Monday, October 8, 2012

Mom: Student didn't touch officer who shot him

(AP) ? The mother of a University of South Alabama freshman killed by a campus police officer said Monday she's been told he never touched the officer who shot him.

Gil Collar of Wetumpka was naked when he was shot at 1:30 a.m. Saturday outside the campus police station. University officials said Collar, a star wrestler at Wetumpka High School before enrolling in South Alabama, assumed a "fighting stance" and chased the officer before being shot. The university said security video captured the events.

"I have been told by someone involved in the investigation that the videotape shows my son never touched the police officer," Bonnie Smith Collar said in a phone interview. She did not elaborate on how the person was involved in the investigation.

The university said the officer heard a bang on a window at campus police headquarters and went outside to investigate. The officer tried to retreat numerous times to defuse the situation before opening fire, the university said in a news release.

Collar's mother said she has received conflicting information about what might have happened before the shooting and declined to discuss it. But, she said, "Whatever caused the incident was something that made him act not in his normal personality."

"I ask that everyone withhold their judgment about what did or did not happen until the evidence comes out," his mother said.

Collar's high school wrestling coach, Jeff Glass, said he was a popular student who even made friends with his opponents on the wrestling mat.

"He didn't know an enemy, but he had a way of making you feel like you were his best friend," Glass said.

He said Collar was so good-looking that other wrestlers didn't want to stand next to him in the team picture.

"The girls thought he was the best thing they had ever seen, and they may have been right," he said.

He said Collar was a good athlete but stood only 5-foot-7 and 135 pounds.

Those measurements are backed up by court records that show Collar had two minor scrapes with police earlier this year: He got a speeding ticket for driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone in May, and he paid a $25 fine after pleading guilty to being a minor in possession of tobacco after being caught with three cigarettes in March.

A candlelight vigil is planned for 6 p.m. Tuesday at Wetumpka High School. Collar's mother said funeral arrangements have not yet been made yet.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-10-08-Naked%20Student%20Shot/id-ac3035bcba7f4474a6b7f5e60df1d16a

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Bitter taste receptors regulate upper respiratory defense system

ScienceDaily (Oct. 8, 2012) ? A new study from a team of researchers at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, the Monell Chemical Senses Center, and the Philadelphia VA Medical Center, reveals that a person's ability to taste certain bitter flavors is directly related to their ability to fight off upper respiratory tract infections, specifically chronic sinus infections. The new research is published in the latest edition of the Journal of Clinical Investigation.

Most humans experience five types of tastes: sweet, salty, sour, bitter, and savory. The sense of taste is mediated by taste receptor cells which are bundled in our taste buds. "Sour" and "bitter" taste sensations alert the body to harmful foods that have spoiled or are toxic. But based on genetics, up to 25 percent of the population cannot detect certain bitter flavors (non-tasters), 25 percent can detect exceedingly small quantities (super-tasters), and the rest of us fall somewhere between these two extremes.

So what exactly does drinking a cup of bitter coffee have to do with chronic sinus infections, which account for approximately 18-22 million physician visits in the U.S. each year? Recent investigations have shown that these taste receptors (T2Rs) are also found in both upper and lower human respiratory tissue, likely signaling a connection between activation of bitter tastes and the need to launch an immune response in these areas when they are exposed to potentially harmful bacteria and viruses.

"With this information in mind, we wanted to better understand the exact role that bitter taste receptors play in the upper airway, especially between these super and non-tasters," says Noam Cohen, MD, PhD, assistant professor of Otorhinolaryngology: Head and Neck Surgery, staff physician at the Philadelphia VAMC, and senior author of the new study.

Cohen and his colleagues formulated the following hypotheses around the connection:

(1) bitter taste receptors are functional in the nose (upper respiratory tract), and each receptor detects a specific type of bacteria;

(2) upon activation by a specific bacterial product, the bitter taste receptor initiates a local defensive response to combat the attacking bacteria; and

(3) genetic variability of the bitter taste receptors alters the vigorousness of the response, thus leaving certain individuals with very strong defenses and others with weak defenses against a specific bacteria.

To test these hypotheses, the team grew cell cultures from sinus and nasal tissue samples collected during sinus surgical procedures. These cultures develop cilia, produce mucus, and reflect many of the defensive workings found inside the nose and sinuses.

They found that one of the bitter taste receptors that functions in upper airway cells, known as T2R38, acts as a type of "security guard" for the upper airway by detecting molecules that a certain class of bacteria secretes. "These molecules instruct other bacteria to form a biofilm, which helps harbor the bacteria. From previous work, we know that these biofilms spur the immune system to mount an over-exuberant inflammatory response that can lead to sinusitis symptoms. When the T2R38 receptor detects these molecules, it activates local defensive maneuvers to increase mucus clearance and kill the invading bacteria. It's really like modern warfare -- intercept the enemies' early communications to thwart their plans and win the battle," Cohen said, who is also the director of the Rhinology Research Lab at Penn.

Through the cultures, the research team demonstrated that super-tasters detect very small concentrations of the offending molecules, while non-tasters and the middle-ground individuals require 100 times more of the molecule for detection. The research team also examined the patients that the original sinus tissue samples were collected from. They found that none of the super tasters were infected with the specific type of bacteria that are detected by the T2R38 receptor, known as a gram-negative bacteria.

"Based on these findings, we believe that other bitter taste receptors in the airway perform the same "guard duty" function for early detection of attack by different types of bacteria, and we hope to translate these findings into personalized diagnostics for patients with chronic rhinosinusitis," Cohen says.

The research team is also using the results of the current study to develop a simple "taste-test" protocol to be conducted during clinic visits. "We're optimistic that a test of this nature will help us predict who is at risk to develop biofilms based on their ability to taste various bitter compounds. Additionally, we are looking at therapeutic outcomes, both surgical and medical, based on the taster/non-taster genetic status to determine whether knowing this status will stratify patients to either surgical or medical interventions."

Funding for the study came from the Flight Attendants Medical Research Institute 082478 (NAC), and a philanthropic contribution from the RLG Foundation, Inc. (NAC) as well as several grants from the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders to the Monell collaborators.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Robert J. Lee, Guoxiang Xiong, Jennifer M. Kofonow, Bei Chen, Anna Lysenko, Peihua Jiang, Valsamma Abraham, Laurel Doghramji, Nithin D. Adappa, James N. Palmer, David W. Kennedy, Gary K. Beauchamp, Paschalis-Thomas Doulias, Harry Ischiropoulos, James L. Kreindler, Danielle R. Reed, Noam A. Cohen. T2R38 taste receptor polymorphisms underlie susceptibility to upper respiratory infection. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 2012; DOI: 10.1172/JCI64240

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/living_well/~3/4zhjs8uuuA8/121008134025.htm

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Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Baboon personalities connected to social success and health benefits

ScienceDaily (Oct. 1, 2012) ? Whether human or baboon, it helps to have friends. For both species, studies have shown that robust social networks lead to better health and longer lives. Now, a team of University of Pennsylvania researchers has helped show that baboon personality plays a role in these outcomes, and, like people, some baboons' personalities are better suited to making and keeping friends than others.

The research was conducted by psychology professor Robert Seyfarth and biology professor Dorothy Cheney, both of Penn's School of Arts and Sciences. They collaborated with the Arizona State University's Joan Silk.

Their work was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Seyfarth and Cheney, along with their colleagues and students, have spent the last 17 years observing a group of baboons living in the Moremi Game Reserve in Botswana, studying the biological roots of their social dynamics. As with many other primates, baboon societies are strongly hierarchical. Females "inherit" their dominance ranks from their mothers and enjoy priority of access to food and mates. But high-ranking females do not always have greater reproductive success than low-ranking females. This suggests that, when it comes to evolutionary success, the inherited advantage of high rank can't explain everything.

"If you look at a baboon society," Seyfarth said, "and see the ranked, matrilineal families, you would think that whatever traits put an individual at the top of the hierarchy, that's what natural selection is going to favor. But that turns out not to be the case.

"In fact, dominance rank is not as good a predictor of reproductive outcomes as a close network of social relationships and stable relationships over time. So our question became 'What predicts having a strong network?'"

Baboon females actively work to maintain close social bonds, but, like humans, some baboons seemed to be better at it than others. With such traits closely tied to fitness and reproductive success, the Penn researchers wanted to get at the root of this variation.

During seven years of observations in the animals' natural habitat, the researchers measured individual female baboons on their sociability. They measured the number of grooming partners a baboon had, as well her tendency to be friendly or aggressive toward others. They also measured reproductive and fitness benefits they accrued: how long individuals and their offspring lived, as well as their stress levels, as determined by the presence of certain hormones in their droppings.

The researchers found that strength of an individual's social bonds was not fully predicted by seemingly obvious factors, such as the female's rank or the size of the family she was born into.

"Even when a female has a lot of relatives," Cheney said, "sometimes she's a loner, but some females who have no relatives do just fine. It suggests that you have to be both lucky and skilled to have these networks."

And, again like humans, these skills came down to individual personality traits. To determine a female's personality, the researchers paid close attention to grunting behavior. For baboons, grunting greases the social wheels. If a lower-ranking female grunts when approaching a higher-ranking female, the grunt acts as a kind of appeasement, reducing the chance of receiving aggression. Conversely, if a higher-ranking female grunts to a lower-ranking female, the grunt puts her at ease, increasing the chance of a friendly social interaction. And females of all ranks grunt when approaching a mother with an infant, because grunts increase the likelihood that the mother will allow the grunter to interact with her child.

Working bottom up from the trends they found in the baboon's behavior, the researchers grouped the baboons into three distinct personality profiles: "nice," "aloof" and "loner."

Nice females were friendly to all others and often grunted to lower-ranking females to signal reassurance. They formed strong and enduring social bonds with fairly consistent partner preferences over time.

Aloof females were more aggressive and less friendly, and they grunted primarily to higher-ranking females who had infants. They formed weaker bonds but had very consistent partner preferences.

Loner females were often alone and relatively unfriendly; they grunted primarily to appease higher-ranking females without infants. They formed weak bonds with changing partners.

Of the three, the loners had the highest stress levels, the weakest social bonds and the least stable social partners over time. Both of these measures were correlated with lower offspring survival and shorter lifespans. Both nice and aloof females showed the health and reproductive benefits associated with strong social bonds.

"This belies the idea that everything is competition and conflict," Cheney said.

While the mechanisms that make both "nice" and "aloof" effective strategies remains unclear, the study shows that cooperative personalities are adaptive.

"These results have allowed us to, for the first time in a wild primate, link personality characteristics, social skill and reproductive success," Seyfarth said. "By being a nice baboon, you increase the likelihood of having strong social bonds, which in turn translates to a better chance of passing on your genes."

The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health, Leakey Foundation and National Geographic Society.

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/strange_science/~3/NuFP-3DKu3s/121001151955.htm

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How immune cells defend themselves against HIV

ScienceDaily (Sep. 26, 2012) ? A team of scientists led by virologists Prof. Oliver T. Fackler and Prof. Oliver T. Keppler from Heidelberg University Hospital have decoded a mechanism used by the human immune system to protect itself from HIV viruses. A protein stops the replication of the virus in resting immune cells, referred to as T helper cells, by preventing the transcription of the viral genome into one that can be read by the cell. The ground-breaking results provide new insights into the molecular background of the immunodeficiency syndrome AIDS and could open up starting points for new treatments.

The study has now been published -- ahead of print online -- in the international journal Nature Medicine.

Human immunodeficiency viruses attack different cells of the human immune system, most frequently, "T helper cells." These lymphocytes play a key role in immune defense, since they activate other immune cells upon contact with pathogens and set off subsequent immune responses. In the course of the HIV infection, they are continuously depleted until the immune system ultimately fails, culminating in AIDS with various infections.

In healthy people, the vast majority of T helper cells in the blood are in a resting state. They are not activated until they contact the pathogens against which they are specialized in defending. In the activated state, the cells are susceptible to HIV infection. "In contrast, resting T helper cells are immune to HIV: While the virus docks, and delivers its genetic information to the cell, the infection does not progress further. We have investigated why this is the case," explained Prof. Fackler, head of the working group at the Department of Infectious Diseases, Virology. Even if the T helper cells are activated later on, the virus does not replicate, because the genetic information of the virus is degraded during this period.

HIV genome cannot be transcribed into cell-compatible version

The team is headed by Prof. Fackler and Prof. Keppler, who moved from Heidelberg to the University Hospital in Frankfurt in April 2012 and now heads the Institute of Medical Virology there. The researchers discovered that the cellular protein SAMHD1 significantly contributes to protecting the resting immune cells. The protein is present in both resting and activated T helper cells and depletes nucleotides, the building blocks of genetic information. In the active phase the cells double their genetic information and divide, a process that depends on the continoues production of nucleotides. In the resting state, the cell does not require any nucleotides and stops their production, and SAMHD1 degrades the remaining nucleotides. "As a result, the HIV viruses most likely also lack the material they need to transcribe their genetic information into a version that can be used for the cell and to allow it to replicate," Fackler explained.

In the experiment, if SAMHD1 expression was silenced, resting T helper cells became susceptible to HIV infection. The same was true for immune cells of a patient who is unable to produce SAMHD1 due to a hereditary condition. "This shows that HIV can only replicate in lymphocytes if the effect of the protective protein SAMHD1 is eliminated," Keppler said. In addition, the researchers discovered that this early protective measure must be followed by other barriers to HIV replication. Even without SAMHD1, no new viruses were released from resting T helper cells. Now that they have described the protective function of SAMHD1 and are able block it, the scientists can for the first time also investigate the downstream mechanisms. "We hope that we will be able to use these findings to develop new strategies in the fight against HIV," the virologist said.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Heidelberg University Hospital.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Hanna-Mari Baldauf, Xiaoyu Pan, Elina Erikson, Sarah Schmidt, Waaqo Daddacha, Manja Burggraf, Kristina Schenkova, Ina Ambiel, Guido Wabnitz, Thomas Gramberg, Sylvia Panitz, Egbert Flory, Nathaniel R Landau, Serkan Sertel, Frank Rutsch, Felix Lasitschka, Baek Kim, Renate K?nig, Oliver T Fackler, Oliver T Keppler. SAMHD1 restricts HIV-1 infection in resting CD4 T cells. Nature Medicine, 2012; DOI: 10.1038/nm.2964

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/-9yz-ZgvbM4/121001095905.htm

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Monday, October 1, 2012

Dexter, Season 7

Katy Waldman: Top of the morning! Showtime has put this episode of Dexter online for free and I?m ready to take another stab at this. A few Slate commenters seem to think the episode's intricacy is an asset. Adam T. says the series is "getting good again," after lackluster showings in Seasons 5 and 6. On the other hand, Dodgy believes "a very good series is passing its sell-by date."

Torie Bosch: Did you say "intricacy"? I thought it was mostly the same old?Dexter is frantic not to get caught, someone else in Miami Metro Homicide has been shot, there's a new villain on the loose, and Dexter wants to take care of him before his colleagues. I think I'd have to agree with Dodgy, much as it pains me.

James Remar as Harry Morgan and Michael C. Hall as Dexter Morgan. James Remar as Harry Morgan and Michael C. Hall as Dexter Morgan (Season 7, episode 2).

Photo by Randy Tepper/Showtime.

Waldman: I disagree! The more I think about it, the more excited I am by last night's episode. The fact that Deb knows Dexter?s secret, I think, could breathe fresh life into the show. It seems like a game-changer. (And I like the way Kimberly Roots at TV Line puts it: Dex?s ?Jenga tower of lies? is beginning to ?teeter big time.?)

Bosch: TV Guide has an interview with showrunner Scott Buck that touches on this. Buck says, ?We?played a couple seasons in a row where no one was onto Dexter, so this is the season where it all comes crashing in on him.? My worry, though, is that they've painted themselves into a corner. This is the jump-the-shark-or-swim moment.

Waldman: I?m encouraged by a lot of depth in the supporting characters. I know we lamented Mushy LaGuerta earlier, but I like her rogue side. She stole a piece of evidence! Of course, a lot of the Miami metro police don't play by the rules. (And Tierney Bricker at TV Scoop loves that Deb is joining the crooked ranks.) Maybe it?s no coincidence so many killers fall through the cracks.

Bosch: I've always thought that the supporting characters had a lot of depth, at least in the beginning, though they may have lost some of that over the last couple of seasons. And Laguerta's been sneaky before?remember when she had an affair with Pascal?s fianc? to throw her off her game?

Waldman: Yes, but that was personal. Now she's bending the rules in the department.

Bosch:?Miami homicide has never been a by-the-book operation.

Waldman: I'm interested in the way the show portrays people stressed to the breaking point. Everyone has an idiosyncratic coping strategy. Quinn and Batista knock back doubles at the bar. Deb runs alone on her treadmill. Dexter murders people. Do you think the show is trying to normalize Dexter's kills? By showing us all these dysfunctional outlets for stress in other characters?

Bosch: I've always thought that this is less about normalizing serial killing?when the show debuted, many critics were disgusted at being asked to empathize with a murderer?than about trauma. How Dexter might have been a normal person had he not been subjected to the unthinkable trauma of witnessing his mother being murdered, then sitting in her blood for days. Really, the show tackles PTSD?and its lesser forms?in a spectacular way.

Waldman: Yes. I think you?ve nailed the show?s philosophy. But in its throwaway details, I sometimes feel we?re asked to believe that Dex isn?t that bad. And then there?s the question of whether he could be a vigilante hero.

Bosch: There is an ongoing suggestion that Dexter might not be strong enough to overcome his dark passenger, but perhaps if Harry had handled him differently, Dexter might not have fulfilled Harry's prophecies. In the end, though, Dexter's motives aren't pure?he wants to kill for the sake of killing. Doesn't that undercut the superhero/vigilante framing?

Waldman: I guess it depends on whether you care more about outcomes or intentions. (Of course, the outcomes would be less grisly if Dexter's motives were to rid the streets of killers rather than to spill blood.)

Bosch: I think of a superhero as one who sacrifices his own quality of life, maybe even life, to help others. Dexter sacrifices others to feed his inner beast.

Waldman: To me, a superhero is someone who stands out in some way, who accomplishes exceptional things.

Bosch: Let?s wrap this up. In plastic.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=57c6a2a44210fd067bc2c1953a1af6c7

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Tim Cook?s astounding Apple Maps apology: Use Bing Maps instead

Wow. Just wow. In an unprecedented move from Apple, Tim Cook has written an open letter apologising for the royal balls up that has been Apple Maps. You really want to read this.

Apple Maps has not been well received. The service has been rife with bugs since its launch, causing upset and outrage among fans of a company famed for trying to produce products that ?just work?.

The issues have been so bad that the whole thing has prompted an official response from Apple?s CEO Tim Cook. Here it is in full:

?To our customers,

At Apple, we strive to make world-class products that deliver the best experience possible to our customers. With the launch of our new Maps last week, we fell short on this commitment. We are extremely sorry for the frustration this has caused our customers and we are doing everything we can to make Maps better.

We launched Maps initially with the first version of iOS. As time progressed, we wanted to provide our customers with even better Maps including features such as turn-by-turn directions, voice integration, Flyover and vector-based maps. In order to do this, we had to create a new version of Maps from the ground up.

There are already more than 100 million iOS devices using the new Apple Maps, with more and more joining us every day. In just over a week, iOS users with the new Maps have already searched for nearly half a billion locations. The more our customers use our Maps the better it will get and we greatly appreciate all of the feedback we have received from you.

While we?re improving Maps, you can try alternatives by downloading map apps from the App Store like Bing, MapQuest and Waze, or use Google or Nokia maps by going to their websites and creating an icon on your home screen to their web app.

Everything we do at Apple is aimed at making our products the best in the world. We know that you expect that from us, and we will keep working non-stop until Maps lives up to the same incredibly high standard.

Tim Cook
Apple?s CEO?

Just take a moment to let that sink in. Apple has conceded that it?s made a huge mistake launching Apple Maps in an unfinished state, and then ? boldly ? suggested that iOS 6 users go and use Bing, MapQuest, Waze Nokia or Google Maps (the mobile site version) while they iron out the bugs.

We really don?t know what to say, other than that we?ve never seen Apple put its hands up to a mistake in quite this fashion before. Cue a barrage of ?This wouldn?t have happened if Steve were still alive? responses?

Link: Apple

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/electricpig/~3/sPUHQuA2irU/

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Al Qaeda-style strikes on Shiites in Iraq kill at least 26

The attacks across Iraq appeared coordinated and included car bombings, a favored tactic of Al Qaeda in Iraq.?

By Sinan Salaheddin,?Associated Press / September 30, 2012

A wounded woman walks near the site of a bomb attack in the town of Taji, about 12 miles north of Baghdad, September 30. A string of car bomb blasts targeting mainly police checkpoints killed at least 17 people across Iraq on Sunday, police and hospital sources said.

Saad Shalash/Reuters

Enlarge

Bombs striking Shiite neighborhoods, security forces, and other targets across?Iraq?killed at least 26 people Sunday, officials said. It was the latest instance in which insurgents launched coordinate attacks in multiple cities across the country in a single day, apparently intending to rekindle widespread sectarian conflict and undermine public confidence in the beleaguered government.

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The deadliest attack came in the town of Taji, a former Al Qaeda stronghold just north of Baghdad, where three explosive-rigged cars went off within minutes of each other. Police said eight people died and 28 were injured in the back-to-back blasts that began around 7:15 a.m.

In all, at least 94 people were wounded in the wave of attacks that stretched from the restive but oil-rich city of Kirkuk in?Iraq's?north to the southern Shiite town of Kut.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the violence, but car bombs are a hallmark of Al Qaeda in Iraq. The Sunni militant network has vowed to take back areas of the country, like Taji, from which it was pushed before US troops withdrew last December.

Shortly after the Taji attacks, police said a suicide bomber set off his explosives-packed car in the Shiite neighborhood of Shula in northwest Baghdad. One person was killed and seven wounded. Police could not immediately identify the target.

"So many people were hurt. A leg of a person was amputated," lamented Shula resident Naeem Frieh. "What have those innocent people done to deserve this?"

And in Baghdad's bustling Karrada neighborhood, a parked car laden with explosives went off next to a police patrol, killing a police officer and a civilian, other officials said. Eight other people were injured. The blast was followed minutes later by another parked car bomb as people gathered, killing three civilians and injuring 12 others, they added. Secondary bomb blasts targeting those coming to help the wounded are a common insurgent tactic.

Elsewhere in the country, another suicide bomber drove a minibus into a security checkpoint in Kut, located 100 miles southeast of Baghdad. Three police officers were killed and five wounded, Maj. Gen. Hussein Abdul-Hadi Mahbob said.

And in?Iraq's?north, another policeman was killed when security forces were trying to defuse a car bomb parked on the main highway between the cities of Kirkuk and Tuz Khormato, said Kirkuk police chief Brig. Gen. Sarhad Qadir. A second policeman was wounded in the blast, Qadir said. Kirkuk is about 180 miles north of Baghdad.

In mid-morning, another parked car bomb went off next to a bus carrying Iranian pilgrims in the town of Madain, killing three Iraqis and injuring 11 others included seven Iranians, another police officer and health official said. Madain is a mainly Sunni area located 12 miles southeast of Baghdad.

In the town of Balad Ruz, 45 miles northeast of Baghdad, a parked car bomb targeted a passing police patrol, killing two policemen and injuring seven others, a police officer and health official said. And in the nearby town of Khan Bani Saad, nine miles northeast of Baghdad, yet another parked car bomb exploded near a market and killed one civilian and injured nine others, they added.

Two Iraqi soldiers were killed in the town of Tarmiyah, 30 miles north of Baghdad, when their patrol hit a roadside bomb, another police officer and health official said. Six other people, including four civilians were wounded.

Health officials in Taji, Tarmiyah and Baghdad confirmed the casualties. All officials spoke anonymously as they were not authorized to release information.

Violence has dropped since the height of?Iraq's?bloodshed a few years ago, but Iraqi forces have failed to stop the attacks that continue to claim lives almost daily.

Senior central government officials were not available for comment.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/jQeVCIsL7II/Al-Qaeda-style-strikes-on-Shiites-in-Iraq-kill-at-least-26

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Concept Aquatic Rover May Explore a Lake On Titan

I'm going to complain here, because no-one else cares...

One of my pet hates is that when the media publishes a measurement, they will give both metric and imperial, and will calculate it to ridiculous significant figures.

For instance, this imaginary robot might weigh, you know, round about 100 kilo - which is 220.5 lbs! Yep, they know know the measurements to the nearest 10th of a pound, but coincidentally it happens to be a really round figure in metric terms.

Rant over. Feel free to ignore.

Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/nsGo9R2hvzI/concept-aquatic-rover-may-explore-a-lake-on-titan

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