Monday, January 7, 2013

New antimatter trapping method to provide 'a major experimental advantage'

Jan. 7, 2013 ? Researchers have proposed a method for cooling trapped antihydrogen which they believe could provide 'a major experimental advantage' and help to map the mysterious properties of antimatter that have to date remained elusive.

The new method, developed by a group of researchers from the USA and Canada, could potentially cool trapped antihydrogen atoms to temperatures 25 times colder than already achieved, making them much more stable and a lot easier to experiment on.

The suggested method, which has been published today (Jan. 7, 2013), in IOP Publishing's Journal of Physics B: Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics, involves a laser which is directed at antihydrogen atoms to give them a 'kick', causing them to lose energy and cool down.

Antihydrogen atoms are formed in an ultra-high vacuum trap by injecting antiprotons into positron plasma. An atomic process causes the antiproton to capture a positron which gives an electronically excited antihydrogen atom.

Typically, the antihydrogen atoms have a lot of energy compared to the trapping depth which can distort the measurements of their properties. As it is only possible to trap very few antihydrogen atoms, the main method for reducing the high energies is to laser cool the atoms to extremely low temperatures.

Co-author of the study, Professor Francis Robicheaux of Auburn University in the USA, said: "By reducing the antihydrogen energy, it should be possible to perform more precise measurements of all of its parameters. Our proposed method could reduce the average energy of trapped antihydrogen by a factor of more than 10.

"The ultimate goal of antihydrogen experiments is to compare its properties to those of hydrogen. Colder antihydrogen will be an important step for achieving this."

This process, known as Doppler cooling, is an established method for cooling atoms; however, because of the restricted parameters that are needed to trap antimatter, the researchers need to be absolutely sure that it is possible.

"It is not trivial to make the necessary amount of laser light at a specific wavelength of 121 nm. Even after making the light, it will be difficult to mesh it with an antihydrogen trapping experiment. By doing the calculations, we've shown that this effort is worthwhile," continued Professor Robicheaux.

Through a series of computer simulations, they showed that antihydrogen atoms could be cooled to around 20 millikelvin; trapped antihydrogen atoms so far have energies up to 500 millikelvin.

In 2011, researchers from CERN reported that they had trapped antimatter for over 1000 seconds -- a record. A year later, the first experiments were performed on antihydrogen whilst it was trapped between a series of magnets.

Even though the processes that control the trapping are largely unknown, the researchers believe that the laser cooling should increase the amount of time antihydrogen can be trapped for.

"Whatever the processes are, having slower moving, and more deeply trapped, antihydrogen should decrease the loss rate," said Professor Robicheaux.

Colder antihydrogen atoms could also be used to measure the gravitational property of antimatter. "No one has ever seen antimatter actually fall in the field of gravity," said co-author Dr Makoto Fujiwara of TRIUMF, Canada's National Laboratory for Particle and Nuclear Physics. "Laser cooling would be a very significant step towards such an observation."

Antimatter fast facts:

  • Every particle has an antiparticle. For example, an electron's antiparticle is the positron and a proton's antiparticle is an antiproton.
  • An antiparticle is exactly the same as its corresponding particle but carries an opposite charge.
  • If a particle and its corresponding antiparticle meet, they destroy each other. This is known as annihilation.
  • The combination of one positron and one antiproton creates antihydrogen.
  • Theories suggest that after the Big Bang, equal amounts of matter and antimatter should have formed. As the Universe today is composed almost entirely of matter, it remains a great mystery why we don't have this symmetry.
  • Scientists such as the ALPHA collaboration at CERN have been trying to measure the properties of antihydrogen to find clues as to why this asymmetry exists.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Institute of Physics (IOP).

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


Journal Reference:

  1. P H Donnan, M C Fujiwara, F Robicheaux. A proposal for laser cooling antihydrogen atoms. Journal of Physics B: Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics, 2013; 46 (2): 025302 DOI: 10.1088/0953-4075/46/2/025302

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/physics/~3/VZrvj3uKyls/130107082310.htm

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Have AT&T U-Verse? Well, You're Getting New Movies From Sony, MGM and Two Apps Today

Starting today through Sunday, AT&T U-Verse customers will be able to preview a brand spankin' new Screen Pack filled with even more content than was previously available, says AT&T. For the low, low price of only $5 a month, U-Verse TV Screen Pack customers will instantly have unlimited access to "an extensive library" of movies across the U-Verse ecosystem (Uverse.com, U-Verse app, U-Verse TV). More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/dyGjlm58_cs/have-att-u+verse-well-youre-getting-new-movies-and-apps-today

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Recreation Opportunities Available throughout Holiday Season at ...

Posted on January 3, 2013 by carlosandre in Soccer.

Lynchburg, Va. (PRWEB) December 21, 2012

With the absence of more than 12,000 residential students for winter break, much of Liberty Universitys dining and recreational offerings will be closed for the holidays, but there are still opportunities to get a taste of excitement or enjoy family fun on campus.

Liberty Mountain Snowflex Centre, the only year-round snowless ski slope of its kind in North America, will continue to offer skiing, snowboarding, and tubing during holiday hours: Monday through Friday noon to 10 p.m., Saturday 10 a.m.-10 p.m., and Sunday 2 p.m.10 p.m., with the exception of Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. For those who prefer to get extreme indoors, the Liberty Mountain Skate Park located in the Candlers Station shopping center, will have the same hours.

The LaHaye Ice Center will be open for ice skating Dec. 26 from noon-5 p.m.; Dec. 27, noon-3:30 p.m.; Dec. 28-29, noon-3 p.m. and 6:30-8 p.m.; and Dec. 30, 1-3 p.m.

Sports fans are able to catch the Flames mens basketball team in action at home Dec. 21 and 28. Liberty hosts the Milligan Buffaloes in the first matchup and Union College to close out 2012 play in the Vines Center. Both games tipoff at 7 p.m.

Campus will look as alive and energetic as ever Dec. 30-31 as students are invited to ring in the New Year at Winterfest. Participants can jam to live tunes from some of todays hottest Christian artists, including TobyMac, Red, and Casting Crowns. The event also features dynamic Christian speakers to challenge students in their faith. Winterfest exposes guests to all that campus has to offer, including its exciting recreational activities like indoor soccer, rock climbing, ice skating, and extreme winter sports at the Snowflex Centre.

Liberty University, located in Lynchburg, Va., is the worlds largest Christian university. Nearly 100,000 students attend classes on its 6,800-acre residential campus and study in its thriving online education program.

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Bombing victim grateful for tragedy counseling

(AP) ? When Carolyn McKinstry hears that young survivors of a mass shooting like last month's in Connecticut are receiving counseling, she can speak to its value through her own experience ? or lack of it.

McKinstry was 15 years old when she survived the 1963 bombing of the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala., where four girls were killed. It was a key moment in the civil rights movement.

The only time the bombing was mentioned in her own home during the aftermath was when the FBI came to interview her, said McKinstry on Saturday. Still, her parents listened but didn't talk about it. McKinstry appeared at a news conference Saturday about the Investigation Discovery network film about the civil rights movement, "March to Justice," which will air in February.

"My parents didn't ask, 'are you afraid?'" she said. "It wasn't mentioned ever ? at home, at church or at school."

Only many years later did McKinstry learn that she suffered from depression and a form of survivor's guilt. It was heightened by her experience answering a phone at the church just before the bombing where someone said only, "three minutes," and hung up.

While she wished her parents had said something about the bombing, she realized that it was a different time. Six months after the church bombing, the windows in McKinstry's home were blown out when a bomb went off in the middle of the night across the street.

"I tried to imagine what (my father) would say to me," she said. "He couldn't say, 'don't be afraid, daddy's going to protect you.' He couldn't say 'this is never going to happen again.' There wasn't anything that he could possibly say that would be consoling."

McKinstry, who lives in Birmingham now and works at the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church, said she's glad to hear about it when survivors of the Sandy Hook elementary school shooting in Newtown, Conn., received counseling.

"I don't know who came up with it, but I'm so grateful that it's there," she said. "We probably can't imagine the kinds of things that we head off by allowing time for healing and for that discussion."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-01-05-TV-Victim%20Counseling/id-da68f622c900422eaa3c7d007a30dbbd

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Sunday, January 6, 2013

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PGA Tour's season opener at Kapalua gets mulligan

Charlie Beljan holds an umbrella as he waits his turn to tee off in the first round at the Tournament of Champions golf tournament on Friday, Jan. 4, 2013, in Kapalua, Hawaii. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

Charlie Beljan holds an umbrella as he waits his turn to tee off in the first round at the Tournament of Champions golf tournament on Friday, Jan. 4, 2013, in Kapalua, Hawaii. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

Ben Curtis peers from behind an umbrella protecting him from a driving side-wind as he prepares to tee off on the first hole at the Tournament of Champions golf tournament Friday, Jan. 4, 2013, in Kapalua, Hawaii. The tournament day was scratched later because of wind and rain. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

Ian Poulter, of England, tees off during the first round of the Tournament of Champions golf tournament Friday, Jan. 4, 2013 in Kapalua, Hawaii. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

A fan uses an umbrella as a windbreak while waiting for players to tee off at the first hole at the Tournament of Champions golf tournament on Friday, Jan. 4, 2013, in Kapalua, Hawaii. After a morning of wind and rain, tournament officials suspended play and scrapped the first round. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

Fans huddle under umbrellas in the rain and wind as they wait for players to tee off in the first round at the Tournament of Champions golf tournament on Friday, Jan. 4, 2013, in Kapalua, Hawaii. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

(AP) ? A bum deal for Webb Simpson. A big break for Scott Stallings.

And a mulligan for the PGA Tour.

The new golf season was not even two hours old when the wind squalls roaring down the mountains above Maui made conditions too severe to continue Friday in the Tournament of Champions. Because the first group off had only completed eight holes ? six players had not even started ? and the forecast offered no relief from the wind, the first round was wiped out.

Season opener, take two.

Rickie Fowler will return to the first tee Saturday morning, and for the second straight day, officially launch the PGA Tour season. But even that's in doubt. The plan was to play 36 holes, though the forecast was for wind just as strong.

"I can honestly say the forecast isn't real good, but maybe we'll get lucky," said Slugger White, the tour's vice president of rules and competition. "That's the hope."

Fowler already was 3 over for the day after a 40-mph gust knocked his ball out of the sky on the par-3 eighth and sent it into a gorge, leading to double bogey. Conditions were so tough that only two of the 20 players who had a score on their cards were under par.

One of them was Simpson, who turned in a remarkable performance by keeping it simple and making a few putts. He was 3 under through seven holes, and now starts from scratch when he comes back to the Plantation Course at Kapalua.

"It stinks for me," Simpson said.

Stallings already was 7 over through four holes. That no longer counts, either.

"Obviously, I was thrilled," Stallings said. "It was just really bad. I hit bad shots and got bad breaks. I'd like to know how Webb Simpson was 3 under."

The wind was raging along the west coast of Maui from sunrise, mixed in with clouds and bursts of rain. When the rain stopped, white caps could be seen dancing along the gray ocean below the mountainous course.

The only way players could have claimed to get the short end of the draw would be if the wind had died after play was suspended. Everyone faced the same conditions, except for those who didn't have to play.

"I got off to a great start, but that's the way it goes. I'm sure they made the decision that's best for all the guys," Simpson said. "But the good news is, I had a good start and I'm playing well. We're just trying to keep the ball in play and in front of us and I was able to make a couple of putts. And that's what you have to do on a day like today."

So much for starting the year in paradise. Kapalua in this kind of weather felt more like work than a working vacation.

The 40-mph gusts became too much when Carl Pettersson lagged a 40-foot putt that was slowing around the hole until a gust came up and blew it another 30 feet and just off the green. Hunter Mahan went to address a putt and the ball blew a few feet forward. Ian Poulter said he used his umbrella to shield the wind so he could mark his ball on the green, but when the umbrella moved, so did his golf ball.

"You couldn't identify the best players out here," Pettersson said.

The last time a round was washed out on the PGA Tour was at The Players Championship in 2005, when 30 players were on a soggy Sawgrass course. That tournament finished on Monday, and this one is also scheduled for a Monday finish. With only a 30-man field, it should be no problem getting it finished by then.

But 36 holes figures to be brutal on the caddies who walk a Plantation Course built on a mountain.

"I'm not sure how I'm going to feel," Pettersson said.

Bubba Watson, who had yet to tee off, said it looked like "goofy golf" from what he saw on television. FedEx Cup champion Brandt Snedeker was on the practice range and told of an 8-iron that only went about 50 yards.

"I could have caught it if I ran fast enough," he said.

Those were the kind of shots that counted on the golf course.

Players were averaging about 350 yards off the tee on the first hole, with the trade wind at their backs. On the third hole, dead into the wind, no one hit a drive longer than 248 yards except for Stallings ? his went 265 yards, only because it hit a cart path and disappeared into the native grass and was never found.

Fowler hit a driver and a 5-iron on the third hole. It's usually a wedge.

"Numbers were kind of irrelevant at times," Fowler said, referring to yardages.

That happens all the time in golf, especially on links courses. The problem, however, was on the putting greens. And the back nine is the most exposed to the wind.

Why even start?

"We aren't really looking for these gusts up to 40 mph," White said. "We had gusts up to 42 mph. I don't think you can just not try to play."

Kuchar was on the eighth tee when play was stopped. He stood over his 4-iron, then back off. He got back into position to play, and then backed off again.

"It just felt too funny to pull the trigger," he said.

Players originally were told to stay on the course to see if conditions would improve, and before long, they were brought back to the clubhouse. About an hour later, White met with them in the dining room to tell them the day was over.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-01-05-Tournament%20of%20Champions/id-93a4eb4a6bcb4ea9acfcf7aea1c34be3

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Budget battles threaten to limit Obama's second-term agenda

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - After a brutal "fiscal cliff" battle, President Barack Obama's looming budget confrontation with Congress threatens to sharply curtail his second-term agenda and limit his ambitions on priorities such as immigration reform and gun control.

Obama has vowed to push ahead with other legislative priorities during the fiscal fight, but faces the likelihood that they will be elbowed aside in a fierce struggle with Republicans over approaching deadlines to raise the limit on federal borrowing, cut spending and fund government operations.

Obama and Congress must agree by the end of March on increasing the $16.4 trillion debt ceiling, the fate of $85 billion in delayed automatic spending cuts and passage of a bill to fund the government after a temporary measure expires.

Those budget battles could be even more intense than the weeks-long "fiscal cliff" fight that ended on New Year's Day with an agreement to raise taxes on the wealthy, leaving divided Republicans itching for revenge and a fractured relationship between Obama and Republican House Speaker John Boehner.

"We always felt that a bipartisan and amicable conclusion to the fiscal cliff would lead to a very positive agenda for the next two years, and the opposite occurred. It bodes poorly for Obama's other major priorities," said Jim Kessler, senior vice president for policy at the centrist think tank Third Way.

"There is a high level of dysfunction. They haven't cracked the code yet on how to work with each other," Kessler said of Obama and congressional Republicans.

The fiscal cliff fight overwhelmed nearly everything else at the White House for two months. A similar result in the budget battle would be bad news for Obama, cutting into the narrow one-year to 18-month window when second-term presidents traditionally still have the political clout to achieve their most significant legislative victories.

"From a Republican standpoint, if you don't want Obama to get any oxygen on these other issues, focusing on the fiscal cliff and all these budget issues is a very good way to run out the clock on him," said Republican strategist John Feehery, a former Capitol Hill aide.

Obama has promised to pursue a broad second-term agenda focused on comprehensive immigration reform, bolstering domestic energy production, fighting climate change and gun control. After the "fiscal cliff" deal, he said he would not curtail his agenda because of the looming budget fights.

"We can settle this debate, or at the very least, not allow it to be so all-consuming all the time that it stops us from meeting a host of other challenges that we face," Obama said on New Year's Day before boarding a flight to Hawaii to resume a holiday interrupted by the fiscal cliff fight.

"It's not just possible to do these things; it's an obligation to ourselves and to future generations," he said.

PRIMED FOR A FIGHT

Republicans are primed for the coming fight, believing they have more leverage against Obama than during the fiscal cliff battle. Failure to close a deal on the debt ceiling could mean a default on U.S. debt or another downgrade in the U.S. credit rating like the one after a similar showdown in 2011.

A failure to reach agreement on a government funding bill could mean another federal shutdown like brief ones in 1995 and 1996.

Republicans say they will not back an increase in the federal debt ceiling without significant spending cuts opposed by many Democrats, particularly to popular "entitlement" programs such as the government-funded Medicare and Medicaid healthcare plans for the elderly and poor.

"When you look at what's coming down the pike, it will make the fiscal cliff look like a day in Sunday school," said Democratic strategist Chris Kofinis.

"You're talking about a battle that's going to last weeks or months. If they get a deal, it's going to be ugly, it's going to be brutal. Once you get past that, where do you find the will to address other issues? It's going to be very hard," he said.

Administration officials promise to move quickly in January in pursuit of new legislation on gun control and immigration. The gun control effort will be led by Vice President Joe Biden, who was appointed to develop a response to the deadly Connecticut school shootings in December.

But what seemed to be fresh momentum for new measures such as a ban on assault rifles after the mass killing in Connecticut could be stalled by a protracted focus on the seemingly never-ending budget showdowns.

Obama also plans to introduce comprehensive immigration legislation this month. Republicans will have fresh incentive on the issue after Hispanics soundly rejected Republican presidential contender Mitt Romney in the November election, giving Obama more than 70 percent of their vote.

But a Senate Republican leadership aide said economic issues would be the prime concern of Congress for months, pushing back consideration of gun control and immigration. The aide blamed Obama.

"The lack of leadership on spending and debt has put us behind on a number of other issues. That is not something that can be resolved quickly," the aide said.

When blocked in Congress, Obama has shown a willingness to use executive orders and agency rules to make policy changes. During last year's campaign, Obama ordered an end to deportations of young undocumented immigrants who came to the country as children and had never committed a crime.

This week, the Department of Homeland Security changed its rules to make it easier for undocumented immigrants to get a waiver allowing them to stay in the country as they seek permanent residency.

With Republicans motivated to improve their standing with Hispanics, there is a chance Congress will work with the White House to pass an immigration bill that both bolsters border security and offers a pathway to legal status for undocumented immigrants who pay their back taxes and fines.

Finding the rare sweet spot where Obama and Republicans actually agree on an issue could be the key to second-term legislative success.

"The only thing that gets done outside of the economy are things that Republicans decide they have to get done for their own political futures," Feehery said.

But Kessler said he was skeptical that Obama and Congress can find common ground on a comprehensive immigration measure that provides a long-term solution for the country's 12 million illegal immigrants.

"Will something get done on immigration? Probably. But a major deal that addresses all undocumented immigrants in a comprehensive way? We're much less confident than we were two weeks ago," Kessler said.

"The question now is, do they even know how to make deals with each other?" he said.

(Additional reporting by Jeff Mason and Thomas Ferraro; Editing by Claudia Parsons)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/budget-battles-threaten-limit-obamas-second-term-agenda-193036078.html

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Saturday, January 5, 2013

Overnight house fire north of Covington leaves family homeless ...

An overnight house fire in the Lake Ramsey community north of Covington completely destroyed a trailer home, leaving a family of three homeless, according to information from St. Tammany Fire District 12. No one was home when the blaze broke out at 76021 Carroll Drive, and no one was injured, spokesman James Hartman said Friday.

The fire was reported at 4:35 a.m., Hartman said, and firefighters arrived seven minutes later to find 60 percent of the double-wide trailer in flames. Four fire engines, a tanker truck and a rescue unit responded, with a total of 14 firefighters from Fire District 12, he said.

The fire was under control by 4:54 a.m., but Hartman said the fire apparently had started well before the first 911 call, and the damage was severe.

The owner was at work when the fire broke out, but returned after it was under control, Hartman said. The other two family members who lived there, a 22-year-old and a 2-year-old, also were away. The American Red Cross was notified and was sending aid.

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Lilly 2013 profit forecast tops expectations

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) ? Eli Lilly and Co. unveiled a better-than-expected 2013 earnings forecast Friday, in part because the pharmaceutical company expects growth from several established drugs to help make up for revenue lost to generic competition.

The Indianapolis drug developer saw sales for its all-time best-selling drug, the antipsychotics Zyprexa, crater in 2012 after it lost U.S. patent protection. Lilly will take another hit next December when it loses patent protection for its current top seller, the antidepressant Cymbalta.

But company executives told analysts Friday they still expect Cymbalta and another product that loses patent protection in 2013, the insulin Humalog, to help drive revenue growth along with products like the cancer treatment Alimta and the erectile dysfunction drug Cialis.

Lilly also expects more growth from Japan, developing countries and its animal health business.

All told, the drugmaker forecast 2013 adjusted earnings of between $3.75 and $3.90 per share on $22.6 billion to $23.4 billion in revenue.

That topped analyst expectations, on average, for earnings of $3.72, according to FactSet. Analysts also expected $22.87 billion in revenue.

Company shares climbed $1.71, or 3.4 percent, to $51.43 in Friday afternoon trading, while broader indexes rose less than 1 percent.

Lilly said it expects operating expenses will be flat or drop slightly compared with 2012, and that was slightly better than what Edward Jones analyst Judson Clark expected.

He called Lilly's 2013 forecast "a pleasant surprise," but he also noted that plenty of long-term concerns remain. Lilly won't feel the brunt of the Cymbalta patent loss until 2014, and Clark expects the company's earnings to shrink then. What remains to be seen, he said, is whether the drugmaker is willing to preserve its dividend and cut expenses enough to tame that loss.

"We think the real question marks are in 2014," he said.

Lilly also expects to counter the patent expirations by developing new drugs, and the company said Friday it has 13 experimental drugs in late-stage testing, the last phase before a company seeks regulatory approval.

Lilly reiterated on Friday that it expects at least $3 billion in net income and revenue of at least $20 billion through 2014. It also expects to keep paying its dividend and to buy back $1.5 billion in shares this year.

Zyprexa once brought in more than $5 billion in annual revenue for Lilly, but its sales sank 66 percent through the first nine months of 2012 after generic competition entered the market. The company expects revenue from Cymbalta, which topped $4 billion in 2011, to start falling in this year's fourth quarter.

Humalog, Lilly's best-selling insulin, brought in about $1.4 billion in U.S. revenue in 2011. That product may take less of a sales hit after it loses U.S. patent protection in May because it's a biologic drug made from living cells instead of a chemical formula. Those are harder for generic drugmakers to replicate.

Lilly should not expect to replace blockbuster drug revenue with another round of blockbusters, said WBB Securities analyst Steve Brozak. He said the company's success will depend on a combination of drug development, partnerships with other companies and acquisitions that help stoke its product pipeline.

But that approach will be difficult because other drugmakers also are facing patent expirations and will be competing with Lilly on those deals.

"If (Lilly executives) think that business as usual applies, their shareholders are going to vote with their sell orders," he said.

The company reports fourth-quarter and 2012 results Jan. 29.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lilly-2013-profit-forecast-tops-expectations-130042995--finance.html

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Friday, January 4, 2013

Borger: Deal was bound to collapse (CNN)

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Spotify halts music purchases in the UK, says it's 'simplifying' the service

Spotify halts track purchases in the UK, says it's 'simplifying' the service

We're not sure how many Brits use Spotify to actually buy music, considering that the service is mainly known for streaming, but the question has suddenly become academic. Anyone in the UK who tries to use the desktop app to buy new tracks will now be confronted with the message above. It offers little explanation of what's going on but does at least link to a help page that reassures those who already possess unused download credits or a gift card. Spotify sent us the following statement, which is pretty abstract but makes it clear this is more than temporary:

We recently updated Spotify to further simplify the service and pave the way for new features announced at the end of last year. In-app purchases aren't part of this update but we're not ruling out their return. Credits/gift cards already purchased are still redeemable.

Update: We hear from a reader in Sweden that the same thing has happened in that country -- so it probably applies internationally, wherever the download option was originally available. Spotify in the US was already streaming-only, so American users will likely notice no change.

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Source: Pocket-lint

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/04/spotify-halts-music-purchases-in-the-uk/

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The Note's Must-Reads for Thursday, January 3, 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, Amanda VanAllen, and Carrie Halperin

FISCAL CLIFF: ABC News' Devin Dwyer, John Parkinson and Sunlen Miller: " President Obama Hails 'Cliff' Deal, Warns of Next Fiscal Fight" Minutes after the House of Representatives approved a bipartisan Senate deal to avert the "fiscal cliff" and preserve Bush-era tax cuts for all Americans making less than $400,000 per year, President Obama praised party leaders and wasted little time turning to the next fiscal fight. "This is one step in the broader effort to strengthen our economy for everybody," Obama said. LINK

The Wall Street Journal's Christopher Rowland: " House OK's fiscal deal as GOP resistance wanes" Almost 24 hours after Congress careened off the fiscal cliff, a bipartisan House of Representatives late Tuesday approved a Senate bill reversing income tax increases and pulling the nation back from the potentially calamitous economic consequences. The vote did not come easily. LINK

The Hill's Russell Berman: " Boehner tells GOP he's through with one-on-one Obama talks" Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) is signaling that at least one thing will change about his leadership during the 113th Congress: he's telling Republicans he is done with private, one-on-one negotiations with President Obama. During both 2011 and 2012, the Speaker spent weeks shuttling between the Capitol and the White House for meetings with the president in the hopes of striking a grand bargain on the deficit. LINK

The Los Angeles Times' David Lauter: " Parties role reversal complicates spending debates" Congress has become the butt of late-night comedians for waiting until the last minute to do any work, yet its procrastination involves something more than fecklessness: The issue over which it keeps stumbling not only separates its two parties into warring camps, but divides them internally. At its core, the debate over the size of government and how to pay for it pits the interests of the huge baby boom generation, now mostly in their 50s and 60s, against the needs of the even larger cohort in their teens and 20s. LINK

The Washington Times' Dave Boyer: " Tax hike deal: Obama's first or GOP's last?" President Obama and congressional Republicans have learned sharply different lessons from the deal to avert the "fiscal cliff" as they prepare to battle again over the next two months on a series of budget deadlines that carry risks such as crippling defense cuts and a government default. Mr. Obama, having won the first round by forcing congressional Republicans to accept a tax increase for the first time in 20 years, said the deal set a precedent for agreements on deficit reduction and federal spending. All deals, he said, must achieve balance by requiring wealthier individuals or corporations to pay more taxes. LINK

The New York Times' Jonathan Weisman: " Tax Deal Shows Possible Path Around House G.O.P. in Fiscal Fights to Come" With the contentious 112th Congress coming to a close, the talks between the White House, Senate Republicans and Senate Democrats that secured a path around a looming fiscal crisis on Tuesday may point the way forward for President Obama as he tries to navigate his second term around House Republicans intent on blocking his agenda in the 113th. LINK

Politico's Steven Sloan: " Dems will need new game plan to score tax revenue" The fiscal cliff deal handed Democrats a tax victory years in the making, but it also means the party will need a new playbook for the budget battles that lie ahead. That's because many Democrats readily acknowledge that they've exhausted their ability to raise taxes on the richest Americans by jacking up their rates. LINK

SANDY AID: New York Daily News' Joseph Straw, Erin Durkin and Corky Siemaszko: " In an about face, House Speaker Boehner promises quick action on $60 billion in Hurricane Sandy Aid" Facing a storm of outrage, House Speaker John Boehner did an about face Wednesday and promised to quickly pass $60 billion in Hurricane Sandy aid - a day after abruptly canceling a vote on the package. Officials from New York and surrounding states had spent much of the day blasting Boehner for initially yanking the Sandy aid from consideration. Some of the fiercest criticism came from fellow Republicans. LINK

The Washington Post's Dana Milbank: " Defined by a Sandy sidestep" The end-of-term reviews of John Boehner's House speakership are in, and they aren't pretty. "The conduct of the Republican leadership was disgraceful, it was indefensible and it was immoral." LINK

CONGRESS: USA Today's Fredreka Schouten: " Fundraising begins anew for newly elected to Congress" Welcome to Congress. Now get back to fundraising. More than 40% of the 82 incoming House freshmen had more debt than leftover cash in the bank, a USA TODAY analysis of final election reports shows. LINK

ABC NEWS VIDEOS " Hillary Clinton Spotted Outside Hospital" LINK

BOOKMARKS: The Note: LINK The Must-Reads Online: LINK Top Line Webcast (12noon EST M-F): LINK ABC News Politics: LINK The Political Punch (Jake Tapper): 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

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/notes-must-reads-thursday-january-3-2013-080654130--abc-news-politics.html

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Joe Lauzon: ?I don?t want to have wars if that means I?m going to forget my own name?

Joe Lauzon's followers on Twitter and Instagram have been treated to the after pictures from Lauzon's bloody, three-round battle with Jim Miller at UFC 155. Lauzon has shared a picture every day of the swelling, cuts and bruises that came from the bout, which Lauzon lost by decision. The picture above is from Wednesday night, when Lauzon said he was "starting to look better."

The pictures are a poignant and even painful reminder of the kind of damage fighters take in the fights we love the most. Lauzon has only had two fights go to decision in his career. He is aware of the kind of damage fighters can take in bouts like his on Saturday.

"I don't feel I've taken any real abuse or punishment," Lauzon said. "But the thing is I don't want to. I don't want to have wars if that means I'm going to forget my own name. If it got to that point, I would reassess everything and take a step back.

Most of the time, Lauzon wins his fights by submission. Eighteen of his 22 wins have ended with a submission, which usually means less damage than in a knockout.

Lauzon worked in information technology and went to school for computer science. He has plenty of opportunities outside of fighting.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/joe-lauzon-don-t-want-wars-means-m-152239868--mma.html

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Research and Markets: BMW Group ? Key Business & Growth ...

DUBLIN?(BUSINESS WIRE)?Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/nq95gk/bmw_group_key) has announced the addition of the "BMW Group ? Key Business & Growth Strategies, Plans, SWOT, Trends & Outlook for 2013" company profile to their offering. This comprehensive report on BMW Group will provide & will be useful for: ? Strategic Planning, Competitive?

Source: http://rambergmedia.com/research-and-markets-bmw-group-key-business-growth-strategies-plans-swot-trends-outlook-for-2013/

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UK's first hand transplant operation

A former pub landlord from West Yorkshire has become the first person in the UK to have a hand transplant.

Mark Cahill, who is 51, had been unable to use his right hand after it was affected by gout.

Doctors say he is making good progress after an eight-hour operation at Leeds General Infirmary.

It is still very early to assess how much control of the hand will be gained - so far he can wiggle his fingers, but has no sense of touch.

'My hand' Continue reading the main story

The new hand

It is early days to assess what level of function Mr Cahill will achieve with his new hand.

Surgeons hope that within 18 months it will be a huge improvement on what he had before.

Prof Simon Kay said: "I would hope that he has a quite a strong grasp, good sensibility in the hand, good ability to feel and a precision pinch."

Both doctors and patient are pleased so far.

Hand transplants raise more ethical questions than other transplants, such as the heart, as they improve the quality of life rather than saving a life.

Yet Mr Cahill will need a lifetime of drugs to suppress his immune system in order to stop his body rejecting the donor hand. This can leave him vulnerable to infection.

Mark Cahill, from Greetland near Halifax, said: "When I look at it and move it, it just feels like my hand.

"Right now it feels really good, it's not a lot of pain, it looks good, it looks a great match and I'm looking forward to getting it working now."

Mr Cahill's new hand is still bandaged up, but he can already move his fingers. It is hoped that with time he will gain much greater levels of movement and sensation.

He developed gout in his toes and feet 20 years ago. Five years ago it spread to his right hand leaving him unable to open his fingers or use his hand for anything.

One option would have been a bionic hand, but he volunteered for the pioneering surgery.

As well as being a first for the UK, it was also the first time a recipient's hand has been amputated during an operation to attach a donor hand.

The fresh cut, made where you would wear a watch, allowed surgeons to connect nerves in Mr Cahill's arm with those in the donor hand with great precision - along with the bone, blood vessels and tendons.

The operation took place on 27 December when a donor hand became available.

'Extremely challenging'

Prof Simon Kay, a consultant plastic surgeon at the hospital, said: "The team was on standby from the end of November awaiting a suitable donor limb, and the call came just after Christmas.

"It was extremely challenging to be the first team in the UK to carry out such a procedure.

"It is still early days but indications are good and the patient is making good progress."

He also paid tribute to the donor and their family.

Continue reading the main story

Milestones

  • Transplants have a long history with the first taking place more than a century ago - in 1905. Alois Glogar was blinded in an accident working with lime. Dr Eduard Zirm grafted corneas from an 11-year-old boy onto both eyes - one failed, but the other allowed Mr Glogar to see.
  • The first successful kidney transplant took place in 1954 between identical twins.
  • Dr Christiaan Barnard was the first to perform a successful heart transplant in South Africa in 1967.
  • The first hand transplant was in 1998.
  • In 2005 the first partial face transplant was carried out in France. Isabelle Dinoire, who had been mauled by her dog, was given a new nose, chin and lips.
  • The first full face transplant took place in 2010.

Leeds General Infirmary already has a reputation for reattaching hands which have been accidentally cut off.

This operation has been planned for more than two years and the hospital was in touch with plastic surgeons across the country looking for people who might be suitable.

Potential patients had to be assessed - both physically and psychologically - to ensure they were suitable for the procedure.

The surgical team also liaised with surgeons in France who performed the first hand transplant in 1998.

'Mentally detached'

The first recipient was Clint Hallam, from New Zealand, who had lost a hand in an accident with a circular saw more than a decade earlier.

He later had the hand removed, complaining it was like a dead man's hand with no feeling in it.

He said he felt "mentally detached" from the transplant, which was wider and longer than his own. The skin was also a different colour.

Surgeons do try to find hand transplants which are a close physical match to a patient, however, they are very visible, unlike a transplanted internal organ such as a kidney.

Ensuring a patient is prepared for the mental challenge of living with a hand which is not their own is considered as important as the surgical element of the transplant.

More than 60 hand transplants have been carried out around the world.

Prof Norman Williams, the president of the Royal College of Surgeons, said: "This is yet another example of life-changing surgical advancements that are now possible."

"As with all procedures that improve the quality of life rather than save it, there is an ethical balance to be struck - especially as the lifelong anti-rejection medication that the patient would need to take carries its own risks.

"Care always needs to be taken in choosing suitable patients who understand the risks and benefits."

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-20898940#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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