Monday, January 28, 2013

10 Things to Know for Monday

A protester throws a tear gas canister back at riot police during clashes near Tahrir Square, in Cairo, Sunday, Jan. 27, 2013. Clashes continued for the fourth successive day between protesters and police near Tahrir square, birthplace of the 2011 uprising. Police used tear gas, while the protesters pelted them with rocks. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)

A protester throws a tear gas canister back at riot police during clashes near Tahrir Square, in Cairo, Sunday, Jan. 27, 2013. Clashes continued for the fourth successive day between protesters and police near Tahrir square, birthplace of the 2011 uprising. Police used tear gas, while the protesters pelted them with rocks. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)

Police investigators inspect the entrance of the Kiss nightclub in Santa Maria city, Rio Grande do Sul state, Brazil, Sunday, Jan. 27, 2013. Flames raced through a crowded nightclub in southern Brazil early Sunday, killing more than 230 people as panicked partygoers gasped for breath in the smoke-filled air, stampeding toward a single exit partially blocked by those already dead. (AP Photo/Nabor Goulart)

Actresses Freida Pinto, left, and Jessica Chastain arrive at the 19th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles on Sunday, Jan. 27, 2013. (Photo by Matt Sayles/Invision/AP)

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

1. WHY THE TOLL WAS SO HIGH IN BRAZIL

More than 230 were killed in Santa Maria when smoke engulfed a crowded club and panicked partiers headed for a single exit.

2. WHERE NEWS OF THE FIRE HIT HOME IN THE US

Memories are still fresh in Warwick, R.I., the scene of pyrotechnics-sparked nightclub blaze that killed 100 in 2003.

3. MORSI'S ANGRY CALL FOR CALM IN EGYPT

Taking to TV, the president warns he'll do whatever is necessary to quell three days of unrest that has left more than 50 dead.

4. THE STARK NUMBERS ON AMERICAN ELDER ABUSE

As many as 1 in 10 seniors may suffer some form of injury, exploitation or neglect, a number that could climb as Baby Boomers age.

5. THE SURPRISING REACH OF ACTIVITY IN THE WORLD'S CITIES

Heat rising up from New York, Paris and Tokyo might be remotely warming up winters far away as Alaska, Canada, and Siberia.

6. WHO'S MAKING A SCORE ON GAS DRILLING

Private landowners are reaping billions in royalties from the U.S. boom, transforming lives and livelihoods in more than a dozen states.

7. HOW SOME KIDS ARE BEING TAUGHT BETTER IN REVERSE

In the technology-driven "flipped learning," classroom lectures becomes the homework and school time is for practice.

8. IT'S OK TO USE YOUR PHONE IN THESE THEATERS

As long as you're in the "tweet seats," a growing number of venues, including some on Broadway, are good with real-time uses of social media.

9. ANNE HATHAWAY PICKS UP SAG HONOR

The best-supporting actress prize for "Les Miserables" boosts her prospects for the Academy Awards.

10. THE TWO FACES YOU COULD SEE THE MOST ON SUPER SUNDAY

Jack and Jackie Harbaugh, parents of the opposing coaches in the Ravens-49ers matchup, will be sought after by CBS-TV's parent cam.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-01-27-10-Things-to-Know-Monday/id-ebafdb28f30a4487b9e798445279a7e8

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Gulf Coast Travel + Leisure | Outdoors: Jan. 24-30 | beimanorbacchain

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Sunday, January 27, 2013

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lteydanie: Office Ergonomics | Learn the Secrets of Good Health ?

Office Ergonomics | Learn the Secrets of Good Health & Fitness ?

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Source: http://binitasharma95.blogspot.com/2013/01/office-ergonomics-learn-secrets-of-good.html

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Before You Sign for a High Risk Car Loan - Bad Credit Auto Loans

What credit challenged consumers can do to give themselves the best chance at successfully completing a subprime auto loan

What we know

Here at Auto Credit Express we believe that car buyers who have experienced credit problems in the past need to face the fact that they will likely need to make a number of difficult choices prior to signing on the dotted line. But the fact is that these choices can mean the difference between successfully completing their auto loans and further damaging their credit.

We don?t mention this topic lightly as it?s based on over two decades of experience helping car buyers with credit issues find those new car dealers that can offer them their best opportunities for approved car loans.

Auto loan troubles

In some cases the consumers we come into contact with have experienced issues with previous car loans that include signing a contracting they didn?t understand for a vehicle they couldn?t afford.

What we have learned from their experiences is that by understanding the process and following some simple guidelines, they could?ve avoided many of the situations they currently find themselves in now.

Credit reports and FICO scores

Even before you start the application process, you should know what?s contained in your credit reports (you?re entitled to one at no charge per year from each of the three credit bureaus) and at least one of your credit scores (you?ll have to pay for the score).

With established credit and FICO scores over 660 most buyers should qualify for a conventional car loan at prime or near prime interest rates with a captive finance company, bank or credit union.

Consumers with scores that fall below 660 will typically be looking at either a subprime auto loan or, in some cases if their credit is really bad, possibly even a loan through a buy here pay here car dealer (although this article won?t be covering BHPH car loans).

To sum it up, knowing your credit scores and the information contained in your credit reports is important for a couple of reasons:

??? ?The conventional and bad credit auto loan processes are different so you should know what to prepare for
??? ?Applying for a conventional car loan with poor credit scores will probably result in a credit denial ? wasting time for you, the lender and the car dealer (if you applied through a dealership that doesn?t have a special finance department)

Your budget

The next step is to determine a car budget. In addition to the car payment, you?ll want to include the cost of gas as well as full coverage car insurance. By comparing this figure to your income after expenses (for assistance you can use the loan calculators on sites such as ours) you can determine your debt to income (DTI) and payment to income (PTI) ratios. All lenders use these ratios but it?s especially important to those who lend to people with credit issues.

Do your research

Next, research those vehicles in the price range you budget for and you?re interested in by visiting web sites like consumerreports.org. This can help you determine which models are the most dependable to save you money in operating expenses.

Dealer backend products

Backend products are those offered in dealership finance departments. Of these, gap insurance makes sense if you have a loan term over 48 months and/or have put less than 20 percent down.

A reasonably-priced car service contract also makes sense if you?re buying a used car or financing a new vehicle beyond the new car warranty period. It?s also a good idea to check a model?s repair history (again, Consumer Reports is a good source for this) as well as price shop the cost of a service contract beforehand.

Buyers, however, should stay away from window etching, rust-proofing and paint protection. All three add little or nothing of value. If necessary you can etch windows and seal the paint yourself for a fraction of the cost, while most cars come with anywhere from a seven to ten year rust perforation warranty from the manufacturer.

Research the dealer

Check with friends, co-workers and the Better Business Bureau before visiting the dealer to determine its reputation for fairness in dealing with new and used car customers. Unfortunately, in many cases consumers with credit problems have a difficult time finding a franchised new car dealer willing to help them ? but more on that in a moment.

As we see it

Before submitting a loan application, know your credit scores and the information in your credit reports. If your credit is less than perfect you should also check your income and expenses to be sure you meet basic lender requirements.

Finally, if your credit is less than perfect, you probably have more options than you realize. Before visiting a tote the note dealer check out Auto Credit Express which matches applicants that have experienced auto credit issues with dealers that can offer them their best opportunities for car loan approvals.

So if you?re ready to establish your car credit, you can begin now by filling out our online car loans application.

Tags: bad credit auto loans, high risk car loans

Source: http://www.autocreditexpress.com/blog/2013/01/25/before-you-sign-for-a-high-risk-car-loan/

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Saturday, January 26, 2013

Science needs a second opinion: Researchers find flaws in study of patients in 'vegetative state'

Jan. 24, 2013 ? A team of researchers led by Weill Cornell Medical College is calling into question the published statistics, methods and findings of a highly publicized research study that claimed bedside electroencephalography (EEG) identified evidence of awareness in three patients diagnosed to be in a vegetative state.

The new reanalysis study led by Weill Cornell neurologists Drs. Andrew Goldfine,Jonathan Victor, and Nicholas Schiff, published in the Jan. 26 issue of the journal Lancet, reports the statistical results and methodology used by a research team led by University of Western Ontario scientists and published online Nov. 9, 2011, also in the Lancet, was flawed in a number of crucial ways. Due to these errors, the reanalysis concludes it is impossible to determine whether or not these vegetative state study subjects demonstrated any degree of awareness during the testing.

The University of Western Ontario researchers in the original study set out to use bedside EEG technology to identify any changes in brain activity in vegetative patients and also healthy subjects as controls. During the study, each subject was asked to either imagine moving their hand or foot each time they heard an electronic beep. The brain activity following hand or foot commands was recorded using EEG and then compared in the study. The published study claimed that three of the 16 tested vegetative patients successfully performed the task, along with 9 of the 12 healthy controls. The reanalysis of this study is important, the Weill Cornell researchers say, because if the method was indeed valid, it would mark an important breakthrough in the field -- the first evidence using a bedside testing method that patients reported to be in a vegetative state could perform high-level cognitive tasks.

"Sadly, our reanalysis of the research team's original data shows these particular methods do not work, and it is important that scientists, physicians, and most importantly, the families of severely brain injured patients understand that the conclusions reached in the original study were most likely due to chance findings," says the corresponding author of the reanalysis, Dr. Schiff, the Jerold B. Katz Professor of Neurology and Neuroscience, professor of neuroscience in the Feil Family Brain and Mind Research Institute and professor of public health at Weill Cornell.

"We see the urgency and need every single day for tests that can be used to help establish awareness and consciousness in brain injured patients. However we won't help patients or their families by using a flawed research method and data that cannot accurately provide the information we are all hoping to find," says Dr. Schiff, who is also a neurologist at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center.

"The reanalysis points to the importance of the peer review process, data sharing and analytic tools to confirm research findings, especially those which are biologically complex and where misinterpretation could have major implications on clinical practice," says study co-author Dr. Joseph J. Fins, the E. William Davis Jr., MD Professor of Medical Ethics and chief of the Division of Medical Ethics at Weill Cornell, and director of medical ethics at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell. "EEG techniques are an inexpensive and portable method of assessment, and a premature endorsement and dissemination of this technique could provide families with false hope about whether patients thought to be vegetative are in fact conscious," says Dr. Fins.

"Methods Have Consequences"

This reanalysis study by Weill Cornell and its colleagues from Burke Medical Research Institute and the University of Li?ge was made possible by a data-sharing agreement between their research group and the authors of the original study, Dr. Damian Cruse, Dr. Adrian Owen and colleagues from the University of Western Ontario. The Weill Cornell, University of Liege and the University of Western Ontario investigators are jointly supported by a multicenter research grant from the James S. McDonnell Foundation.

"We set out to validate the original Lancet study findings about EEG, not disprove them, because it is critically important that tests purporting to assert the presence of consciousness be carefully vetted by peer-review," says senior author Dr. Victor, the Fred Plum Professor of Neurology and professor of neuroscience in the Feil Family Brain and Mind Research Institute at Weill Cornell and a neurologist at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell.

The reanalysis study doesn't criticize the use of bedside EEG technology for detection of consciousness, but questions the appropriateness of the statistical methodology applied to the data, Dr. Victor explained. The Weill Cornell research team's main finding was that the original study failed to take into account several aspects of EEG signals present in the vegetative patients who were said to show awareness -- including the contamination of the EEG signals with muscle activity and the random characteristics of the EEG over extended periods of time, he says. Also, basic task-related EEG signals observed in the healthy subjects were not identifiable in any of the vegetative patients.

"The false-positive EEG brain activity responses in vegetative patients may have been reported because of flawed statistical methods, a problem that was exacerbated because a large number of statistical features were extracted from a small amount of data," says lead author Dr. Goldfine, assistant professor of neurology at the Burke Medical Research Institute, a neurologist at New York Presbyterian /Weill Cornell and Burke Rehabilitation Hospital. "Our reanalysis showed that because of the statistical assumptions and methodology used in the original study, random phenomena could be misinterpreted as a 'response'."

In addition to identifying flaws in the statistical approach used in the original study, the Weill Cornell research team also reanalyzed the original data with methodologies that take into account the presence of contamination of EEG data by muscle activity artifact, and the kind of randomness that EEG signals manifest over time. "But critically, the data from the vegetative subjects showed no changes indicative of consciousness or command following. Our analysis only revealed random fluctuations of brain activity," says Dr. Goldfine, who is also an assistant professor of neuroscience in the Feil Family Brain and Mind Research Institute at Weill Cornell.

"This reanalysis study shows methods have consequences," says Dr. Fins. "This is really difficult science, and we must do everything in our power to work together, to share our data and methods and peer review it, so that we can reach our goal of properly defining consciousness in severely brain injured patients."

The study's other co-authors include: Jonathan Bardin, a neuroscience graduate student at Weill Cornell Graduate School of Medical Sciences, and Dr. Quentin Noirhomme of the Coma Science Group, Cyclotron Research Centre and Neurology Department at the University and University Hospital of Li?ge, in Li?ge, Belgium.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Weill Cornell Medical College.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Andrew M Goldfine, Jonathan D Victor, Mary M Conte, Jonathan C Bardin, Nicholas D Schiff. Bedside detection of awareness in the vegetative state. The Lancet, 2012; 379 (9827): 1701 DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(12)60714-4

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/top_news/~3/grB-j5V__5I/130125104206.htm

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Home Relocation Tips For Your Family | HomeBackers Realty

Posted on January 25th, 2013 by Homebackers

Moving from one home to another is really hectic when we think the process of shifting. That too, if you are in situation to move to other state is traumatic and can?t imaginable. You may be well settled in your current state and your kids have good friends around there. Thinking of relocation is impossible for you but the situation is you have to move on. If you decided to relocate to another home consider things that you have to opt with new location. Organize your relocation plan step by step can help you to keep your stress under control.

In other hand if you like to move to other state that you think your family?s future will be bright over there. Then there is no stress or confusion to move on but also consider your family members situation that they may not like to move to other place leaving there friends. Understand everyone?s situation and make a move. Inform them prior about relocation so that they will try to set up everything and please give them some time to get in to the situation. Particularly your kids, they may be well attached with their friends and neighbors and it will be really difficult for them about their separation.

Explain them about the future that is waiting for them in the new state. Make them interest in moving to new state and get to know them about the culture and places that can be visit every weekend. Make the home move as fun. Give them some responsibilities to pack their things and inform their friends about the moving and make a small get together in your home. Get together can make them relax and make them prepare about the moving. Don?t do any things that make them feel about leaving their current state. Packing and moving your home is not difficult it?s just a physical work that can be done by some home movers. But making your family members convincing about the relocation is the most difficult part. Do it correctly.

HomeBackers Realty is an expert realtor in Dayton Ohio with years of real estate experience that you can trust. Buying a house via HomeBackers can save you time and money as well they will negotiate on your behalf. They can find you the best specials. If your desire to own a home is based on to create stability, keeping control over your living situation, building asset and investing for your future, just go for it Greenville is the best choice. Make your life simple and comfortable by choosing Homes in Greenville, be in safe hands! Please feel free to contact us or call 937-754-1111 for further details.

Source: http://www.homebackers.com/home-relocation-tips-for-your-family/

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Friday, January 25, 2013

P53 mutation hinders cancer treatment response

Jan. 25, 2013 ? Scientists from the National Cancer Centre Singapore (NCCS) have discovered the workings of the gene that has been hindering treatment response in cancer patients. This discovery was made after 5 years of studying the mutant form of the p53 gene, the major tumor suppressor in humans, which is generally found mutated in over 50% of all type of human cancers.

The dominant-negative (DN) effect of the mutant p53 gene in cancers was found to affect the outcome of cancer treatment modalities. DN effect is a phenomenon whereby one copy of mutant p53 that exists in cancer cells inhibits the tumor suppressor activity of the other wild-type p53 copy when they co-exist. The result is that a patient may either have poor response or earlier relapse of tumours after their treatment.

The research findings is significant in that it offers hope to improve cancer treatment outcomes by selectively inhibiting mutant p53's DN effect through several methods by generating selective and specific inhibitory molecules specific for some of the common hot-spot p53 point mutations. There are currently no drugs or compounds that can alleviate DN effects of mutant p53.

In order to understand the specific roles of mutant p53 DN properties in regulating acute treatment response and long-term tumourgenesis, a team of five researchers led by NCCS Prof Kanaga Sabapathy, the Principal Investigator in the Laboratory of Carcinogenesis and Head of the Division of Cellular & Molecular Research from NCCS, carried out experiments by generating genetically engineered knock-in mouse strains expressing varying levels of mutant p53. The results showed that DN effect is observed after acute p53 activation by a variety of chemotherapeutic drugs and irradiation, thereby affecting anti-cancer treatment. This breakthrough came after five years of intensive research.

It was found that mutant p53 have DN effects in a cell-type and dose-dependent manner, especially during acute p53 activation where p53 levels are elevated. Based on the above observations, efforts to generate specific inhibitors for the common hot spot p53 point mutations are underway. The inhibition of mutant p53 expression in cells carrying a wild-type and mutant p53 alleles can improve response to chemotherapeutic drugs.

In a further study, the researchers also questioned the possibility of the mutant p53 acquiring new functions (or Gain of Function) to drive carcinogenesis, transforming normal cells to cancerous cells. Their investigation comparing cells from genetically engineered mouse strains expressing 2 different types of p53 mutations: the R172H mutation versus the R246S mutation, which showed that Gain of Function (GOF) was found only in the former. This showed that GOF of mutated p53 is specifically dependent on mutation-type but not across all kinds of genetic mutations, highlighting diversity in properties of the different types of p53 mutations, thereby indicating that mutations found in human cancers can behave differently, and thus, need to be carefully assessed prior to treatment.

Thus, the existence of mutant p53 certainly has a negative impact on cancer treatment, whether it is through DN effect or GOF. Prof Sabapathy said that the team is now embarking on more research to determine the possibility of targeting mutant p53 without affecting wild-type p53 in human cells, paving way to clinical trials in the future to test the efficacy on cancer therapeutic response.

The research was supported by grants from the National Medical Research Council of Singapore and the Singapore Millennium Foundation to KS. The publication has been accepted and published by Cell Press, publisher of biomedical journals, in the journal Cancer Cell, on Dec. 10, 2012. Prof Sabapathy also teaches at the Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by SingHealth, 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. Ming?Kei Lee, Wei?Wei Teoh, Beng?Hooi Phang, Wei?Min Tong, Zhao?Qi Wang, Kanaga Sabapathy. Cell-type, Dose, and Mutation-type Specificity Dictate Mutant p53 Functions In?Vivo. Cancer Cell, 2012; 22 (6): 751 DOI: 10.1016/j.ccr.2012.10.022

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/top_news/top_health/~3/EAuE68IgufU/130125111331.htm

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Celebrity Mug Shot Photos

Celebrity Mug Shot Photos

Paris Hilton makes her mug shot look like a glamor shotWe normally see the men and ladies of Hollywood looking their best with the help of a hair and make-up teams and the best lighting. But, even celebrities can’t escape the long arm of the law and their mug shot photos aren’t the most flattering! Check out our gallery of celebrity mug shot photos! Josh ...

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Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/01/celebrity-mug-shot-photos/

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Tuesday, January 22, 2013

This is for the people of the gun (Unqualified Offerings)

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Its not a helicopter its the new Windy 45 Chinook ? World Sports Boats

Norwegian boat-builder Windy Boats is to unveil a major new model at the 2013 D?sseldorf Boat Show (19-27 January) which combines the comfort and protection of hard-top cruising with the exhilaration of an open sports boat. Involving a considerable investment in design, tooling and customer research, the new 45 Chinook, a development of the 44, boasts a massively enlarged hardtop that offers more shelter to the cockpit and main deck seating areas.

Windy 45 Chinook

It also features a huge opening sunroof, transforming the boat at the touch of a button from a fully enclosed, hard-top cruiser into an open-cockpit sports machine. The new model is also some 34cm (13in) longer than its award-winning predecessor, thanks to an extended swimming platform. ?It was the success of the 40 Maestro which inspired our new 45,? explained Windy?s CEO, Knut Heiberg-Andersen. ?Its long hardtop and the big opening sunroof have proved extremely popular, giving cruising families the best of both worlds ? proper weather protection, and an open boat for when the sun comes out. It was a design development that seemed tailor-made for the Chinook.?

Windy 45 Chinook

Windy?s designers also took the opportunity to redesign and enlarge the topsides windows to match the right-angles of the new Windy look. Also in common with the Maestro, the 45 Chinook has a fresh new interior design by Peder Eidsgaard, which combines cool and understated modernity with the warmth and solidity of hardwood. Tactile touches and detailing emphasise the built-in Windy quality. ?This is a very exciting boat for us,? commented Ben Toogood of Berthon, Windy?s distributor in the UK and France. ?We?re getting a lot of Windy 37 owners saying it?s a logical step up for them ? it has a lot more volume, two showers and three cabins, and of course the Eidsgaard interior design, which is proving really popular.

Windy 45 Chinook

And then there?s the extended hardtop and enormous sunroof.? The new 45 retains the Chinook?s excellent, family-friendly layout, with a lower saloon and galley. Two engine options and a superb Hans-J?rgen Johnsen hull complete an unbeatable cruising package. The Windy 45 Chinook can be seen on the Windy Boats stand (5E20) at the 2013 D?sseldorf Boat Show (19-27 January) alongside the Windy 26 Kharma, the Windy SR26 Tender, the Windy 29 Coho, the Windy 31 Zonda and the Windy 40 Maestro.

Windy 45 Chinook

Engine options

Twin 370hp Volvo IPS500

Twin 435hp Volvo IPS600

Fuel capacity 1100lt (290 US gal)

Water capacity 305lt (80.5 US gal)

Maximum speed 44 knots

Cruising speed 35 knots

Cruising range 228 nautical miles

Windy owner views at the ILBC www.worldsportsboats.ning.com

Windy boats?www.windy.no

50.365742 -4.160655

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Source: http://worldsportsboats.com/2013/01/22/its-not-a-helicopter-its-the-new-windy-45-chinook/

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Misery Blu-ray Review | AVForums.com - UK Online

Written by Matthew Jarvis
published 22nd January 2013

Supplied for review by

Zavvi

?Don?t even think about anyone coming for you, not the doctors, not your agent, not your family because I never called them. Nobody knows you?re here, and you better hope nothing happens to me, because if I die, you die.?

This one line from Kathy Bates sums up this entire, chilling film. As physiological thrillers go, the writing of Stephen King coupled with the direction of Rob Reiner has produced one of the all time best. It?s not the sort of film that has you trying to work out what will happen next, or who the next victim might be, as both villain and victim are far too well defined for that. But the charm and for that matter, the horror, comes from the apparent normality of the setting.

Our two leads are Kathy Bates who plays Annie, the middle aged, overweight ex nurse, living her solitary existence in her remote small holding with just her pet pig (called Misery) to keep her company and James Caan, the...

[Read the complete movie review]

Picture

This MPEG-AVC transfer is in 24FPS and on the whole looks quite good. Unusually for a recent transfer, I detected a couple of substantial dust marks on the picture as well as some quite prominent film grain. The problems ? minor as they are, don?t stop there unfortunately, with a few scenes looking most un-film like with a tinge of video about the picture. It looks a little like the generation of sit-coms made on film and converted to video in a few places, but to be fair, the majority of the movie looks very good. The colour palette leans towards browns and greens ? a good trick amongst the snow, and it feels very small town America. The cinematography is creative and technically to a high standard and this really helps to define the film.

Detail in the dark bits is a little lacking, as there has been quite a lot of smoothing ? and then edge enhancement, to my mind the reason why some shots don?t look too hot. In all honesty, I am being quite picky here, but films of this pedigree deserve top quality transfers and I feel this one dips a point below where it should be, given its age and original production quality. To be fair in all other respects, the transfer is very good and the end result is very watchable. I have slated films before for not being cleaned up enough, but this one has just gone slightly over the top on occasions.

Picture score : 7

Sound

Horror films don?t work without an atmospheric and creepy soundtrack and this one is no exception. From the subtlety of some of the sound effects to the full on gothic score, we get atmosphere by the box full. The DTS-HD MA stream is dynamic for the film?s vintage and the old school surround track works quite well. There are a few moments to warm up the sub, but on the whole things are pretty quiet at either end of the spectrum. Every line of dialogue is sharp, even in the low, threatening and even whispered passages, just as it should be.

Marc Shaiman?s score perfectly fits the movie, with a mixture of a few contemporary tracks mixed in with a classical score, favouring heavy strings in true horror style. This does feature quite heavily in the surround mix, but on this occasion it kind of adds to the whole experience.

There are a few minor issues to try to ignore though. There is audible wow and flutter, both in the opening credits ? thus attuning your ear to it, and on occasions during the film. There are also some slightly compressed sounding vocal peaks. Both I think are probably on the original master, so are not the fault of the transfer and would have been quite expensive and invasive to fix. Neither spoils the film to any extent either.

Sound score : 8

Extras

Zippo, zilch, nothing! Just a main menu and pointless pop up menu with scene selection and language support. This is very disappointing for such an iconic movie and I am sure something could have been put together. It leaves a bad taste and makes the disc feel like a cheap, giveaway disc better suited to the supermarket bargain bin.

Extras score : 0

Verdict

An iconic movie, creepy, claustrophobic and containing one of the most famous scenes of the genre. What more could you want? Kathy Bates gives her all and a strong supporting cast all add up to make this a must see psychological thriller that will keep you on the edge of your seat.

Technically, this disc is pretty good for the age of the initial movie, but there are better ones out there. The lack of any extras is a major disappointment to me and not good enough for a release of this stature. The good news is, the minor imperfections do not spoil the enjoyment the film one jot and do not dilute my recommendation to add this film to your collection.

Overall score : 8

687 word review written by Matthew Jarvis.

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Source: http://www.avforums.com/movies/Misery-review_11159/blu-ray.html

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Sunday, January 20, 2013

mutrasubi: What Beginners Should Know About Scuba Diving ...

Scuba diving Atlanta can be a wonderful experience for anyone. This will give them a chance to look at the natural habitat of fishes and other underwater creatures. Coral formations and other vistas underwater can also be seen through this activity. For people who like adventures or explorations, then this is good for them.

Although this can be fun, it also has its risks. If someone performs this activity without the right training, he might experience different problems with the gears and his health while he is underwater. This counteracts with his body?s instincts to survive and swim in water because he will try to sink for this to be done. For it to be done properly, then, he will need to learn more about this whole thing.

Scuba actually stands for self-contained underwater breathing apparatus. This describes the oxygen tank and regulators that are used by the divers so they can breathe in the water. Although recreational scuba diving does not have any centralized regulatory agencies, many countries require these certifications for people to do the activity.

If one is interested in learning this and getting certified, then he should find an instructor to train him. He should do some research to find out where he can have the best training. He should be sure that he attends a course given by an instructor who is not only a skilled diver but also a reputable instructor in this field.

You must learn how to control your breathing when you dive. You must know how you should inhale or exhale through your apparatus. It is also essential to be relaxed during this time so you can sink with a particular rhythm and then rise slowly so your breathing patterns would not have any problem.

The use of the right gear is also important for these people. They should know what equipment they need for this and in which establishments they will be able to get these. They need to research regarding this matter since it is important for them to find the gears with the best quality that have reasonable prices for them to use when they dive.

When they already go to the sea, it is very important for them to keep in mind that they should never dive alone. This is one of the most important rules in the activity. This can mean between life and death so they should check their gears properly and never stray far away from their partners when they dive.

Students are always reminded by instructors to follow rules. These are necessary to ensure the safety of the divers. By following these, one can be sure that he is safe and he would not be hurt. Through these rules, the fun and adventure can be experienced without putting his self in unnecessary danger.

By following these tips, surely, they can have a good time in scuba diving Atlanta. This will let the people have a good look at what lay underneath the waters. This will be an experience that they are not likely to forget so they have to enjoy everything and take in the beauty and wonders that only nature can make.

Read more about Some Tips On Scuba Diving For Beginners visiting our website.

Source: http://sport.litr.in/recreation-sports/what-beginners-should-know-about-scuba-diving/

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Source: http://mutrasubi.blogspot.com/2013/01/what-beginners-should-know-about-scuba.html

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Te'o among many victims of online wishful thinking

CHICAGO (AP) ? It started out a stunner: The Heisman Trophy runner-up had told heartbreaking stories about a dead girlfriend who didn't exist. Then it became unreal: The All-American linebacker said he had been duped, and theirs was a relationship that existed only in phone calls and Internet chats.

The reaction was predictable: Unbelievable. Couldn't happen.

People speculated he must be a straight-laced Mormon, naive and unfamiliar with modern-day dating hazards. Or he must be part of an elaborate hoax designed to bolster his image. Because no big-time college football player, beloved on campus and adored by millions, could have a girlfriend he's never ... actually ... met.

Yet even people who really ought to know better say what Notre Dame's Manti Te'o says happened to him has happened to them, and they believe it happens far more often than people care to admit.

"If we shake the tree, we would find hundreds of thousands of people falling out of the tree who are experiencing something like this," said Robert Epstein, a senior research psychologist at the California-based American Institute for Behavioral Research and Technology.

It's just human nature, Epstein said, something known formally by psychologists as "confirmation bias." We watch the news that matches our political beliefs. We discount viewpoints we don't like. We ignore good advice and miss red flags, so we can continue believing in something we want to be true.

In Epstein's case, it was believing he'd made a real connection with an attractive Russian woman named Ivana he met online. In fact, she was nothing more than a computer bot someone had set up to respond to queries on an online dating site.

"A lot of people still make fun of me," he said.

Today's social networking sites, such as Facebook and Twitter, make it easy to "meet" someone without ever doing more than chatting online or exchanging emails. The same tools that allow for such casual contact also can be used by impostors to create intricate personas that exist only on the Internet.

All of it simply makes it that much easier to delude ourselves.

"After a generation of kids growing up with Facebook and decades of online life, you'd think we wouldn't be so easily duped, but I think these people who do the duping are more inventive than people who use the technology," said Steve Jones, a communications professor and online expert at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

It's been happening since people first began mingling in chat rooms more than 20 years ago. In 2006, one mom in Missouri, Lori Drew, created a MySpace page for non-existent teenage boy so she could "romance" ? and strike back at ? a girl she thought was spreading rumors about her daughter. Humiliated, the targeted girl later killed herself.

"As far back as the 1980s, men were impersonating women, kids were pretending to be adults, and all kinds of relationships with non-existent or phony people flourished online," says Paul Levinson, a professor of communication and media studies at Fordham University, who studies social media.

Now, he says, "the rise of Twitter and Facebook have only made that easier."

Those behind Te'o's imaginary girlfriend, for instance, created more than one Twitter account for her and appear to have used photos lifted from a California woman's Facebook page to make it look that much more real.

"In retrospect, I obviously should have been much more cautious," Te'o said in a statement earlier in the week. "If anything good comes of this, I hope it is that others will be far more guarded when they engage with people online than I was."

Te'o has company. As Notre Dame rose to No. 1 in the AP Top 25, sport writers nationwide recounted the story of the heroic, grieving athlete who persevered on the field after a girlfriend named Lennay Kekua was diagnosed with leukemia. Te'o and his family provided them with plenty of stories about the relationship, and no one figured out it was fiction until Deadspin.com broke that news this past week.

In his first interview since, Te'o told ESPN he had lied to his father about having met Kekua. To cover that up, he apparently lied to everyone else.

"That goes back to what I did with my dad. I knew that. I even knew that it was crazy that I was with somebody that I didn't meet," Te'o said during the off-camera interview Friday. "So I kind of tailored my stories to have people think that, yeah, he met her before she passed away."

The fact is that many people don't like to admit that they find love online, let alone that they might be misled by someone they've met that way.

For a young woman in Chicago, it started last February when a potential love interest responded to a personal ad she'd posted in the Craigslist "W4M" section. They communicated for several months online, first by email, and then instant messaging and then online voice chat.

She sent him her photo. He delayed sending his, again and again, and put off meeting in person. He wasn't ready, he told her. It bothered her, but she was so taken with the ease and intimacy of their long, daily conversations ? about their lives and their jobs, their family and friends, even sex.

After this went on for eight months, he abruptly deleted his email and Yahoo Messenger accounts, the only means she'd had to reach him. She didn't even know his last name and wouldn't know him if he passed her on the street.

"It all sounds ridiculous when you're not immersed in the situation, but when you are, it's incredibly easy to get sucked in and not want out," said the 23-year-old, a young professional who shared her story on the condition of anonymity, still hesitant to admit how truly heartbroken she was over a person she'd never met in person.

Te'o offered similar details Friday, telling ESPN he never met Kekua face-to-face and when he tried to speak with her via Skype and video phone calls, the picture was blocked. Still, he said he didn't figure out the ruse.

After he was told Kekua had died of leukemia in early September, Te'o admitted he misled the public about the nature of the "relationship" because he was uncomfortable saying it was purely an electronic romance. Skeptics remain, including some young adults accustomed to making connections on the Internet and by text message.

"Maybe I'd be more inclined to buy it if he was an everyday 'Joe Schmoe,' but with his fame, I can't imagine it happening," said Jennifer Marcus, a 26-year-old New Yorker who blogs about dating and other topics. "To me it seems like he did it for sympathy, or maybe has a few screws loose like a ton of people in this world. People go to great lengths to fit in."

For the 23-year-old Chicagoan, her experience online hasn't led her to swear off using Craigslist and the OkCupid website to find dates. She has, however, started heeding the red flags she once ignored, she says, and cuts off communication with anyone who won't meet with her in person.

"I don't want my time wasted again with someone who isn't willing to give the same amount of transparency and availability that I am," she said. "I'm planning a third date with someone who is very much the person he claimed to be."

___

Online:

Epstein's article: http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=from-russia-with-love

___

Martha Irvine is an AP national writer. She can be reached at mirvine(at)ap.org or via http://twitter.com/irvineap

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/teo-among-many-victims-online-wishful-thinking-161225803--spt.html

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Aviation: American Airlines Unveils New Livery on Boeing 777-300ER

Aviation American Airlines Boeing extended range aircraft

American Airlines flagship Boeing 777-300ER sporting air carrier's? new livery. Photo Credit: American Airlines

Business

American Airlines has unveiled a new logo and new livery on the already delivered Flagship Boeing 777-300ER aircraft, which will take to the skies on 31 January 2013. Which raises an interesting question: will pilots threaten to go on strike the way they did the last time American introduced a new logo and livery?

It's been a while since American Airlines last revamped its look ? about 30 years, if I remember correctly. That's when the airline switched from its blue and orange against a silver exterior to a red, white, and blue colour scheme. The airline's signature polished metal exterior, however, was maintained.

American Airlines Boeing 737-800

American Airlines Boeing 737-800 sporting the air carrier's current livery. Photo Credit: American Airlines.

Pilots Threaten to Strike

?

Pilots, however, were outraged that the airline's symbol, an eagle, had been dropped from the logo and threatened to go on strike.

In the end, the airline agreed to add a stylized version of an eagle between the double AAs, which were to become the airline's new logo.

At first, I thought that the airline had decided once again to drop the eagle from its livery. It was nowhere to be seen on the tail of the airplane. It was only upon closer examination that I noticed a highly stylized version of an eagle toward the front of the fuselage. This time, however, the eagle looks more like an airplane than a bird.

Will pilots be happy? Only time will tell.

550 New Airplanes on Order

American Airlines plans to continue taking delivery of new planes in 2013 as part of its historic order of 550 new aircraft.? ?

"Since placing our landmark aircraft order in July of 2011, we've been building anticipation toward a moment in time when the outside of our aircraft reflects the progress we've made to modernize our airline on the inside," says Tom Horton, American's Chairman and CEO.

"While we complete the evaluation of whether a merger can build on American's strengths, we remain steadfast in each step we take to renew our airline, a step we take with great respect for our name American.? Today marks important progress in that journey as we unveil a new and updated look for the first time in more than 40 years." ?

One of the hallmarks of the American Airlines livery from the get go has been the polished metal ? rather than a painted ? aircraft exterior.

With the delivery of hundreds of new, lighter aircraft built of composite materials, however, polished metal was no longer an option. The planes had to be painted.

Silver Bird Legacy

Wanting to maintain its ?silver bird? legacy, Ameican Airlines decided on silver mica paint as a way of maintaining the look ? if not the metal. ?

"Our new logo and livery are designed to reflect the passion for progress and the soaring spirit, which is uniquely American," says Virasb Vahidi, American's Chief Commercial Officer.

"Our?core colors - red, white, and blue - have been updated to reflect a more vibrant and welcoming spirit. The new tail, with stripes flying proudly, is a bold reflection of American's origin and name. And our new flight symbol, an updated eagle, incorporates the many icons that people have come to associate with American, including the 'A' and the star." ?

Comment

I don't know about anyone else, but I always thought that the old American Airlines' livery looked like an elongated French flag. Why was it blue, white, and red rather than red, whte and blue? As for the new livery? Well?

Okay, it most definitely does NOT look like a French flag. It DOES look more like an American flag than a French flag. That is for sure.

But it also seems strangely reminiscent of the tail of British Airways airliners - don't they sport the Union Jack?

?Your Response Wanted!

After comparing the new American Airlines livery with the old American Airlines livery, which one do you like better? Please post your comments in the comment box below. Better yet, please post them on Facebook at the following link: Accidental Travel Writer on Facebook. And don't forget to LIKE us while you're there!

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Source: http://www.accidentaltravelwriter.net/accidental-travel-writer/2013/01/aviation-american-airlines-unveils-new-livery-on-boeing-777-300er-.html

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Saturday, January 19, 2013

Snow falls in Southeast; 1 death linked to storm

ATLANTA (AP) ? A winter storm made its way across the Southeast on Thursday, dumping snow in states recovering from days of rain, playing a role in at least one fatality, and leaving thousands without power.

Weather warnings and advisories were in effect for sections of Alabama, Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia.

Parts of Mississippi saw 2 to 4 inches of snow on the ground. In Lowndes County, Highway Patrol spokesman Cpl. Criss Turnipseed said Johnnie A. Matthews, 64, of West Point died when his car collided with a downed tree about 5 a.m. on Mississippi Highway 50.

Turnipseed says the large pine tree in the roadway appeared to have been uprooted by wind and ground saturation due to excessive rainfall. The winter blitz follows days of heavy rain across much of the Southeast.

No other fatalities have been reported.

In Roanoke, Va., heavy snow was falling as residents prepared for the first significant storm of the season. Thousands of customers in the southwestern part of the state were without power. Appalachian Power said the heavy, wet snow contributed to outages to at least 45,000 customers.

The National Weather Service said a foot of snow was possible in the highest elevations of southeastern Virginia. At the other end of the spectrum, parts of Hampton Roads could see just a dusting.

In Bland County, Virginia, heavy snow, downed trees, disabled vehicles and numerous crashes partially closed I-77, said Virginia State Police spokeswoman Corinne Geller. Traffic was moving slowly Thursday night and Geller said officials would work through the night to reopen all lanes.

In Alabama on Thursday, northern and central parts of the state were blanketed with as much as 4 inches of snow, forcing businesses and schools to close early and snarling traffic on Interstate 65, where some motorists were stuck for seven or more hours after a series of crashes that caused a miles-long traffic jam. The county emergency management agency opened a shelter at the Cullman Civic Center for stranded motorists, but it wasn't clear how many drivers could even get there.

Traffic crawled across a slickened Tennessee River bridge over a waterway swollen out of its banks. Some areas of the state had received as much as 6 inches of rain since Sunday, prompting flood warnings and watches across a wide area.

Scores of schools, businesses and government offices as far south as metro Birmingham pushed back their opening times for Friday because of the threat of icy roads after freezing temperatures overnight.

Officials closed NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville because of the threat of slippery roads. Engineers postponed an outdoor rocket test to give workers time to get home.

In northern Georgia, the heaviest snow was expected to fall in the mountains, with lighter amounts possible in parts of the Atlanta area. Schools in at least five counties in the northwest part of the state dismissed early Thursday. Winter weather advisories were in effect across at least 25 counties, set to expire between midnight and 7 a.m.

Snow also was possible across much of North Carolina, with as much as 9 inches in the northwestern mountains. Snow was expected as far east as Elizabeth City.

A winter weather advisory also was issued in South Carolina, with up to 3 inches of snow expected in the northern part of the state.

The National Weather Service said Thursday evening that most of the Washington area would avoid snow, although some southern Maryland counties might see an accumulation of 2 to 4 inches.

The weather service said temperatures were expected to stay above freezing in Washington and that if rain fell, it would move out of the area before midnight.

However, a winter weather advisory remained in effect south of Washington in St. Mary's, Charles and Calvert counties. Meteorologists predicted 2 to 4 inches of snow there.

The moisture may be welcomed by farmers in the Southeast, notably in those states hardest hit by the nation's worst drought in decades.

An update Thursday by the U.S. Drought Monitor showed that about 59 percent of the continental U.S. remains gripped by some form of drought. More than 91 percent of Georgia is in drought, as is about a third of Mississippi.

Climatologists and hydrologists have called winter precipitation ? and lots of it ? crucial in breaking the grip of drought and restoring moisture to soil and pastureland.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/snow-falls-southeast-1-death-linked-storm-210729724.html

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How Do You Fend Off The Flu?

Copyright ? 2013 National Public Radio. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

FLORA LICHTMAN, HOST:

This is SCIENCE FRIDAY, from NPR. I'm Flora Lichtman. The flu came on fast and furious this year. Deaths from flu so far are slightly above epidemic levels, according to the CDC. Besides getting the flu shot, is there anything you can do to avoid the virus? It seems like everybody has their own strategy, right?

Do you hold your breath as you walk past a cougher nearby? An informal poll found that SCIENCE FRIDAY employees are likely to do this. Are you that person that brings a napkin into the train rather than touching the subway poll? Maybe you go the hand sanitizer route. We want to know your rules for flu avoidance and your thoughts on flu etiquette.

What do you think? Do you think it's rude to get up if someone is coughing nearby, or just good judgment? We'll find out if there's a better way than moving your seat to avoid getting the flu, as well. Are new, speedier vaccines in the works? Call and tell us your flu story. Like, did you guilt someone into getting a flu shot this year? Are you secretly wishing your sniffly co-workers would stay home?

Give us a call: 1-800-989-TALK. That's 1-800-989-8255. Or tweet us @scifri. And we'll find out how well these strategies really work, because we have a flu expert in our studio with us to vet your flu avoidance tactics. Dr. Nicole Bouvier is an assistant professor in the Division of Infectious Diseases at Mount Sinai School of Medicine here in New York. She joins us in our New York studios. Welcome to SCIENCE FRIDAY, and thanks for coming in.

NICOLE BOUVIER: Thanks for having me.

LICHTMAN: Now tell us - introduce us to the flu. Let's do some basic flu biology first. What makes this virus different?

BOUVIER: So, influenza - the disease influenza is actually caused by, in humans, mainly three different strains. There's two strains of what we call influenza A. So there's the H1N1, which caused the pandemic a few years ago. You may remember hearing that. And then there's also H3N2, which is what's circulating right now. And then the third one is Influenza B. So any of those three viruses can cause what we know as clinical influenza.

Now, right now, what's circulating in most of North American is the H3N2 virus. And the reason this season is a bit unusual is partly because it's hit a little bit early. So we - usually, we don't see this many people getting the flu this early in the season. And it also - historically, the H3N2 strain has been associated with more what we call morbidity and mortality, basically more illness and more death.

And why that is, we actually don't know. But if you look back at seasons' worth of data from the CDC, years in which H3N2 predominates tends to be the years in which more people get into the hospital and more people die.

LICHTMAN: And what about that early onset this year? First of all, where does it go the rest of the year? And what explains an early presence this year?

BOUVIER: So, flu is actually in humans worldwide. There's also flu in animals. So, you know, we can occasionally get a pandemic from an animal source. But, in general, flu that's adapted to humans is circulating around the globe all year around. So when we're in the summer and not seeing a lot of flu, the Southern Hemisphere is actually in their winter, and they're seeing a lot of flu.

So when we're up here, you know, going to the beach, Australians are having the flu. So it continually circles around from hemisphere to hemisphere. And then, of course, in the tropics, it tends to be either a year-round phenomenon or, you know, there's more than one annual epidemic. So places like Hong Kong will see often two epidemics per year that are separated by months.

So it depends on, really, what climate you're in and what time of the year it is.

LICHTMAN: Well, what climate does flu like?

BOUVIER: So, it seems to not mind the tropics, because it's there. But what we've seen in the lab, at least, is that in temperate climates, it seems to like winter conditions - so, basically, cold and dry. And there's been some work done in animal models in - actually at Mount Sinai, showing that flu transmits between guinea pigs, which is a model that we use to study flu transmission, much better in a cold, dry environment than when you turn up the humidity or turn up the heat.

LICHTMAN: And how - what's its favorite way to travel?

BOUVIER: That's a good question, also, and it's something we don't fully have the answer to. Now, you can imagine many different ways for a respiratory virus like flu to transmit. It can transmit through the air, either because somebody coughs or sneezes a bunch of - you know, sprays on you, or because once the droplet dries out, it can hang in the air for hours and hours and hours, and you can maybe breathe it in later.

You could also imagine that if somebody rubs their nose and either shakes your hand, and then you touch your nose, or if they touch a doorknob that you subsequently touch and then touch your nose, that's a contact transmission. And probably, it transmits by all of these routes, but we actually don't know which one is the most important and which one is most common among humans.

LICHTMAN: Did you just say that it hangs in the air for hours and hours and hours?

BOUVIER: So we don't actually know, all right. That is a known method of transmission for something like measles or tuberculosis. So it's theoretically possible for flu. The thing about flu is that it's actually a quite delicate virus. It doesn't live forever. It's got a structure that, if it dries out, it dies. So it either has to be in some sort of, you know, viscous substance that's going to keep it sort of moist and alive, or if it desiccates, it dies.

So how long flu can survive hanging in the air is actually not really known.

LICHTMAN: Does that mean if the subway poll feels a little moist, I should avoid that part of it?

BOUVIER: Well, that's actually another interesting question, because, you know, there was some scientific study looking at how long flu lasts on different kinds of surfaces. And under lab conditions, if you put a droplet of flu on a stainless steel surface, it could be cultured - live virus could be cultured from swabs of that spot for up to 72 hours.

LICHTMAN: Wow.

BOUVIER: Now, that - take that with a grain of salt, because that was probably a whole lot more virus, and in a different consistency of medium than you would get if somebody rubbed their nose and touched the subway pole. What I can say is that studies that have been done in households, where one person has flu and then gives it to other people in the household, researchers have gone into those houses and swabbed various surfaces that you think would be touched frequently: doorknobs, phones, refrigerator handles, things like that.

And really, the results have not been very good. They can't really culture live flu viruses off of those surfaces. The one surface that seems to have a lot of flu virus, as you might imagine, are children's toys. So, you know, I wouldn't go putting your kids' toys near your nose. But, you know, the subway pole, I would say, is probably not the most likely place to get it, but use some hand sanitizer after you're holding onto it, and you can be extra sure.

LICHTMAN: Well, let's go to the phones. Gabe in Hadley, Massachusetts, welcome to SCIENCE FRIDAY.

GABE: Hi. Thank you.

LICHTMAN: Do you have a question?

GABE: My question is: I'm a cashier at a supermarket, and I make contact with lots of people day in and day out. I recall, previously on this program, hearing something about ants and them licking each other if one ant is sick or an ant is dead. And I'd be curious to know, maybe it's surprising that I'm not getting sick more than I am, and if that may be attributed to my exposure to so many people on a daily basis and strengthening of the immune system.

BOUVIER: That could be the case. You know, if you're an otherwise healthy person, you are going to be more resistant to getting the flu than somebody else who has underlying health conditions or is older or, you know, younger, like less than two.

An interesting study that was done a while back was looking at swabbing flu from bank notes in Europe. And actually, you can swab live flu from bank notes. So it's possible you're exposing yourself to a lot of flu viruses by handling money. But because, if you have a healthy immune system, and you're not really inoculating yourself with enough to come down with a, you know, a case of the flu, you may actually be strengthening your immune system without even realizing it.

LICHTMAN: A sort of alter-vaccination. Thanks for calling, Gabe.

GABE: Thank you.

LICHTMAN: Let's go to Gary in Wichita, Kansas.

GARY: Hi. I got the stomach flu on Christmas Day because I was on the naughty list this year. But I'm curious - I've gotten it before where I couldn't even tolerate liquids, even clear liquids. But I'm curious, because I hear so much about this flu, but the symptoms are much different than the stomach flues I've gotten. What are the scientific - what are the differences between the two? And I'll take my answer off the air.

LICHTMAN: Thank you.

BOUVIER: I'm really glad you asked that question, because stomach flu is a bit of a misnomer. Most viruses - well, in fact, all viruses that cause a typical kind of gastroenteritis like you had are not actually influenza viruses. So stomach flu is just a nickname that has nothing to do with influenza viruses.

So influenza viruses specifically are respiratory viruses. They only cause respiratory symptoms, except in children. Sometimes children do have vomiting or diarrhea with typical respiratory flu. But generally, adults don't have gastrointestinal symptoms. So you had a different virus, not a flu virus.

LICHTMAN: Norovirus is going around this year, right?

BOUVIER: Yeah, that's probably - it sounds like a norovirus, based on what you're describing. It sort of hits hard and fast and doesn't really make you feel bad for a long time. But that's what it sounds like.

LICHTMAN: Is sneezing a symptom of influenza?

BOUVIER: So, not as much as you might think. So, flu tends to be more coughing than sneezing. Common cold viruses, which are different from influenza viruses - they're things like rhinoviruses, coronaviruses, adenoviruses - which are different families and classes of viruses, cause the common cold. And they tend to be associated more with sneezing, which is sort of a nose phenomenon. In fact, rhinovirus comes from the word rhino, which means nose. Flu viruses tend to cause more sort of lower respiratory tract symptoms - things like coughing, sore throat, feeling like you've got, you know, a frog in your throat, that sort of thing. Sneezing - it's not to say it can't happen, but it's not as common with the flu as it would be with the common cold viruses.

LICHTMAN: Let's talk a little bit about the vaccine. It seemed to be a pretty good match this year, I read.

BOUVIER: Yeah. It's a very good match this year. I think of all of the flu isolates from around the country that the CDC has tested, 91 percent of them so far have been a very good match to the current flu vaccines. So it's a well-matched year.

LICHTMAN: How do they decide which viruses or virus fragments to put in a vaccine?

BOUVIER: It is part surveillance and part guessing. So what they tend to do is when they're looking at the Northern Hemisphere formulation, they'll look at what's circulating in the Southern Hemisphere during our summer. So, you know, they will be sampling viruses from Australia, from New Zealand, from South Africa and try to make an educated guess as to which of those strains are most likely to come up here at our hemisphere during the winter. And often, they get it right, like this year, and sometimes, they get it wrong. And that's the kind of season we have when we have a poorly match vaccine.

LICHTMAN: This year, there was news about a new vaccine that wasn't made with eggs or live virus. It was insect cells. Can you tell us a little bit about it?

BOUVIER: So the traditional flu vaccine is, basically, they take whatever strain they think is the best virus candidate and inoculate it into eggs - which, as you can imagine, you need a lot of hens laying a lot of eggs to make millions of vaccine doses. So this new technology is - relies on an insect virus called a baculovirus. And what you do is you engineer this virus to have the gene for the hemoglutinin protein of flu, and that's the protein that the flu uses to attach to cells that it wants to infect.

And it's the most immunogenic protein of flu, meaning it's the one that provokes the largest immune response. So what they do is they put the gene for the hemoglutinin protein into this insect virus. Then they use the insect virus to infect insect cells. And in the process of making its own proteins, the insect virus will also, as a byproduct, make the flu protein. Then they purify it out, and that becomes your vaccine.

LICHTMAN: Is it easier or faster to produce?

BOUVIER: It is faster because the insect cells, you can keep them in the freezer until you need them. And then you just take them out and you thaw them, and you do what we call expand them. You basically let them grow for a while, until you have a lot of them, then you just put a lot of cells with the insect virus in lots of vats and let - just let it go. So you don't have to worry about having lots of hens hanging around, just waiting to lay your eggs in the case of a pandemic.

LICHTMAN: You're listening to SCIENCE FRIDAY, on NPR. I'm Flora Lichtman talking with Dr. Bouvier about the flu. Let's go back to the phones, because people have some interesting things to say - Amy in Manhattan.

AMY: Hi.

LICHTMAN: Hi.

AMY: Well, in addition to all these other things, I try to keep a rule that, you know, my germs on one hand, and my - and other people's germs on the other hand, like the right hand. So I'll shake hands with my right hand, and I try not touch my face with my right hand. But, you know, if I need to scratch my nose or something, I'll use my left. And...

LICHTMAN: What do you think about that strategy?

BOUVIER: It's actually part of what has been studied under the heading of non-pharmaceutical interventions, and that's basically things you can do that are not drugs or vaccines to prevent yourself from getting the flu. And so what they've done is - in studies, you take a group of people who are told to just go about their normal lives and a group of people who are told, you know, wash your hands frequently. Do what we call hand awareness, meaning think about where your hands are and try not to touch your face. Do things like cover your sneezes with your elbow instead of with your hand, and sometimes even wearing facemasks. And of those studies, hand awareness and hand hygiene usually turns out to be one of the most effective ways of not giving yourself the flu. So...

AMY: A sense of ill-at-ease.

(LAUGHTER)

BOUVIER: Yes, it has been.

LICHTMAN: Thanks for calling, Amy.

AMY: Thank you.

LICHTMAN: What about the universal flu vaccine, the holy grail of seasonal influenza vaccines? How far are we from that?

BOUVIER: It's a little bit hard to say. I think we're inching closer. So one of the problems with the flu virus is that, for reasons that are kind of complicated, they're very good at subtly changing themselves year after year so that it doesn't affect how they infect or how they replicate, but it does affect how your immune system recognizes them sort of the second time around. And that's why we need to get annual flu vaccines. So it turns out that there are very few parts of the flu virus - we call them epitopes - which are so crucial, that their function is so important, that they cannot change.

If this part of the protein changes, it's going to result in a dead virus. And, you know, we have identified a couple of those, but it turns out that these epitopes do not stimulate a really good immune response when you get either a regular vaccine or when you get the flu. So what researchers are doing now, including my group at Mount Sinai, are looking at how we can alter these epitopes so we present them to the immune system in a different way, almost forcing the immune system to recognize these constant epitopes, make the antibodies against it.

And then, if you get infected with the flu, you have the antibodies to this constant region that can't change. So it's hard to say. There's a lot of strategies that are sort of underway, but I think it's possible. It's just we need some more work.

LICHTMAN: In about the minute we have left, do you have other tips for people who want to avoid getting flu? Let's say they've already gotten their flu shot. What should they do?

BOUVIER: OK. I have to say, if you haven't gotten your flu shot, get it, because I'm a doctor and I have to say that.

(LAUGHTER)

BOUVIER: But it depends on who you are. If you're someone who has certain comorbidity, certain diseases, if you're pregnant, you must get vaccinated. But other than that, I think the things that have shown to work best are things like hand-washing. And if you don't have access to a sink, you can use an alcohol-based sanitizer. You just have to put enough on so your hands are really wet, and you have to let it dry, and then that'll kill the flu virus on your hands.

You have to be aware of where your hands are. If you sneeze or cough, do it into your - in the crook of your elbow instead of in your hand. Try to avoid sharing utensils with people. If you know someone sick, try not to be in their orbit, because the closer you are to them, the more likely you can get flu from them. And they're mostly just commonsense things. But to various degrees, they have been shown to be effective.

LICHTMAN: You know, the hand sanitizer thing is interesting, and we really have like 15 seconds, because I - a cold, it doesn't work as well on, right?

BOUVIER: It does some of them, but some of them it doesn't. So flu, it does kill.

LICHTMAN: Good to know. Thank you for joining us today.

BOUVIER: Thanks for having me.

LICHTMAN: Dr. Nicole Bouvier is an assistant professor in the Division of Infectious Diseases at Mount Sinai School of Medicine here in New York. And stay with us, because we have some astronomy news coming up.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

LICHTMAN: This is SCIENCE FRIDAY, from NPR.

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Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/01/18/169708755/how-do-you-fend-off-the-flu?ft=1&f=1007

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