Sunday, February 24, 2013

Mandiant goes viral after China hacking report

(Reuters) - Cybersecurity company Mandiant Corp won plaudits from its peers and made front-page news around the world this week when it published a report that purportedly traced a series of cyberattacks on U.S. companies to a Shanghai-based unit of the Chinese army.

But some hackers have turned the tables on the cyber-expert by creating malicious versions of its 74-page report that were infected with computer viruses. They emailed the tainted reports to their victims this week in a bid to wreak havoc under Mandiant's name.

Though the episode was embarrassing, the company said its systems were not breached. "Mandiant has not been compromised," the company said on its corporate blog.

Mandiant was founded in 2004 by Kevin Mandia, a former U.S. Air Force cyber-forensics investigator who co-authored an influential textbook on the subject. The company made its name by automating processes used to investigate computer breaches.

Mandiant was largely unknown outside the computer security industry until Monday, when it fingered the People's Liberation Army's Shanghai-based Unit 61398 as the most likely driving force behind a Chinese hacking group known as APT1.

China's Defense Ministry issued a flat denial of the accusations and called them "unprofessional." But Mandiant won kudos for the unprecedented level of detail in its report, including the location of a building in Shanghai's Pudong financial hub from which Mandiant said the unit had stolen "hundreds of terabytes of data from at least 141 organizations across a diverse set of industries beginning as early as 2006."

Other security companies that have published reports on cyberattacks have shied away from so clearly identifying their perpetrators.

"It was a wonderful report," said Michael Hayden, a former director of the CIA and National Security Agency, who is now with the Chertoff Group. "Everybody is saying 'it's about time.'"

The report did not identify the victims of APT1 or Mandiant's customers, though the company says it has worked for about 40 percent of the Fortune 500.

When asked why he had decided to go public with this report, Mandia, 42, told Reuters, "There is mounting frustration in the private sector. Tolerance is shrinking. We also have a bunch of employees here who are ex-military who sense that frustration and said, 'Let's push this out.'"

The report comes ahead of next week's annual RSA Conference on security in San Francisco, where Mandiant will showcase its products to help companies identify security breaches.

IPO in the cards?
Mandiant says it begins investigations by installing software it has developed that searches for infections by looking for evidence hackers leave behind. It refers to those digital signatures as Indicators of Compromise, or IOCs.

The proprietary database of those indicators makes up a critical part of the "special sauce" that automates the investigation process and, Mandiant says, enables investigators to root out attackers faster than rivals.

The company has thousands of IOCs in its database, which it is constantly expanding.

"We tend not to take the small jobs. We take the big ones - the ones you would love to read about in the paper, but we keep them out of the paper," said Mandiant's chief security officer, Richard Bejtlich.

Some investors have speculated that Mandiant is preparing for an initial public offering in the next year or so. On Friday, it named Mel Wesley to the post of chief financial officer. Wesley was CFO of publicly held OPNET, which was sold to Riverbed Technology in December for about $1 billion.

Mandia, who raised $70 million by selling stock to Silicon Valley venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and One Equity Partners, the private investment arm of JPMorgan Chase & Co, said he is in no rush to go public. "I do not believe we need more capital," he said.

Ted Schlein, a partner with Kleiner Perkins, declined to say if an IPO was in the works, but told Reuters: "They are certainly of the size and they certainly have the operating metrics to be a public company."

Mandia said revenue soared 60 percent last year to about $100 million, and he expects it to climb at about the same clip this year on rising demand for Web-based services that help businesses identify when they have been attacked.

The New York Times and News Corp's Wall Street Journal recently disclosed that they hired Mandiant to investigate cyberattacks. The company has done similar work for Thomson Reuters Corp, parent of Reuters News, according to two sources with knowledge of the matter. A spokesman for Thomson Reuters declined to confirm it.

Premium fees
Mandiant declined to discuss its fees, though analysts say they are among the highest in an industry where rivals include much bigger companies such as Accenture, AT&T Inc, Deloitte, PwC and Verizon Communications Inc, which offer cyber-forensics alongside other services.

Mandiant consultants often bill at rates of $450 or more an hour, said a person familiar with the company. Teams of consultants investigate breaches for weeks and sometimes several months, typically ringing up bills of between $250,000 and $1 million.

John Pescatore, director of emerging security trends for the SANS Institute, says Mandiant can charge a premium partly because it gets strong recommendations from the government and other customers.

There is often a waiting list for its services.

"It's supply and demand. You call Mandiant and Mandiant tells you when they can show up," said the person familiar with the company, who was not authorized to publicly discuss its finances.

Mandiant also competes against CrowdStrike and Cylance, which are run by the founders of a company known as Foundstone, a pioneer in cyber-forensics that had hired Mandia away from the military. He left Foundstone in 2004 to start Mandiant.

(Reporting by Jim Finkle in Boston; Additional reporting by Joseph Menn in San Francisco and Deborah Charles in Washington; Editing by Tiffany Wu and Prudence Crowther)

(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2013. Check for restrictions at: http://about.reuters.com/fulllegal.asp

Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/mandiant-goes-viral-after-china-hacking-report-1C8513891

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

The State of California Has Mark Zuckerberg's Unclaimed Paychecks Waiting

Mark Zuckerberg should fill out one of the claim association forms from the California State Comptroller's office. Turns out, he has an unclaimed paycheck from 2004 from PayPal to the tune of $308.62, BetaBeat reports. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/UAS-siB7rw4/the-state-of-california-has-mark-zuckerbergs-unclaimed-paychecks-waiting

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Greece needs growth to get out of crisis, France's Hollande says

ATHENS (Reuters) - French President Francois Hollande used a visit to hard-hit Greece on Tuesday to press his pro-growth agenda, saying fiscal reform could not be achieved by austerity alone.

He offered to help the twice bailed-out country - in a deep economic depression - with privatizations, tourism and a public sector overhaul.

"We must make sure that growth and jobs come back in Greece," Hollande said. "We need more growth in Europe. That's how we'll reach our public deficit reduction goals."

Athens, whose euro zone partners and the International Monetary Fund unlocked bailout aid in December after a six-month stalemate, hopes Hollande's one-day visit will spur badly-needed investments to ease record-high unemployment.

"I didn't come to sell weapons ... we have to show the Greeks solidarity, support and also confidence that will allow growth to come back," Hollande said in a joint news conference with Prime Minister Antonis Samaras after talks.

Samaras praised Paris for having helped Greece stay in the euro zone, despite its debt crisis.

"France has given us vital support over the past few months to stay in Europe and is supporting us today to exit the crisis," he said.

Greece's economy has shrunk by about 20 percent since the recession began in 2008, with its downturn exacerbated by fiscal austerity demanded by its international lenders to shore up public finances and attain a primary budget surplus in 2013.

Unemployment hit a euro-area record 27 percent in November.

"Greece should make efforts, it should meet its commitments, but its efforts have been considerable," said Hollande. "No people in Europe have undergone such a test, so we must be at the side of Greece", he added.

Greece's deteriorating economy and fears of a euro zone exit prompted French banks Credit Agricole and Societe Generale to sell their Greek units to local peers.

But Hollande said on Tuesday he expected French companies to return to Greece and bid for state firms being sold as part of the country's multi-billion euro privatization plan.

The two leaders also signed an agreement to boost the flow of French tourists to Greece. Tourism is the country's biggest money spinner but French visitors were less than 7 percent of total arrivals last year, half as many as from Germany.

French civil servants are advising Athens on how to reform its inefficient state machine and how to draw up a national land registry - a task Athens has failed to complete for decades despite dozens of millions of euros of aid from the EU.

With Greek journalists on a 24-hour, anti-austerity strike, Hollande's visit was not getting extensive local coverage.

(Writing by Harry Papachristou. Editing by Jeremy Gaunt.)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/greece-needs-growth-crisis-frances-hollande-says-134011515--business.html

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Friday, February 15, 2013

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Thursday, February 14, 2013

10 Things to Know for Friday

Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about Friday:

1. TRUE STORIES OF LIFE ON THE CRIPPLED CRUISE SHIP

As the Carnival Triumph creeps toward Mobile, Ala., passengers recount horror stories.

2. HAGEL NOMINATION HITS SNAG

Senate Republicans block the would-be defense secretary, demanding unrelated information on the Benghazi attack ? which the White House says was already provided.

3. BLADE SHOCKER

Oscar Pistorius could have been voted "least likely to kill someone" by those who ran track with him, now the feel-good story of the Summer Olympics is sullying the sport.

4. QUEEN OF THE HIGH ROLLERS

The former mayor of San Diego acknowledges looting millions from her husband's charity as she wagered a billion dollars ? yes, with a 'B' ? during a years-long gambling binge.

5. WHEN IT'S TIME FOR A SENATOR TO RETIRE

Democrat Frank Lautenberg won't seek re-election at age 90, but says "this is not the end of anything" as he outlines goals for the rest of his term.

6. HOMES FOR DRONES

The FAA looks for sites across the U.S. to test unmanned aircraft, while attempting to calm privacy fears with an online statement.

7. POT LUCK IN NYC

Starting in March, people arrested on low-level marijuana possession charges will be released with appearance tickets if they have ID and no open warrants.

8. WHAT'S SQUEEZING SOME HUB AIRPORTS

American-US Airways mega carrier could lose one or two of the combined eight focus cities.

9. WHERE OBAMA WILL CELEBRATE PRESIDENTS DAY

The commander in chief will get some downtime on Florida's Atlantic Coast.

10. A VALENTINE WEDDING THE BRIDE'S FAMILY WANTED NO PART OF

An Argentine woman marries the man convicted of killing her twin sister.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/10-things-know-friday-103047600.html

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Obama says expects Hagel to win Senate confirmation

Finola Hughes has called the upcoming 50th anniversary of "General Hospital" a "really sweet" moment."I think the fact that we, at 'GH,' are doing so well right now, and to enter into our 50th anniversary on such a high, it feels really sweet," the actress, who plays Port Charles Police Chief Anna Devane, told Access Hollywood, when asked about the daytime drama's impending anniversary.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-says-expects-hagel-win-senate-confirmation-230707522.html

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Venture Exchanges: Are Investors at Risk Investing in SMEs ...

From Dodd-Frank in 2010 to the recently enacted JOBS Act, recent legislation has loosened regulations on smaller companies, making it easier for them to go public. Meanwhile, the SEC recently held a roundtable to study the impact that decimalization has had on small-cap stocks and the ability of small companies to access capital markets.

To help CFA Institute and regulators better understand the potential risk to investors and financial market trust, CFA Institute commissioned a report on the topic, Exchanges and Their Investors: A New Look at Reporting Issues, Fraud, and Other Problems by Exchange. It considers how frequently companies listed on venture exchanges have reporting problems, fraud, and other issues, when compared with companies listed on more established securities exchanges.

In a recently published issue brief, CFA Institute offers policy recommendations aimed at helping investors make informed decisions while also providing small to medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) with access to capital markets to fund their growth and development.


Photo credit: @iStockphoto.com/Nikada

Source: http://blogs.cfainstitute.org/marketintegrity/2013/02/13/venture-exchanges-are-investors-at-risk-investing-in-smes/

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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

How to create more Twitter buzz for you and your business with a baseball twist,...

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Source: http://www.facebook.com/PRNewsChannel/posts/409344965826738

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Newly identified natural protein blocks HIV, other deadly viruses

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

A team of UCLA-led researchers has identified a protein with broad virus-fighting properties that potentially could be used as a weapon against deadly human pathogenic viruses such as HIV, Ebola, Rift Valley Fever, Nipah and others designated "priority pathogens" for national biosecurity purposes by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease.

In a study published in the January issue of the journal Immunity, the researchers describe the novel antiviral property of the protein, cholesterol-25-hydroxylase (CH25H), an enzyme that converts cholesterol to an oxysterol called 25-hydroxycholesterol (25HC), which can permeate a cell's wall and block a virus from getting in.

Interestingly, the CH25H enzyme is activated by interferon, an essential antiviral cell-signaling protein produced in the body, said lead author Su-Yang Liu, a student in the department of microbiology, immunology and molecular genetics at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA.

"Antiviral genes have been hard to apply for therapeutic purposes because it is difficult to express genes in cells," said Liu, who performed the study with principal investigator Genhong Cheng, a professor of microbiology, immunology and molecular genetics. "CH25H, however, produces a natural, soluble oxysterol that can be synthesized and administered.

"Also, our initial studies showing that 25HC can inhibit HIV growth in vivo should prompt further study into membrane-modifying cholesterols that inhibit viruses," he added.

The discovery is particularly relevant to efforts to develop broad-spectrum antivirals against an increasing number of merging viral pathogens, Liu said.

Working with Jerome Zack, a professor of microbiology, immunology and molecular genetics and an associate director of the UCLA AIDS Institute, the researchers initially found that 25HC dramatically inhibited HIV in cell cultures. Next, they administered 25HC in mice implanted with human tissues and found that it significantly reduced their HIV load within seven days. The 25HC also reversed the T-cell depletion caused by HIV.

By contrast, mice that had the CH25H gene knocked out were more susceptible to a mouse gammaherpes virus, the researchers found.

In collaboration with Dr. Benhur Lee, a professor of pathology and laboratory medicine and a member of the UCLA AIDS Institute, they discovered that 25HC inhibited HIV entry into the cell. Furthermore, in cell cultures, it was found to inhibit the growth of other deadly viruses, such as Ebola, Nipah and the Rift Valley Fever virus.

Intriguingly, CH25H expression in cells requires interferon. While interferon has been known for more than 60 years to be a critical part of the body's natural defense mechanism against viruses, the protein itself does not have any antiviral properties. Rather, it triggers the expression of many antiviral genes. While other studies have identified some antiviral genes that are activated by interferon, this research gives the first description of an interferon-induced antiviral oxysterol through the activation of the enzyme CH25H. It provides a link to how interferon can cause inhibition of viral membrane fusion, Liu said.

He noted some weaknesses in the research. For instance, 25HC is difficult to deliver in large doses, and its antiviral effect against Ebola, Nipah and other highly pathogenic viruses have yet to be tested in vivo. Also, the researchers still need to compare 25HC's antiviral effect against other HIV antivirals.

###

University of California - Los Angeles Health Sciences: http://www.uclahealth.org/

Thanks to University of California - Los Angeles Health Sciences for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/126740/Newly_identified_natural_protein_blocks_HIV__other_deadly_viruses

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Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/02/katy-perry-grammys-dress-whoa/

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Senate panel sets Tuesday vote on Hagel nomination

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A Senate panel plans to vote on Tuesday afternoon on the bitterly contested nomination of Chuck Hagel as President Barack Obama's new secretary of defense, the committee said on Monday.

Senator Carl Levin, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, which must approve Hagel's nomination as Pentagon chief before a vote by the full Senate, intends to ask the committee to vote in an open meeting at 2:30 p.m. EST (1930 GMT).

Hagel, 66, a Republican and former Nebraska senator, has been the target of harsh criticism from senators in his own party, who raised questions over whether he is sufficiently supportive of Israel and tough on Iran.

Hagel's testimony before the committee during his January 31 confirmation hearing has also been criticized. Even some Democrats have said he appeared unprepared and at times hesitant during aggressive questioning by Republican panel members.

Levin intends to have the committee vote on Hagel's nomination after its members discuss it.

Hagel's backers are still convinced he will succeed the retiring Leon Panetta at the Defense Department and have called Republican delays and threats to prevent the vote on his nomination political posturing.

The Democrats have 14 votes on the armed services panel, to 12 for the Republicans, and Hagel needs only a simple majority to be cleared by the committee for a vote by the full senate, where the Democratic caucus outnumbers Republicans, 55-45.

No Democrat has come out against Hagel, and at least two Republicans - Senator Thad Cochran of Mississippi and Mike Johanns, who holds Hagel's old Senate seat - have said they will vote for him.

A few other Republicans have said they would not support the use of any procedural mechanism that would force the Democrats to round up 60 votes to confirm Hagel.

Levin had hoped to have the committee vote on Hagel's confirmation last week, but delayed amid Republican demands for more information on issues including Hagel's business dealings and past speeches.

Levin has characterized some of the requests as an attempt to set a new standard for a cabinet nominee.

Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, who has been among the most vocal Hagel opponents, on Sunday threatened to block a vote on his confirmation until the Obama administration provides more information about the deadly September attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libya.

Graham had previously threatened to block the vote if Panetta did not appear before the committee to discuss Benghazi.

Panetta and General Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the U.S. military's Joint Chiefs of Staff, testified before the committee in a four-hour hearing on Thursday, but Graham said he was still not satisfied.

Graham and some other Republican lawmakers have questioned Obama's response to the September 11, 2012, Benghazi incident in which the U.S. ambassador to Libya and three other Americans were killed.

(Additional reporting by Mark Hosenball; Editing by Jackie Frank and Philip Barbara)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/senate-panel-plans-vote-hagel-tuesday-164131498.html

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Friday, February 8, 2013

Disoriented python hunters rescued in Everglades

Two stranded and disoriented python hunters were rescued by a helicopter Thursday in the Everglades of northern Broward County, Fla., authorities said.

Broward Sheriff Fire Rescue Regional Everglades units responded just before 4 p.m. ET to a call about the snake hunters stranded about 15 miles west of U.S. 27 on the northern border of the county, spokesman Mike Jachles said in a statement.

Those units and Broward Sheriff's Office Air Rescue began searching, and about half an hour later the two men were spotted about two miles north of the L-5 Levee and 15 miles west of U.S. 27.

The helicopter landed in the Everglades and brought the wayward python hunters, ages 22 and 25, to the waiting rescue units about two miles away. The victims complained of light-headedness and weakness, and were suffering from heat exhaustion and dehydration, Jachles said.

More news on NBCMiami.com

Firefighter-paramedics treated both patients on the scene, and they refused to be taken to a hospital, he said.

The two men, from Tennessee, were in the Sunshine State to hunt pythons, Jachles said. The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission is currently holding its inaugural Python Challenge, which wraps up this weekend.

It's believed the hunters were staying in their car in the Everglades while they searched for the snakes, Jachles said.

By NBCMiami.com

Related:

Video: Python hunt draws hunters to Florida Everglades

PhotoBlog: Florida python hunt draws hundreds

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/08/16894524-stranded-disoriented-python-hunters-rescued-in-florida-everglades?lite

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APEX Services? Blog Archive ? IN-DEPTH: A Look at How New ...

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Source: http://www.workerscompbytes.com/2013/02/06/in-depth-a-look-at-how-new-york-workers-comp-reform-will-impact-carriers-brokers-and-employers/

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Thursday, February 7, 2013

Sensing the light, but not to see: Primitive organism's photosensitive cells may be ancestral to 'circadian receptors' in mammalian retina

Feb. 6, 2013 ? Among the animals that are appealing "cover models" for scientific journals, lancelets don't spring readily to mind. Slender, limbless, primitive blobs that look pretty much the same end to end, lancelets "are extremely boring. I wouldn't recommend them for a home aquarium," says Enrico Nasi, adjunct senior scientist in the MBL's Cellular Dynamics Program. Yet Nasi and his collaborators managed to land a lancelet on the cover of The Journal of Neuroscience last December. These simple chordates, they discovered, offer insight into our own biological clocks.

Nasi and his wife, MBL adjunct scientist Maria del Pilar Gomez, are interested in photo-transduction, the conversion of light by light-sensitive cells into electrical signals that are sent to the brain. The lancelet, also called amphioxus, doesn't have eyes or a true brain. But what it does have in surprising abundance is melanopsin, a photopigment that is also produced by the third class of light-sensitive cells in the mammalian retina, besides the rods and cones. This third class of cells, called "intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells" (ipRGCs), were discovered in 2002 by Brown University's David Berson and colleagues. Now sometimes called "circadian receptors," they are involved in non-visual, light-dependent functions, such as adjustment of the animal's circadian rhythms.

"It seemed like colossal overkill that amphioxus have melanopsin-producing cells," Nasi says. "These animals do nothing. If you switch on a light, they dance and float to the top of the tank, and then they drop back down to the bottom. That's it for the day." But that mystery aside, Gomez and Nasi realized that studying amphioxus could help reveal the evolutionary history of the circadian receptors.

As so it has. In 2009, Gomez and Nasi isolated the animal's melanopsin-producing cells and described how they transduce light. In their recent paper, they tackled the puzzling question of why the light response of these amphioxus cells is several orders of magnitude higher than that of their more sophisticated, presumed descendents, the ipRGCs. (In mammals, the ipRGCs relay information on light and dark to the biological clock in the hypothalamus, where it is crucial for the regulation of circadian rhythms and associated control of hormonal secretion.)

By detailing how the large light response occurs in the amphioxus cells, Gomez and Nasi could relate their observations to the functional changes that may have occurred as the circadian receptors evolved and "eventually tailored their performance to the requirements of a reporter of day and night, rather than to a light sensor meant to mediate spatial vision." The light-sensing cells of amphioxus, they discovered, may be the "missing link" between the visual cells of invertebrates and the circadian receptors in our own eyes.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Marine Biological Laboratory. The original article was written by Diana Kenney.

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


Journal References:

  1. C. Ferrer, G. Malagon, M. d. P. Gomez, E. Nasi. Dissecting the Determinants of Light Sensitivity in Amphioxus Microvillar Photoreceptors: Possible Evolutionary Implications for Melanopsin Signaling. Journal of Neuroscience, 2012; 32 (50): 17977 DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3069-12.2012
  2. M. del Pilar Gomez, J. M. Angueyra, E. Nasi. Light-transduction in melanopsin-expressing photoreceptors of Amphioxus. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2009; 106 (22): 9081 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0900708106

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/KlWWopw8rWk/130206190630.htm

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Antibiotic cream has high cure rate, few side effects in treating cutaneous leishmaniasis

Feb. 6, 2013 ? An international collaboration of researchers from the U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command (USAMRMC), Tunisia and France has demonstrated a high cure rate and remarkably few side effects in treating patients with cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) with an investigational antibiotic cream. CL is a parasitic disease that causes disfiguring lesions, with 350 million people at risk worldwide and 1.5 million new cases annually, including U.S. military personnel serving abroad and the socio-economically disadvantaged in the developing world, especially children.

The results of the research conducted by USAMRMC, the Institut Pasteur de Tunis, the Tunisian Ministry of Health and the Institut Pasteur in Paris were published today in the New England Journal of Medicine.

"A simple cream represents a tremendous breakthrough in the way we treat this neglected disease," said Maj. Mara Kreishman-Deitrick, product manager at the U.S. Army Medical Materiel Development Activity, which leads the advanced development of medical products for the USAMRMC. "Currently, patients must stay in a medical center for weeks to receive toxic and painful treatments. A cream would offer a safe, effective option that patients can apply themselves."

Phase III study investigators evaluated WR 279,396, a combination of two antibiotics (15 percent paromomycin-0.5 percent gentamicin). In the trial, the topical cream cured the CL lesions in 81 percent of the patients who participated in the clinical trial. Curing the disease was defined as the shrinking of the lesion, regrowth of normal skin and absence of relapse. Adverse events were reported in less than 5 percent of all study groups and were primarily reported as minor reactions at the application site.

A cream containing paromomycin alone (15 percent paromomycin) had a similar cure rate of 82 percent. In the study, only 58 percent of the patients who received a vehicle cream not including antibiotics or other active ingredients saw the lesions cured.

Researchers said they expected parity between the single and combination therapies in this study, which treated CL caused by L. major, a parasitic species common in the Middle East and North Africa. However, they noted that the combination therapy could hold additional promise for global use since early research shows the combination therapy may be effective against the parasitic species found in Central and South America.

The 375-patient trial was sponsored by the USAMRMC and was conducted in partnership with the Tunisian Ministry of Health, the Institut Pasteur in Tunis and the Institut Pasteur in Paris.

Current CL treatments called antimonials contain toxic heavy metals that must be administered either intravenously or injected directly into the lesion. Because of toxicity, many health care providers are hesitant to use them to treat the disease. People who have CL must leave home and work to undergo the standard 20-day course of treatment at a medical center. Public health workers in the developing world see patients resort to home treatments like burning their lesions with battery acid or red-hot machetes, rather than seek out painful and expensive medical treatments. These home remedies also can compound the severity of scarring.

More than 3,000 CL cases have been reported among U.S. service members since 2003. Service members who develop CL often must be evacuated from their posts -- at an approximate cost of $35,000 for hospitalization, treatment and lost duty time per service member. WR 279,396 has the potential to become a first-line treatment that service members could apply themselves in the field.

"The research community has tended to overlook CL because it is not deadly, but that doesn't mean the disease does not have a lifelong impact on patients," said Professor Afif Ben Salah, principal investigator for the Tunisia study and head of the Medical Epidemiology Department at the Institut Pasteur in Tunis. "Many people experience discrimination in social settings, at work or at school as a result of the disease's devastating scarring. The stigma takes a serious toll on their education, marriage and employment prospects."

USAMRMC and Institut Pasteur researchers formed a partnership 10 years ago around their common need for better CL treatments. Human transmission of CL has been seen as far north as Texas and CL affects civilian travelers as well as U.S. service members. In Tunisia, where the Phase III clinical trial was conducted, up to 10,000 new cases are reported each year and more than half of those cases are in children.

"With these results, we are on the verge of being able to provide non-toxic and easy-to-use treatments to the people who need them most, including U.S. service members," said Col. Max Grogl, director of the Division of Experimental Therapeutics at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research. "We are grateful to our international research partners for their dedication to developing a more tolerable CL treatment that will benefit patients around the world."

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has designated WR 279,396 as eligible for fast-track review, given CL's status as a neglected disease. The Fast Track program of the FDA is a process designed to facilitate the development and expedite the review of new drugs that are intended to treat serious or life-threatening conditions and that demonstrate the potential to address unmet medical needs. USAMRMC is actively engaged with the FDA to support this review. Additional research also is being planned in Latin America to explore the effectiveness of the topical cream for treating the parasitic species found in the western hemisphere.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by US Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Afif Ben Salah, Nathalie Ben Messaoud, Evelyn Guedri, Amor Zaatour, Nissaf Ben Alaya, Jihene Bettaieb, Adel Gharbi, Nabil Belhadj Hamida, Aicha Boukthir, Sadok Chlif, Kidar Abdelhamid, Zaher El Ahmadi, Hechmi Louzir, Mourad Mokni, Gloria Morizot, Pierre Buffet, Philip L. Smith, Karen M. Kopydlowski, Mara Kreishman-Deitrick, Kirsten S. Smith, Carl J. Nielsen, Diane R. Ullman, Jeanne A. Norwood, George D. Thorne, William F. McCarthy, Ryan C. Adams, Robert M. Rice, Douglas Tang, Jonathan Berman, Janet Ransom, Alan J. Magill, Max Grogl. Topical Paromomycin with or without Gentamicin for Cutaneous Leishmaniasis. New England Journal of Medicine, 2013; 368 (6): 524 DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa1202657

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/z1VKU1rz6no/130206185844.htm

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Energy Innovation vs. Deployment: Addressing Differences on ...

energy debateOver the last week or so, there has been a resurgence of what is becoming a classic (see: tired) debate between very smart people about the tension between clean energy innovation and deployment.

This is a ?debate? that has played out several times over, enough times now that I think there are a few things the clean energy community needs to acknowledge about it:

1)????? There is a difference between policy and communications.

2)????? There are disagreements about communications. However, conflating communications and policy allows disagreements about messaging to spill over into the policy discussion.

3)????? Ultimately, there is little functional difference between the policies actually advocated by these two ?camps.?

4)????? In letting this happen, the community misses an opportunity to coalesce around items on the policy agenda that we do agree on.

5)????? The only real beneficiary of this infighting is the fossil fuel industry, which hardly needs the help.

What can be done? First, separate the communications debate from the policy debate, and try to have a real conversation about the merits of each messaging approach given the outcomes we are trying to achieve. Second, discuss the policy agenda outside the context of this conversation about messaging, to isolate the items where there is substantial agreement. Third, galvanize around the agenda items where there is significant agreement, and push for those policies based on whatever strategy can be salvaged out of the communications discussion.

It may be that there are irreconcilable differences on the communications front (which, I suspect, is the case). If so, there still should be some understanding about what policies have our support- and we can cut back on the friendly fire. Pragmatically speaking, there is no benefit to allowing differences on messaging style to interfere with coalition building around policies.

?

A Case Study: ?Innovators? vs. ?Deployers?

To illustrate my points, let?s take a look at the most recent installment of this debate. It started, as best I can tell, with Stephen Lacey?s TakePart post here. Lacey takes issue with President Obama?s recent comment that ?some big technological breakthrough? is needed to shift away from the high carbon energy sources that cause climate change. This statement, he says, is as negatively influential as those made by climate deniers.

Lacey goes on to outline the two camps in the climate action world: a) the deployment advocates who believe that high-penetrations clean energy of can be achieved with existing technology (let?s call them ?Deployers?) and b) those who argue we cannot do anything on climate without major technological breakthroughs (let?s call them ?Innovators?).

Lacey equates the communications and rhetoric from folks in this second camp to climate doubters and denialists. This prompted a fair bit of outrage from a crowd of folks who (I assume) believe they are in this second camp. Queue the slew of quips, factoids, and citing of precedent from both sides.

Below, I will use this recent incarnation of the ?Deployers vs. Innovators? debate to walk through the 5 points I make above, and highlight the need for a pragmatic solution. ?

1)????? There is a difference between policy and communications.

Our governance system is designed to have rhetoric and politics intertwined. We, obviously, are not the only country guilty of this fact. However this does mean that, by necessity, policies for the public must have an accompanying messaging strategy to survive in the political world.

Think tanks are positioned to advocate for policies which are consistent with their missions. Advocacy requires that policy and communications are conflated, so that they can maximize the impact of a given policy recommendation. After all, what good is a policy without a compelling story about its need and impact?

This particular debate is mostly raging among current or former think-tankers. As such, it is not surprising that the distinction between policy and communications has gotten a little lost in the shuffle. However, policy and communications are two separate worlds, which have very different objectives and constraints.

The formal definition of Policy is ?a course of action adopted and pursued by a government, ruler, political party, etc.? Communications is ?the imparting or interchange of thoughts, opinions, or information by speech, writing, or signs.? The distinction that needs to be made here is that, while certainly communications is used to explain policies, the policy itself is an actual course of action. We can agree on policies, but disagree on how to communicate them.

?

2)????? There are disagreements about communications. However, conflating communications and policy allows disagreements about messaging to spill over into the policy discussion.

The hard part is that there is a genuine disagreement about communications. Below, I will lay out what the disagreement is and weigh in.

Let?s go back to Lacey?s piece. Communications in the ?climate action? context that Lacey mentions is fundamentally about raising awareness about climate change so that action can be taken. The counterpoint usually is that climate communications should solely be about passing along information. As such, there is a difference on messaging because one side believes that communications should be oriented to achieve a certain outcome, and the other believes that approach often rushes conclusions. This difference may always exist, but I think there is something to be said for this particular example of equating Obama?s rhetoric with climate denial. ?

From a communications perspective, the way you talk about energy policy may impact the perception of the public on the climate change issue. For example, Lacey notes that the President talking about the need for ?some big technological breakthrough? to address climate change has the same functional communications impact as denying that climate change is a problem. This is persuasive, when it comes to convincing the public to take action- there isn?t much light between a problem that isn?t real and a problem you can do nothing about.

The President saying that ?some big technological breakthrough? is needed to fix the climate problem does have a very real impact on public perception. If there was an asteroid hurtling towards Earth, and the President said that ?some big technological breakthrough? was needed to address the issue- most American?s could be forgiven for thinking that meant that we were doomed. I am sympathetic to the idea that climate communications isn?t just about getting Americans aware of the asteroid- it is about getting the President to do something about it.

Let?s address the counterpoint here. If communications ought to just be about passing along information, would the Presidents statement still be the functional equivalent of climate denial? Since the functional impact of climate denial is passing along facts that are not true, then answering this question is really a matter of asking: is the President right? Is some big technological breakthrough needed to address climate change?

I don?t think so. But, I also did not see many actually address this issue in the debate. Most of what I saw boiled down to, as section 3 will address, a conflation of innovation and deployment objectives. Lacey cites the NREL study showing electricity can be provided by 80 percent renewable sources. This seems like a case-in-point example for the fact that a big technological breakthrough is not needed to address climate change. Would there be costs? Yes. But do we need a technological breakthrough to do it?? No. This sounds contentious here, but it isn?t as adversarial as it sounds, as section 3 will explain.

To get back to the issue, it is important to remember that if the communications shoe were on the other foot, it would be very surprising if the President talking about how we can deploy existing technologies to fight climate change caused a widespread public perception that innovation dollars are no longer needed. However, the opposite does seem to be the case. Because clean energy, in the climate context, is a means to an end.

?

3)????? Ultimately, there is little functional difference between the policies actually advocated by these two ?camps.?

This is where there is a lot of huffing and puffing but not much real content. The people in the first camp, the Deployers, do not generally think that NO technological innovation is needed. See Laceys comment that ?of course we want to encourage technological leaps by investing in R&D and helping bring emerging technologies to market.? However, the threat of climate change is imminent, so relying solely on innovation would be foolish.

But the people in the second camp, the Innovators, don?t think we should just rely solely on innovation! In fact, they overwhelmingly do not seem to think that deployment of current technologies is mutually exclusive with technological innovation.

And while it is true that in the federal budget these two approaches are zero-sum (since dollars have to go to one over the other), that is never the debate I hear.

From a public policy perspective, this makes the grey area between these two camps pretty expansive. Do both camps support ARPA-E? Seems like it. What about the demonstration projects funded through the Recovery Act? As far as I can tell, yes. There are a few buzzwords and catchphrases which are supposed to distinguish these camps, but I cannot really see where the significant difference lies. Lets go through a few of them.

?Reform clean energy subsidies!? This one is thrown around an awful lot, which would make you think there is some disagreement. But honestly, I don?t know what it is. Let?s take the PTC for example. Neither side is enamored with the PTC in its current bulky, stop-and-go form- although I?d venture to say both sides would take it over 0 policy support for wind. Both sides support reforming the PTC to encourage technological progress, and shift to a tax credit that shows more support for low capacity factor siting. Both camps seemed pretty supportive of AWEA?s proposed phase-out. I honestly couldn?t tell you where the difference lies on this issue, except in some nuanced minutiae. I?ll get to why these differences don?t matter in section 4.

?The role of government in clean energy investment? is another alleged hotspot. The Innovators often cite the DOE role in natural gas as a good precedent for what the government?s involvement in energy innovation should look like. But I doubt that, if really pressed, they would say that the U.S. government should abandon all deployment and push funding solely into energy innovation. Remember, that investment in natural gas took 30+ years to pay off- and the climate clock is ticking. Deployers believe in helping create a market for clean energy through government procurement and demand policies that ?pull? technology to market. There may be a dispute over the extent of these policies, but state RPS?s and feed-in-tariffs, as well as greening the federal government, seem to have wide support.

Yes, the Deployers want to see stronger policy signals from the government to bolster the market adoption of what we have. But none of them would recommend stripping the federal budget of innovation dollars, or crafting clumsy policy tools in the name of stability. Unfortunately for the Deployers, they haven?t had much luck getting an actual, nuanced, stable policy- so they?ve had to take what they can get. The Innovators have repeatedly called for RD & D. Seems like we are singing the same tune here.

??Technology tribalism? is another great one. And yet, both sides seem equally guilty (or equally absolved) of it. Anti-technology tribalism shouldn?t just be code for pro-nuclear, and those called technology tribalists shouldn?t just support solar and wind. Fine. Both sides probably need to give a lot more attention to biomass, geothermal, and small-scale hydropower- not just quibble about energy storage, CCS, and nuclear. The NREL report mentioned before certainly does. But, I don?t know when the last time I saw a big pro-geothermal white paper come out of either camp.

?Carbon tax!? If it were progressive, and put some money into innovation as well as deployment, I doubt you?d hear too much fuss.

The only substantial difference seems to be on cap-and-trade and, sorry everyone, that isn?t on the table at the moment. So it hardly seems worth squabbling over.

?

4)????? In letting this happen, the community misses an opportunity to coalesce around items on the policy agenda that we do agree on.

This brings me to my fourth point. As the above indicates, there is a pretty concrete and robust set of initiatives that have broad-based agreement. While there may be nuanced differences (how much money from a carbon tax goes to innovation, how exactly the PTC is structured and tiered to promote technological progress) we can all support the big picture.

We are missing out on an opportunity to pick and organize around the policy objectives that we share. Sure, Congress is dysfunctional and the Administration is being pulled to the ?center? on issues like oil and gas. That is all the more reason the clean energy and climate community needs to outline a bold, cogent, and widely shared set of priorities that the Administration hears about- no matter who in the community they talk to.

Too often the disputes around messaging have sidetracked the productive conversation about policy progress. If we can?t agree on how should we talk about a carbon tax, can we at least agree that we need to talk about a carbon tax? If we cannot settle on whether rhetoric needs to be carefully crafted to spur action, can we at least agree that rhetoric should accurately capture the real picture? For example, if the President had said ?we need to continue to promote technological development and innovation to drive down the costs of clean energy, while aggressively deploying available technologies,? would any of us really be upset? We should all seize the narrow sighted rhetoric about relying solely on innovation (the view of the President, not the Innovators) as an opportunity to say ?Mr. President, you are missing the big picture. Here are all the things you can do.?

?

5)????? ?The only real beneficiary of this infighting is the fossil fuel industry, which hardly needs the help.

My final point is that the only real winner when we fight amongst ourselves is the fossil fuel industry. This is true on both fronts. When it comes to communications, there is nothing the fossil fuel industry wants more than to have us wait and see (indefinitely). But since both camps, practically speaking, want to innovate and deploy- that should be our message. No, we do not need to wait. We need to innovate and deploy, because climate change is real.

On a policy front, the story is similar. The fossil fuel industry is the real beneficiary of disputes within the clean energy community, because they benefit from the status quo. If we become so paralyzed by artificial differences that we fail to act, or articulate a common agenda, the U.S will default to the way things have always been.

We cannot afford that. We must find, and articulate, our common goals. We should continue to discuss the merits of different messaging strategies, but not at the cost of pragmatic change. The stakes are too high, and the headwinds are too strong.

So innovate and deploy, because climate change is real.

?

Full disclosure: I am an employee of the Center for American Progress (who probably fall into the ?Deployers? camp, and the CAP Action Fund formerly employed Stephen Lacey). However, I am writing this article in my capacity as a clean energy advocate with friends in both camps, not a CAP employee.

Source: http://theenergycollective.com/adamjames/182006/energy-innovation-vs-deployment

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AP source: Lawmakers to get classified drone info

WASHINGTON (AP) ? President Barack Obama has directed the Justice Department to give Congress' intelligence committees access to classified legal advice providing the government's rationale for drone strikes against American citizens working with al-Qaida abroad, a senior administration official said Wednesday.

A drumbeat of demands to see the document has swelled on Capitol Hill in recent days as the Senate Intelligence Committee prepares to hold a confirmation hearing for John Brennan, who helped manage the drone program, to be CIA director.

Those demands were only intensified by the leak this week of an unclassified "white paper" on how decisions are made to target U.S. citizens abroad that the Justice Department confidentially sent to key lawmakers last year. The unclassified memo says it is legal for the government to kill U.S. citizens abroad if it believes they are senior al-Qaida leaders continually engaged in operations aimed at killing Americans, even if there is no evidence of a specific imminent attack.

The senior official said Obama decided to send lawmakers the classified rationale on Wednesday as part of his "commitment to consult with Congress on national security matters." Obama directed the Justice Department provide the Senate and House intelligence committees access to classified advice from its Office of Legal Counsel that the white paper is based on, the official said.

Legal opinions produced by the legal counsel's office are interpretations of federal law that are binding on all executive branch agencies.

The administration official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the matter by name.

Earlier Wednesday, White House spokesman Jay Carney said Obama was engaged in an internal process deliberation to determine how to balance the nation's security needs with its values. He said Obama was committed to providing more information to Congress, even as he refused to acknowledge whether the drone memo even existed.

"He thinks that it is legitimate to ask questions about how we prosecute the war against al-Qaida," Carney said. "These are questions that will be with us long after he is president and long after the people who are in the seats that they're in now have left the scene."

Eleven senators, including Democrat Ron Wyden of Oregon, called on Obama to provide lawmakers "any and all legal opinions" that outline the president's authority to use legal force against Americans.

Wyden, a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, told The Associated Press that Obama called him Wednesday evening to alert him to the decision to release the legal opinions. The president pledged to launch a "very extensive" public discussion on the government's ability to target Americans abroad, Wyden said.

"This is an encouraging first step," Wyden said. "There is now an opportunity to build on it."

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., committee's chairman, said in a statement that the legal opinion would be provided to her committee by Thursday morning. The confirmation hearing will be held Thursday afternoon.

Justice's unclassified 16-page white paper says that it is lawful to target al-Qaida linked U.S. citizens if they pose an "imminent" threat of violent attack against Americans and that delaying action against such people would create an unacceptably high risk. Such circumstances may necessitate expanding the concept of imminent threat, the memo says.

"The threat posed by al-Qaida and its associated forces demands a broader concept of imminence in judging when a person continually planning terror attacks presents an imminent threat," the document added.

A September 2011 drone strike in Yemen killed Anwar al-Awlaki and Samir Khan, both U.S. citizens. A separate drone strike two weeks later killed al-Awlaki's 16-year-old son, a Denver native. The strikes came after U.S. intelligence concluded that the elder al-Awlaki was senior operational leader of al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula plotting attacks on the U.S., including the abortive Christmas Day bombing of an airplane landing in Detroit in 2009.

The memo does not require the U.S. to have information about a specific imminent attack against the U.S. But it does require that capture of a terrorist suspect not be feasible and that any such lethal operation by the United States targeting a person comply with fundamental law-of-war principles.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ap-source-lawmakers-classified-drone-000559859--politics.html

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Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Famous bridge in India is in danger of coming down ... because of spit

Engineers say that Kolkata?s landmark Howrah bridge is in danger because gutkha chewing tobacco spit is corroding its pillars. Now activists are trying to ban the acidic tobacco.

By Shaikh Azizur Rahman,?Contributor / January 20, 2013

Indians bathe on the banks of the River Ganges River beside the landmark, Howrah Bridge on a cold winter morning in Kolkata, India, last week.

Bikas Das/AP

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It was first reported in 2010 that the pillars of Kolkata?s landmark Howrah bridge were being used as spittoons by pedestrians who chewed gutkha?? a tobacco product popular with millions in India.

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Engineers who surveyed the cantilever structure then reported that the struts supporting the girders of the bridge had already lost half of their metal casing: The corrosion was apparently caused by acids in the gutkha.

Soon the Lions Club of Howrah launched a ?Save Howrah Bridge from Spit? campaign urging people not to spit on the bridge. ?

The campaign spread across the city of Kolkata, where reddish-brown gutkha stains are visible almost everywhere ? pavements, streets, office staircases, business houses, and residential complexes. Prominent citizens of Kolkata joined the campaign in an effort to rid the city of the ugly stains.

Gutkha is a commercially produced pre-packaged mixture of crushed betel nut, tobacco, lime, paraffin, and other ?secret? ingredients, many of which are carcinogenic and addictive.

Some brands of gutkha also contain lead, arsenic, chromium, nickel, and cadmium, which are as bad as nicotine. To make its shelf life longer, magnesium carbonate ? which is used in fire extinguishers and is a known carcinogen ? is also added to gutkha.

Activists reported about a year ago that one-third of men and one-fifth of women across India are addicted to chewing tobacco and gutkha was its most popular form.

Because of its candy-like flavor and dirt-cheap prices ? 4 to 6 cents per sachet ? gutkha has become increasingly popular among children, who chew and even eat it. An estimated 5 million of India?s children are addicted to gutkha, and every day another 5,000 try it for the first time, according to reports last year by the American Cancer Society.

Research indicates that tobacco kills 1 million Indians annually and that gutkha alone leads to 80,000 cases of oral cancer every year ? the highest incidence in the world. In recent years an anti-gutkha campaign has picked up steam across the country with several nongovernment organizations lobbying for a ban on gutkha.

In August 2011, India?s Food Safety and Standard Authority issued a regulation declaring that no foodstuff, including gutkha, could contain tobacco. Last year some states began following the order by banning gutkha.

With Andhra Pradesh and Odisha states having banned it earlier this month, the manufacture and sale of the product has now been prohibited in 17 of India?s 28 states and 3 of the 7 union territories (UTs), including New Delhi. However, reports in many local newspapers suggest that gutkha?is being smuggled from other regions and is still being sold in many states.

Kolkata-based anti-gutkha campaigner Sekharesh Ghoshal said that states and union territories should cooperate and ban the tobacco in the national interest.

?Sachets of gutkha display a warning that it?s dangerous for health. Yet gutkha users do not pay any attention to such health risks and keep on chewing it,? says Dr. Ghoshal.

?Unless gutkha is banned and actually made unavailable in the market, you cannot stop people from using it. A ban only in parts of the country is of no help.?

But in many states the gutkha companies are fighting the ban by taking the local government to court.

They argue that gutkha is a tobacco product that cannot be classified as a foodstuff, and therefore cannot be banned. Still, courts in most states have upheld the ban.

Bela Naskar, the mother of two child addicts in a slum in Kolkata, says she vehemently supports a ban on gutkha.

?My 10- and 13-year-old sons have been into gutkha for some years. They take several sachets of it every day. It?s bad for their health. But they don?t listen to my warnings.?

?We really need a ban on gutkha in our state,? Ms. Naskar says. ?Otherwise I shall not be able to rid my children from this dangerous addiction.??

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/Fu90cJul_HI/Famous-bridge-in-India-is-in-danger-of-coming-down-because-of-spit

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UFC champion Jon Jones celebrates with his brother and the Baltimore Ravens after Super Bowl win

UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones was on the field to celebrate after the Baltimore Ravens won the Super Bowl on Sunday. His brother Arthur had a fumble recovery, a sack and two tackles as the Ravens won 34-31. According to his Twitter account, Jon talked to 21-time Olympic medalist Michael Phelps, talked with retiring legend Ray Lewis, and danced with his mother and brother.

All three Jones brothers are professional athletes. Chandler, the youngest, plays for the New England Patriots. His team was eliminated in the postseason by the Ravens, and his big brother Arthur.

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Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/ufc-champion-jon-jones-celebrates-brother-baltimore-ravens-143723374--mma.html

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College of Business to Celebrate 50th Anniversary with a Mardi ...

Good food, good fun and good memories are in store when the UCF College of Business Administration celebrates its Golden Anniversary with a Mardi Gras Banquet on Friday, February 15. Presented by BB&T, the event will take place from 6 to 10 p.m. at the Venue at UCF (the former Arena).

The banquet includes a reception and dinner and will honor those that helped shape the college over the past five decades. A nominating committee selected 50 people or organizations that best exemplify the tenets of the UCF Creed,?integrity,?scholarship,community,?creativity, and?excellence. This prestigious group will be recognized and honored during the banquet.

Integrity:

Those selected in this category have contributed to the research and teaching of ethics and social issues in the classroom. Honorees include:

  • Branch Banking & Trust Company
  • Bill Callarman, Ph.D., associate professor emeritus, UCF College of Business Administration
  • Kenneth G. Dixon, ?75, founder and CEO, Leland Enterprises, Inc.
  • Robert Folger, Ph.D., distinguished alumni endowed professor in business ethics, UCF College of Business Administration
  • Paul P. Gregg, ?74 & ?76, instructor of finance, UCF College of Business Administration and chief financial officer, Rini Technologies, Inc.
  • Stan Horton, ?73, president and CEO, Boardwalk Pipeline Partners
  • Richard Lapchick, Ph.D., endowed chair and director (DeVos/Orlando Magic Sport Business Management Eminent Scholar), president and CEO, National Consortium for Academics and Sports, founding director, The Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport, UCF College of Business Administration
  • Robin W. Roberts, Ph.D., Al and Nancy Burnett Eminent Scholar Chair in Accounting, UCF College of Business Administration
  • John H. Salter, Ph.D., professor emeritus, Kenneth G. Dixon School of Accounting and?Marilyn P. Salter, MSA ?81, retired instructor, Kenneth G. Dixon School of Accounting, UCF College of Business Administration
  • Marshall Schminke, Ph.D., BB&T Professor of Business Ethics, UCF College of Business Administration

Scholarship:

The 10 people selected in this category have contributed to the scholarship of the college and possess a strong research record. Honorees include:

  • Maureen L. Ambrose, Ph.D., Gordon J. Barnett Professor of Business Ethics, UCF College of Business Administration
  • Vicky Arnold, Ph.D., Ernst & Young Professor of Accounting, Kenneth G. Dixon School of Accounting UCF College of Business Administration and editor,?Behavioral Research in Accounting
  • Raj Echambadi, Ph.D., professor and James F. Towey Fellow, University of Illinois
  • Glenn Hubbard, Ph.D., ?79, dean and Russell L. Carson Professor of Finance and Economics (Graduate School of Business) and professor of economics (Arts and Sciences), Columbia University
  • Richard C. Huseman, Ph.D., founder and CEO, Executive Development & Education
  • Thomas L. Keon, Ph.D., chancellor, Purdue University Calumet
  • Ronald S. Rubin, Ph.D., professor emeritus of marketing, UCF College of Business Administration
  • Carol Saunders, Ph.D., professor of management, UCF College of Business Administration and Schoeller Senior Research Fellow, Dr. Theo and Friedl Schoeller Research Center for Business and Society
  • Steve G. Sutton, Ph.D., KPMG Professor of Accounting, UCF College of Business Administration
  • Gregory M. Trompeter, Ph.D., C.G. Avery Professor, UCF College of Business Administration

Community:

This category honors organizations or businesses that have partnered with the college. The companies selected have demonstrated their support by contributing financially, providing speakers, or hiring students. Honorees include:

  • DeVos Family and The Orlando Magic
  • Dr. Phillips Charities
  • Ernst and Young, LLP
  • Grant Thornton, LLP
  • NAIOP Central Florida Chapter
  • Orlando Health
  • Richard Nunis, retired chairman, Walt Disney Parks and Resorts
  • SeaWorld Parks and Resorts Orlando
  • SunTrust
  • Walt Disney World Resort
  • Wells Fargo

Creativity:

Those selected in this category have used their entrepreneurial and creative talents to form new ideas, methods, or ways of doing business. They ?think outside the box.? and support the college in entrepreneurial activities and competitions. Honorees include:

  • N. Lois Adams, ?85, president, CEO, and chairman, HHCS Health Group
  • Debbie Balaschak, ?88?and?Jim Balaschak, ?86 & ?92, president, Deanja, LLC
  • G. Thomas Bland, Jr., ?75 & ?79, chairman & CEO, AquaFiber Technologies Corporation
  • Steven Felkowitz, ?79, chief executive officer, Atico International
  • Cameron M. Ford, Ph.D., director, Center for Entrepreneurial Leadership
  • The Honorable Phyllis A. Klock
  • Blaine Sweatt, MBA, ?76, president, New Business Division (Retired), Darden Restaurants, Inc.
  • Andrew B. Titen, ?75, president and chief operating officer, Bisk Education
  • Turbine Technology Services
  • Richard J. Walsh, ?77 & ?83, president, The Knob Hill Companies

Excellence:

This group consistently goes ?above and beyond? and performs at the highest level in every endeavor they participate in. Honorees include:

  • Merrell Bailey, ?85, ?89, ?01 & ?07, managing partner, Bailey Zobel Pilcher
  • Robert B. Case, ?70, president, RB Case Consulting, Inc.?and Chief Operations Officer, eSchool Solutions, Inc.
  • Lawrence J. Chastang, ?80, managing partner of International Services, CliftonLarsonAllen LLP
  • Les W. Eiserman, CPA CVA, ?81 & ?82, partner in charge ? Orlando Office Audit Department, CliftonLarsonAllen LLP
  • James W. Ferrell, ?80, president, Ferrell Wealth Management, Inc.
  • Melanie Fernandez, ?86 & ?91, partner, Cross, Fernandez & Riley, LLP
  • Andrew J. Fore, III, ?76 & ?83,?managing director ? Global General Services, Citigroup
  • Michael J. (?Micky?) Grindstaff, ?78, president, Shutts & Bowen, LLP
  • Laurette McPartland Koellner, ?77, executive chairman, International Lease Finance Corporation, Corporate Board Member, Celestica Inc, Corporate Board Member, Hillshire Brands
  • Nan B. McCormick, ?83, senior vice president, CBRE, Inc.
  • Tom Messina, ?84, executive director and associate vice president, UCF Alumni Association
  • Kenneth White, Ph.D., founding professor, UCF Economics Department

The 50 will be recognized during a brief ceremony, where Paul Jarley, dean of the college will share his new vision.

?This event promises to be fun for all, and will be a great opportunity to reflect upon the past 50 years, as well as look forward to our very promising future,? he said.

The banquet is the highlight of a week-long celebration that also features a Mardi Gras party for faculty, staff and students as well as a student organization showcase.

Source: http://today.ucf.edu/college-of-business-to-celebrate-50th-anniversary-with-a-mardi-gras-banquet/

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