Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Controlling the triggers of age-related inflammation could extend 'healthspan'

Controlling the triggers of age-related inflammation could extend 'healthspan'


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21-Oct-2013



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Contact: Karen Peart
karen.peart@yale.edu
203-432-1326
Yale University






Inflammation is the common denominator of many chronic age-related diseases such as arthritis, gout, Alzheimer's, and diabetes. But according to a Yale School of Medicine study, even in the absence of a disease, inflammation can lead to serious loss of function throughout the body, reducing healthspan that portion of our lives spent relatively free of serious illness and disability.


Published as the cover article in the October issue of Cell Metabolism, the study found that immune sensor Nlrp3 inflammasome is a common trigger of this inflammation-driven loss of function that manifests itself in insulin-resistance, bone loss, frailty, and cognitive decline in aging.


As the elderly population increases, clinicians are seeing a spike in age-related diseases, but scientists did not fully understand the role of inflammation. What is commonly known is that as we age, our cells change, leading the immune system to produce chronic, low-level inflammation throughout the body. Aging is also a major risk factor for multiple chronic diseases, but according to the researchers, biomedical enterprise spends billions of dollars to tackle each age-dependent disease separately.


"This is the first study to show that inflammation is causally linked to functional decline in aging," said lead author Vishwa Deep Dixit, professor of comparative medicine and immunobiology at Yale School of Medicine. "There are multiple cellular triggers of inflammation throughout the body, but we've pinpointed Nlrp3 as the specific sensor that activates inflammation with age."


"If aging is indeed a common factor for multiple diseases, the unanswered question is, can we identify the triggers of aging that cause low-level inflammation so that 'switching off' the trigger can slow the onset of multiple chronic diseases that are age-dependent at their onset," Dixit added. "Since aging affects us all, if this goal can be achieved, it is likely to significantly improve the healthspan and may also lower healthcare costs as the aging population increases in the U.S."


Dixit and his colleagues investigated the normal aging process of mice that were free of diseases, and fed a normal diet. The research team found that immune sensor Nlrp3 inflammasome is activated in response to aging. They then tested mice to determine if reducing the activity of Nlrp3 inflammasome lowers inflammation, and aging-associated decline in function. Results showed that animals with lower Nlrp3 activation were protected from many age-related disorders such as dementia, bone loss, glucose intolerance, cataracts, and thymus degeneration. Functionally, the mice also performed better, were less frail, and ran for longer durations. The researchers also tested another immune sensor called caspase11, which is activated in response to certain infections, and found that it was not linked to the age-related inflammation process.


"Now that we've identified this mechanism in the Nlrp3 sensor, we might be able to manipulate this immune sensor to delay, or reduce inflammation," Dixit said. "This could lead to the possibility of prolonging healthspan, potentially leading to an old age relatively free of disease or disability."


Dixit said additional studies are needed to explore whether the Nlrp3 mechanism can be safely manipulated without impairing the immune system. He points out that although there are several anti-inflammatory drugs available, none seem to be effective in expanding the healthspan. "One of our long-term goals is to develop therapies or specific diets that could dampen the excessive inflammation process as a means to prevent chronic diseases," he said.


###


Other authors on the study include Yun-Hee Youm, Ryan W. Grant, Laura R. McCabe, Diana C. Albarado, Kim Yen Nguyen, Anthony Ravussin, Paul Pistell, Susan Newman, Renee Carter, Amanda Lague, Heike Munzberg, Clifford J. Rosen, Donald K. Ingram, and J. Michael Salbaum.


The study was supported by the National Institutes of Health (AG043608, AI105097, and DK090556, P20RR02195, HD055528); The Genomics and Core CBB Core facilities supported by Pennington Center of Biomedical Research Excellence (NIH 8P20 GM 103528) and Nutrition and Obesity Research Center (NIH P30DK072476).


Citation: Cell Metabolism, Vol. 18, Issue 4 doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cmet.2013.09.010




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Controlling the triggers of age-related inflammation could extend 'healthspan'


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

21-Oct-2013



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]


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Contact: Karen Peart
karen.peart@yale.edu
203-432-1326
Yale University






Inflammation is the common denominator of many chronic age-related diseases such as arthritis, gout, Alzheimer's, and diabetes. But according to a Yale School of Medicine study, even in the absence of a disease, inflammation can lead to serious loss of function throughout the body, reducing healthspan that portion of our lives spent relatively free of serious illness and disability.


Published as the cover article in the October issue of Cell Metabolism, the study found that immune sensor Nlrp3 inflammasome is a common trigger of this inflammation-driven loss of function that manifests itself in insulin-resistance, bone loss, frailty, and cognitive decline in aging.


As the elderly population increases, clinicians are seeing a spike in age-related diseases, but scientists did not fully understand the role of inflammation. What is commonly known is that as we age, our cells change, leading the immune system to produce chronic, low-level inflammation throughout the body. Aging is also a major risk factor for multiple chronic diseases, but according to the researchers, biomedical enterprise spends billions of dollars to tackle each age-dependent disease separately.


"This is the first study to show that inflammation is causally linked to functional decline in aging," said lead author Vishwa Deep Dixit, professor of comparative medicine and immunobiology at Yale School of Medicine. "There are multiple cellular triggers of inflammation throughout the body, but we've pinpointed Nlrp3 as the specific sensor that activates inflammation with age."


"If aging is indeed a common factor for multiple diseases, the unanswered question is, can we identify the triggers of aging that cause low-level inflammation so that 'switching off' the trigger can slow the onset of multiple chronic diseases that are age-dependent at their onset," Dixit added. "Since aging affects us all, if this goal can be achieved, it is likely to significantly improve the healthspan and may also lower healthcare costs as the aging population increases in the U.S."


Dixit and his colleagues investigated the normal aging process of mice that were free of diseases, and fed a normal diet. The research team found that immune sensor Nlrp3 inflammasome is activated in response to aging. They then tested mice to determine if reducing the activity of Nlrp3 inflammasome lowers inflammation, and aging-associated decline in function. Results showed that animals with lower Nlrp3 activation were protected from many age-related disorders such as dementia, bone loss, glucose intolerance, cataracts, and thymus degeneration. Functionally, the mice also performed better, were less frail, and ran for longer durations. The researchers also tested another immune sensor called caspase11, which is activated in response to certain infections, and found that it was not linked to the age-related inflammation process.


"Now that we've identified this mechanism in the Nlrp3 sensor, we might be able to manipulate this immune sensor to delay, or reduce inflammation," Dixit said. "This could lead to the possibility of prolonging healthspan, potentially leading to an old age relatively free of disease or disability."


Dixit said additional studies are needed to explore whether the Nlrp3 mechanism can be safely manipulated without impairing the immune system. He points out that although there are several anti-inflammatory drugs available, none seem to be effective in expanding the healthspan. "One of our long-term goals is to develop therapies or specific diets that could dampen the excessive inflammation process as a means to prevent chronic diseases," he said.


###


Other authors on the study include Yun-Hee Youm, Ryan W. Grant, Laura R. McCabe, Diana C. Albarado, Kim Yen Nguyen, Anthony Ravussin, Paul Pistell, Susan Newman, Renee Carter, Amanda Lague, Heike Munzberg, Clifford J. Rosen, Donald K. Ingram, and J. Michael Salbaum.


The study was supported by the National Institutes of Health (AG043608, AI105097, and DK090556, P20RR02195, HD055528); The Genomics and Core CBB Core facilities supported by Pennington Center of Biomedical Research Excellence (NIH 8P20 GM 103528) and Nutrition and Obesity Research Center (NIH P30DK072476).


Citation: Cell Metabolism, Vol. 18, Issue 4 doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cmet.2013.09.010




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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/yu-ctt102113.php
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Where are all the women at finance conferences? - The Term Sheet ...

By Susan Askew


131018135343-men-in-suits-620xaFORTUNE -- I am one of the 32% -- the 32% of the Wall Street Journal readers that are women. For many years, I have faithfully read the financial news and, not so faithfully, looked at the ads. But sometimes an oversized or provocative ad will catch my eye ... as in the case of one recent full-page splash for a private equity conference sponsored by Dow Jones. The ad prominently displayed the photos of 10 featured speakers. All men. Huh, I thought. What happened there?


Shortly after, another full-page ad in the Journal for its own Heard on the Street Live conference on "Investing in an Age of Easy Money" hosted by three male editors and featuring nine male speakers. Within days, a half-page ad appeared for Barron's "The Art of Successful Investing" conference. Ten speakers. One woman.


By this point, my incredulity was a bit strained. As the saying goes: Once is an anomaly. Twice is a coincidence. Three times is a pattern.


Twenty years ago, as a novice entrepreneur looking for financial backing for a "women's website," an investor asked me "Is this a social cause, are you asking me for a donation?" I learned very fast that it wasn't about mission. It was about money. So, let's talk numbers.


  • In 2007, the most recent year for which IRS data are available, there were an estimated 1.3 million men and 1 million women with assets of $2 million or more.

  • The Boston Consulting Group reports that in 2009 women controlled 27% of the world's wealth, 33% of financial assets in North America, "meaning that they decide where the assets are invested." Within the next decade, private wealth in the United States is expected to reach $22 trillion with half of it controlled by women.

  • In a BCG survey of women with bankable assets of more than $250,000, 42% reported their wealth was self-earned, coming from salaries and bonuses.

  • Looking to the future, due to longer lifespans, women are expected to control a large portion of what Boston College researchers say will be an estimated $42 trillion wealth transfer by 2052.

According to the IRS data, women are more likely to hold publicly traded stocks and other assets such as bonds vs. the "closely held stock and business assets" that make up a greater portion of men's portfolios. That means women should be in the sweet spot for the organizers of conferences, like Barron's, that target individual investors.


MORE: The 50 Most Powerful Women in business


The Dow Jones Private Equity Analyst conference targets "investors in private equity and venture capital transactions." The WSJ conference is for fund managers and financial advisors. While, admittedly, this audience is dominated by men, the Center for Venture Research reports a significant increase in the number of women angel investors, growing from 12.2% of the market in 2011 to 21.8% in 2012.


At the same time, there are women in private equity with something to add to the dialog. A report earlier this year from Rothstein Kass indicated hedge funds owned by women outperformed the HFRX Global Hedge Fund Index in the third quarter of 2012, netting an 8.95% return vs. 2.69%. I would think these women fund managers would have something of interest to say to the audiences at the Dow Jones and Wall Street Journal conferences.


While women control a significant amount of wealth, surveys indicate they don't have a gender preference when it comes to financial managers, but they do want to be respected. Invisibility of half the population on the dais at financial conferences is the height of disrespect.


Including female voices in financial conferences isn't just good policy, it's good business.


Susan Askew is a former staffer to Delaware Governor Mike Castle, is a recent graduate of the George Mason University BIS program with a concentration in Latin American Finance, and a new Gender Avenger (genderavenger.com).


Source: http://finance.fortune.cnn.com/2013/10/18/women-finance/
Tags: vikings   Malala Yousafzai   Brant Daugherty   al jazeera   usain bolt  

Cold Crime: Jell-O Stolen From Work Fridge Sparks Police Call


The limits of workplace theft are being tested in Pennsylvania, where a man called police this month to complain that his Jell-O had been stolen. The flavor was strawberry, he said. And it wasn't the first instance of fridge-theft.


The story comes from Philadelphia's CBS KYW-TV:


"The 'victim,' a 39-year-old man, was irate because this wasn't the first time his food had been stolen from the refrigerator. Unfortunately, police were unable to catch the thief, as 'the incident remains under investigation.' "


We'll admit here that we followed up on the case in part to confirm the story wasn't a mistaken reposting of an item from The Onion, drawing on an all-too-common annoyance for today's workers.


Officials at the Upper Macungie Township Police Department assure us that it's a genuine theft complaint.


"You're talking about someone stealing someone else's food," police Sgt. Pete Nickischer tells us. He says the victim was frustrated by repeated incidents.


"I think he was fed up," Nickischer says.


In a news release, police say that "an employee at Wakefern reported that an unknown person stole his Jell-O brand strawberry Jell-O snack from the break room refrigerator."


Wakefern, we'll note, is a large grocery wholesaler — in other words, the facility in question is a food warehouse.


A reader who commented on the KYW story suggests what could be a fitting end for the case:


"When they find the perp, they'll put him in custardy."


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/21/239291101/cold-crime-jell-o-stolen-from-work-fridge-sparks-police-call?ft=1&f=1003
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Jimmy Fallon Proudly Displays his "Jumping Bear"

Proudly sharing his bundle of joy with the world, Jimmy Fallon posted a new photo of daughter Winnie Rose on Instagram Monday (October 21).


In the snapshot, the little one's eyes twinkle as she sticks out her tongue at the camera in a soft outfit with ears on top.


As she appears to be in a bouncy seat, the "Late Night" host captioned the pic, appropriately, "Jumping bear."


Back in July, Jimmy and wife Nancy Juvonen welcomed their long-awaited daughter via surrogate. "Late Night with Jimmy Fallon" airs weeknights on NBC.


Source: http://celebrity-gossip.net/jimmy-fallon/jimmy-fallon-proudly-displays-his-jumping-bear-946902
Tags: TSLA   cnn news   adam levine   Talk Like a Pirate Day   Never Forget 9/11  

Monday, October 21, 2013

UCSB anthropologist studies the evolutionary benefit of human personality traits

UCSB anthropologist studies the evolutionary benefit of human personality traits


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21-Oct-2013



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Contact: Andrea Estrada
andrea.estrada@ia.ucsb.edu
805-893-4620
University of California - Santa Barbara






(Santa Barbara, Calif.) Bold and outgoing or shy and retiring while many people can shift from one to the other as circumstances warrant, in general they lean toward one disposition or the other. And that inclination changes little over the course of their lives.


Why this is the case and why it matters in a more traditional context are questions being addressed by anthropologists at UC Santa Barbara. Using fertility and child survivorship as their main measures of reproductive fitness, the researchers studied over 600 adult members of the Tsimane, an isolated indigenous population in central Bolivia, and discovered that more open, outgoing and less anxious personalities were associated with having more children but only among men.


Their findings appear online in the journal Evolution and Human Behavior.


"The idea that we're funneled into a relatively fixed way of interacting with the world is something we take for granted," said Michael Gurven, UCSB professor of anthropology and the paper's lead author. Gurven is also co-director of the University of New Mexico-based Tsimane Health and Life History Project. "Some people are outgoing and open, others are more quiet and introverted. But from an evolutionary standpoint, it doesn't really make sense that our dispositions differ so much, and are not more flexible.


"Wouldn't it be great to be more extroverted at an important party, more conscientious when you're on the clock at work, less anxious when talking to a potential date?" Gurven continued. "Differences in personality and their relative stability are not unique to humans, and have now been studied in many species, from ants to primates. How could dispositional consistency be favored by selection?"


Given the variability in personality, a question then is how that variability is maintained over time. "If personality traits, like extroversion, help you interact easily with bosses, find potential mates and make lots of friends, then why, over time, aren't we extroverted?" Gurven asked. Successful behavioral strategies with genetic underpinnings and behavioral genetics has demonstrated relatively high heritability for personality variation often increase in frequency over time, and therefore reduce variation over many generations.


One reason might be that selection pressures vary whatever is adaptive today might not be so tomorrow, and what is adaptive in one place might not be so in another. Selection pressures can vary between sexes as well. The most advantageous personality traits for men may not always be so for women. A second reason could be the idea that too much of a good thing is bad. "Being more extroverted might also make you more prone to taking unnecessary risks, which can be dangerous," Gurven said.


Gurven and his team wanted to examine the personality measures they had on the Tsimane adults and determine what consequences might result from one personality over another. "Considering the evolutionary adaptiveness of a trait like personality can be problematic in modern developed societies because of the widespread use of contraception," Gurven explained. "In all animals including humans the better condition you're in, the more kids you have. And for humans in more traditional environments, like the Tsimane, the higher your status, the better physical condition you're in, the earlier you might marry, and the higher reproductive success you're likely to have."




The Tsimane present a favorable test group because their subsistence ecology is similar to the way people in developed countries lived for millennia. "It's a high fertility population the average woman has nine births over her lifetime and a ripe kind of population for trying to look at personality," said Gurven.


Based on their measurement of different aspects of personality, the researchers looked at how personality impacted the number of children men and women had. "And what we found was that almost every personality dimension mattered for men, and it mattered a lot," Gurven said. "Being more extroverted, open, agreeable and conscientious and less neurotic was associated with having more kids."


Interestingly, though, Gurven added, the same was not true for women. "But that wasn't the whole story. Because we had a large number of test subjects, we could look at whether the relationship between personality and reproduction varied across different regions of the Tsimane territory," he said. Some Tsimane choose to live close to town, near roads, schools and the various opportunities that accompany the more urban life, while others live in the remote headwaters, and still others live in remote forest villages where they're often isolated during much of the rainy season.


Only among women living in villages near town did personality associate with higher fertility, Gurven noted. In more remote regions, the same personality profile had


the opposite effect or, in some cases, no effect on fertility. For men, however, location made no difference. Wherever they lived, manifesting traits related to extroversion, openness and industriousness was associated with higher fertility.


So, if higher fertility was the upside of extroversion and other traits, the researchers wondered what the downside might be. Looking for potential costs related to these personality traits that associate with higher fertility, they focused on health and conflicts. Neither, they discovered, really seemed to be an issue.


"You might think that folks putting themselves out there all the time would be getting sick more often because of greater pathogen exposure or from taking risks," Gurven said. "But we didn't find much evidence that they were sicker. If anything, they were consistently healthier. Which actually makes sense when you consider that of people who are in good condition in general are both healthier and more likely to be outgoing."


Health was assessed two years after the personality measurements so there was no possibility that feeling under the weather meant subjects were more likely to be shy, anxious or dispirited.


Regarding conflicts, the researchers did find that the more extroverted and open men got in trouble more often. "They did have more conflicts," Gurven noted. "But most were verbal." And while conflicts can sometimes escalate into physical confrontation, he added, for the most part, they don't result in death.


The researchers found no evidence that intermediary levels of extroversion or other personality traits lead to highest fertility. Instead, greater levels of these traits associate with higher reproductive fitness, consistent with the evolutionary model referred to as directional selection. But personality varied widely between the sexes men scored higher on extroversion, agreableness, conscientiousness, openness, prosociality and industriousness.


"That the relationship between personality and fitness varies by sex and geographical region supports the view that fluctuating selection pressures may help maintain variation in personality," said Gurven. "Selection pressures may vary over time as well. Indeed, the environment Tsimane face today may be somewhat novel. The annual growth rate of the Tsimane population over the last several decades is almost four percent meaning the population doubles every 17 years which suggests pioneer-like conditions. Greater market access, schooling and other opportunities are producing further changes in Tsimane society."


###


The paper's other co-authors include Christopher von Rueden of the Univeristy of Richmond; Hillard Kaplan of the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque and co-director of the Tsimane Health and Life History Project; Jonathan Stieglitz of the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque; and Daniel Eid Rodriguez of the Universidad Mayor de San Simn, Cochabamba.




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UCSB anthropologist studies the evolutionary benefit of human personality traits


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

21-Oct-2013



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Contact: Andrea Estrada
andrea.estrada@ia.ucsb.edu
805-893-4620
University of California - Santa Barbara






(Santa Barbara, Calif.) Bold and outgoing or shy and retiring while many people can shift from one to the other as circumstances warrant, in general they lean toward one disposition or the other. And that inclination changes little over the course of their lives.


Why this is the case and why it matters in a more traditional context are questions being addressed by anthropologists at UC Santa Barbara. Using fertility and child survivorship as their main measures of reproductive fitness, the researchers studied over 600 adult members of the Tsimane, an isolated indigenous population in central Bolivia, and discovered that more open, outgoing and less anxious personalities were associated with having more children but only among men.


Their findings appear online in the journal Evolution and Human Behavior.


"The idea that we're funneled into a relatively fixed way of interacting with the world is something we take for granted," said Michael Gurven, UCSB professor of anthropology and the paper's lead author. Gurven is also co-director of the University of New Mexico-based Tsimane Health and Life History Project. "Some people are outgoing and open, others are more quiet and introverted. But from an evolutionary standpoint, it doesn't really make sense that our dispositions differ so much, and are not more flexible.


"Wouldn't it be great to be more extroverted at an important party, more conscientious when you're on the clock at work, less anxious when talking to a potential date?" Gurven continued. "Differences in personality and their relative stability are not unique to humans, and have now been studied in many species, from ants to primates. How could dispositional consistency be favored by selection?"


Given the variability in personality, a question then is how that variability is maintained over time. "If personality traits, like extroversion, help you interact easily with bosses, find potential mates and make lots of friends, then why, over time, aren't we extroverted?" Gurven asked. Successful behavioral strategies with genetic underpinnings and behavioral genetics has demonstrated relatively high heritability for personality variation often increase in frequency over time, and therefore reduce variation over many generations.


One reason might be that selection pressures vary whatever is adaptive today might not be so tomorrow, and what is adaptive in one place might not be so in another. Selection pressures can vary between sexes as well. The most advantageous personality traits for men may not always be so for women. A second reason could be the idea that too much of a good thing is bad. "Being more extroverted might also make you more prone to taking unnecessary risks, which can be dangerous," Gurven said.


Gurven and his team wanted to examine the personality measures they had on the Tsimane adults and determine what consequences might result from one personality over another. "Considering the evolutionary adaptiveness of a trait like personality can be problematic in modern developed societies because of the widespread use of contraception," Gurven explained. "In all animals including humans the better condition you're in, the more kids you have. And for humans in more traditional environments, like the Tsimane, the higher your status, the better physical condition you're in, the earlier you might marry, and the higher reproductive success you're likely to have."




The Tsimane present a favorable test group because their subsistence ecology is similar to the way people in developed countries lived for millennia. "It's a high fertility population the average woman has nine births over her lifetime and a ripe kind of population for trying to look at personality," said Gurven.


Based on their measurement of different aspects of personality, the researchers looked at how personality impacted the number of children men and women had. "And what we found was that almost every personality dimension mattered for men, and it mattered a lot," Gurven said. "Being more extroverted, open, agreeable and conscientious and less neurotic was associated with having more kids."


Interestingly, though, Gurven added, the same was not true for women. "But that wasn't the whole story. Because we had a large number of test subjects, we could look at whether the relationship between personality and reproduction varied across different regions of the Tsimane territory," he said. Some Tsimane choose to live close to town, near roads, schools and the various opportunities that accompany the more urban life, while others live in the remote headwaters, and still others live in remote forest villages where they're often isolated during much of the rainy season.


Only among women living in villages near town did personality associate with higher fertility, Gurven noted. In more remote regions, the same personality profile had


the opposite effect or, in some cases, no effect on fertility. For men, however, location made no difference. Wherever they lived, manifesting traits related to extroversion, openness and industriousness was associated with higher fertility.


So, if higher fertility was the upside of extroversion and other traits, the researchers wondered what the downside might be. Looking for potential costs related to these personality traits that associate with higher fertility, they focused on health and conflicts. Neither, they discovered, really seemed to be an issue.


"You might think that folks putting themselves out there all the time would be getting sick more often because of greater pathogen exposure or from taking risks," Gurven said. "But we didn't find much evidence that they were sicker. If anything, they were consistently healthier. Which actually makes sense when you consider that of people who are in good condition in general are both healthier and more likely to be outgoing."


Health was assessed two years after the personality measurements so there was no possibility that feeling under the weather meant subjects were more likely to be shy, anxious or dispirited.


Regarding conflicts, the researchers did find that the more extroverted and open men got in trouble more often. "They did have more conflicts," Gurven noted. "But most were verbal." And while conflicts can sometimes escalate into physical confrontation, he added, for the most part, they don't result in death.


The researchers found no evidence that intermediary levels of extroversion or other personality traits lead to highest fertility. Instead, greater levels of these traits associate with higher reproductive fitness, consistent with the evolutionary model referred to as directional selection. But personality varied widely between the sexes men scored higher on extroversion, agreableness, conscientiousness, openness, prosociality and industriousness.


"That the relationship between personality and fitness varies by sex and geographical region supports the view that fluctuating selection pressures may help maintain variation in personality," said Gurven. "Selection pressures may vary over time as well. Indeed, the environment Tsimane face today may be somewhat novel. The annual growth rate of the Tsimane population over the last several decades is almost four percent meaning the population doubles every 17 years which suggests pioneer-like conditions. Greater market access, schooling and other opportunities are producing further changes in Tsimane society."


###


The paper's other co-authors include Christopher von Rueden of the Univeristy of Richmond; Hillard Kaplan of the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque and co-director of the Tsimane Health and Life History Project; Jonathan Stieglitz of the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque; and Daniel Eid Rodriguez of the Universidad Mayor de San Simn, Cochabamba.




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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/uoc--ua102113.php
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Lea Michele Spotted With Healing Crystal And THE Diamond Ring Believed To Be From Cory Monteith





lea michele wearing healing crystal diamond ring


She's staying strong because Cory Monteith is never far from her mind.


Even though Lea Michele has been busy working hard ever since tragically losing Cory far too soon, we're sure she's been trying to mend her broken heart any way she can.


And now it seems the Glee starlet turned to crystals for some strength as she was spotted at LAX wearing what appears to be a healing crystal necklace. But that wasn't all that she was keeping close to her.


Lea was also spotted wearing that same diamond ring on her ring finger that has been popping up from time to time ever since Cory passed away.


We've heard they might have been engaged before his death or that maybe he was planning a proposal, so if that ring is from Cory, we hope it helps heal her heartache.


[Image via AKM-GSI.]



Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,






Source: http://perezhilton.com/2013-10-21-lea-michele-wearing-healing-crystal-diamond-ring-engagement-finger-lax
Category: amber alert   What Does Government Shutdown Mean   wes welker   Jason Heyward   Jose Iglesias  

SF transit strike has commuters facing gridlock


OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — San Francisco Bay Area commuters are waking up to another day without the region's main commuter train line because of a strike.

Traffic at the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge toll plaza was already heavy around 5:30 a.m. Monday. Ferries, charter buses from several BART stations and Alameda-Contra Costa Transit District buses are serving as alternatives for regular BART riders.

BART's unions went on strike on Friday after contract talks broke down. The two sides have not scheduled any new talks. BART's board, however, is holding a special meeting on Monday afternoon.

BART spokeswoman Alicia Trost said the agency is open to restarting negotiations if that's what a federal mediator wants. The San Francisco Chronicle, meanwhile, reports the unions have made another offer to BART.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sf-transit-strike-commuters-facing-gridlock-130906533--finance.html
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iPad app lets you create DJ mixes from Spotify playlists

If you're a Spotify Premium subscriber, you can now move beyond simple crossfades thanks to the DJ Mixer for Spotify iPad app. In order to use it, you have to download songs from your existing playlists, which also lets you use it offline. As with other such apps, you get two virtual decks and can ...


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/K9DKhuEJmSk/
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Cuban entrepreneurs gird for ban on import sales

In this Oct 11, 2013 photo, a woman tries on a shoe inside the home of a small business owner in Havana, Cuba. Three months from now, authorities will begin enforcing a new law banning the private sale of imported goods. For entrepreneurs who have carved out modestly successful livelihoods after investing their life savings to launch import-dependent businesses, the new measure feels like a big step back. (AP Photo/Franklin Reyes)







In this Oct 11, 2013 photo, a woman tries on a shoe inside the home of a small business owner in Havana, Cuba. Three months from now, authorities will begin enforcing a new law banning the private sale of imported goods. For entrepreneurs who have carved out modestly successful livelihoods after investing their life savings to launch import-dependent businesses, the new measure feels like a big step back. (AP Photo/Franklin Reyes)







In this Oct 11, 2013 photo, shoes for sale are displayed on a shelf inside the home of a small business owner in Havana, Cuba. Some 436,000 Cubans are running or working for private small businesses under President Raul Castro's package of social and economic reforms begun in 2010. (AP Photo/Franklin Reyes)







In this Oct 11, 2013 photo, a man shops for personal grooming items sold from the window of the home of of a small business owner in Havana, Cuba. Entrepreneurs have carved out modestly successful livelihoods after investing their life savings to launch import-dependent businesses. And three months from now, it could all be over as authorities begin enforcing a new law banning the private sale of imported goods. (AP Photo/Franklin Reyes)







In this Oct 11, 2013 photo, a man who sells imported clothing at a fair, reads a copy of Cuba's state newspaper Granma, in Havana, Cuba. Labor Ministry official Jose Barreiro Alfonso recently told Communist Party newspaper Granma that it's necessary to "impose order" in the retail sector, and it will be a crime to "obtain merchandise or other objects for the purpose of resale for profit." (AP Photo/Franklin Reyes)







In this Oct 11, 2013 photo, students shops for shoes inside the home of a small business owner in Havana, Cuba. Three months from now, authorities will begin enforcing a new law banning the private sale of imported goods. For entrepreneurs who have carved out modestly successful livelihoods after investing their life savings to launch import-dependent businesses, the new measure feels like a big step back. (AP Photo/Franklin Reyes)







HAVANA (AP) — You can find just about anything at El Curita marketplace in gritty central Havana.

Hundreds of entrepreneurs hawk all manner of goods at this bustling bazaar, from watches, shampoos and facial creams to neon-colored tube tops and the striped FC Barcelona soccer jerseys that are increasingly a fashion must.

Three years ago, there was nothing quite like it on this Communist-run island known as much for perpetual scarcity as it is for pristine beaches and world class cigars. And three months from now, it could all be over as authorities begin enforcing a new law banning the private sale of imported goods.

Cuba is in the middle of what it calls a significant opening to limited private enterprise — even as it swears it won't abandon socialism. But for entrepreneurs who have carved out modestly successful livelihoods after investing their life savings to launch import-dependent businesses, the new measure feels like a big step back.

Announced in late September, the law is likely to snuff out some businesses entirely while driving others back underground in a nation where the black market has long flourished. In some markets, crude signs have already started going up advertising "liquidation" sales.

"I never thought that this would happen. I'm desperate," said Barbara Perez, who sells blouses for $13 and jeans for around $15 from her clothing stall. "I can't sleep because I'm constantly asking myself, 'What is going to happen? What am I going to do?'"

Last week, she said, authorities summoned her to hear an explanation of the new rule.

"They treated me well. They read me the new law and they made me sign a paper," Perez said between sobs. She has until Nov. 30 to sell her remaining inventory, and "after that they can confiscate it."

Some 436,000 Cubans are running or working for private small businesses under President Raul Castro's package of social and economic reforms begun in 2010. Among other things, the government has legalized used car and real estate sales and ended the much-detested exit visa required for decades of all islanders seeking to travel overseas.

While critics say the list of nearly 200 approved areas of independent employment is too short, it continues to expand. The same day the ban on selling imports was announced, authorities OKed 18 more professions including blacksmiths, welders and real estate agents.

"Personally, I think the steps so far have been positive," said Josuan Crespo, who can now work legally as a real estate agent. "With this new regulation we can help people with everything to do with buying and selling property."

Perez opened shop three years ago with a seamstress' license, but quickly realized there was no money in making clothing from scratch. For starters, there's no wholesale market offering raw materials to craft new clothes or shoes. When available, fabric can be of dubious quality. And the real demand is for foreign fashions.

"The first 11 days I didn't sell anything. They said my clothes were out of fashion and low-quality," Perez said. "So I decided to sell my sewing machine, my television, my refrigerator, and with the $150 I raised, I bought clothes from a person who brought it from abroad and started selling that."

She and countless other entrepreneurs continue to rely for supply on so-called mules who fly overseas, returning with duffel bags stuffed with underwear, jewelry, auto parts, appliances.

Authorities began taking aim at that sub-industry last year by dramatically hiking customs duties.

Labor Ministry official Jose Barreiro Alfonso recently told Communist Party newspaper Granma that it's necessary to "impose order" in the retail sector, and it will be a crime to "obtain merchandise or other objects for the purpose of resale for profit."

Together, the measures recall previous policies that critics describe as two steps forward, one step back.

In the 1990s, Cubans were allowed to open private restaurants to ease the pain of a severe economic crisis; when the worst had passed, authorities regulated the eateries practically out of existence until they were revived under the recent reforms.

Such policies "create an atmosphere of uncertainty that is not positive, and a level of frustration that will not rise to the level of nationwide protests," said Frank Mora, director of the Latin American and Caribbean Center at Florida International University. "But with this, the government is sending a message to the people that it is maintaining control."

Carmelo Mesa-Lago, a University of Pittsburg professor emeritus of economics, interpreted the new law as an attempt to protect the government's own retail operations.

"It miscalculated" before, Mesa-Lago said. "It thought it could compete with these people who ... sell at a reasonable price while (state-run) stores have very high prices."

After being laid off from his hotel job, Frank Rodriguez, 30, took out a cobbler's license and began selling imported shoes at El Curita. He intends to recover his $3,000 investment one way or another, by selling "here or elsewhere."

"We are living days of complete uncertainty," Rodriguez said. "If they allowed this for three years across the country, why prohibit it now? How, and with what money will I buy food for my daughter?"

Diana Sanchez, who supports herself, her daughter and her retired mother by selling plumbing and household supplies, is considering becoming a manicurist.

"What I sell, I can't make. So they're going to shut me down? You can't do that," Sanchez said. "They allowed this. We had hope, an illusion that things were really going to change. ... We're going to take a step back instead of moving forward."

___

Follow Anne-Marie Garcia on Twitter: www.twitter.com/AnneMarie279

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-10-18-Cuba-Small%20Businesses/id-915ff5ddf18c40bdb0719f90b6c1404f
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Kerry Hopes Syria's Chemical Weapons Are Shipped Out Of The Region





Secretary of State John Kerry flies over Afghanistan on Oct. 11. He met with President Hamid Karzai to work out an agreement on U.S. presence in the country.



Jacquelyn Martin/AFP/Getty Images


Secretary of State John Kerry flies over Afghanistan on Oct. 11. He met with President Hamid Karzai to work out an agreement on U.S. presence in the country.


Jacquelyn Martin/AFP/Getty Images


Syria's chemical weapons could be consolidated and moved out of the country, Secretary of State John Kerry suggested in an interview with NPR.


Weapons inspectors are still in Syria assessing the country's stockpile and how to destroy it, in accordance with a United Nations Security Council resolution approved in September.


Asked by Morning Edition host Renee Montagne whether the agreement ensures that Syria's President Bashar Assad will remain in power, perhaps for many more months, Kerry replied:




"The fact is that these weapons can be removed whether Assad is there or not there because we know the locations, the locations have been declared, the locations are being secured. And my hope is that much of this material will be moved as rapidly [as] possibly into one location, and hopefully on a ship, and removed from the region."





Where such a ship would go is unclear, NPR's Michele Kelemen reports, and even the logistics of dealing with the weapons inside Syria are complicated.


"The Chemical Weapons Convention bars countries from moving their stockpiles — but in Syria's case, a U.N. resolution allows it and urges member states to help," Kelemen says.


Ralf Trapp, a consultant in chemical weapons disarmament, tells Kelemen that the idea of moving the material has been under discussion. However, he adds:




"It's a big, big logistical operation, and just doing this under peacetime conditions is not an easy job, so doing this under the conditions of Syria today is a challenge."




In an interview airing Thursday on Morning Edition, Kerry emphasized that the way forward in Syria would have to be diplomatic and that maintaining state institutions is key to future progress.


"There is no military solution. Absolutely not. There is only a continued rate of destruction and a creation of a humanitarian catastrophe for everybody in the region if the fighting continues," he said.


His remarks follow a two-week trip abroad, including two days in Kabul, where Kerry met with Afghan President Hamid Karzai. The leaders reached a deal on the terms of U.S. presence in Afghanistan after its combat mission ends.


"Everything that will be necessary to a successful agreement is in the agreement. We succeeded in defining exactly what the limits would be for American participation in the future," Kerry said.


But a council of public and tribal leaders, known as the Loya Jirga, still has to sign off on the issue of jurisdiction over Americans who would be working in Afghanistan.


"Needless to say, we are adamant it has to be the United States of America. That's the way it is everywhere else in the world," Kerry said. "And they have a choice: Either that's the way it is or there won't be any forces there of any kind."


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/17/235664114/kerry-hopes-syrias-chemical-weapons-are-shipped-out-of-the-region?ft=1&f=3
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Instagram Becomes Concerned for Lady Gaga's Well Being

Setting off a few scares this week on Instagram, Lady Gaga tweeted about a strange message sent to her from the Instagram community on Wednesday (October 16). She wrote, “OMG at this email INSTAGRAM just sent me… what the actual hell. hahahaha.”


She also posted a screenshot of a message she’d received from the social media platform, which read: “Members of the Instagram community have raised concerns for your well-being after seeing posts you’ve shared. We’re reaching out to provide you with some important safety information.”


The singer superstar gave no details about which of her Instagram posts threw up the red flags, but her most recent pictures, from October 13th and 14th, are of notebooks filled with song lyrics.


Stay linked to GossipCenter for more updates about the status of Lady Gaga’s health, music, personal life, and much more!


Source: http://celebrity-gossip.net/lady-gaga/instagram-becomes-concerned-lady-gagas-well-being-944292
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Electronic Make-Up Lets You Activate Gadgets By Blinking

A cheeky wink can say an awful lot—but now it can do an awful lot, too. A new range of conducting cosmetics means that you could soon be activating electronics with the blink of an eye.

Read more...

Source: http://gizmodo.com/electronic-make-up-lets-you-activate-gadgets-by-blinkin-1446288892
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Sunday, October 20, 2013

Suicide bombing in Iraq kills 35 in busy cafe

A woman gestures as residents gather at the site of a car bomb attack in Baghdad, Iraq, Saturday, Oct. 19, 2013. Police officials said the Friday night blast took place in the capital's eastern Mashtal neighborhood. Violence in Iraq has escalated sharply since April, 2013 following a deadly crackdown by security forces on a camp for Sunni protesters in the northern town of Hawija. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)







A woman gestures as residents gather at the site of a car bomb attack in Baghdad, Iraq, Saturday, Oct. 19, 2013. Police officials said the Friday night blast took place in the capital's eastern Mashtal neighborhood. Violence in Iraq has escalated sharply since April, 2013 following a deadly crackdown by security forces on a camp for Sunni protesters in the northern town of Hawija. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)







A woman inspects the site of a car bomb attack in Baghdad, Iraq, Saturday, Oct. 19, 2013. Police officials said the Friday night blast took place in the capital's eastern Mashtal neighborhood. Violence in Iraq has escalated sharply since April, 2013 following a deadly crackdown by security forces on a camp for Sunni protesters in the northern town of Hawija. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)







(AP) — A suicide bomber slammed his explosive-laden car Sunday night into a busy cafe in Iraq's capital, part of a day of violence across the country that killed 45 people, authorities said.

The bombing at the cafe in Baghdad's primarily Shiite Amil neighborhood happened as it was full of customers. The cafe and a nearby juice shop is a favorite hang out in the neighborhood for young people, who filled the area at the time of the explosions.

The blast killed 35 people and wounded 45, Iraqi officials said.

Violence has been on the rise in Iraq following a deadly crackdown by security forces on a Sunni protest camp in the northern town of Hawijah in April. At least 385 have died in attacks in Iraq so far this month, according to an Associated Press count.

In a village north of Baghdad, a car bomb targeted a police officer's house, killing his father, brother and five nephews, officials said. Six others were wounded in the blast, which happened when the officer was not at home.

Security forces meanwhile foiled an attack on the local council of the western town of Rawah by five would-be suicide bombers disguised in police uniforms, said Muthana Ismail, head of the local security committee.

Ismail said two attackers were shot while the rest blew up themselves up outside. Two police officers and an official were killed, while 20 people were wounded, he said.

Rawha is about 330 kilometers (200 miles) northwest of Baghdad.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for Sunday's attacks, though car bombings and gun assaults are favorite tactics of al-Qaida's local branch. It frequently targets Shiites, whom it considers heretics, and those seen as closely allied to the Shiite-led government in Baghdad.

Hospital officials confirmed the casualty figures for all attacks. All officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to journalists.

___

Associated Press writers Sinan Salaheddin and Qassim Abdul-Zahra contributed to this report.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-10-20-ML-Iraq/id-e4515cc640a944999efd39018852bdfc
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Liar's Dice: Mumbai Review




The Bottom Line


A character-driven road movie totters between a curious male-female relationship and Indian social drama.




Venue


Mumbai Film Festival (India Gold), Oct. 18, 2013


Cast


Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Geetanjali Thapa, Manya Gupta


Director/Screenwriter


Geetu Mohandas




It’s not easy to make an engrossing drama out of India’s hidden scandal of construction workers recruited from poor towns the north and taken to accident-prone sites in the big city bereft of safety norms. In her promising first feature, writer-director Geetu Mohandas cleverly skirts the issue in a wry road movie about a mountain woman who stubbornly ignores the village elders and takes off in search of her missing spouse. Not always convincing, the tale sails along on the coattails of two fine actors, Geetanjali Thapa and Nawazuddin Siddiqui, who hold things together through various shifts in tone. Their presence should propel Liar’s Dice into more festival outings.



Thapa, whose fine performance in I.D. won international awards, plays the courageous if somewhat recklessly irresponsible Kamla, a lovely lady from the high Himalayas and mother to the precocious little Manya (Manya Gupta). It’s been five months since she heard from her husband and she’s worried. He's stopped writing and doesn’t answer his cell phone – something’s wrong.


Dragging little Manya and, absurdly, her pet goat along, she slips away in the freezing night and starts down a snowy mountain road. The little party is almost immediately attacked by two passing truck drivers and Kamla would almost certainly be raped, were it not for the prompt intervention of a straggly-looking guy who intervenes.


This is Nawazuddin (Siddiqui, who played Faizal Khan in Gangs of Wasseypur and more recently charmed in a supporting role in The Lunchbox.) He’s virtually unrecognizable with a dirty face and a rag around his head, looking like a generic freedom fighter who sews up his own wounds with a borrowed needle and thread. There are just too few cues (outside the press book) to realize he’s an army deserter from the Border Guard, and for most non-Indian viewers he will pass as some eccentric outcast of society. As long as he’s gruff and silent, he seems like a strong protector for the two women; but when he finds his voice a few scenes along, surprise: it’s to whine for money. Kamla shows no desire for his company at all, but without him they can’t sneak their little goat on a bus that takes them to the regional capital of Shimla.


Not much is seen of this exotic location, apart from a scary night-time scene in which Kamla meets a woman from her village who evasively refuses to give her info. Sensing a trap, she backs out and agrees to give their “protector” her gold bangle if he’ll accompany them to Delhi and check around the construction sites.


The talented actors – including wide-eyed, outgoing little Manya – are interesting to watch as they struggle with their characters. Kamla however seems too focused on her quest, to the point of sometimes forgetting the young child at her side who she dragged into danger, and her inability to accept the inevitable makes her seem a bit soft-headed.


Nawazuddin slowly transforms from wild man to the familiar flawed mensch Siddiqui plays best. Still, it’s hard to understand why, after their Delhi flophouse solves the goat problem, he takes Kamla and Manya out for a mutton dinner – a cheap joke that makes no sense in terms of his evolving character. For Nawazuddin is industrious, a bread-winner at heart, skilled at fleecing passers-by at a dice game he whisks out whenever he can corral a crowd. This prepares for the satisfying final shot, which leaves the ending open in an interesting way.


Rajeev Ravi’s sensitive cinematography smooths out the rough edges and highlights the film's transition from the pristine snowy village with its steep streets to the urban squalor of Delhi’s alleyways. John Bosters’ music is soulful and low-key.


Venue: Mumbai Film Festival (India Gold), May 18, 2013.
Production companies: Jar Pictures in association with Unplugged
Cast: Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Geetanjali Thapa, Manya Gupta
Director: Geetu MohandasScreenwriter: Geeta Mohandas
Producers: Alan McAlex, Ajay G. RAi
Director of photography: Rajeev Favi

Production designer: Prakash Moorthy
Editor: B. Ajithkumar
Music: John Bosters
No rating, 104 minutes.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/international/~3/oRhAhnpU5Bw/story01.htm
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Lee's 31 points lead Warriors past Lakers in China

BEIJING (AP) — David Lee scored 31 points and grabbed six rebounds to lead the Golden State Warriors to a 100-95 preseason win over a Kobe Bryant-less Los Angeles Lakers on Tuesday in China.


Stephen Curry added 24 points for the Warriors, while Andrew Bogut had 14 rebounds and nine points. Lee finished 12 of 16 from the field.


"The way it's supposed to work is that we can get some stuff on the inside early in the game and that will open up the outside for guys like Steph to shoot 3s as the game goes on," the center said.


Nick Young led the Lakers with 18 points. Pau Gasol had 15 points and Chris Kaman scored 14 with 10 rebounds.


Although Bryant made the trip to China, he's sitting out the games to nurse a torn Achilles tendon and an ailing right knee. He was clearly missed by the Chinese fans, who chanted his name throughout the game.


Gasol said the Lakers faded defensively in the third quarter without their star.


"We don't know when Kobe's going to get back," Gasol said. "But until that point we just have to play hard as a team as we've been doing, and making sure we can't wait for him to get back and everything to fall into place at that point."


The Lakers play a second exhibition game in Shanghai on Friday.


The Warriors trailed 11 points at the end of the third quarter, but tied the score at 84 with just over seven minutes remaining on a 3-pointer by Curry and never trailed again.


Golden State coach Mark Jackson said Curry has been healthy the entire offseason.


"I thought tonight for the first time in a long time he had a rhythm and he was the best player on the floor," Jackson said. "It was great to see and we expect tremendous (things) from him throughout the course of this season."


Curry said the team played "probably our best half in the second half all preseason."


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lees-31-points-lead-warriors-past-lakers-china-160352968--spt.html
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Little comfort for Egypt's Brotherhood during sacred Eid


By Abdel Rahman Youssef


ALEXANDRIA, Egypt (Reuters) - Every year, millions of Muslims around the world sacrifice an animal, a sheep, a camel, a goat, as part of the Eid al-Adha festival, the meat to be offered to the poor. It is a time for families to celebrate together.


But with a son in an Egyptian jail for his ties to the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood, Oum Amr's family was too distraught to perform what is a sacred ritual in Islam.


"Eid has no meaning without my son," she said in Alexandria, Egypt's second city and a traditional Brotherhood stronghold. "We are accustomed to performing the sacrifice every year, but this year, it's just not the same."


Other Egyptians connected to the movement were ill inclined to celebrate at a time when leaders are behind bars.


Instead of immersing themselves in their faith, Brotherhood members and their families seem preoccupied with the impact of one of the toughest security crackdowns on the Middle East's oldest Islamist movement.


When Mohamed Mursi became the first Brotherhood official to be freely elected as the president of Egypt last year, his supporters imagined they would celebrate many Eids in power.


Instead, they are on the defensive once again after enduring decades of repression under Egyptian leaders bent on breaking their influence.


Many Islamists have been going underground again since the army toppled Mursi on July 3 and installed an interim government that brands the Brotherhood as a terrorist group.


The army, for its part, denies it staged a coup, saying it responded only to the will of Egyptians who had become disillusioned with Mursi's rule. He was accused of usurping power and mismanaging the economy, allegations he denied.


DIVISIONS MAR HOLIDAY OF UNITY


Hundreds have been killed. Top Brotherhood leaders including Mursi have been arrested on charges ranging from inciting violence to murder.


While many Egyptians are spending the first day of Eid al-Adha distributing meat from sacrificed sheep to the poor, the Brotherhood are instead giving money that would have been used to purchase animals to families of jailed or killed Islamists.


Tasneem Gamal, 23, recalled the festive moods of previous holidays.


"Every year, we would organize a breakfast at the mosque, but we did not this year," said Gamal, whose father, a prominent Brotherhood member in Alexandria, was rounded up.


This time there were no decorations in the house, and the children missed exchanging blessings with their father.


"The festival of the sacrifice" traditionally promotes unity among Muslims around the world, in part because it marks the end of the annual haj pilgrimage to Mecca.


In Egypt, it is not clear whether faith will heal the divisions that have been deepening in the three bloody months since Mursi's downfall.


Tahrir Square, the cradle of the 2011 popular uprising that toppled autocrat Hosni Mubarak, was sealed off by army vehicles, a reminder that Egypt is a country in crisis.


Some Brotherhood members remain defiant even though pressure on the movement is unrelenting.


Salah Madani takes comfort in describing his son as a martyr for the group's cause. Ahmed was killed on August 14, when security forces crushed a pro-Brotherhood protest camp in Cairo.


"We do not accept condolences, but we accept congratulations (on his death)," said Madani.


Mohamed al-Sayed, an arts student whose uncle has been arrested, said:


"Of course this Eid feels different. Most of our families are either in jail or have been martyred. But we insist on confronting this coup."


Across Alexandria, the mood was grim at the movement's mosques, and rituals which always injected joy into Eid were absent.


This year Islamic songs calling for the return of Islamic rule could not be heard outside Brotherhood mosques. Raffles which once offered prizes like television sets or household supplies were cancelled.


Most telling of all, balloons, candy, and other holiday gifts for children were not distributed.


"We ask God to bless us next year ... and to give us more political freedom," said Essam el-Erian, one of the only Brotherhood leaders who has managed to stay out of prison, in a Eid blessing on his Facebook page.


(Additional reporting by Yara Bayoumy; Writing by Maggie Fick and Michael Georgy; editing by Ralph Boulton)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/little-comfort-egypts-brotherhood-during-sacred-eid-140533996.html
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2 killers escape Fla. prison with bogus documents

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — As authorities hunt for two killers who were mistakenly freed by bogus court documents, prison officials and prosecutors across Florida scrambled to make sure no other inmates had been let out early.


The review comes three weeks after convicted murderer Joseph Jenkins walked out of prison, despite a life sentence. A week after he was let go, Charles Walker, who was also serving life, also was released.


It's not clear exactly who worked up the fake documents ordering their release. Authorities said the paperwork in both cases was filed in the last couple of months and included forged signatures from the same prosecutor's office and Chief Circuit Judge Belvin Perry. The documents also called for 15-year sentences.


Perry said Thursday there were several red flags that should have attracted the attention of the court clerk's office or the Corrections Department. Namely, it's rare for a judge to order a sentence reduction, and even more uncommon for the request to come from prosecutors.


"One of the things we have never taken a close look at is the verification of a particular document to make sure it's the real McCoy," he said. "I knew that that was always a possibility, but you never want that possibility occurring in the way that it did."


Prisoners have had varying success trying to use bogus documents to escape. Many forgeries are discovered early, but there have been cases where inmates walk free.


In Florida, Jenkins was let out Sept. 27, and Walker was freed Oct. 8.


Jenkins, 34, was found guilty of first-degree murder in the 1998 killing and botched robbery of Roscoe Pugh, an Orlando man.


State Attorney Jeffrey Ashton said he learned Jenkins had been released when Pugh's family contacted his office. They reviewed the paperwork and found that it was a fake, then notified law enforcement.


Later, they discovered Walker's release documents were also fake. The paperwork also forged prosecutors' signatures, Ashton said.


"It is now clear that the use of forged court documents to obtain release from prison is an ongoing threat which all law enforcement, prosecutors, judges, court clerks and prison officials must address and stop," Ashton said.


Upon hearing of Jenkins' release, his former attorney, Bob Wesley, said he was sure "it wasn't a cunning master plan."


Wesley, now the public defender for metro Orlando, recalled his client's crime and said Jenkins broke into a home of someone he knew and was "not smart enough to pull his ski mask down."


Walker was convicted of second-degree murder in a 1999 slaying in Orange County. He told investigators that 23-year-old Cedric Slater was bullying him and he fired three shots intending to scare him.


Walker's then-defense attorney, Robert LeBlanc, now a judge in Orlando, refused to comment.


In a statement, Department of Corrections Secretary Michael Crews said his agency was reviewing records to make sure no other inmates had been released in a similar fashion.


Ashton said another man serving a life sentence for attempting to kill a law enforcement officer was also scheduled to be released using forged documents, but an investigator discovered the scheme before any release.


In 2010, a Wisconsin killer forged documents that shortened his prison sentence and he walked free, only to be captured a week later. In 2012, a prisoner in Pennsylvania was let out with bogus court documents, and the mistake was only discovered months later.


Florida state Rep. Darryl Rouson, the Democratic ranking member of the House Justice Appropriations Subcommittee, said the Legislature should hold hearings on the matter.


"This is unconscionable, almost unthinkable," said Rouson, a St. Petersburg lawyer.


Republican Gov. Rick Scott said he was focused on the manhunt.


"The first thing you do when something like this happens is solve the problem you have at hand," he said. "We need to apprehend these individuals."


In both cases, the forged paperwork included motions from prosecutors to correct "illegal" sentences, accompanied by orders allegedly filed by Judge Perry within the last couple of months. The orders granted a 15-year sentence. Perry is best known for presiding over the Casey Anthony murder trial in 2011.


Leesa Bainbridge, a spokeswoman for the Orange County Clerk of Courts, said the office moves thousands of pages of court documents a day.


"We're kind of like the post office," Bainbridge said. "It comes in and we move it along."


Bainbridge said officials in the clerk's office plan to talk about what measures, if any, can be put in place to make sure something similar doesn't happen again.


"This is something we take very seriously," she said.


___


Farrington reported from Tallahassee, Fla.


___


Follow Mike Schneider on Twitter: http://twitter.com/mikeschneiderap


Follow Brendan Farrington on Twitter: http://twitter.com/bsfarrington


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/2-killers-escape-fla-prison-bogus-documents-230219717.html
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