Sunday, September 30, 2012

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Chinese premier calls on citizens to back Communist Party

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Jerry Lewis to film PBS special in Las Vegas

LAS VEGAS (AP) ? Comedy king Jerry Lewis plans to film a television special for PBS.

The Las Vegas Review Journal reports (http://bit.ly/Qor4SC ) that the 86-year-old entertainer is returning to the spotlight Nov. 18 at The Orleans Hotel & Casino.

PBS plans to broadcast "An Evening With Jerry Lewis ? Live from Las Vegas!" in March around Lewis' birthday.

Lewis has been busy preparing a Broadway musical version of "The Nutty Professor" based on the 1963 movie that Lewis directed and starred in.

That production has been thrown into uncertainty with the recent death of composer Marvin Hamlisch, who did the score.

___

Information from: Las Vegas Review-Journal, http://www.lvrj.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/jerry-lewis-film-pbs-special-las-vegas-192641627.html

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Video: RNC fires firm over voter registration questions

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/49218990/

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Saturday, September 29, 2012

Melting Greenland Weighs Perils Against Potential

[unable to retrieve full-text content]As warming temperatures are upending traditional Greenlandic life, they are also offering up intriguing new opportunities.

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/24/science/earth/melting-greenland-weighs-perils-against-potential.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

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Obama Blocks Chinese Wind Farms in Oregon Over Security - CNBC

President Barack Obama blocked on Friday a privately owned Chinese company from building wind turbines close to a Navy military site in Oregon due to national security concerns, and the company said it would challenge the action in court.

Offshore wind farm

Shaun Curry | AFP | Getty Images


The rare presidential order to divest interests in the wind farms comes as Obama campaigns for a second term against Republican? Mitt Romney, who has accused him of being soft on China.

Ralls Corp, which had been installing wind turbine generators made in China by Sany Group, has four wind farm projects that are within or in the vicinity of restricted air space at a naval weapons systems training facility, according to the Obama administration.

(Read More: Obama's Journey to Tougher Tack on a Rising China)

"There is credible evidence that leads me to believe" that Ralls Corp, Sany Group and the two Sany Group executives who own Ralls "might take action that threatens to impair the national security of the United States," Obama said in issuing his decision.

Ralls Corp had filed a lawsuit against the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) for ordering it to stop all construction and operations at its projects while the government panel completed its investigation and finalized its recommendation to Obama.

After the decision was announced on Friday, the company said it was confident that the courts would vindicate Ralls Corp's rights under the law and the Constitution.

Sany Group is the parent company of Shanghai-listed Sany Heavy Industry Co., China's largest construction equipment maker and the seventh biggest in the world.

Another group company, Sany Heavy Equipment International Holdings, is listed in Hong Kong. The U.S. court documents name only Sany Group, not the listed companies.

Sany's chairman and controlling shareholder, Liang Wengen, is China's fifth richest man, according to the latest ranking by Hurun Report, down from number one in 2011.

Security Concerns

Although CFIUS reviews dozens of foreign investment deals for potential national security concerns every year, the president is rarely called upon to issue a formal order as companies usually abandon their deals or divest assets when the panel takes issue with their transaction.

The last time a president formally blocked a deal on national security grounds was in 1990 when then President George H.W. Bush stopped a Chinese aero-technology company from acquiring a U.S. manufacturing firm.

"This is a big deal because it is the first time since 1990 that the president of the United States has either blocked a transaction from occurring or divested a transaction that has occurred," said Clay Lowery, a former assistant secretary at Treasury who oversaw the CFIUS process and now is with Rock Creek Global Advisors.

Ralls Corp had hired the George W. Bush administration's top lawyer Paul Clement to help represent the company as well as a former U.S. assistant attorney general, Viet Dinh, who helped the Republican administration develop the Patriot Act. But that appeared to do little to convince the current administration to allow the company to resume operations.

The presidential order gives the Chinese company 90 days to divest all its interests in the projects. However, sources close to Ralls Corp said the company was still evaluating the order and had no immediate plan to unwind its activities.

Only one of the four wind farms was in restricted airspace and CFIUS never came up with a plan that would require the company to only divest interests in that particular project, the sources said.

In addition, the sources said there are other wind farms in the same area also operated by foreigners: one Danish company and another German.
?
Not a Precedent

Obama's decision comes as two other Chinese companies are vying for CFIUS approval.

China's state-owned oil company CNOOC Ltd [0883.HK? Loading...? ? ? () ? ] is trying to buy Canada's Nexen [NXY.TO? Loading...? ? ? () ? ]in a $15.1 billion deal, and auto parts company Wanxiang Group Corp wants to take over U.S. battery maker A123 Systems Inc.

Though Nexen is based in Canada, the CNOOC takeover is still subject to CFIUS approval because Nexen has extensive business in the United States.

The Treasury Department stressed that Obama's decision was not a precedent for other investments from China or any other country. Acting Commerce Secretary Rebecca Blank said the United States generally welcomed investment from China, but not in every case.

(Read More: Obama Foreign Policy Bright Spot Now Looking Dimmer)

"Particularly when you're talking about China, but there's other countries where this is true too, one has to be worried about national security concerns," Blank said in remarks at the Council on Foreign Relations earlier on Friday.

China's Minister of Commerce said this week that the country's state-owned companies act in the same way as privately owned firms.

Neither Sany Group's headquarters nor the Ministry of Commerce could be reached for comment on Saturday.

The decision to block Ralls Corp and Sany echoes some of the difficulties China's largest telecom equipment manufacturer, Huawei Technologies Co, has faced in its efforts to crack the U.S. market.

CFIUS has blocked three deals by Huawei in recent years. Last year Huawei dropped plans to buy assets from 3Leaf Systems, a computer services company, after problems with CFIUS.

Like Sany, Huawei is privately owned, but CFIUS expressed concerns about informal links between Huawei's founder and CEO, Ren Zhengfei, and the Chinese military. Ren retired from the military in 1984, and Huawei says he has not maintained ties.

Less high-profile Chinese deals in the U.S. are often approved.

"There have been many Chinese investments in the U.S. that have gone through without trouble," said Benjamin Powell, a former general counsel to the director of national intelligence who is now a partner at Wilmer Hale.

? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.cnbc.com/id/49216617

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Ice Age Co-Stars: Horses, Camels And Cheetahs

Copyright ? 2012 National Public Radio. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

IRA FLATOW, HOST:

This is SCIENCE FRIDAY. I'm Ira Flatow. We're broadcasting live from Boise, Idaho. And Idaho, you may not know, is not only famous for its potatoes. Just a couple of hours from here are the Hagerman Fossil Beds, where the skulls and skeletons of hundreds of early horses have been dug up. These fossils are the earliest known examples of the equus genus, relatives of today's zebras and horses and donkeys.

And that's right - horses evolved here in the grasslands of North America before going extinct here also. But they weren't alone. There were a lot of unusual creatures roaming around North America during the Ice Age, ones you don't hear much about, as much as the mammoths and the saber-toothed cats.

Did you know that camels lived here too, alongside supersized bison, American lions that are bigger than the African lions, and cheetahs. And this is safari-quality stuff. But you'd have to be a caveman to have gone on safari in those days because many of those large beasts disappeared around 10,000 years ago, just as humans were entering upon the scene.

Were they hunted to extinction? Where did they go? Killed off by disease? Or could the culprit have been then climate change also? And why did most of the large mammals die out where the small ones lived on to modern-day time? Just a few of the mysteries about our North American fauna, and that's what we'll be talking about for the rest of the hour.

We won't be taking calls today, but if you're here in the audience, I invite you to step up to the mic and ask a question. You can also tweet us @scifri at S-C-I-F-R-I, and go to our website at sciencefriday.com, where you'll find links to the topic, and you can leave a message also.

Let me introduce my guests. Matthew Kohn is a distinguished professor in the Department of Geosciences here at Boise State University. Welcome to SCIENCE FRIDAY.

MATTHEW KOHN: Thanks Ira, pleasure to be here.

FLATOW: You're welcome. Christopher Hill is associate dean of the Graduate College at Boise State University. He's also associate professor of anthropology here. Welcome to SCIENCE FRIDAY.

CHRISTOPHER HILL: Thank you, Ira.

FLATOW: You know, this is - this I think is certainly knew. When we were talking about topics we were going to talk about when we came to Boise, is talking about the menagerie of animals, Christopher, that were here at one point. You always hear about the mammoths and the saber-toothed cats, but there's a whole lot of other stuff like camels here.

HILL: Sure, there were both plant-eaters like camels and bison. Down in Idaho we had musk ox and caribou. So there were a lot of plant-eaters, and then there were meat-eaters like saber-tooth cats.

FLATOW: So you mean the camel was here before it was out there in the desert in another continent in the Middle East?

HILL: Sure, the camel evolved in North America. It started off as something about the size of a rabbit about 20, 40 million years ago, and over time the population's changed, and it became even larger than the kinds of camels we see today. So there were gigantic camels for a while.

And then around 11,000 years ago camels disappeared in North America.

FLATOW: Did they go someplace?

(LAUGHTER)

FLATOW: I mean...

HILL: They became fossils.

FLATOW: They became fossils, and you have found those fossils of the camels.

HILL: Yes, so we found examples of camels in Southern Idaho and in Montana, and they're connected with all these other animals you were talking about.

FLATOW: Did they evolve into the camels that you see in other parts of the world?

HILL: Sure, so they spread across probably from Alaska to Siberia and into Asia and then became the different types of camels we see all over the world.

FLATOW: Wow. Matthew Kohn, you've studied the horses from the Hagerman Fossil Beds. Tell about that. It must be very exciting. You found a lot of stuff in that bed.

KOHN: Well, one of the things I do, my specialty is really in stable isotope geochemistry.

FLATOW: What?

KOHN: Stable isotope geochemistry. And so what we do is we analyze the ratio of stable isotopes of oxygen and carbon to learn something about the ecosystems and the plants that were living in the area at the time. So what we analyze are scraps of tooth enamel, and they're tooth enamel from these different animals that lived here.

Some of them are from Hagerman horse. There were also some camels, mastodon. We've analyzed some beavers as well.

FLATOW: And these are all found in this one spot? What makes that spot so special that all of these fossils were found?

KOHN: Well it's one of the more fossiliferous localities in the...

FLATOW: We keep doing these F-things, I'm going to run out of...

(LAUGHTER)

FLATOW: Why would they be all there in that one spot?

KOHN: Well, those particular kinds of sediments turn out to be quite fossiliferous. Hagerman has an extremely well-exposed sequence of sedimentary rocks. They're all about three to four million years old. And there is one particular locality, the Hagerman Horse Quarry, where hundreds of horses were discovered, their fossils were discovered back in the late 1920s, early 1930s.

FLATOW: And how does the Hagerman Horse fit in with the modern horses and zebras of today?

KOHN: Yeah, it is the earliest representative of the genus equus. So you have to think about horses. There used to be many, many different genera of horses across North America. There are individual localities in - from about 14 or 15 million years ago, where there will be seven or eight different genera of horses, not just species, but these are the actual genera, whereas today we only have one genus, the genus equus.

So these genera evolve, and over time the genus equus evolved. Hagerman is the earliest representative, as far as I know, of the genus equus, and from that genus then spread out all of the different species of equus.

FLATOW: So the big mystery, we had the horses, we had lions that were bigger than lions in Africa, Christopher?

HILL: That's right.

FLATOW: Giant lions, how big?

HILL: About 20 percent bigger than the African lion. And there were other kinds of large cats.

FLATOW: Such as?

HILL: There was a saber-toothed cat.

FLATOW: We call it the saber-toothed tiger, right? Is that a...

HILL: Please don't say that.

(LAUGHTER)

FLATOW: I won't say that.

HILL: So there's another saber-toothed cat called homotherium, and we've found examples of that. And besides the American lion, there's also a puma, but it looks sort of like a cheetah, so it's sometimes called the American cheetah.

FLATOW: And they all disappeared about 10,000 years ago, and that's the big mystery of where they went - they became fossils - and what happened to them. And your theory is about what happened.

HILL: Well, it's an important experiment we have in the natural history to look at these examples of animals that went extinct and to try to figure out what might have been the reasons why they went extinct. And the two big reasons, usually, that are discussed are either changes in the environment, like global warming events or global cooling events, or also predation, like..

FLATOW: Hunters.

HILL: Hunters. And one example of that would be over-hunting by humans.

FLATOW: These were the Clovis people?

HILL: In North America, the old Stone Age people that lived right at the end of the Ice Age are called the Clovis people, based on an archaeological site in Clovis, New Mexico, where the first spear point was found with mammoth, mammoth bones.

FLATOW: Would it be that they suddenly learned how to be better hunters?

HILL: Well, so one argument is that there was a human population, a small human population here, maybe before 11 or 12 thousand years ago, but they didn't know how to use spear points to hunt these large animals, and then around 11,000 years ago that population learned how to use spear points, these large spear points, to hunt the animals.

FLATOW: Matthew, you were shaking your head about all of this.

KOHN: Oh, absolutely, yeah. Those are the two hypotheses: rapid climate change, changes in the environment or ecosystems, and then over-hunting by humans. I should say not all of the large animals went extinct, right? We still have deer, we still have moose, we still have antelopes, and they lived back in the same time period that all of these - you know, we consider them exotic animals - were living here too.

FLATOW: The bison were living back then, right? Why didn't they get hunted for extinction if they were hunting?

KOHN: Well, we almost did, didn't we?

(LAUGHTER)

FLATOW: Well, that was just 100 years or so ago, right?

KOHN: Well, that's true.

FLATOW: But they were a little heartier, maybe, Christopher?

HILL: There are some examples, or many examples, of bison kills connected with a time right after Clovis, called the Folsom Period, around 10,500. And that was - most of those sites connected with Folsom are connected with bison, whereas Clovis sites are connected with mammoths.

But the bison is an example of an animal that probably came to North America between two and one hundred thousand years ago and then survived in different versions until about 11,000 years ago. So it went through different climate change episodes, and then right around 11,000 years ago, apparently there was a bottleneck, a decrease in the population. The numbers of bison and all the bison that live in North America now are from a group that was a fairly small group that almost went extinct around 11,000 years ago.

FLATOW: Quick question before the break, yes.

UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN: Ira, I think you're wonderful, first of all. Thanks for coming to Boise. Can families take their children to Hagerman to see the fossils that you have explored?

HILL: You can certainly go to Hagerman Fossil Beds, and you know, it's a public area. You can walk around. But in general, the fossil localities themselves are not open to the public. And in general, all federal lands are prohibited from vertebrate fossil collection. Private lands, of course you talk to a landowner, but federal lands are generally protected.

FLATOW: We have a tweet coming in from Jado(ph), who says: Don't forget about the giant ground sloth, the short-faced bear and the giant armadillo. Those are - we're not forgetting now.

HILL: We've analyzed them.

(LAUGHTER)

FLATOW: How big were these animals? Were they bigger than the kind we have today, or are they...

HILL: Ground sloths are, what, seven feet tall?

KOHN: Yeah, there was a ground sloth called Megalocnus that was found at Hagerman, and it was probably seven or eight feet tall, and it was probably one of the smaller of the ground sloths. And a version of that ground sloth also went extinct around 11,00 years ago.

An interesting thing about the ground sloths is that their - we were talking earlier in the previous hour about what is native and non-native, what would be an exotic animal. This is an example of an animal that would - originated in South America and migrated into North America.

And there are other examples of that also. A living example would be a porcupine. It's an example of - the ancestors of porcupines came from South America. On the other hand, we were talking about bison, and they are also an exotic animal if you look at geologic time scales.

They came to North America between two and one hundred thousand years ago.

FLATOW: Wow. All interesting stuff. We're going to take a break and come back more - and talk more with Matthew Kohn and Christopher Hill, and questions from the audience, talking about the lions and tigers and - no tigers. No more saber-toothed tigers. We're not going to call them that anymore. So we'll be right back after this break. Stay with us. I say, we'll be right back. Don't go away.

(APPLAUSE)

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

FLATOW: This is SCIENCE FRIDAY. I'm Ira Flatow. We're talking this hour about the beasts of the Pleistocene, like mammoths and camels and early horses and why they suddenly disappeared about 10,000 years ago. My guests are Matthew Kohn, distinguished professor at the Department of Geosciences; Christopher Hill, associate dean of the Graduate School, all here at Boise State University.

Our number is 1-800 - but we're not going to take calls today. We're going to take calls - hopefully - people stepping up to the mic here. Let me ask you, Matthew, as we begin: This must have happened - if there was a climate change, this must have happened over a really short period of time, did it not? What would be the estimate on that?

KOHN: Well, it's interesting because when we talk about climate change on the Earth, there are different parts of the Earth that respond more or less rapidly. So when we look at places at high latitudes, they respond very quickly to climate change. We see that today, that the arctic is responding very quickly to global warming.

When people have looked at the Greenland ice cores, they have found evidence for climate change that is very rapid, this is the transition from the Glacial Period into the warm period of the Holocene, on timescales of decades or even less than decades.

Now, once that occurs, there's a huge ice cap over North America, it takes thousands of years for that ice cap to disappear. So there's some parts of the climate system that respond more slowly, but there are other parts that are very sensitive, and they respond very quickly.

FLATOW: Yeah, we're watching the Arctic respond very quickly these days.

KOHN: Exactly.

FLATOW: Let's go to the - let's go to the audience here.

UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN: To the question earlier, we took our children to the Hagerman National Fossil Beds Visitor Center, which was really interesting for them. They became junior rangers. But a ranger that was there explained to us that the majority of the fossils they found of the Hagerman horse all died at the same time. And so I had questions if you had theories as to how they died.

KOHN: Yeah, so the Hagerman horse fossils, I mean we're talking about a single quarry that - where over 200 individuals were excavated, mostly as skulls or jaws but also some complete skeletons. In general, these deposits are called bone beds, and they're really two different kinds of generations of bone beds.

One is a gradual accumulation - for example, a watering hole that might have animals that accumulate every year until finally you have a lot, or you can have a catastrophic event. And the theory, the prevailing theory for Hagerman horse, those horse fossils, is that it was a catastrophic event - for example, a flash flood that could've taken out a herd of horses.

Or they could've been killed upstream and washed downstream and deposited in that location. But it is viewed by most people as a catastrophic accumulation.

FLATOW: Thanks. We have a tweet poured in from MichaelDeGraff(ph), who says: To the lady who wanted to show your kids the fossils, please take your kids to the National Park Service Visitor's Center at Hagerman, so you can get - I'll go here and I'll come back here. Yes, ma'am.

UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN: Going back to the Pleistocene overkill versus climate change hypothesis, Matt and Chris, it seems - I'm not a hunter, but it would seem pretty to take out a seven-foot sloth, but maybe not so easy to take out a giant cat. So did the cats go extinct because they lost their prey, or were people actually maybe hunting them?

HILL: You know, there aren't any examples that I know of where we have evidence of people hunting the carnivores, like the saber-toothed cats. But there is an example where one of the saber-tooth cats, homotherium, we found a den that contained lots of examples of baby mammoth teeth in that den. So it's an example where the homotherium, that ancient cat, probably went extinct not because of over-hunting but because its prey went extinct, and that's one example that we have of that.

FLATOW: Was it a scary time to be a person? We've got these - all these big animals that might be coming after you...

KOHN: Ira, maybe it was a delicious time.

(LAUGHTER)

FLATOW: No beer. No...

(LAUGHTER)

FLATOW: Yes, ma'am.

UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN: With the advancement of technology, can you evaluate multiple evidences at the same time and create a probability of one theory versus another theory more easily than maybe 10 or 20 years ago?

FLATOW: Christopher?

HILL: Well, there are lots of different ways we could kind of try to answer the questions about over-hunting or climate change. And some of them are - we find bones that we can't identify based on what they look like. And it might be that we could use techniques like DNA to test those bones to see if they're actually extinct animals or animals that still persist today.

Another big question when we're looking at the different models, the different ideas connected with extinction, is the timing. Do we have people there before or after the extinction event? And today we have much better precision in terms of being able to estimate, measure and estimate the timing for extinctions.

FLATOW: Would there be enough people around at that point to wipe out all these animals?

HILL: Well, that's a good question. I think there were very low numbers of people at that time. So one idea would be that overkill was a contributing factor but not the only factor that combined to lead to the extinctions at the end of the Ice Age.

FLATOW: OK, let's go here, and then I'll come back here, yes.

UNIDENTIFIED MAN: So I'm curious what it takes to identify a new species from the fossil record. It seems like in the past, you know, somebody will find a fragment of a skull and declare it a new species. I'm wondering what's the threshold. Do you need an entire skeleton? Do fragments count? How does that work?

KOHN: Most species - genera and species are identified based on tooth morphology, and that's largely because - well, for a couple reasons. One is it's distinctive, and so different species have different crenulations to their tooth enamel and so on. But the other thing about teeth is they're incredibly well-preserved.

So they're very resistant to physical abrasion and to chemical decay, and so that's one of the best materials that we have. It's not the only thing that is used to identify different species, and so the morphology of the skull and the shape of the limb bones is also used, although the limb bones and body bones, generally called post-cranial material, is generally less well-preserved than the skull material.

FLATOW: Before - you want to follow up?

UNIDENTIFIED MAN: Well, I just was going to say I'm a dentist, I just happen to be a dentist, and I see tons of different morphology in teeth in humans. I don't know if that's different from other species, but it's just a coincidence.

FLATOW: They could use you over there at the dig.

(LAUGHTER)

KOHN: But it's also true, there is internal variability to any tooth morphology that one might be willing to assign to a particular species. So it has to be a morphological feature that exceeds some threshold that is identified by looking at populations of teeth.

FLATOW: OK. Yes, sir.

UNIDENTIFIED MAN: Hi. I was glad to hear you say that hunting was a contributing factor because I'm a retired science teacher, and I remember before plate tectonics came in, I was starting to teach. And then plate tectonics came in, and it started to explain things. And they had that theory about everybody running across the land bridge, slaughtering animals and populating North America.

UNIDENTIFIED MAN: And then they figured out that you'd have to have tribes of people every few years picking up and moving down to make that happen. And so my question is: You know, as we find more and more evidence, like Kennewick Man or like other spear points, not just in Clovis, New Mexico, but on the Eastern Seaboard, maybe near New York, and they find these things around, how does that register for you as a teacher, professor and a scientist, in changing how we view the theories that we once purported as being the best theory, and now we've got to move on because it's obvious there's new evidence.

So how do you guys address that? That's my question.

HILL: Well, the great thing is we're getting more and more information. We're getting larger samples and samples that we can study in a lot more detail. So you're right. I think if we were in a radio show 20 years ago, we would talk about Clovis, and Clovis would be the first real good example of people in North America.

And today, with more discoveries, there are some possibilities of older things, older than Clovis. And that would then connect with the question of extinction. If there are already human groups in North American prior to Clovis, why didn't they cause the extinction? So there are all these new discoveries that then lead - help us test our explanations, test our hypotheses.

FLATOW: We were a radio show 20 years ago and did talk about Clovis.

(LAUGHTER)

FLATOW: Apologies to the audience. We've run out of time for this segment. We're going to thank you both for taking time to be with us today, and it was very interesting, talking about all the species that have become extinct. And thanks again.

HILL: Thank you.

KOHN: Thank you.

(APPLAUSE)

FLATOW: Matthew Kohn, Christopher Hill from Boise State University.

Copyright ? 2012 National Public Radio. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to National Public Radio. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2012/09/28/161955793/ice-age-co-stars-horses-camels-and-cheetahs?ft=1&f=1007

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First real indicator of longevity in mammals discovered

ScienceDaily (Sep. 27, 2012) ? A team of researchers from the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO), headed by CNIO Director Mar?a Blasco, has demonstrated in a pioneering study on mammals that longevity is defined at a molecular level by the length of telomeres. The work -- which is published September 27 in the online edition of the journal Cell Reports -- opens the door to further study of these cellular components in order to calculate the rate at which cells age and thus be able to determine life expectancy for a particular organism.

Chromosomes -- the cellular containers holding the genetic information in living creatures -- have repetitive sequences of DNA at their extremities called telomeres. These sequences act as hoods that protect the genetic material in the face of any external agent which might damage it and compromise the function of the cells.

Several transversal population studies -- measuring telomere length once over time in a large group of individuals -- show a relationship between the length of the telomeres and the risk of suffering illnesses -- cardiovascular disease or cancer, for example.

Until now, however, the use of telomeric measurements to predict real life expectancy in mammals had not been evaluated.

"In the transversal studies, it appears that individuals with short telomeres have a significantly increased probability of developing illnesses, including cancer. But this information is not applicable to a specific individual," says Blasco.

To determine a real aeing prediction method, the authors of the present study have carried out longitudinal studies of telomere length in mice, in which a single individual is followed over a period of time.

After taking periodic blood samples from the same individual, from which cells were extracted for study, they found that those mice which managed to live longer were not the ones that had longer telomeres at any given age but those in which showed less telomeric shortening over time.

"The important thing is not so much the long telomeres at any given time as the tendency or the evolution of the length of the telomeres over time," says Elsa Vera, lead author of the study.

With this study, Blasco's team suggests using mice as an animal model in longitudinal studies that allow for health prognoses in humans. Blasco says that: "while telomere length in normal mice is much greater than in humans, we have found, surprisingly, that the telomere shortening rate in mice is 100 times faster than in humans, so the old dogma of normal mice not getting old due to the shortening of their telomeres is wrong."

This study further opens the possibility of studying, via the longitudinal examination of these genetic guardians, the real effect of lifestyle choices such as diet, smoking or exercise on individual aging rates.

These studies might therefore be crucial in preventing illnesses or in developing new medicines to treat them.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Oncologicas (CNIO).

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Elsa Vera, Bruno Bernardes?de?Jesus, Miguel Foronda, Juana?M. Flores, Maria?A. Blasco. The Rate of Increase of Short Telomeres Predicts Longevity in Mammals. Cell Reports, 2012; DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2012.08.023

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/health_medicine/genes/~3/3QalP-qaVds/120927130215.htm

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Brooke Astor Auction Raises Nearly $19-Million for Charity ...

September 27, 2012, 10:46 am

Nonprofit groups that the late New York philanthropist Brooke Astor supported will receive $18.8-million from this week?s sale of some 900 items from her two homes, more than double the expected take, writes the Associated Press.

Auction house Sotheby?s had estimated the collection of furnishings, paintings, jewelry, and other objects would fetch $6-million to $9-million during the two-day sale concluded Tuesday evening.

Proceeds will benefit the New York Public Library and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, among other institutions and charities, under a deal reached by the New York attorney general?s office to settle a bitter dispute over Ms. Astor?s estate.

The longtime doyenne of New York society died in 2007 at the age of 105, suffering from dementia. Her son, Anthony Marshall was convicted in 2009 of exploiting Ms. Astor?s condition to secure changes in her will that would gain him millions of dollars. He has appeal the conviction.

This entry was posted in News-updates. Bookmark the permalink.

Source: http://philanthropy.com/blogs/philanthropytoday/brooke-astor-auction-raises-nearly-19-million-for-charity/54544

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Friday, September 28, 2012

Second time is the charm for Air Force One landing

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Thursday, September 27, 2012

Chael Sonnen didn?t show at Anderson Silva?s barbecue

Remember how before Anderson Silva beat Chael Sonnen at UFC 148, Sonnen said he wanted Silva's wife to make him a steak, and then after the fight, Silva invited Sonnen to a a barbecue? Well, the barbecue happened, but Sonnen didn't show.

Silva says it wasn't just some hamburgers on the grill affair, but a true Brazilian gaucho barbecue. Sonnen now has his sights on UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones, and he's forgotten all about his pal Andy.

Thanks, Fightlinker.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/chael-sonnen-didn-t-show-anderson-silva-barbecue-175039572--mma.html

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Signed Tim Lincecum Black Baseball ? GAI ? Sports and Recreation

Signed Tim Lincecum Black Baseball - GAI Signed Tim Lincecum Black Baseball - GAI Signed Tim Lincecum Black Baseball - GAI. This rare piece comes with Sportsmemorabilia.com's own numbered hologram. Sports memorabilia collectors have seen similar items increase in value over time. Superb autograph quality. A piece like this is great; just look at Lincecum's stats and you'll see why he's in demand with sports memorabilia collectors around the world. It's a challenge to find quality pieces from Tim Lincecum since he doesn't like participating in official signings. In 2010, the ace pitcher led the San Francisco Giants to a World Series championship. We guarantee that every item we sell is of the highest possible quality. All pieces sold by Sportsmemorabilia.com come with a money-back authenticity guarantee.

More information

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Source: http://boyajianmarc.com/sports/2012/09/26/signed-tim-lincecum-black-baseball-gai/

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Kaka recalled to Brazil squad after 2 years out

By TALES AZZONI

AP Sports Writer

Associated Press Sports

updated 3:52 p.m. ET Sept. 27, 2012

SAO PAULO (AP) - Kaka is back in the Brazilian national squad for the first time since the 2010 World Cup.

The playmaker was selected Thursday despite playing sparingly with Real Madrid. Coach Mano Menezes picked Kaka in a squad for exhibitions last year, but he didn't play because of an injury.

Menezes chose a squad of 24 players for the exhibitions against Iraq in Sweden on Oct. 11 and Japan in Poland on Oct. 16.

Kaka's last game with the national team was Brazil's elimination by the Netherlands in the quarterfinals of the World Cup in South Africa.

On Wednesday, Kaka scored three goals in Real Madrid's 8-0 win in an exhibition against Colombian side Millionarios in Madrid.

? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/49199640/ns/sports-soccer/

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Republic Wireless announces dual-band Motorola Defy XT, offers incentives to quell coverage woes

Republic Wireless announces dualband Motorola Defy XT, offers incentives to quell coverage woes

Republic Wireless is pretty candid that it's still learning the ropes of the mobile world, but with its monthly service cost of $19 per month, we know more than a few people who'd like to help test the water. Most recently, the company admitted an error with its deployment of a single-band Motorola Defy XT, which is compatible only with Sprint's 1,900MHz network. While this is fine for many -- especially given that subscribers are primarily expected to use WiFi -- it's presented a more tangible challenge for those who live within or travel to areas that rely on 800MHz service. Don't be alarmed, however, because the company is going to make it right.

From today, Republic Wireless subscribers in waves B through E will have 30 days to evaluate their service, and if it's unacceptable, may seek a full refund from the provider. Those who are willing to wait it out, however, will receive a free dual-band Defy XT when it becomes available. Similarly, the company is incentivizing the upgrade for those in wave A with a $100 discount. Meanwhile, it will continue to offer the single-band Defy XT to those in waves F and beyond, but alternatively, it'll also keep the door open for its invitees to come aboard once the dual-band version is available -- it certainly seems wise to hold out for the dual-band version if you're able. You'll find the complete details at the source link.

[Thanks, Connor]

Filed under: , ,

Republic Wireless announces dual-band Motorola Defy XT, offers incentives to quell coverage woes originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 Sep 2012 22:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/09/25/republic-wireless-announces-dual-band-motorola-defy-xt/

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'Jersey Shore' star JWoww is engaged

Ethan Miller / Getty Images file

Jenni "JWoww" Farley and Roger Matthews.

By Us Weekly

JWoww is getting ready to fist-pump her way down the aisle! MTV's "Jersey Shore" and "Snooki & JWoww" star (real name: Jenni Farley) accepted boyfriend Roger Mathews' proposal?-- and a dazzling pink and white engagement ring.

PHOTOS: Biggest celeb engagement rings

Together for 2 1/2 years, JWoww, 26, and Mathews, 37, got engaged during a high-flying skydiving session when Mathews presented his girlfriend with a ring that totaled 5 carats and features 2.5 carats in diamonds surrounding the center stone.

"Thank you everyone on the engagement wishes," the reality star tweeted?Wednesday.

PHOTOS: Lavish A-list weddings

As news of her impending nuptials spread, JWoww's fellow MTV costars were quick to offer her and Mathews their best wishes. "CONGRATS on the engagement boo! Love you so much" Snooki (real name: Nicole Polizzi) -- who announced her engagement to Jionni LaValle in March and welcomed son Lorenzo in August -- tweeted.

PHOTOS: Aww! Snooki bonds with son Lorenzo

"I just heard the news! They grow up so fast," mused Pauly D on Twitter. Added the "Jersey Shore" star: "It's official: I'm the only single one left ... now accepting applications #SeriousInquiresOnly."

More in TODAY Entertainment:

Source: http://todayentertainment.today.com/_news/2012/09/26/14113755-jersey-shore-star-jwoww-is-engaged?lite

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Ozone Media Launches Retargeting Service Smarton - MediaNama

Ozone Media, a?digital ad network, has?launched Ozone Smarton, a re-targeting and dynamic banner advertising platform. According to the company,?Ozone Smarton will allow e-commerce merchants to acquire dropped-off and dormant consumers by assembling dynamic banners in real-time and serving them to the re-targeted audience.

It mentioned that?Smarton is powered by predictive algorithms that determine the optimal product to be shown to the re-targeted users, and that it builds intelligence about users who have visited an advertiser?s website and shows them the relevant products in the retargeted dynamic banner ads. It selects the product to be served on dynamic banner in real time, based on its prediction algorithms, to maximize conversion rates and also supports multi-product banners that feature multiple products relevant to the user, according to Ozone.

Senthil Govindan, Associate Vice President of Product & Partnerships at Ozone Media said that the company is?in the process of working with its customers to implement algorithms through the customizable Recommendation Engine which, according to him, will maximize their ability to generate conversions through retargeting. He also added that it ?will soon be able to proactively suggest campaigns that advertisers can run, helping advertisers micro-segment their user base and target them accordingly.

Ozone claims that on Smarton pushed up the conversion rate by three to eight times for the retargeted audience, in initial results.?After e-commerce, Ozone also intends to target the travel segment, followed by?other online verticals where online customer acquisition is important.

How Retargeting Works:?Drop-off visitors are users who visit the advertiser?s site, or a site which sells the advertiser?s products or just a site where the advertiser has advertised, but don?t take any action, and move to another site. For example, if a user visits an e-commerce site and searches for a particular product,but doesn?t make a purchase and switches to another site, the retargeting service will instantly generate banner ads, enabling the company to place them on sites which the user visits. It might even list the the product on top when a user searches for a mobile phone on a search engine and display a different landing page for the user to feature that product.

Although, dynamic retargeting is an effective strategy to attract and retain users but going on an overkill, might end up hurting companies and their brands, since people might find it irritating, and equate it to online stalking.

Other Players:?Vizury Interactive, an online advertising solutions company also offers retargeting solutions. The company?s Visitor Relationship Management(VRM) solution lets advertisers identify drop off visitors, study their online behavior and usage pattern?and target them even when they leave the web site through customized dynamic banner messages for every drop-off user. Last year, online advertising network, Tyroo,?had also launched a?dynamic retargeting?service for?Indian advertisers.?The service allows advertisers to identify drop off visitors, study their online behavior and usage pattern, and target them even when they leave the web site by generating customized, dynamic banner messages.

Ad: Our advertising coverage is brought to you by Indiatimes

Popularity: 1% [?]

Source: http://www.medianama.com/2012/09/223-ozone-media-launches-retargeting-service-smarton/

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It's Your Time! ? LG 42LM6200 Cinema 3D HDTV Review

Posted on 9/27/2012 at 6:48:20 AM

The subsequent posting involves pertinent information which will bring about you to reconsider anything you thought you recognized with regards to the romantic relationship in between satellite tv and Web television. On the other hand, essentially the most significant issue is usually to read with the open up head and be willing to revise your being familiar with if required.

What on earth is Satellite Television?

Satellite television refers to television provider beamed to subscribers by means of orbiting communications satellites great over earth from a length of involving ? 22, 000 to 37, 000 miles generating it feasible for television courses to reach broader regions than was feasible with possibly the traditional terrestrial or cable television which out reach was hampered by earth?s curvature and distance.

When Was The primary Satellite Tv Aired?

It absolutely was in 1962 the incredibly initially tv signal was up linked from Europe on into the Telstra satellite and beamed above North The usa. Anik1 was the initial domestic North American satellite released in 1973 in Canada.

So how exactly does Satellite Television Do the job?

Perfectly, with out heading specialised, it will desire you to notice that the tv indicators you receive from communications satellites are very first sent up from floor stations by using really significant (9 ? twelve meters) dishes to an orbiting satellite that consequently beams the signals right down to earth and on to your receiver?s parabolic dish?s point of interest as well as a LNB or very low sound blocker part converts ands send the indicators in your decoder box wherever the final conversion is finished for the signals so that it gets to be the tone and photographs you observe.

There are also various brands of mobile none parabolic dish receivers for use in automobiles and various cell platforms. In this case satellite tv indicators are been given with a satellite antenna and directed via a satellite decoder box and an oscillator converts it to L-band selection of frequencies that an on-board electronics eventually converts into the typical frequency usable by typical television sets.

What is A TVRO?

Tv Receive Only or TVRO will be the forerunner of satellite television viewing in your own home. The very large dish measurement, about three ? 6 ft, expected to run C-Band frequencies of about 4 G Hertz meant that not the majority of people could own it due to very exorbitant price of installing one particular, and also the room for installation.

One particular other problem with TVRO is the fact the massive dish has to be moveable to help keep monitor of far more satellite, mainly because C-Band satellites carry less channels than KU-band satellites. This dish movement, even so can make it feasible to obtain no cost channels and feeds or possibly unedited C-Band reports materials becoming sent to headquarters by area correspondence or perhaps an information crew, they are generally not scrambled.

If you want to get more info about LG 42LM6200, you can visit http://www.squidoo.com/42lm6200. If you are ready to buy the HDTV, you can find the LG 42LM6200 review and best price there as well.

Source: http://itsyourtimetosucceed.com/?p=76087

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VerticalResponse Continues Awards Streak With Three Gold ...

SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 25, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- VerticalResponse, a leading provider of self-service marketing solutions for small businesses including email marketing, social media marketing, event marketing, postcard marketing and online surveys, won three gold Stevies? at the 10th annual American Business Awards. The company won the top prize for Executive of the Year for CEO/founder Janine Popick, Best Website and Best Twitter Feed.

(Photo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20120925/SF80802)

(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20120815/SF57671LOGO)

This year, for the first time, the American Business Awards were presented at two awards events: the traditional awards banquet in New York in June, and at a new tech and product awards event in San Francisco on September 17 at the Julia Morgan Ballroom.

The American Business Awards are the nation's premier business awards program. All organizations operating in the United States are eligible to submit nominations ? public and private, for-profit and non-profit, large and small.

VerticalResponse also won one silver and three bronze Stevie medals, for a total of seven awards:

  • Gold Stevie, Executive of the Year ? Janine Popick, CEO/founder
  • Gold Stevie, Best Website
  • Gold Stevie, Best Twitter Feed
  • Silver Stevie, Best Facebook Page
  • Bronze Stevie, Company of the Year
  • Bronze Stevie, Best New Business-to-business Product or Service ? VerticalResponse Social
  • Bronze Stevie, Best New Marketing/Public Relations Solution ? VerticalResponse Social

"We're thrilled that the Stevie Awards chose our hometown, San Francisco, for their first technology and new product event," said Popick. "Attending the awards ceremony here was an incredible experience for myself and my team, and it was great to be among such forward-thinking companies. We wouldn't be here without our amazing team and small business customers."

More than 3,000 nominations from organizations of all sizes and in virtually every industry were submitted this year for consideration in a wide range of categories. Stevie Award winners were selected by more than 270 executives nationwide who participated in the judging process this year.

Details about the American Business Awards and the lists of Stevie Award winners who were announced on September 17 are available at www.stevieawards.com/aba.

ABOUT VERTICALRESPONSE
VerticalResponse Inc. provides a full suite of self-service marketing solutions for small businesses including email marketing, social media marketing, event marketing, online surveys and direct mail marketing. Its mission is to empower small businesses and non-profit organizations to easily and affordably create, manage and analyze their own marketing campaigns. Users can benefit from a wide variety of features via a single dashboard, including more than 700 free email marketing templates; social media management tools to create, schedule and publish content, and engage with followers; and robust reporting so that they can understand overall marketing success. VerticalResponse is headquartered in San Francisco, Calif. For more information visit www.verticalresponse.com, and connect on Twitter at @VR4SmallBiz and Facebook at www.facebook.com/verticalresponse.

ABOUT THE STEVIE AWARDS
Stevie Awards are conferred in four programs: the American Business Awards, the International Business Awards, the Stevie Awards for Women in Business, and the Stevie Awards for Sales & Customer Service. Honoring organizations of all types and sizes and the people behind them, the Stevies recognize outstanding performances in the workplace worldwide. Learn more about The Stevie Awards at www.stevieawards.com.

Sponsors and partners of the 2012 American Business Awards include American Support, Business TalkRadio Network, CallidusCloud, Citrix Online, Dynamic Research Corporation, iolo technologies, John Hancock Funds, LifeLock, PetRays, Primus Telecommunications Group, SoftPro, and VerticalResponse.

Available Topic Expert(s): For information on the listed expert(s), click appropriate link.
Janine Popick
http://www.profnetconnect.com/janine-popick

SOURCE VerticalResponse, Inc.

Source: http://www.businessrevieweurope.eu/press_releases/verticalresponse-continues-awards-streak-with-three-gold-american-business-stevie-awards

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Let's Get Honest with 'The Avengers'

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Quick Rumba likely to be quick in William Hill Hotbox Bet Stakes ...

Quick Rumba likely to be quick in William Hill Hotbox Bet Stakes

Since June 2012, Quick Rumba has been at the top of his game. During this period, he has registered a number of podium finishes including five classic victories. Moreover, he took intense training during the last five days.

Keeping in view all these factors, we can hope that the G. Gibbinson trained blue dog will make a big impact in the high-voltage race of William Hill Hotbox Bet Stakes that is set to be held at Newcastle on Tuesday night, September 25.

The grade A3 race will be run over 480 meters. Quick Rumba will break from the orange box to fight against five worthy rivals for the sake of the prize money worth ?123.

The four-year-old veteran hound possesses an impressive track record. After winning a T2 race on June 20, he nicely bagged a couple of consecutive conquests in July.

In the month of August, the talented son of Hondo Black out of Digestivebiscuit achieved a couple of thirds and a tremendous triumph that was the William Hill Hotbox Bet Stakes.

The brilliant sprinter went ahead to finish first in the very next race entitled as A3 480m Flat. He fought well but finished third in the William Hill - The Home Of Betting.

These stats show that Quick Rumba is awash with form at the moment. He will surely apply this form tonight with a view to outpace his competitors.

Among the other hounds, Run For Glory is likely to perform well in the race. The J. Walton trained white and fawn bitch impressed all by winning the William Hill Hotbox Bet Stakes of August 11. She competed exceptionally good to beat the hot favourite candidate, Stay On Lass, by the big margin of 3? lengths.

The brilliant bitch moved on to seal top spot in the William Hill Hotbox Bet Stakes that occurred on September 13. She stood third in her last start.

Thus, the daughter of Crash out of Cillbeara Blu will fight head-to-head against Quick Rumba. The fiery spar between the two will give the spectators an exciting event to enjoy. Good luck to all the six contestants.

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are the writer's own and do not reflect Bettor.Com?s editorial policy.

Source: http://blogs.bettor.com/Quick-Rumba-likely-to-be-quick-in-William-Hill-Hotbox-Bet-Stakes-a190097

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Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Warnings to at-risk drivers reduce vehicle crashes

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - A system where doctors routinely reported drivers who might be impaired by chronic illness cut the risk of car crashes by 45 percent in a new study from Ontario, Canada.

That includes people with alcoholism, epilepsy or uncontrolled high blood pressure, researchers said.

But one downside, the study found, is that people were less likely to go back to doctors who had given them a medical warning and reported it to the government.

Nonetheless, lead researcher Dr. Donald Redelmeier of the Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto told Reuters Health the findings should convince doctors to warn patients about driving risks.

"It isn't just that it can save your patient's life, not just that (not reporting) imposes risks on others in the community as well," he said. "It's also that crashes are such a widespread cause of property damage that everybody pays, either through insurance premiums, or congested roadways, or the price of consumer goods."

If the results from the Canadian study, conducted by the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences, were extrapolated throughout the United States, he said the annual savings might total $160 million.

Smaller studies have offered conflicting findings about the effectiveness of such warnings.

The new report, published in The New England Journal of Medicine, looked at the risk of getting in a crash and needing emergency room care in 100,075 people who were advised by their doctor not to drive.

Since 2006, doctors in Ontario have been paid $36.25 per case to encourage reporting of such problems. Patients subsequently receive a warning letter from the government.

The reasons for getting a warning letter in this study ranged from diagnoses of uncontrolled high blood pressure and diabetes to epilepsy and stroke.

"The vast majority of patients in our study had more than one of those disorders," said Redelmeier - including 21 percent who had five or more conditions on the worrisome-driving list.

Among the people reported under the program, 10 to 30 percent ultimately had their license suspended, "so everybody gets cautioned, but relatively few people get suspended," he said.

AN ?IMMEDIATE, SUBSTANTIAL' EFFECT

During the three years prior to the warning, 1 in 210 people in the study were involved in a crash that resulted in an ER trip each year - about double the rate in the general population.

One year after the warning was issued, the risk to those patients had fallen to 1 in 367, a 45-percent reduction.

"The reduction in risk was immediate, substantial, and sustained," the researchers said. "Together, these data suggest that warning patients who are medically unfit to drive may reduce the risk of road crashes."

"It turns out that medical warnings for unfit drivers are substantially more effective than physician advice about smoking cessation or weight loss or regular exercise," Redelmeier said.

Eight U.S. states have mandatory reporting of medically impaired drivers: California, Delaware, Georgia, Maine, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico and Pennsylvania.

The researchers didn't have data on how often patients drove in general after receiving the warnings.

Warnings had no effect on the rate of accident-related ER visits when the patient wasn't the driver.

However, their risk of showing up to be treated for depression rose from 1 in 52 annually before the intervention to 1 in 42 after.

And although patients didn't have fewer visits to any doctor after the warning, they were less likely to see the physician who reported them.

Dr. Alice Pomidor, a geriatrician at Florida State University College of Medicine in Tallahassee, who was not connected to the study, said the decline in the accident rate was "quite impressive," but conditions in the U.S. might discourage that type of reporting.

Under the Canadian system, patients can't avoid the warning by going to another doctor. It follows them in their records.

"It also doesn't really have any financial impact on the Canadian physician if the patient 'takes their business elsewhere,'" she told Reuters Health in an email.

"Here, the threat to never come back, and to tell all their friends so that no one else will go to the reporting physician, has potentially a much greater impact on an individual physician/practice."

In addition, "Physicians are concerned that if they 'rat out' the patient, he or she may also become afraid to tell the physician the truth about their medical conditions, to the detriment of their health," Pomidor said. "So there needs to be a really compelling personal reason involving the medical safety of an individual patient to get a physician to report" to a government authority.

Redelmeier said the reduction in accidents seen in the study "is about two times larger than the combined effects of modern trauma systems in saving patients' lives. This is a very large effect size traceable to a preventative program, as opposed to a resuscitation program."

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/QETDM4 The New England Journal of Medicine, online September 26, 2012.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/warnings-risk-drivers-reduce-vehicle-crashes-210457036.html

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