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Independent Filmmaker Turns to Kickstarter.com to Raise Funds for Controversial PBS Documentary

Independent Filmmaker Turns to Kickstarter.com to Raise Funds for Controversial PBS Documentary
2012-09-25
Independent filmmaker Michael Torres is turning to the Internet to help raise funds for his feature film project, "Who Is Albizu Campos?" the first feature length documentary that tells the life story of the Puerto Rican revolutionary considered a patriot by some and a terrorist by others. Raising funds for independent film projects has always been a daunting task, especially for controversial subjects such as Latino revolutionaries. Creativity is key to raising all of the money needed and community fundraising sites such as Kickstarter offer filmmakers the opportunity ...

Michael McIntyre's London O2 Circuit is a Comedy Must, Says LondonTown.com

2012-09-25
Famous for his cheeky face, well-spoken gags and tubby stature, Michael McIntyre has shot to fame in recent years for appearances on Mock the Week, Have I Got News for You and Live at the Apollo. This autumn, fans of McIntyre can enjoy his laugh-out-loud humour at London's O2 arena as the comic makes a welcome return to the capital! Running from 26 September to 16 October 2012, audiences can expect to be charmed by McIntyre's side-splitting gags and stunned by his remarkable energy as he races around the stage. All ticket details (currently standing at GBP35) can be found ...

Start-up Company Seeks to Innovate the Group Couponing Experience by Offering 0% Transaction Fee to Local Maryland Merchants

Start-up Company Seeks to Innovate the Group Couponing Experience by Offering 0% Transaction Fee to Local Maryland Merchants
2012-09-25
LocateBaltimore.com, a small-business start-up, provides a unique way to enhance the group coupon experience. The company offers local discounts to consumers while allowing merchants to advertise using a monthly, pay-as-you-go platform. Company officials say the new approach will help foster repeat business for local communities in Baltimore. "Our goal is provide local deals which are truly local," Trevian Mathis, president and CEO of the Baltimore-based company explains. Gone are the days of having to travel 20 minutes or more to find great deals. Locate ...

Smokers Utopia Electronic Cigarette Review Announces Review of South Beach Smoke

2012-09-25
The electronic cigarette review site that is making waves across the Internet with reviews that are not as sugar coated as other sites has announced a new review on one of the webs most popular electronic cigarettes. Although the company may not agree with the review, the site cuts to the chase and quickly points out some of the hype, exposing facts based on pricing more than anything else. However, nothing seems to be off limits with Smokers Utopia. With a top 10 lineup that doesn't mix with the mainstream reviews, it is instantly easy to see that this website takes ...

Discover the New Art of Speed Reading!

2012-09-25
Whoever does not want to spend entire nights cramming and would like to read and learn faster and more effectively will now finally have the opportunity to do so! Endymio.com started its crowd-funding campaign on http://www.indiegogo.com/endymio in order to collect funds to design its website. 75,000 USD is required in order to perfect the speed-reading methods and implement them with a user-friendly design. Endymio would like to attain this goal through the support of GrunderGarage (http://www.entrepreneurship.de/gruender-garage/) which will contribute additional funds ...

Tropical cyclones in the Arabian Sea have intensified due to earlier monsoon onset

Tropical cyclones in the Arabian Sea have intensified due to earlier monsoon onset
2012-09-24
The tropical cyclones in the Arabian Sea during the pre-monsoon season (May – June) have intensified since 1997 compared to 1979 - 1997. This has been attributed to decreased vertical wind shear due to the dimming effects of increased anthropogenic black carbon and sulfate emissions in the region. The decrease in vertical wind shear, however, is not the result of these emissions, but due to a 15-day on average earlier occurrence of tropical cyclones, according to a study spearheaded by Bin Wang at the International Pacific Research Center, University of Hawaii at Manoa ...

Discovery may shed light on why some HIV-positive patients have more virus

2012-09-24
Biologists at UC San Diego have unraveled the anti-viral mechanism of a human gene that may explain why some people infected with HIV have much higher amounts of virus in their bloodstreams than others. Their findings, detailed in a paper in this week's advance online issue of the journal Nature, could also shed light on the mystery of why some people with HIV never develop symptoms of AIDS. The biologists found that a gene called Human Schlafen 11 produces a protein that inhibits the replication of HIV in infected human cells by blocking the ability of the host cell ...

Large bacterial population colonized land 2.75 billion years ago

Large bacterial population colonized land 2.75 billion years ago
2012-09-24
There is evidence that some microbial life had migrated from the Earth's oceans to land by 2.75 billion years ago, though many scientists believe such land-based life was limited because the ozone layer that shields against ultraviolet radiation did not form until hundreds of millions years later. But new research from the University of Washington suggests that early microbes might have been widespread on land, producing oxygen and weathering pyrite, an iron sulfide mineral, which released sulfur and molybdenum into the oceans. "This shows that life didn't just exist ...

New chemistry technique from the Scripps Research Institute reproduces nature's elusive complexity

New chemistry technique from the Scripps Research Institute reproduces natures elusive complexity
2012-09-24
LA JOLLA, CA – September 23, 2012 – Scientists at The Scripps Research Institute have shown how to synthesize in the laboratory an important set of natural compounds known as terpenes. The largest class of chemicals made by living organisms, terpenes are made within cells by some of the most complex chemical reactions found in biology. The new technique, described in an advance online edition of the journal Nature Chemistry on September 23, 2012, mimics a crucial but obscure biochemical phenomenon that allows cells to make terpenes. The discovery may one day result in ...

Understanding the brain by controlling behavior

2012-09-24
In the quest to understand how the brain turns sensory input into behavior, Harvard scientists have crossed a major threshold. Using precisely-targeted lasers, researchers have been able to take over an animal's brain, instruct it to turn in any direction they choose, and even to implant false sensory information, fooling the animal into thinking food was nearby. As described in a September 23 paper published in Nature, a team made up of Sharad Ramanathan, an Assistant Professor of Molecular and Cellular Biology, and of Applied Physics, Askin Kocabas, a Post-Doctoral ...

Scientists predict major shifts in Pacific ecosystems by 2100

2012-09-24
What if you woke up every day to find that the closest grocery store had moved several miles farther away from your home? Over time, you would have to travel hundreds of extra miles to find essential food for yourself and your family. This is potentially a scenario faced by thousands of marine animals affected by climate change. A new study published in Nature Climate Change examines the distribution of various open ocean animals in the North Pacific and explores how that could change over the next century as global ocean temperatures increase and productivity levels ...

Preterm birth of mother increases risk of pregnancy complications

2012-09-24
Women who were born preterm are at increased risk of complications during pregnancy compared to those born at term, and the risk almost doubles for mothers born before 32 weeks, according to a study in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal). Pregnancy complications include gestational diabetes, gestational hypertension, and preeclampsia or eclampsia. The findings are based on a study of 7405 women born preterm and 16 714 women born at term between 1976 and 1995 in the province of Quebec. Of the preterm women, 554 were less than 32 weeks at birth and 6851 were at ...

What does the feminization of family medicine mean?

2012-09-24
With more women in family medicine in Canada, what does this mean for the specialty and the profession, for patients and for society, asks a Salon opinion piece in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal). Female family physicians (FPs) now outnumber males, with 50.6% of the profession now female; this trend will continue as older, mainly male, physicians retire. These changing demographics will have implications for the way medicine is practised and for patients. Female FPs practise differently than men, working fewer hours (47 v. 52), seeing fewer patients but with ...

Eunuchs outlive other men

2012-09-24
Castrated men living in Korea centuries ago outlived other men by a significant margin. The findings, reported in the September 25 issue of Current Biology, a Cell Press publication, suggest that male sex hormones are responsible for shortening the lives of men, the researchers say. The evidence comes after careful study of genealogy records of noble members of the Imperial court of the Korean Chosun dynasty (AD 1392-1910). "This discovery adds an important clue for understanding why there is a difference in the expected life span between men and women," said Kyung-Jin ...

JCI early table of contents for September 24, 2012

2012-09-24
Small proteins in the cornea protect against bacterial infection Exposed tissue surfaces, including skin and mucous membranes, are under constant threat of attack by microorganisms in the environment. The layer of cells that line these areas, known as epithelial cells, are the first line of defense against these pathogens, but the underlying molecular mechanisms that allow them to repel microbes are unknown. In this issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, report that epithelial cells in the cornea, which ...

Small proteins in the cornea protect against bacterial infection

2012-09-24
Exposed tissue surfaces, including skin and mucous membranes, are under constant threat of attack by microorganisms in the environment. The layer of cells that line these areas, known as epithelial cells, are the first line of defense against these pathogens, but the underlying molecular mechanisms that allow them to repel microbes are unknown. In this issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, report that epithelial cells in the cornea, which is highly resistant to bacterial infection, express small antimicrobial ...

Human brains outpace chimp brains in the womb

Human brains outpace chimp brains in the womb
2012-09-24
VIDEO: This movie shows a pregnant chimpanzee undergoing an ultrasound imaging procedure to explore brain growth in her fetus. Click here for more information. Humans' superior brain size in comparison to their chimpanzee cousins traces all the way back to the womb. That's according to a study reported in the September 25 issue of Current Biology, a Cell Press publication, that is the first to track and compare brain growth in chimpanzee and human fetuses. "Nobody knew ...

Pregnancy complications up to twice higher in women born preterm

2012-09-24
This press release is available in French. Women who were born premature are more likely to have pregnancy complications than women who weren't, according to data analyzed by a team lead by Dr. Anne Monique Nuyt, a neonatal specialist and researcher at the Sainte-Justine Mother and Child University Hospital Center and University of Montreal. This is the first study to clearly show the impact of preterm birth (i.e. before 37 weeks of gestation) itself on pregnancy risks. "We knew that to be born with a low birth weight could be associated with increased risk of pregnancy ...

Research shows ants share decision-making, lessen vulnerability to 'information overload'

2012-09-24
TEMPE, Ariz. – Scientists at Arizona State University have discovered that ants utilize a strategy to handle "information overload." Temnothorax rugatulus ants, commonly found living in rock crevices in the Southwest, place the burden of making complicated decisions on the backs of the entire colony, rather than on an individual ant. In a study published in the early, online version of scientific journal Current Biology, Stephen Pratt, an associate professor in ASU's School of Life Sciences in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and Takao Sasaki, a graduate student ...

Researchers at Harvard's Wyss Institute engineer novel DNA barcode

Researchers at Harvards Wyss Institute engineer novel DNA barcode
2012-09-24
VIDEO: DNA origami is a process that can be used to self-assemble shapes that are of nanometer dimensions -- 100 nanometers is about 1,000 times shorter than the width of an... Click here for more information. BOSTON, September 24, 2012—Much like the checkout clerk uses a machine that scans the barcodes on packages to identify what customers bought at the store, scientists use powerful microscopes and their own kinds of barcodes to help them identify various parts of a cell, ...

Study uncovers mechanism by which tumor suppressor MIG6 triggers cell suicide

Study uncovers mechanism by which tumor suppressor MIG6 triggers cell suicide
2012-09-24
New York, NY and Uppsala, Sweden, September 24, 2012 – Death plays a big role in keeping things alive. Consider the tightly orchestrated suicide of cells--a phenomenon essential to everything from shaping an embryo to keeping it free of cancer later in life. When cells refuse to die, and instead multiply uncontrollably, they become what we call tumors. An intricate circuitry of biochemical reactions inside cells coordinates their self-sacrifice. Tracing that circuitry is, naturally, an important part of cancer research. In a major contribution to that effort Dr. Ingvar ...

New study shows PTSD symptoms reduced in combat-exposed military via integrative medicine

2012-09-24
SAN DIEGO (Sept. 24, 2012) – Healing touch combined with guided imagery (HT+GI) provides significant clinical reductions in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms for combat-exposed active duty military, according to a study released in the September issue of Military Medicine. The report finds that patients receiving these complementary medicine interventions showed significant improvement in quality of life, as well as reduced depression and cynicism, compared to soldiers receiving treatment as usual alone. The study, led by the Scripps Center for Integrative ...

Pacific Islanders have high obesity, smoking rates

2012-09-24
ANN ARBOR, Mich.—In the first study to detail the health of Pacific Islanders living in the United States, University of Michigan researchers have found alarmingly high rates of obesity and smoking. The preliminary findings are being presented today (Sept. 24) at a conference in Los Angeles on health disparities among Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders. "Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders are the second fastest growing minority population in the U.S.," said Sela Panapasa, a researcher at the U-M Institute for Social Research and principal investigator of the ...

Vitamin D deficiency increases risk of heart disease

2012-09-24
New research from the University of Copenhagen and Copenhagen University Hospital shows that low levels of vitamin D are associated with a markedly higher risk of heart attack and early death. The study involved more than 10,000 Danes and has been published in the well-reputed American journal Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis and Vascular Biology. Vitamin D deficiency has traditionally been linked with poor bone health. However, the results from several population studies indicate that a low level of this important vitamin may also be linked to a higher risk of ischemic heart ...

Climate is changing the Great Barrier Reef

2012-09-24
Satellite measurement of sea surface temperatures has yielded clear evidence of major changes taking place in the waters of Australia's Great Barrier Reef over the past 25 years, marine scientists have found. The changes have big implications for the future management of the GBR and its marine protected areas say Dr Natalie Ban and Professor Bob Pressey of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies and James Cook University, who led the study with Dr Scarla Weeks from the University of Queensland. "When we looked back at satellite data collected since 1985, ...
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