgery," he said.

Between February 2009 and July 2012, a group of 2,183 individuals, ages 17 to 73 (75 percent female, 25 percent male), underwent laser-assisted lipolysis and liposuction on multiple areas of the body, including the neck, arms, love handles, breast, belly, thighs and calves. Prior to treatment, each person had measurements recorded including weight, diameter of the area treated and skin tightness. At each follow-up appointment the diameter of the treatment areas was measured and recorded. Skin tightness was also recorded against control criteria.

The laser's thermal (heat) energy melts the fat and standard liposuction removes it from the body, noted Chamsuddin. Patient follow-up was daily for a week and then at one, three and six months. All treated areas showed improvement in reducing fat bulk as well as tightening skin. The laser uses targeted energy to "zero in" on the fat, without affecting the other tissue, enabling a faster recovery, he added.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Society of Interventional Radiology.

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Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/mj1MBKviE1I/130415124819.htm

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Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Google's MyGlass Companion App for Google Glass Is Now Available in Google Play

Though this is completely useless for pretty much every single one of us (since we don't have Google Glass), Google just released the companion Android app for Google Glass called MyGlass in Google Play. Even Google so cheekily reminds us that the app does nothing (without Glass, that is) saying: "If you don't have Glass, then downloading this will be a waste of time. Sorry about that. But if you swipe the screenshots to the right you'll see there's a picture of a puppy in pajamas. So not a total waste of time after all." More »
    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/IcRoLnq9rVc/googles-myglass-companion-app-for-google-glass-is-now-available-in-google-play

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Google Glass Has 12GB Of Usable Storage And A 5MP Camera, Official Specs Reveal

google glassGoogle Glass is arriving soon, with lucky Explorer program members getting their devices soonish, with units rolling off the production line right now, but you can find out right now what kind of hardware specs the gadget has thanks to a Google Glass support doc. The display is said to be equivalent to viewing a 25-inch HD display from eight feet, the camera captures 5 megapixel stills and 720p video, there's 16GB of flash memory, of which 12GB are usable, and it has both Wi-Fi and Bluetooth on board.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/7Y5GVkwgMfw/

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High court rejects challenge to NY gun law

(AP) ? The Supreme Court is staying out of the gun debate for now.

The justices on Monday declined to hear a challenge to a strict New York law that makes it difficult for residents to get a license to carry a concealed handgun in public.

The court did not comment in turning away an appeal from five state residents and the Second Amendment Foundation. Their lawsuit also drew support from the National Rifle Association and 20 states.

The high court action comes amid an intensifying congressional debate on new gun control measures. The issue has resurfaced prominently in Washington in the wake of the Newtown, Conn., school shooting that killed 20 children and six adults.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/apdefault/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-04-15-US-Supreme-Court-Guns/id-1046c69611994cf2983ee5a718e781f8

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Monday, April 15, 2013

The Note's Must-Reads for Monday, April 15, 2013

The Note's Must-Reads are a round-up of today's political headlines and stories from ABC News and the top U.S. newspapers. Posted Monday through Friday right here at www.abcnews.com

Compiled by ABC News' Jayce Henderson and Carrie Halperin

NORTH KOREA: The Washington Times' Guy Taylor: " N. Korea talks hinge on ending nuke plan" After meeting with Japanese leaders Sunday, Secretary of State John F. Kerry signaled that the U.S. is prepared to engage in talks with North Korea if it moves toward abandoning its nuclear program. During an intimate question-and-answer session Sunday night with reporters traveling through Asia with him, Mr. Kerry said the United States is "prepared to reach out" to 29-year-old North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, but doing so would require the "appropriate moment" and "appropriate circumstances." LINK

The Wall Street Journal's Jay Solomon: " U.S. Offers Direct Korea Talks" Secretary of State John Kerry said he would be willing to open a direct U.S. diplomatic channel to North Korea's leadership in a bid to reduce tensions in Northeast Asia, if Pyongyang signaled it would move to begin dismantling its nuclear-weapons arsenal. The U.S. proposal marked a considerable softening by the Obama administration of its rhetoric toward North Korea after a massive display of U.S. military force on the Korean peninsula-including the deployment of B-2 bombers, F-22 stealth fighters and advanced missile-defense systems. LINK

GUN CONTROL: The New York Daily News' Adam Edelman: " Bipartisan gun control compromise headed for Senate debate - 'It's going to be close,' says pol" One of the two senators behind a breakthrough compromise on gun-control legislation questioned Sunday whether the watered-down deal could muster enough votes to get through a divided senate, even as a flock of GOP lawmakers moved toward the bill. "It's an open question on whether or not we have the votes," Pennsylvania Republican Sen. Pat Toomey said Sunday of the deal he and West Virginia Democrat Sen. Joe Manchin reached last week on gun-sales background checks. LINK

USA Today's Richard Wolf: " High court may decide on carrying guns outside home" Guns are on the docket in Congress and dozens of state legislatures. Can the Supreme Court be far behind? The court may decide as early as Monday to consider whether the Second Amendment's right to keep a gun for self-defense extends outside the home. The case under consideration is a challenge to New York's law that requires "proper cause" to carry a weapon in public. Ten states, including California, New Jersey, Massachusetts and Maryland, have similar restrictions. Most have been challenged in court. LINK

COUNTER-TERRORISM: The Los Angeles Times' Ken Dilanian: " With Al Qaeda shattered, U.S. counter-terrorism's future unclear" Skilled in tracking foreign terrorists, Jarret Brachman once was a sought-after expert on Al Qaeda, advising several federal agencies and speaking regularly around the country. Now the former research director of the Combating Terrorism Center, a think tank at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, has turned his focus away from Islamic militants. He spends most of his time consulting with federal, state and local law enforcement agencies about threats from domestic extremists and anti-government militias. LINK

CONGRESS: The Washington Post's David Nakamura: " With endorsement of immigration plan, Rubio makes first major policy gambit of his career" It was early one morning in December when Richard J. Durbin spotted Marco Rubio in the members-only Senate gym. Dedicated fitness buffs, the two had become unlikely workout buddies. Now Durbin (D-Ill.) wanted to know whether Rubio (R-Fla.) would join him in another heavy lift: a fledgling bipartisan group tackling immigration reform. LINK

Politico's John Bresnahan and Jake Sherman: " Mitch McConnell in no mood for bipartisanship" Mitch McConnell still hasn't gotten over December's traumatic fiscal cliff showdown. The Senate minority leader has signaled privately that he has no interest in sitting in the same room as Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) to discuss a possible "grand bargain" on budget and tax issues, Senate insiders tell POLITICO. LINK

ECONOMY: Bloomberg's Jonathan Burgos: " Asian Stocks Drop as China GDP Grows Less Than Estimated" Asian stocks dropped, with the regional benchmark index retreating from the highest level in 20 months, after Chinese economic growth and industrial production expanded less than economists' estimated. Jiangxi Copper Co., China's largest copper producer, plunged 5 percent in Hong Kong. Newcrest Mining Ltd., Australia's biggest gold producer, sank 8.7 percent, after the bullion tumbled to the lowest price in almost two years. LINK

OTHER: The Hill's Sam Baker: " Supreme Court Wrestles with right to patent human genes" Do companies have the right to patent your genes? The Supreme Court will wrestle with that highly charged question on Monday, when it hears oral arguments in a case that could have far-reaching implications for the future of medical research. The federal government itself is divided over the issue. The federal patent office has been approving patents on human genes since the 1980s, but the Justice Department on Monday will ask the court to invalidate those protections and rule that human genes cannot be patented. LINK

The New York Times' William Neuman: " Venezuela Gives Ch?vez Prot?g? Narrow Victory" In an unexpectedly close race, Venezuelans narrowly voted to continue Hugo Ch?vez's revolution, electing his handpicked political heir, Nicol?s Maduro, to serve the remainder of his six-year term as president, officials said late Sunday. LINK

ABC VIDEO: " North Korea Missile Threat Escalates" LINK

BOOKMARKS: The Note: LINK The Must-Reads Online: LINK Top Line Webcast (12noon EST M-F): LINK ABC News Politics: LINK George's Bottom Line (George Stephanopoulos): LINK Follow ABC News on Twitter: LINK ABC News Mobile: LINK ABC News app on your iPhone/iPod Touch/iPad: LINK

Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/notes-must-reads-monday-april-15-2013-082831988--abc-news-politics.html

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Activists say Syrian airstrike kills 12 civilians

BEIRUT (AP) ? A Syrian government airstrike on a town in the country's northwest killed at least 12 people Saturday, shattering store fronts, setting cars ablaze and sending a giant plume of black and gray smoke over the horizon.

President Bashar Assad's air force has been one of his biggest assets in the 2-year-old civil war and he has used warplanes and helicopters to try to check rebel advances, although the regime also frequently hits civilian areas.

A Human Rights Watch report this week accused the Syrian government of committing war crimes by using indiscriminate and sometimes deliberate airstrikes against civilians, killing at least 4,300 people since the summer.

Saturday's air raid struck the town of Saraqeb in Idlib province, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights activist group. The Observatory said four of the 12 people killed in the attack were members of the same family. Many others were wounded and the death toll was expected to rise, the Observatory said.

Amateur videos posted online showed a giant plume of black smoke, and people in cars and on motorbikes rushing to help the wounded. A group of men can be seen carrying a wounded man covered in gray dust. Another man in the video rushes with a bucket of water to help extinguish cars in flames. Rubble and twisted metal littered the street.

The video appeared genuine and corresponded to other reporting by The Associated Press of the events depicted.

Rebels have wrested much of the countryside of Idlib and other provinces in northern Syria from regime forces, although government troops still control many military bases in the region from which they launch attacks ? including airstrikes ? on opposition-held areas.

South of Saraqeb, Syrian government troops trying to relieve a besieged military base ambushed a rebel checkpoint, killing at least 12 opposition fighters.

The Observatory said the government forces surprised the rebel fighters on the outskirts of the village of Baboulein. The Observatory, which relies on a network of local activists on the ground, said many opposition fighters were also wounded in the attack.

Observatory director Rami Abdul-Rahman said the assault was part of government efforts to resupply the embattled military base at Wadi Deif outside of the town of Maaret al-Numan, which is just north of Baboulein on the Damascus-Aleppo highway.

Rebels have been trying for months to capture the large base at Wadi Deif, from which regime troops regularly pound the now largely abandoned town of Maaret al-Numan with artillery fire. The regime must push convoys through rebel-held territory to prevent the base from running short of troops and supplies.

On Thursday, activists said rebels shot down a helicopter carrying food and supplies to the base, killing the pilot and three other soldiers.

In the northern city of Aleppo, a government air raid on the disputed Sheikh Maqsoud neighborhood killed at least three people and wound 16 others, the Observatory said. It added that doctors treating the wounded said many showed symptoms of inhaling toxic gas, such as severe vomiting and irritation to the nose and eyes.

Both sides in the Syrian civil war have accused the other of using chemical weapons.

Syria has asked the U.N. to investigate an alleged chemical weapons attack by rebels in March on the village of Khan al-Assal outside of Aleppo. The rebels blame regime forces.

Britain and France want the U.N. to investigate allegations of chemical weapons use in Khan al-Assal and another village, Ataybah, on March 19, as well as the central city of Homs on Dec. 23.

Syria has rejected U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's push to expand the U.N. probe to include those other villages.

The Syrian conflict began in March 2011 with largely peaceful protests but has since devolved into a civil war that the United Nations says has killed at least 70,000 people. Hundreds of thousands of Syrians have sought refuge abroad, and millions inside the country have fled their homes to try to find safety elsewhere inside Syria.

International efforts to find a peaceful resolution to the conflict have faltered.

U.N.-Arab League envoy Lakhdar Brahimi is scheduled to address the U.N. Security Council on Thursday. Brahimi has not been able to make progress in his mission to push forward a peace plan for Syria first presented in June at an international conference in Geneva.

On Saturday, Syrian state-run daily Al-Thawra accused Brahimi of being a "false witness." The daily said he had taken sides in the conflict and that his briefing "will not alleviate the suffering of Syrians."

Brahimi angered the Syrian government in December by saying that the four-decade rule of the Assad family had gone on "too long."

In Rome, the Italian Foreign Ministry said that four Italian journalists who had been detained in Syria since April 4 have been freed. The ministry did not specify who had detained them, or disclose details of their release.

Italian media have reported that the four were a RAI public television reporter and three freelancers who had entered Syria earlier this month with the intention of working by day in Syria and crossing into Turkey in the evening. They were reportedly detained in a rebel-controlled area in northern Syria near the Turkish border.

___

Associated Press writer Bassem Mroue contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/activists-syrian-airstrike-kills-12-civilians-131225615.html

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90% The Angels' Share

All Critics (62) | Top Critics (15) | Fresh (56) | Rotten (6)

The film itself vaporizes before your eyes, but it's likable. Given its unstable mishmash of thuggery and whimsy, that's something of an achievement.

Like the spirit it celebrates, "The Angel's Share" is a neat little jolt of pleasure - and guaranteed to leave you feeling just a mite warmer.

While a few farcical moments fizzle, it's mostly charming.

"The Angels' Share" leaves a warm glow.

[Mr. Loach] has gone and directed a comedy from a script by his longtime collaborator Paul Laverty, and it's so delightful that his fans will be clamoring for more.

Watching it is like receiving a hard slap in the face from someone who expects you to laugh it off, even though the sting lingers.

This is one of the most likable movies so far this year.

Although the English director Ken Loach has been making socially conscious movies for close to 50 years, this shaggy comedy unfolds like the work of a young man on a lark.

With The Angels' Share, Ken Loach expertly combines a handful of genres which congeal into an often funny, always charming affair that serves as a salute to whisky to boot.

Loach films have been funny while making their point before (see "Riff Raff"), but this one is imbued with a little bit of magic...Those offended by four letter words should be warned that even the voice of God slings a heavy dose of them here.

Ken Loach comedy about young Glaswegian reprobates fighting for a second chance has charm aplenty, but suffers from occasional portions of cheese and a hard-to-swallow premise (whisky-tasting as gateway to a better life).

I'm not suggesting The Angels' Share is a chock full of bellylaughs, but it's the first Loach film in some time that lacks the sensation of having a plastic grocery bag pulled over one's face.

Some good laughs and a passable air of bonhomie do nothing to cover up the fact that The Angels' Share is totally lightweight and distractingly underdone.

Loach's best film since The Wind That Shakes the Barley.

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

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Sunday, April 14, 2013

A look at the North Korea crisis

As the world waits and watches for an expected North Korean ballistic missile test, the U.S. and its allies are prepared to respond if necessary. U.S. officials are conceding North Korea may be increasing its nuclear capabilities but don't expect a nuclear strike. They suggest that other military moves by Pyongyang involving artillery attacks or shelling of nearby South Korean islands could actually present a more serious threat in triggering a conflict.

WHY ALL THE HUBBUB

Since the 1950-53 Korean War, North Korea has feared that Washington is intent on destroying the regime. The U.S. worries that Pyongyang will re-ignite the conflict with South Korea, and is uneasy because little is known about Kim Jong Un, the North's new, young leader, and considers him unpredictable. Both sides have ratcheted up the rhetoric and military muscle moves in recent weeks. North Korea threatened a pre-emptive strike against the U.S., and conducted an underground nuclear test in February and a rocket launch in December. The threats are seen as an effort to pressure Washington and Seoul to change their North Korean policies and convince the North's people that their new leader is strong enough to stand up to its foes. U.S. and South Korean troops have been conducting annual joint military drills in the region since early March, including bringing out nuclear-capable stealth bombers and fighter jets in what the Air Force acknowledged was a deliberate show of force.

NORTH KOREAN MISSILES

North Korea has been steadily working to display an increasing capability to launch missiles. Last year it failed in an attempt to send a satellite into space aboard a long-range rocket. A subsequent launch in December was successful, and that was followed by the country's third underground nuclear test on Feb. 12. U.S. officials believe the North is preparing to test fire a medium-range "Musudan" missile. And a section in a new Defense Intelligence Agency assessment concludes with "moderate confidence" that the North could deliver nuclear weapon by ballistic missiles. The report notes that the delivery system is still not considered reliable.

U.S. RESPONSE

The North American Aerospace Defense Command, or NORAD, which has responsibility for U.S. homeland defense, is watching the region via satellite and the USS Fitzgerald and the USS John S. McCain, Navy destroyers armed with sophisticated missile defense systems, have been positioned to best be able to detect and track a missile launch. The U.S. is confident it would be able to shoot it down, but would do so only if it appears to be a threat to America or its allies. The U.S. is also prepared to provide military assistance to South Korea in the event of any other type of attack by the North.

WHAT THEY'RE SAYING

Secretary of State John Kerry warned North Korea not to conduct a missile test, saying it will be an act of provocation that "will raise people's temperatures" and further isolate the country and its people. President Barack Obama said his administration would "take all necessary steps" to protect American citizens and he urged Pyongyang to end its' brazen threats. North Korea has issued no specific warnings to ships and aircraft that a missile test is imminent. And the country has begun festivities celebrating the April 15 birthday of the country's late founder Kim Il Sung, which is considered the most important national holiday. China has been a longtime political, military and economic backer of North Korea and is considered to have more real leverage over the North. U.S. officials say there are indications Chinese leaders have become frustrated with Pyongyang's recent behavior and rhetoric.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-04-12-US-North-Korea-Glance/id-02e3f620216b449db459217c6e280114

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Prisoners, guards clash over Guantanamo Bay raid

MIAMI (AP) ? Months of increased tension at the Guantanamo Bay prison boiled over into a clash between guards and detainees Saturday as the military closed a communal section of the facility and moved its inmates into single cells.

The violence erupted during an early morning raid that military officials said was necessary because prisoners had covered up security cameras and windows as part of a weekslong protest and hunger strike over their indefinite confinement and conditions at the U.S. base in Cuba.

Prisoners fought guards with makeshift weapons that included broomsticks and mop handles when troops arrived to move them out of a communal wing of the section of the prison known as Camp 6, said Navy Capt. Robert Durand, a military spokesman. Guards responded by firing four "less-than-lethal rounds," he said.

There were no serious injuries from the rounds, which included a modified shotgun shell that fires small rubber pellets as well as a type of bean-bag projectile, said Army Col. Greg Julian, a spokesman for Miami-based U.S. Southern Command, which oversees the prison at the U.S. base in Cuba.

"I know for sure that one detainee was hit but the injuries were minor, just some bruises," Julian said.

The confrontation came a day after a team from the International Committee of the Red Cross finished a three-week visit to Guantanamo to meet with prisoners and assess conditions.

"The ICRC continues to follow the current tensions and the hunger strike at Guantanamo very closely and with concern," spokesman Simon Schorno said. "If necessary, an ICRC team will in coming days return to Guantanamo to assess the situation of the detainees on hunger strike in view of this latest development."

Camp 6 had previously been a section of the camp reserved for detainees who followed prison rules. In exchange they were allowed to share meals and pray together, have nearly round-the-clock recreation time as well as access to satellite TV, computer games and classes. It held a majority of the 166 prisoners at the base before the hunger strike began, but the military said the number was down to fewer than 70 on Saturday.

Prisoners in the communal section had access to materials with which to make some of the improvised weapons used in the clash with guards. Durand said troops were confronted with batons made with tape and plastic water bottles, about three to four feet long and "as big around as a broomstick," he said.

The guards moved the hunger strikers and all other detainees at the communal section to single cells in a separate wing of Camp 6 around 5 a.m. Prisoners will eventually be allowed back into communal living conditions in the future if they follow rules. Hunger strikers will be allowed back into the communal section eventually as well if they follow the rules, Durand said.

"For now, housing detainees in individual cells will enable us to observe them more closely," he said. He said one of the concerns of military officials was that some prisoners might have been coerced into participating in the hunger strike.

Tensions had been high at the prison for months. Lawyers for prisoners said a hunger strike began Feb. 6 in protest over their indefinite confinement and what the men believed were tighter restrictions and intrusive searches of their Qurans for contraband. Prisoners offered to give up the Muslim holy book that each one is issued by the government but officials refused, considering it a tacit admission of wrongdoing.

"This is exactly the opposite of what they should be doing," Carlos Warner, a federal public defender in Ohio, said of the decision to move prisoners into single cells instead of negotiating an end to the strike. "The military is escalating the conflict."

The military said 43 prisoners were classified as hunger strikers under a definition that includes missing nine consecutive meals. Lawyers for prisoners have insisted the strike is much more widespread and say almost all of the men are refusing to eat.

Officials were also concerned that some men were surreptitiously starving themselves to avoid being classified as hunger strikers and force fed. The military said it was conducting individual assessments of all the prisoners.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/prisoners-guards-clash-over-guantanamo-bay-raid-214116253.html

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Saturday, April 13, 2013

Serious Conor and the Dead Babies (Balloon Juice)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/298767346?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Moga Pocket Controller


Smartphone and tablet gaming has advanced considerably, but only to the point of being able to play some of the better games of previous console generations. You still need a physical controller to really enjoy those games despite their touch screen support, but the fact that you can run games like Grand Theft Auto: Vice City and Jet Set Radio on an Android device is still pretty great. The Moga Pocket Controller offers just what you need to play those games and a large handful of others. This $49.99 (list) gamepad has two analog sticks and several dozen good games available through its first-party app, but to really get the most out of it, you need a third-party driver that's surprisingly easy to set up. If it had a direction pad as well, it would be a thoroughly excellent gamepad.

Small Controller
The Moga Pocket Controller is fairly small for a gamepad, measuring about 5 inches wide by 3 inches tall. It's mostly flat, with only a slight curve on the underside to give it an Xbox 360 controller-like grip and provide slots on either end of the gamepad to hold the two AAA batteries that power it. A large plastic arm that cuts through the middle of the controller hides the power switch and flips up to hold a smartphone in its foam-padded, telescoping grip. It can hold large smartphones including the Samsung Galaxy Note, but it isn't quite big enough to hold 7-inch tablets like the Google Nexus 7?or Kindle Fire HD.

The controls are simple, comfortable, and slightly lacking. The Pocket Controller sports two analog sticks in an Xbox 360 controller configuration (the left analog stick on the same level as the face buttons, the right analog stick below the face buttons), plus four face buttons labeled A, B, X, and Y, two shoulder buttons, Start and Select buttons, and a logo/Home button that lights up to indicate when the controller is pairing or connected. The sticks are very similar to the analog pad found on the Nintendo 3DS; they slide around a small area, but don't tilt like full-sized controller analog sticks. They still feel comfortable, though, and allow for precise input. The one thing it's missing is arguably the most important for anyone who wants to play classic games: a direction pad. There's no digital direction pad like the one found on nearly every game controller since the Nintendo Entertainment System, and that's a big omission. The larger Moga Pro Controller, incidentally, includes a direction pad and has full analog sticks. The more expensive SteelSeries Free Wireless Mobile Controller features dual analog sticks and a direction pad, but it suffers from lackluster support, both first- and third-party, compared with the Moga controller.

Moga Pivot Library
The Moga Pocket Controller requires the free Moga Pivot app to work, according to the manufacturer. It's certainly the easiest way to get the controller working, and offers access to a library of over 50 games through its own online store. The app itself lets you download Pac-Man for free when you pair a controller, and the controller comes with a code for Sonic CD. However, once you use the code, you can't readily re-download it to another device. The most important aspect is that it automates pairing and configuring the controller, a process that requires only a few steps.

The Pivot app has a small but solid library of games, including Sonic CD, Grand Theft Auto: Vice City, Jet Set Radio, and The Bard's Tale. Every game available through the Pivot app is compatible with the Moga Pocket Controller. This is one of the few cases of an Android focus instead of iOS focus, like the Ion Audio iCade, ThinkGeek iCade 8-Bitty,?and?Discovery Bay Games Duo Gamer?(the former two of which has a large but incomplete selection of classic arcade games and the latter of which is focused overwhelmingly on Gameloft titles). However, compatibility outside of games in the Pivot app's library is less consistent. That's where some minor hacking comes in.

Third-Party Driver Support
The most useful aspect of the controller doesn't come from the first-party app and its games. Instead, the third-party Moga Universal Controller app, a free driver and configuration tool, lets you set up the controller to work with any game that accepts physical button mapping. It opens up the controller for use as a general input device, and if you root your smartphone or tablet, you can even use the analog sticks as analog inputs and not digital directional inputs (without root access, the driver detects stick inputs as simply up, down, left, or right). Several third-party drivers let users play with different Bluetooth controllers, including the Sony PlayStation 3 controller. However, the Moga Universal Controller app and the Moga Pocket Controller offer the easiest and simplest way to integrate a controller into additional games, even without rooting.

I played Sonic CD with the Moga Pocket Controller, and it was smooth and responsive with no noticeable lag. The buttons felt firm and "clicky," and the left analog pad triggered Sonic's running quickly. The only problem was the lack of a digital direction pad; the analog pad played well enough, but side-scrolling action games like Sonic the Hedgehog were made for direction pads, and the difference between tapping a direction and sliding a pad in that direction slightly threw off my gameplay.

Out of all the different smartphone and tablet controllers I've reviewed so far, the Moga Pocket Controller is the best, but only by a bit. Like most Bluetooth controllers it only gets useful if you tinker with third-party drivers, but it's designed well and worked with everything I threw at it. It also importantly offered several very good non-arcade games on its compatible games list, which many controllers (like the iCade and Duo Gamer) tend to lack. Sure, they're previous-gen games from the PlayStation, Dreamcast, and Sega CD age, but they're still much better and worth the couple bucks they cost than the same-y, generic shooters and action games that plague the Google Play store. Most importantly, you can use it flawlessly with the third-party driver. If it had a digital pad it would certainly be our Editors' Choice, but that omission holds back this otherwise excellent tablet gamepad.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/XSGTwml1xso/0,2817,2417314,00.asp

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Goat's head delivered to Wrigley Field

CHICAGO (AP) ? The Chicago Cubs found a severed goat's head at Wrigley Field on Wednesday, and they're treating the cruel reference to a longtime curse as a crime.

Chicago police were called in to investigate after a man stopped the white van he was driving, walked a box to a security entrance on Waveland Avenue and wordlessly put it down, Cubs spokesman Julian Green said.

Security workers opened the box, addressed to team owner Tom Ricketts, and discovered the severed head. The team immediately called police.

Green said Thursday that police were given surveillance video, and that he doesn't know why someone would deliver a goat's head. Police did not comment on who might have left the goat head or a possible motive ? other than to refer to the head in a brief statement as an "intimidating package."

Cubs manager Dale Sveum had a theory, of sorts.

"Obviously, it's just an unfortunate fan doing something pretty stupid," he said.

The significance of the goat, however, isn't lost on many. In 1945, a tavern owner named William "Billy Goat" Sianis tried to bring a goat to a World Series game, but was told his goat ? which had a ticket ? smelled too much to be admitted. Sianis angrily put a curse on the team and since then, the Cubs haven't been back to the World Series.

Fans have had little to cheer on the field in recent years, as the Cubs lost more than 100 games last year and are off to a rocky start this season. As for Ricketts, he's been negotiating a $300 million renovation of the stadium, built almost a century ago, with the city and neighborhood businesses. Police have not said whether the head is believed to be linked to those negotiations ? or anything else.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel said Thursday he has contacted Ricketts about the head.

"There's nothing else to say, it speaks for itself, it's wrong to do," Emanuel said. "I did call Tom last night, and said obviously that the police need to do something, we'll be on it."

Cubs players, however, weren't intimidated by the gesture.

"That's probably just an upset fan or a fan of another team," first baseman Anthony Rizzo said before the Cubs played the San Francisco Giants on Thursday. "My opinion it's just dumb, but it is what it is."

Pitcher Jeff Samardzija was disappointed with the lack of creativity.

"Very original since it's only been around for 60, 70 years," pitcher Jeff Samardzija said. "You'd think they'd come up with something different."

As for Green, he doesn't want anything to do with another goat.

"We've got one too many goat legends," he said. "We don't need another one."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/goats-head-delivered-wrigley-field-015412175--mlb.html

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Friday, April 12, 2013

Verizon to extend phone-upgrade waiting period

(AP) ? Verizon Wireless, the country's largest cellphone carrier, on Friday said that it is extending the time it takes to earn a subsidized phone upgrade from 20 months on contract to 24 months.

The move will save Verizon money, since it subsidizes each new smartphone by as much as $400 to get the price down to $199 or lower. With less frequent phone upgrades, it will pay out less in subsidies.

In a statement on its website, Verizon said the move aligns its policy with the typical length of a phone contract, and with the way people buy new phones. The change takes effect with contracts expiring in January.

The change also reflects the growing popularity of expensive phones. Verizon subsidized upgrades after just 13 months until January 2011, when it introduced the 20-month period just before it started selling the iPhone, which is one of the most expensive smartphones.

Verizon sold 9.8 million smartphones in the last three months of 2012, up 27 percent from same period the year before. Of those, two-thirds were iPhones.

Verizon Wireless is a joint venture of New York-based phone company Verizon Communications Inc., which owns 55 percent, and British cellphone company Vodafone Group PLC, which owns the rest.

Customers at No. 2 carrier AT&T Inc. are eligible for upgrades after 20 months.

Breaking with industry practices, No. 4 wireless carrier T-Mobile USA ditched its service contracts and phone-upgrade waiting periods two weeks ago in favor of selling phones on installment plans.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-04-12-Verizon-Phone%20Upgrades/id-fe76986664a04b51b66401c57a128ad1

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Postal Service bows to pressure, won?t end Saturday delivery (Washington Post)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/298215921?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Thursday, April 11, 2013

Jay Carney denies White House involvement with Jay-Z & Beyonce?s Cuba trip (Michellemalkin)

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HTC One just $99 for customers who switch to Sprint

HTC One

Current customers stuck with $199 price tag, full price still $549

Sprint is prominently displaying promotions on its HTC One pre-order page indicating that new customers coming to the Now Network will receive $100 off their purchase. Provided you bring your own number to the carrier (presumably to make sure people intend to stick around) and sign a two year contract, the device will ring up at just $99. The HTC One will be finally available on Sprint on April 19th, but pre-ordering before then secures your device, which Sprint says it will attempt to have arrive at your door before it actually goes on sale in stores.

If you're planning on pre-ordering you're unfortunately going to be restricted to just the silver/white model, with the black model still "coming soon". Is $100 enough money to make you consider switching carriers? You can get more info at the source link below.

Source: Sprint

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/1CxAicNUuho/story01.htm

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One in five seniors on risky meds; more in US South

Apr. 10, 2013 ? A study of more than 6 million seniors in Medicare Advantage plans in 2009 found that 21 percent received a prescription for at least one potentially harmful "high-risk medication." Nearly 5 percent received at least two. Questionable prescriptions are more common in the South and among people who live in poor areas.

More than one in five seniors with Medicare Advantage plans received a prescription for a potentially harmful "high-risk medication" in 2009, according to a newly published analysis by Brown University public health researchers. The questionable prescriptions were significantly more common in the Southeast United States, as well as among women and people living in relatively poor areas.

The demographic trends in the analysis, based on Medicare data from more than 6 million patients, suggest that differences in the rates of prescription of about 110 medications deemed risky for the elderly cannot be explained merely by the individual circumstances of patients, said lead author Danya Qato, a pharmacist and doctoral candidate in health services research at Brown.

"At the population level it is clear that there is a unique phenomenon occurring," said Qato, lead author of the paper published in this month's edition of the Journal of General Internal Medicine. "While one can reason that it might be appropriate for a particular patient to be on a particular medication, with such a preponderance of use of high-risk medications in some locations versus others, our results suggest that we cannot attribute this variation wholly to patient characteristics."

In the analysis, Qato and co-author Dr. Amal Trivedi, assistant professor of health services, policy and practice at Brown and a hospitalist at the Providence VA Medical Center, found that 21.4 percent of the patients, or more than 1.3 million people, received at least one high-risk medication, for which there is often a safer substitute, and that 4.8 percent received at least two.

'Geography is destiny'

Residents of the South Atlantic, East South Central and West South Central regions of the country -- an area stretching from parts of Texas to South Carolina -- had a 10 to 12 percentage point higher risk of receiving potentially harmful prescriptions than people in New England, who had the lowest chance, the analysis found.

The trend persists at the finer resolution of "hospital-referral regions" or HRRs, the authors note. "The 20 lowest performing HRRs were all in the Southern region of the United States. In contrast," they wrote in the journal, "only one of the 20 highest performing HRRs was in the South."

Albany, Ga., had the highest rate of receipt of single high-risk prescriptions: 38.2 percent. Seniors in Alexandria, La., led the nation in receiving at least two high-risk prescriptions, with a rate of 13.5 percent. Mason City, Iowa (9.6%) and Worcester, Mass. (0.7%), had the best rate of single and multiple high-risk prescription use, respectively.

In another demographic analysis, women across the country had a 10 percentage point greater likelihood of receiving a high-risk prescription. Other differences were less stark. Generally the lower the socioeconomic status of a patient's region, the more likely they were to receive a high-risk medication. Residents of the poorest areas had a 2.7 percentage point higher risk than the residents of the richest areas.

Complex reasons

Qato and Trivedi said the explanation for the gender difference may be straightforward. Some of the high-risk medications treat ailments specific to women or that are more common in women.

People living in poor areas, meanwhile, generally have less access to high-quality health care, Qato said, although the connection between poverty and high-risk prescriptions requires further study.

The higher risk of receiving potentially harmful prescriptions in poor areas does not explain the geographic differences, Qato said. She and Trivedi accounted for the economic statistics in their geographic analysis and for geography in their economic analysis.

Instead the reasons why people in the South are at substantially higher risk than people in the rest of the country could be a combination of many, likely interconnected, factors, Trivedi and Qato said. The factors could include higher patient demand for the drugs, a different prescribing culture, possibly higher prevalence of chronic medical problems in the region, or inadequate medical training with regard to appropriate prescribing among elderly patients.

Trivedi said officials and health care providers should take the study as a cue to improve prescribing.

"Clinicians and policymakers should work to reduce the use of these potentially inappropriate medications in older patients, because their risks outweigh their benefits and safer alternatives exist," he said.

As a pharmacist, Qato said she hopes the research encourages seniors to take greater ownership of their health care and to be more vigilant about their prescription drug use.

"This is one of the many reminders for patients to regularly review the appropriateness and safety of their medications with their pharmacist and physician," Qato said. "Patients are often their own best advocates."

The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (grant: 1T32HS019657) and the National Institute of Aging (grant: 5RC1AG036158) supported the study.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Brown University.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Danya M. Qato, Amal N. Trivedi. Receipt of High Risk Medications among Elderly Enrollees in Medicare Advantage Plans. Journal of General Internal Medicine, 2012; 28 (4): 546 DOI: 10.1007/s11606-012-2244-9

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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/living_well/~3/Gxvc8u-s14o/130410131333.htm

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Journalist faces judge over sources in Colorado shooting story

By Keith Coffman

DENVER (Reuters) - A Fox News reporter returned to a Colorado courtroom on Wednesday for a hearing on whether she should be compelled to reveal anonymous sources cited in a story about the July 2012 massacre of a dozen people in a suburban Denver movie theater.

The outcome of the proceedings were inconclusive, however, and the judge put off a decision on the matter for at least four more months.

New York-based journalist Jana Winter is fighting a subpoena calling for her to testify about her sources for an article that said the accused theater gunman, James Holmes, sent a notebook to a psychiatrist detailing his plans to commit mass murder.

Holmes' public defenders are demanding that prosecutors be sanctioned for leaks of the information to the media, arguing that whoever provided the information violated a gag order in the case and undermined their client's right to a fair trial.

Citing two law enforcement sources, the story appeared five days after prosecutors say Holmes opened fire inside an Aurora, Colorado, multiplex during a midnight screening of Batman film "The Dark Knight Rises," killing 12 moviegoers and wounding 58 others.

Holmes, 25, is charged with multiple counts of first-degree murder and attempted murder. Prosecutors announced last week they will seek the death penalty for the California native if he is convicted.

Winter said in an affidavit that if she were compelled to divulge the names of the sources, her reputation in the industry would be "irreparably tarnished."

"If I am forced to reveal the identities of persons whom I have promised to shield from public exposure, simply put, I will be unable to function effectively in my profession, and my career will be over," she wrote.

In a hearing on the issue last week, Winter's lawyer argued that the court had not exhausted all possible remedies to trace the origin of the leak, short of ordering Winter to testify, a requirement under Colorado's reporter shield law.

POLICE DENY LEAKING INFORMATION

Arapahoe County District Judge Carlos Samour Jr. agreed and ordered Aurora police detective Alton Reed, who previously denied under oath that he was a source of the leak, to take the stand Wednesday and testify as to whether he told anyone about the notebook who may have then leaked its contents.

Reed said he discussed the notebook in general terms with another police officer who was drafting a warrant but did not share information gleaned from his investigation with anyone else. Several other police investigators denied under oath in December that they had leaked information.

After Reed's testimony, Holmes' lawyer, Rebecca Higgs, said someone in law enforcement must have lied about not disclosing sealed information and urged the judge to force Winter to disclose her sources.

Winter's reporting was "not a noble act," Higgs said, because she knew there was a gag order in place, and Holmes' right to a fair trial trumps Winter's free-speech rights.

But Samour, who took over the case last week, said he would not force Winter to testify until and unless the notebook, which is under seal, becomes evidence in the case.

"I need to know whether the notebook will be admitted or not," he said. "I can't speculate."

The judge deferred ruling on the issue and ordered Winter back to court in August.

Prosecutors have not been directly implicated in connection with the leak and have remained largely silent on the matter.

Representatives of the Colorado Press Association, the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and the Colorado Broadcasters Association have filed affidavits with the court on Winter's behalf.

The president of the Washington, D.C.-based National Press Club, Angela Greiling Keane, issued a statement calling on the judge to drop the issue.

"If anonymous sources believe their identities can be dredged up in court, they will be less likely to disclose to the press information of vital public importance," she said.

(Reporting by Keith Coffman; Editing by Steve Gorman and Pravin Char)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/journalist-faces-judge-over-sources-colorado-shooting-story-012652835--finance.html

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