Wednesday, January 30, 2013

How to Supercharge Your Portfolio

Tuesday, January 29th, 2013
By George Leong, B.Comm. for Profit Confidential

Supercharge Your PortfolioSmall-cap stocks will be a key driver of the broader market should the U.S. and global economies continue to improve. In 2012, small-cap stocks trailed only the technology sector as far as performance. The Russell 2000 advanced the most in December. If 2013 is a strong year for the economy, small-cap stocks will deliver.

Small-caps have been impressive so far in 2013, as the Russell 2000 is up six percent, with the index trading at the 900 level for the first time.

In my view, continued economic renewal will drive small companies higher, because these companies tend to be able to react more quickly to a changing economy.

My stock analysis suggests that what happens in January will be an important indicator for the year as far as performance. Historical records indicate that stocks have increased an average of 1.6% in January since 1969, according to the Stock Trader?s Almanac.

The strong start to 2013 is also a bullish sign, as was the case in 2012 when stocks flew out of the gate. We are seeing a similar situation this year, so expect some gains.

The chart of the Russell 2000 shows the break near 860 on rising relative strength and the moving average convergence/divergence (MACD) indicator. Watch to see if the breakout holds.

Russell 2000 Small Cap index Chart

?Chart courtesy of www.StockCharts.com

I favor small-cap stocks for long-term growth, as the valuations are more attractive and may be worth a look for aggressive long-term investors. (I also like the emerging markets, which you can read more about in ?Boost Your Portfolio Returns with the Emerging Markets.?)

And while I view the holding of large-cap stocks as an integral part of a portfolio, for added overall portfolio returns, I like small-cap stocks. These stocks add to the risk component of your portfolio, but you are compensated by a higher overall expected return from your investments. You can increase the expected return of a portfolio by simply adding more risk. This is the advantage of adding small-cap stocks.

A standard and simple measure of stock risk versus the market is called a beta?a quantitative measure of systematic or market risk that cannot be diversified away and generally changes in relation to the S&P 500 or another market/benchmark.

A beta of less than one implies a stock has less risk than the market, which in turn means less expected return; whereas a beta of greater than one implies a higher comparative risk versus the market, meaning possibly higher expected returns

When there?s a stock market rally, stocks with a higher beta will tend to fare better. But a note of warning?buying only higher beta stocks does not necessarily translate into higher returns, as it also results in greater volatility and downside risk when the broader market declines.

To increase the overall risk of your holdings, you need to increase the expected return. The most important fact to understand is that you can increase the risk-reward profile of your portfolio by adding small-cap stocks and/or sectors that have higher growth potential.

If the global and U.S. economies continue to show renewed growth, look to small-cap stocks to outperform this year.

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Source: http://www.profitconfidential.com/stock-market/how-to-supercharge-your-portfolio/

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MGM picks up rights to Jojo Moyes' romance novel 'Me Before You'

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios has secured the feature film rights to Jojo Moyes' novel "Me Before You," MGM announced Tuesday.

"Jojo's book is frankly one of the most unique, emotional and engaging love stories written in recent years," said MGM president Jonathan Glickman. "We're so thrilled to collaborate with her on creating a classic film romance that lives up to this exceptional novel."

The best-selling romance follows a small-town girl caught between dead-end jobs. She becomes a caretaker for a successful, but newly-paralyzed man who has given up on life as a result of his sudden disability. The two bond over a series of adventures.

Moyes, a British journalist-turned-author, has written 10 novels since her first, titled "Sheltering Rain," was published in 2002. "Me Before You" has sold more than half a mllion copies since its release in 2012.

"I could not be more excited about MGM and their plans for ?Me Before You,'" Moyes said in a statement. "The studio is so passionate about the book and I'm thrilled that a story that seems to have come alive in so many readers' imaginations is about to have a whole new life on-screen."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mgm-picks-rights-jojo-moyes-romance-novel-221907739.html

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Randy Couture will coach on Bellator reality series

Randy Couture is a member of the UFC Hall of Fame. He fought in the Octagon 23 times, and held the heavyweight and light heavyweight UFC belts. But according to a report from Sports Illustrated, his next move will be with Bellator.

Couture has reportedly signed on to do multiple projects with Viacom, the media conglomerate that has a major stake in Bellator and owns Spike TV, Bellator's TV partner. Couture's first project will be to coach on an upcoming MMA reality TV series.

This won't be Couture's first time in that role. Along with Chuck Liddell, Couture was a coach on the first season of "The Ultimate Fighter." That show helped catapult the UFC to the level it is on today.

Bellator is smartly banking on Couture's popularity as a fighter and an actor to help grow their promotion.

Other popular content on Yahoo! Sports:
? Report: Ravens' Ray Lewis used banned deer-antler spray during rehab
? Does Tiger Woods' early-season win mean he's back?
? Former NBA All-Star Allen Iverson declines a D-League invitation
? Yankees star Alex Rodriguez joins list of disgraced athletes

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/randy-couture-coach-bellator-reality-series-231006398--mma.html

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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Stealthy Data Storage Analytics And Intelligence Startup DataGravity Nabs $30M From Andreessen Horowitz And Others

DataGravity - _Turning Data into Information_DataGravity, a stealthy data storage analytics company, has raised $30 million in series B funding led by Andreessen Horowitz with existing investors Charles River Ventures and General Catalyst Partners participating in the round. This brings the company's total funding to $42 million.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/3zAXr8w57sI/

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Brazil, Mexico And Other Deadly Nightclub Fires In Latin America

In the early morning hours of Sunday, Jan. 27, 232 people perished in a nightclub fire in Santa Maria, Brazil. The fire is one of the deadliest nightclub fires in the world and it could be the deadliest on record in Latin America.

The nightclub fire erupted around 2 a.m. after a band used flares during their performance on stage which set the ceiling on fire, according to investigators. The club called Kiss, which holds a capacity of 1000 to 2000 people, was filled with about 900 young partygoers. The first death toll estimates came in at 90 and have risen to 232 with 200 injured. Authorities are expecting the death toll to rise.

Here?s a look at the deadliest nightclub fires in Latin America.

Deadly nightclub fires in Latin America

The Brazil nightclub fire bares a striking similarity to the fire that killed 193 people and injured 700 in Buenos Aires, Argentina on Dec. 30, 2004? a result of a flare thrown from the crowd. After the ceiling and roof caught fire, club-goers were trapped inside when the nightclub?s emergency exits were blocked, reports La Tercera.

Faulty pyrotechnics used in a performance at an awards ceremony at Factory nightclub in Quito, Ecuador on April 19, 2008, were behind the nightclub fire that killed 15 and injured 35.

In Mexico City, 22 people were killed and 24 were injured in a nightclub fire on Oct. 20, 2000, when propane gas canisters were said to have exploded at Lobohombo, a well-known after hours club. Many of the victims were trampled to death, reports the Independent.

Two years later on July 20 in Lima, Peru, 29 people were killed and 100 were injured in a nightclub fire caused by a fire show put on by bartenders at the upscale club called Utopia. In this case, the club had a capacity of 400 but was filled with 900 to 1000 people, according to the Associated Press.

That same year on Dec. 1, 47 people were killed at La Guajira nightclub in Caracas, Venezuela. The estimated 400 people at the nightclub rushed toward the exit when smoke began filling the club housed in the basement of Hotel Venezuela. Investigators said the fire may have been caused by faulty electrical wiring.

Originally published in VOXXI as Deadliest nightclub fires in Latin America

Earlier on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/28/nightclub-fires-latin-america_n_2564738.html

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Monday, January 28, 2013

Artificial pancreas: The way of the future for treating type 1 diabetes

Jan. 28, 2013 ? IRCM researchers, led by endocrinologist Dr. R?mi Rabasa-Lhoret, were the first to conduct a trial comparing a dual-hormone artificial pancreas with conventional diabetes treatment using an insulin pump and showed improved glucose levels and lower risks of hypoglycemia. Their results, published January 28 in the Canadian Medical Association Journal (CMAJ), can have a great impact on the treatment of type 1 diabetes by accelerating the development of the external artificial pancreas.

The artificial pancreas is an automated system that simulates the normal pancreas by continuously adapting insulin delivery based on changes in glucose levels. The dual-hormone artificial pancreas tested at the IRCM controls glucose levels by automatically delivering insulin and glucagon, if necessary, based on continuous glucose monitor (CGM) readings and guided by an advanced algorithm.

"We found that the artificial pancreas improved glucose control by 15 per cent and significantly reduced the risk of hypoglycemia as compared with conventional insulin pump therapy," explains engineer Ahmad Haidar, first author of the study and doctoral student in Dr. Rabasa-Lhoret's research unit at the IRCM and at the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at McGill University. "The artificial pancreas also resulted in an 8-fold reduction of the overall risk of hypoglycemia, and a 20-fold reduction of the risk of nocturnal hypoglycemia."

People living with type 1 diabetes must carefully manage their blood glucose levels to ensure they remain within a target range. Blood glucose control is the key to preventing serious long-term complications related to high glucose levels (such as blindness or kidney failure) and reduces the risk of hypoglycemia (dangerously low blood glucose that can lead to confusion, disorientation and, if severe, loss of consciousness).

"Approximately two-thirds of patients don't achieve their target range with current treatments," says Dr. Rabasa-Lhoret, Director of the Obesity, Metabolism and Diabetes research clinic at the IRCM. "The artificial pancreas could help them reach these targets and reduce the risk of hypoglycemia, which is feared by most patients and remains the most common adverse effect of insulin therapy. In fact, nocturnal hypoglycemia is the main barrier to reaching glycemic targets."

"Infusion pumps and glucose sensors are already commercially-available, but patients must frequently check the sensor and adjust the pump's output," says Mr. Haidar. "To liberate them from this sizable challenge, we needed to find a way for the sensor to talk to the pump directly. So we developed an intelligent dosing algorithm, which is the brain of the system. It can constantly recalculate insulin dosing based on changing glucose levels, in a similar way to the GPS system in a car, which recalculates directions according to traffic or an itinerary change."

The researchers' algorithm, which could eventually be integrated as software into a smart phone, receives data from the CGM, calculates the required insulin (and glucagon, if needed) and wirelessly controls the pump to automatically administer the proper doses without intervention by the patient.

"The system we tested more closely mimics a normal pancreas by secreting both insulin and glucagon," adds Dr. Laurent Legault, peadiatric endocrinologist and outgoing Director of the Insulin Pump Centre at the Montreal Children's Hospital, and co-author of the study. "While insulin lowers blood glucose levels, glucagon has the opposite effect and raises glucose levels. Glucagon can protect against hypoglycemia if a patient with diabetes miscalculates the necessary insulin dose."

"Our work is exciting because the artificial pancreas has the potential to substantially improve the management of diabetes and reduce daily frustrations for patients," concludes Dr. Rabasa-Lhoret. "We are pursuing our clinical trials to test the system for longer periods and with different age groups. It will then probably be introduced gradually to clinical practice, using insulin alone, with early generations focusing on overnight glucose controls."

This study was conducted with 15 adult patients with type 1 diabetes, who had been using an insulin pump for at least three months. Patients were admitted twice to the IRCM's clinical research facility and received, in random order, both treatments: the dual-hormone artificial pancreas and the conventional insulin pump therapy. During each 15-hour visit, their blood glucose levels were monitored as they exercised on a stationary bike, received an evening meal and a bedtime snack, and slept at the facility overnight.

Dr. Rabasa-Lhoret's research is funded by Diabetes Qu?bec, the Canadian Diabetes Association, and the IRCM's J.A. De S?ve Chair in clinical research. IRCM collaborators who contributed to study include Maryse Dallaire, Ammar Alkhateeb, Ad?le Coriati, Virginie Messier and Maude Millette.

About diabetes

Type-1 diabetes is a chronic, incurable disease that occurs when the body doesn't produce enough or any insulin, leading to an excess of sugar in the blood. It occurs most often in children, adolescents or young adults. People with type-1 diabetes depend on insulin to live, either through daily injections or with a pump. Diabetes is a major cause of vision loss, kidney and cardiovascular diseases.

According to the Canadian Diabetes Association, an estimated 285 million people worldwide are affected by diabetes, approximately 10 per cent of which have type 1 diabetes. With a further 7 million people developing diabetes each year, this number is expected to hit 438 million by 2030, making it a global epidemic.?

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Institut de recherches cliniques de Montreal.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Ahmad Haidar, Laurent Legault, Maryse Dallaire, Ammar Alkhateeb, Ad?le Coriati, Virginie Messier, Peiyao Cheng, Maude Millette, Benoit Boulet, Chiu-Ching Huang, R?mi Rabasa-Lhoret. Glucose-responsive insulin and glucagon delivery (dual-hormone artificial pancreas) in adults with type 1 diabetes: a randomized crossover controlled trial. Canadian Medical Association Journal, 2013 DOI: 10.1503/cmaj.121265

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/IsBFXJa7YCU/130128151928.htm

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An iOS 6.1 Jailbreak for iPhone 5 Is Definitely Probably Maybe Coming This Sunday

iPhone 5 users have been waiting a long, long time for a jailbreak. Sure, the current versions of iOS have been opened, but unlucky kids with A6 chips and the fancy new Apple devices they come in have been out of luck. But no longer! Probably. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/DGUBupA-4so/an-ios-61-jailbreak-for-iphone-5-is-definitely-probably-maybe-coming-this-sunday

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Sunday, January 27, 2013

David's Blog: Navigation ? sextant and GPS

David's Blog: Navigation ? sextant and GPS

Navigation ? sextant and GPS


There was a man on the radio this week talking about his sextant ? which was over 100 years old when he bought it some time ago. This was the only navigation instrument available to sailors for over a century. When searching for info for this entry I found a reference to Robin Knox Johnson?s circumnavigation of the globe 44 years ago ? he had no radio, a barometer from a pub and a sextant. How things have changed! GPS, now on most mobile phones can locate your position to within a metre or so.

Sextants rely on the knowing the exact time to calculate the position in fact the British admiralty sponsored the development of the first accurate timepiece that could go to sea ? pendulum clocks aren?t much use in a seaway! The balance wheel was the solution to this problem.

GPS rely on timing, too, but rather more precisely that a maritime chronometer. The basis for GPS is a series of satellites that orbit the earth ? not in synchronous orbits like communications satellites ? but with a period of just under 12 hours. These are equipped with extremely accurate atomic clocks. A GPS receiver will receive signals from at least four satellites and will calculate the distance from each based on the time take for the signal to reach the receiver from the satellite. It then calculates the position based on a mathematical principle called trilateration. This involved calculating the intersecton of the four or more spheres that are defined by the timings. Thinking of this in 3 dimensions is quite tricky (I always have to get an orange out when I try to think of the geometry of the earth!) In two dimensions, it?s a little simpler: here?s a local example. Suppose I?m 2.81 miles from Gt Missenden, 2.59 miles from Wendover and 3.33 miles from Princes Risborough. The first distance gives me a circle.?





The second ties the position down to two possible points





The third fixes me at Little Hampden




Now try to imagine this in three dimensions ? intersections of spheres. The calculation to achieve a position is pretty complicated. GPS devices can also calculate the position in a number of formats including the GB OS grid reference. I?ve put a map on the waymark outside outside our house with a grid reference read from my GPS. Lots of walkers stop to look ? but I?m not sure if the reference means anything to many of them!

Source: http://dmh0.blogspot.com/2013/01/navigation-sextant-and-gps.html

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Want The Best Enterprise Software? ?Date? It

Mikkel SvaneEditor's note: Mikkel Svane is CEO and co-founder of Zendesk. It?s hard to imagine the time when you couldn?t date anyone you liked. Cultural barriers got in the way. Your access to information was limited, and your ways of communicating were few. You were restricted from true choice. Then the culture changed, and technology helped it. Today?s dating world is transformed by both changes in culture and technology, and when we talk about the ?consumerization of the enterprise,? the same changes have occurred.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/IdwqmHCM25s/

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PFT: Revis realizes trade talks all about money

Darrelle_RevisGetty Images

The Jets have made it known that they will at least explore their options regarding cornerback Darrelle Revis.? Which means that anyone interested in trading for him now knows that he?s available.

So what could the Jets get?? An NFL source with knowledge of the market tells the New York Post that the Jets will aim high.

?They?re going to ask for two [first-round picks],?? the source said, which coincidentally is the same package they got for receiver Keyshawn Johnson 13 years ago. ?It?s going to take probably a first and a third [round pick] and salary . . .? picking up the money end of it is a big consideration as well. Maybe a throw-in seventh-round pick depending on how well he does.??

That seems ridiculously high, given the impact of the rookie wage scale on the value of draft picks and given that Revis is still recovering from a torn ACL.? No one will give up that kind of value without knowing Revis will be the same player ? and without knowing that he?ll be sticking around for a while under a contract that he deems acceptable.? Which will be hard to negotiate until knowing if he?s healthy.

Seven years ago, the Dolphins gave up a second-round pick for quarterback Daunte Culpepper, who had suffered the knee-ligament Trifecta the prior season.? And Culpepper never was the same as he was from 2000 through 2004.

More recently, the Patriots gave up a fourth-round pick for cornerback Aqib Talib and a seventh-round pick, even though Talib was in the final year of his rookie deal.? Though the Patriots have not yet extended Talib?s contract, they have the luxury of the franchise tag; Revis can?t be tagged.

Another source tells the Post that the Jets will get less than they could have gotten by allowing their intentions to be known.

?They?ve tipped their hand and taken all their leverage away,?? the source said.? ?This could have been done in silence, other than saying ?We?re going to trade our best player,? coming from the owner.?

We disagree with that.? The Jets will maximize their return for Revis by maximizing interest.? It becomes an auction, and if two or more teams decide they must have him, the offers will (in theory) get better and better.

The only problem is that, by allowing word of the trade interest to be leaked, the Jets now have a potential issue with their best player.? And it will take more than a give-me-time-to-review-the-roster conversation with new G.M. John Idzik to restore the belief that the Jets plan to keep Revis around.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/01/26/revis-realizes-trade-talk-traces-to-money/related

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Saturday, January 26, 2013

Video: Collection of JFK photos, belongings on auction



>>> we want to move on to decades of kennedy history that are about to hit the auction block. personal collection of photos, artifacts and mementos from one of president kennedy 's most trusted advisers. erica hill has that story.

>> fascination that america has with the kennedys, especially president kennedy , nearly 50 years after his death. hundreds of items that once belonged to the 35th president is creating major buzz. simple moments forever frozen in time, like these photos from 1963 , given to president kennedy 's best friend and special assistant, dave powers .

>> this was given to dave from jackie kennedy . this was given -- it says to dave powers , who gave the president so many of his happiest hours.

>> reporter: powers was jfk 's confidante for many years and remained loyal to the kennedy family until he died in 1998 .

>> mind blowing when you think how close this person was, how close this relationship was.

>> this is the actual schedule that was given to dave powers for the november of '63 trip to texas. 12:52 , parkland hospital . 1:00, my president is dead.

>> reporter: after kennedy's assassination, powers went on to head the kennedy library . the items more than 700 were part of powers' estate. among the pictures and memorabilia up for auction next month, jfk 's famed air force one bomber jacket .

>> this is a president whose presidency affects us still half a century later and everyone is very much aware of and, in many cases, mystified by the circumstances of his death.

>> reporter: each piece tells an intimate story, of a president, a husband, a friend, a father.

>> this is the birthday card that we have that was given to president kennedy from his son, john, which would have turned out to be the president's last birthday. and there it's signed john, xx.

>> and a piece of history just being told. that happens next month in boston just in time for president's day. savannah?

>> we'll have some of those items, including jfk 's bomber jacket here in the studio, monday on "today." look forward to showing you that.

Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/50585524/

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Cruise Travel Deals ? 4 Cost-Saving Tips

Cruise Travel Deals - 4 Cost-Saving Tips

Cruise Travel Deals - 4 Cost-Saving Tips

Many people believe a weight luxury cruise isn?t some thing that they?ll pay for. Whilst cruise ships could be costly you will find methods to slow up the price as well as help to make the actual journey inexpensive. Low cost luxury cruise journey offers are available along with a few investigation in to crucial places.

The very first thing to think about whenever buying the luxury cruise is actually along the actual luxury cruise. A few of the cruise ships could be 3 times, while some could be a 7 days or even lengthier, a few so long as sixteen times. This particular issues not only due to the quantity times you?re billed, however it includes a immediate effect on the amount of plug-ins associated with phone exactly where you might disembark. The actual costs related to entering interface as well as departing the actual deliver in order to discover aren?t thought to the cost a person spend the actual luxury cruise collection for that journey. What this means is you are able to rapidly invest countless bucks within extra costs with regard to meals, beverages, buying, as well as actions during interface. To lessen your own possible costs pick a luxury cruise that?s three or four times long having a solitary interface associated with phone.

Another indicate investigation may be the costs included in the actual ?all-inclusive? label. Should you buy a good all-inclusive bundle be sure you understand what costs aren?t protected. Usually alcoholic beverages, soda pop, treats, health spas, as well as buying on-board the actual deliver aren?t protected within these types of deals. Double-check what?s taken care of within the bundle.

An additional choice to investigation is actually on-board credit how the deliver might be offering to assist fill up the actual deliver. Occasionally they are simpler to safe whenever you guide a lot nearer to the actual leaving day, however seek advice from the journey broker to determine that cruise companies are providing the very best on-board credit score offers. These types of offers may vary from $100 in order to $1, 000 or even more so that they are really worth looking into. A few cruise companies actually permit you to utilize the residual abandoned stability for your last expenses before you decide to depart the actual deliver, decreasing the price additional.

Your final indicate investigation as well as think about is the real leaving stage. Attempt to pick a area that you could achieve through vehicle. This particular significantly reduces the price, as you choose isle leaving factors you will have to buy flight tickets in order to individuals locations along with your own luxury cruise buy. This could very easily generate the price of the actual luxury cruise from your spending budget.

In conclusion, decreasing the actual plug-ins associated with phone, making the most of your own all-inclusive bundle, making the most of your own on-board credit, as well as selecting a leaving stage inside generating range associated with house are points that will help you acquire luxury cruise journey offers affordable. Go to Luxury cruise Journey Offers with regard to much more ideas as well as low cost info.

Tags: Cruise Companies, Cruise Ships, Cruise Travel Deals, Investigation, Luxury Cruise, Whilst Cruise Ships

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Source: http://www.lifeofrubin.com/cruise-travel-deals-4-cost-saving-tips.html

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'Star Wars' Lego toy sparks Turkish tiff

Lego

Lego says its "Jabba's Palace" construction set is modeled after the villain's lair in the "Star Wars" saga. A Turkish group in Austria, however, says the structure looks too similar to Istanbul's Hagia Sophia monument.

By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

A Turkish cultural center in Austria has stirred up an international tiff over a "Star Wars" Lego toy: specifically, a model of Jabba the Hutt's domed palace that the Turks say looks too much like Istanbul's sacred Hagia Sophia monument.

"The missiles, guns and weapons ... in the Lego castle are questionable for the Turkish Cultural Community of Austria, even 'educational explosives,'" the center said on its German-language website. The center said a complaint was lodged with Lego, and it reserved the right to file hate-crime complaints with German and Austrian authorities as well.

In response, Lego said that "Jabba's Palace" wasn't modeled after any mosque or other holy place, but after, um, Jabba's palace.


"The model in question is not based on any real building, rather depicts a fictional scene of Jabba?s Palace on the planet Tatooine from 'Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope,'" Michael McNally, brand relations director for Lego Systems, said in an email. "As is the case in all Lego sets related to the Star Wars property, Lego designers reproduce all structures, vehicles and characters based on the way they appear in the films. The company regrets that the group has misinterpreted what the Lego Star Wars set depicts."

McNally told NBC News that "the set has not been withdrawn from stores."

Jabba the Terrorist?
The cultural center in Vienna said the issue arose when a father lodged a complaint about the construction set, which his son received as a Christmas gift. The dad took the toy back to the store, and the center said it contacted Lego about what it saw as "educationally and culturally objectionable defects."

"The terrorist Jabba the Hutt likes to smoke hookah and kills his victims," the center said. "It is clear that the figure of the ugly villain Jabba and the whole scene serves up racial prejudice and vulgar insinuations against Orientals and Asians as sneaky and criminal personalities. ..."

What does Jabba's palace have to do with the Turks? In an annotated set of pictures, the center drew a parallel between the dome of Jabba's house and the dome of the Hagia Sophia, a 1,500-year-old monument that has served as a church and a mosque but is now used as a cultural museum. The tower rising beside Jabba's palace? To the Austrian Turks, that looks like a Muslim minaret.

Turkischegemeinde.at

The Turkish Cultural Community of Austria put together a detailed comparison of the "Star Wars" play set and the Hagia Sophia monument.

UNESCO

The centuries-old Hagia Sofia is one of Turkey's most famous monuments.

May 1, 2008: NBC's Lester Holt joins TODAY's Matt Lauer on his "Where in the World" tour and takes a trip through Turkey, visiting such colorful locations as Bodrum, Cappadocia and Ephesus.

As you might expect, the controversy sparked a storm of Hothian proportions on the Internet. The idea that a Lego toy could offend Asians or Muslims seemed so out of the blue that some commentators suspected it was an elaborate spoof. "A very successful one, well done to the author, you've had half the world's press swallowing it," Forbes contributor Tim Worstall wrote.

5,000 emails received
A spokesman for the cultural community, Ata Sel, told NBC News that this is not a spoof. He said the center has received about 5,000 emails so far about its stand. "We did get a lot of racist emails," he said, "but a lot of emails say we are right."

He hasn't yet heard back from Lego officially, but he has seen the company's response in news reports ? and he doesn't like it. "This answer we cannot accept," he said. "Lego wants to make war respectable by producing games for children."

Instead of helping children build a "Star Wars" world, "Lego should show how to construct a peaceful world," Ata Sel said. "Lego is a big firm, with responsibilities."

It's not so unusual for folks to take umbrage at "Star Wars" and its characters: Over the years, the fictional universe has weathered claims of anti-Semitism and anti-Japanese sentiment?as well as complaints about?racial stereotyping by Jar Jar Binks. Do you think the latest protest by the Austrian Turks has a valid point, or is this controversy as silly as Jar Jar's accent? Feel free to weigh in with your comments below.

More about Lego offerings ... and 'Star Wars':


Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's?Facebook page, following?@b0yle on Twitter?and adding the?Cosmic Log page?to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered to your email in-box every weekday. You can also check out?"The Case for Pluto,"?my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

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Friday, January 25, 2013

Disorder at Work

Proteins without a definite shape can still take on important jobs

By Tanya Lewis

Web edition: January 24, 2013
Print edition: February 9, 2013; Vol.183 #3 (p. 26)

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In its unbound state, some parts of the p53 protein take on a definite structure (gray model) while other regions remain flexible and disordered (other colors).

Credit: P. Tompa/Trends in Biochemical Sciences 2012

Richard Kriwacki refused to give up on his protein. He had tried again and again to determine its three-dimensional shape, but in every experiment, the protein looked no more structured than a piece of cooked spaghetti.

Normally, this lack of form would be a sign that the protein had been destroyed, yet Kriwacki knew for a fact it could still do its job in controlling cell division. While discussing the conundrum with his adviser in the atrium of their La Jolla, Calif., lab, insight dawned: Maybe the floppy protein didn?t take shape until it attached to another protein. Kriwacki raced off to do yet another experiment, this time combining his protein, p21, with a partner. Sure enough, Kriwacki got what he was looking for. Once joined, a seemingly ruined mess gave way to a neatly folded structure. The finding defied a foundational dogma of biology, that structure determines function.

Nearly everything the human body does, from shuttling oxygen through the bloodstream to digesting a meal, relies on proteins. These biological workhorses are composed of chains of molecules called amino acids. Whenever a chain is made, conventional scientific wisdom says, electrical forces cause it to immediately bend into helical ribbons and tight zigzags, which twist further into even more defined three-dimensional forms. The resulting shape determines what other molecular players the protein can bind to and thus what it can accomplish in a cell. Unfolded proteins were thought to result only from intolerable conditions that render a protein useless, such as extreme heat or acidity.

But since around the time of Kriwacki?s discovery more than 15 years ago, disorder has surfaced as a key player in the protein world. ?Intrinsically disordered proteins,? or IDPs, turn out to play vital parts in controlling cellular processes. More than one-third of all human proteins, in fact, may be partially or completely disordered in structure, floating around like strands of wet noodles. ?The roles that disordered regions can play are quite diverse,? says Kriwacki, now at St. Jude Children?s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tenn.

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Some disordered protein regions, such as the one above (in purple), take shape once they meet up with another protein (gray).

Credit: H.J. Dyson and P.E. Wright/Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology 2005

To better understand how something so flexible can be functional, researchers are now taking a closer look at how the disordered proteins interact with other proteins. The disordered dissidents can behave as switches, quickly turning cellular processes on or off in response to changing conditions, or as shape-shifting ensembles that integrate multiple signals before telling a cell to get a job done. Studying the interactions of intrinsically disordered proteins may even yield insight into certain diseases and lead to new treatments.

Floppiness exposed

Disordered proteins flew under the radar for so long because the standard technique for determining a protein?s structure, known as X-ray crystallography, requires that the protein retain a set shape long enough to be crystallized. Scientists had found a few examples of proteins that couldn?t be crystallized, but these were thought to be anomalies.

When Kriwacki encountered the troublesome p21 protein, he was working with molecular biologists Jane Dyson and Peter Wright at the Scripps Research Institute. Dyson and Wright were using a technique called nuclear magnetic resonance, or NMR, spectroscopy, which reveals a molecule?s form based on the magnetic properties of its atoms? nuclei as opposed to its crystal structure. ?Peter and Jane?s lab at the time was the world-leading protein NMR lab,? says Kriwacki. Advances in NMR were what allowed him to finally figure out what his protein looked like.

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STRUCTURE SPECTRUM

Choosing to label a protein as disordered or ordered is not always straightforward. Some proteins are as wiggly as cooked spaghetti, while others can be mostly structured with just a few regions that dabble in disorder.

Credit: H.J. Dyson and P.E. Wright/Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology 2005

After p21, examples of these proteins just kept turning up. You don?t need to go looking for them, Dyson says, ?they?ll come looking for you, believe me.? In 1999, Dyson and Wright published a landmark review paper in the Journal of Molecular Biology that set the stage for a new protein paradigm. There were too many examples to be mere outliers; it was clear that something bigger was going on. ?We were finding that these proteins were not only unstructured, but had to be,? Dyson says.

Meanwhile, other scientists were independently building a strong case for the existence of intrinsically disordered proteins. Keith Dunker, a bioinformatician at Indiana University School of Medicine in Indianapolis, and Peter Tompa, a protein chemist at the Free University of Brussels, were both leading efforts to predict disorder mathematically. ?The main thing we did was to determine that unstructured proteins have a fundamentally different amino acid composition compared to structured proteins,? Dunker says.

A protein?s mix of amino acids can create regions that are either hydrophilic (?water-loving?) or hydrophobic (?water-hating?). Structured proteins that exist in solution typically fold into spherical shapes with a hydrophilic shell enclosing a hydrophobic core. But disordered proteins contain few, if any, hydrophobic regions, so they don?t fold up. They also tend to have more electrically charged portions. ?If you look at these differences, you can anticipate that they?re not going to fold into a 3-D structure,? Dunker says. To help study the differences, he and his colleagues developed ?DisProt,? a database of proteins that experiments have shown to be disordered.

Though scientists often speak of ?structured proteins? and ?intrinsically disordered proteins? as if they are distinct classes, along the way it has become clear that any particular protein?s degree of disorder falls on a spectrum, from precise rigidity to complete disarray. Proteins can also migrate along that spectrum from one moment to another, shifting into different versions of themselves. Many disordered proteins, including p21, eschew their wiggly nature when binding to a partner protein ? like a string puppet snapping to attention. Others fold to a more limited extent upon binding, and some never shape up at all.

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PROTEIN POWER

View larger image | Because of its disorder, a protein known as I?B? can act as a switch that turns a host of cellular behaviors on and off. It?s I?B??s interaction with another disordered protein, NF?B, that makes this regulatory role possible.

Credit: Source: H.J. Dyson and E.A. Komives/Iubmb Life 2012, adapted by S. Egts

Fold for a cause

How a protein?s degree of disorder enables its function is now a hot topic of research. Ongoing efforts suggest some disordered proteins act like switches, triggering or stopping an action in response to a signal. This makes them well-suited for controlling activities such as the production of other proteins, cell growth or division, and the sending of cellular signals.

Lately, Dyson has been working with Elizabeth Komives of the University of California, San Diego to study a duo of proteins, NF-kappaB and I-kappa-B-alpha. Together, the proteins control a host of vital phenomena in cells, from growth and development to immunity and stress response. The proteins, which both contain disordered regions, normally exist bound together as a complex within a cell. When the cell receives a signal, such as a hormone molecule binding to its surface, I?B? is tagged for destruction and degraded. NF?B is released and sent to the nucleus. There, NF?B binds to the DNA, turning on genes that hold the instructions for making specific proteins.

One of the proteins produced is more I?B?, which allows the response to be switched off again when it is no longer needed. I?B? binds to NF?B and strips it from the DNA, Dyson and Komives reported last year in IUBMB Life. It?s not yet clear how the stripping process works, but the disordered regions of I?B? appear to cast around like a fishing line to find NF?B and peel it off the DNA. The new complex of NF?B and I?B? leaves the nucleus and returns to its resting state within the cell. Thanks in part to the disordered regions, the cell can respond flexibly and rapidly to external stimuli.

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Alpha-synuclein, a protein implicated in Parkinson?s disease (spots show abnormal clumping in brain stem), may be disordered in its healthy state.

Credit: S. Rajan/WikiMedia Commons

While NF?B and I?B? become mostly structured upon binding, other IDPs remain highly dynamic. One example is Sic1, a disordered protein found in yeast that prevents DNA replication and thus keeps cells from dividing. A 2008 study led by Julie Forman-Kay of the University of Toronto and then-colleague Tanja Mittag revealed how proteins such as Sic1 function as ?dynamic ensembles? of disordered states. Sic1 contains six short disordered regions that take turns binding in a ?pocket? of a partner protein. At any given moment, only one of Sic1?s six regions sits inside the pocket, while the other regions remain disordered. Each of these six regions is susceptible to modifications that can deactivate it in a way that prevents it from binding. All six of them must be ready to bind for Sic1 to hold onto its protein partner and stave off cell division. Each segment?s activation is like a weight added to one side of a balance ? only with enough weights does the scale tip.

While some disordered regions play active roles in sensitive responses, others serve only to hold more structured areas together like beads on a string. The disordered protein complex CBP/p300 has several structured regions connected by long, floppy ?flexible linkers.? The linkers form a malleable scaffold for bringing together the structured parts of the protein complex, controlling how and when these other players interact.

In sickness and health

Historically, before IDPs took off, anything other than a properly structured protein was considered a disease risk. This was a reasonable conclusion, given that diseases often result when proteins take forms they aren?t meant to, a process called misfolding. Today, though, scientists know that a disordered protein is not the same as a misfolded one.

Still, IDPs, like any proteins, can misfold. And misfolded proteins known to play roles in some high-profile diseases have recently turned out to be disordered. The tau protein, for example, forms the characteristic protein tangles seen in Alzheimer?s disease. Same, it seems, for alpha-synuclein and Parkinson?s disease. Some scientists think disordered proteins may be more prone to misfolding than other types, but the relationship is not yet clear. By understanding the full range of protein folding behavior, scientists hope to gain insight into the causes of such diseases.

Homing in on interactions involving disordered proteins could also lead to new approaches to treatment. Drug developers have traditionally focused on creating molecules that bind to highly structured proteins that carry out reactions in a cell. That means binding to what?s called an ?active site.? But the new understanding of IDPs opens possibilities for designing drugs that instead interfere with protein-protein interactions, by binding to intrinsically disordered proteins or binding to a site on a partner protein where the IDP attaches.

?The idea of targeting disordered proteins themselves remains very challenging,? Kriwacki says. ?Much more feasible is to target binding sites on folded [partner] proteins.? If a short sequence of a disordered protein is known to bind to another protein that triggers a disease state, a small molecule could mimic that sequence, binding to the partner protein and deactivating it. An anticancer drug developed by the pharmaceutical company Roche is made from Nutlin-3a, a chemical that works in just this way. Nutlin-3a prevents an IDP commonly associated with cancer, p53, from interacting with its partner protein.

Of course, scientists? current understanding of disordered proteins assumes that the versions studied in lab dishes are in fact disordered in cells, a notion some researchers challenge.

Disorder doubters

As with any paradigm shift, the idea that proteins can be disordered but still functional has its skeptics. ?I think the majority of people accept disorder,? says Wright, ?but there are still a few critics.? Most studies of IDPs are conducted in lab dishes rather than in living cells, because today?s techniques, for the most part, aren?t sensitive enough to allow the study of proteins at the low amounts present in actual cells. Scientists commonly use bacterial cells to create many copies of a protein. The protein is then isolated and studied under artificial conditions. This has led some researchers to question whether the apparently disordered state of IDPs is merely an artifact of the lab environment. In the true setting of a cell, which is much more crowded with other molecules, the proteins might be folded, the critics argue.

Neuroscientist Dennis Selkoe of Harvard Medical School and colleagues published a controversial paper in 2011 suggesting that alpha-synuclein protein, widely believed to be disordered in its healthy form, actually exists in a structured state inside cells. Selkoe?s team studied alpha-synuclein obtained from human brain cells grown in a lab dish, reporting that the protein appears to occur naturally as a helix-shaped ?tetramer? of four proteins as opposed to a single, unstructured protein.

But the findings are highly contested, and others have failed to replicate them. Philipp Selenko, a biochemist at the Leibniz Institute of Molecular Pharmacology in Berlin, used NMR to show that alpha-synuclein was unstructured inside intact E. coli bacteria. Biologist Guy Lippens of Lille University of Science and Technology in France and colleagues have shown that tau protein, too, appears unstructured in immature frog egg cells. Still, says Lippens, the question of whether all lab-studied IDPs are truly disordered in cells remains open.

Assuming the proteins are unstructured, another mystery is how they evade degradation. Cells have machinery that recognizes proteins that haven?t folded properly and digests them. One theory posits that since IDPs lack regions of the type the degradation system recognizes, the disordered proteins appear to the cell as folded proteins. Another theory holds that ?chaperone? proteins bind to IDPs to stabilize them so they don?t get eaten up by the cell. A third theory suggests that IDPs are tightly regulated and kept at low levels in the cell, broken down when they are not needed. Studying proteins under natural conditions ? in cells ? will help provide the answer.

Despite a growing awareness of disorder in proteins, much more research remains to be done. In this chaotic new view of the protein world, scientists must reexamine everything they have assumed about structure and function. ?Just like in physics,? Tompa says, ?the protein universe seems to have this dark matter we have neglected, which now turns out to be important in cells.?


Loose jobs
Intrinsically disordered proteins, or IDPs, have important regulatory and signaling jobs in cells (some outlined below). Their disorder is thought to make them better at these tasks, by enabling quick and flexible responses to the changing conditions that cells face.

  • Cell cycle activities? Disordered proteins help control when and how a cell grows and divides.

  • Transcription? These proteins turn on and off the copying of genes (DNA) into protein-making instructions (RNA).

  • Translation ?IDPs are involved in the reading of RNA to make proteins.

  • Signal transduction? The flexibility of intrinsically disordered proteins allows them to convert a signal coming from outside the cell into a response that shows up within the cell.

  • Self-assembly of multiprotein complexes? IDPs help bring together different proteins to form larger structures ? such as the ribosome, a molecular machine that serves as the site of protein synthesis.

  • Cargo transport? These proteins play a role in moving large molecules around a cell along the fibers making up the cell?s skeleton.

  • Apoptosis ?Disordered proteins can mediate a cell suicide pathway.

M. Babu et al. Versatility from Protein Disorder. Science, Vol. 337, September 21, 2012, p. 1460. doi: 10.1126/science.1228775.

M. Babu et al. Intrinsically disordered proteins: regulation and disease. Current Opinion in Structural Biology, Vol. 21, June 2011, p. 432. doi: 10.1016/j.sbi.2011.03.011.

R. Das et al. Unmasking Functional Motifs Within Disordered Regions of Proteins. Science Signaling, Vol. 5, April 17, 2012, p. 17. doi: 10.1126/scisignal.2003091.

A. K. Dunker and R. W. Kriwacki. The orderly chaos of proteins. Scientific American, April 2011, p. 68.

A. K. Dunker. Function and structure of inherently disordered proteins. Current Opinion in Structural Biology, Vol. 18, November 2008, p. 756. doi: 10.1016/j.sbi.2008.10.002.

A. K. Dunker. DisProt: a database of protein disorder. Bioinformatics, Vol. 21, January 1, 2005, p. 137. doi:10.1093/bioinformatics/bth476.

H. J. Dyson and E. Komives. Role of Disorder in I?B-NF?B Interaction. Life, Vol. 64, June 2012, June, 2012, p. 499. doi: 10.1002/iub.1044.

A. K. Dunker. Sequences and topology: intrinsic disorder in the evolving universe of protein structure. Current Opinion in Structural Biology, Vol. 21, 2011, p. 1. doi: 10.1016/j.sbi.2011.04.002.

H. J. Dyson and P. Wright. Intrinsically Unstructured Proteins And Their Functions. Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, Vol. 6, March 2005, p. 197. doi: 10.1038/nrm1589.

R. Kriwacki. Structural studies of p21Waf1/Cip1/Sdi1 in the free and Cdk2-bound state: conformational disorder mediates binding diversity. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Vol. 93, Oct. 15, 1996, p. 11504.

D. Jones et al. Prediction and Functional Analysis of Native Disorder in Proteins from the Three Kingdoms of Life. Journal of Molecular Biology, Vol. 337, March 26, 2004, p 635. doi:10.1016/j.jmb.2004.02.002.

G. Lippens et al. NMR observation of Tau in Xenopus oocytes. Journal of Magnetic Resonance, Vol. 192, June 2008, p. 252. doi: 10.1016/j.jmr.2008.03.006.

J. Forman-Kay et al. Dynamic equilibrium engagement of a polyvalent ligand with a single-site receptor. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Vol. 105, November 18, 2008, p. 17772. 10.1073/pnas.0809222105.

J. Rumi-Masante et al. Structural Basis for Activation of Calcineurin by Calmodulin. Journal of Molecular Biology, Vol. 415, January 13, 2012, p. 307. doi: 10.1016/j.jmb.2011.11.008.

P. Selenko et al. Bacterial in-cell NMR of human alpha-synuclein: a disordered monomer by nature? Biochemical Society Transactions, Vol. 40, October 2012, p. 950. doi: 10.1042/BST20120096.

D. Selkoe et al. [agr]-Synuclein occurs physiologically as a helically folded tetramer that resists aggregation. Nature, Vol. 477, March 2011, p. 107. doi: 10.1038/nature10324.

P. Tompa. Intrinsically disordered proteins: a 10-year recap. Trends in Biochemical Sciences, Vol. 37, December 2012, December, 2012, p. 509. doi: 10.1016/j.tibs.2012.08.004.

P. Tompa and M. Fuxreiter. Fuzzy complexes: polymorphism and structural disorder in protein?protein interactions. Trends in Biochemical Sciences, Vol. 33, January, 2008, p. 2. doi: 10.1016/j.tibs.2012.08.004.

P. Wright and H. J. Dyson. Linking Folding and Binding. Current Opinion in Structural Biology, Vol. 19, February 2009, p. 31. doi: 10.1016/j.sbi.2008.12.003.

P. Wright and H. J. Dyson. Intrinsically Unstructured Proteins: Re-assessing the Protein Structure-Function Paradigm. Journal of Molecular Biology, Vol. 293, October 22, 1999, p. 321. doi: 10.1006/jmbi.1999.3110.

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/feature/id/347758/title/Disorder_at_Work

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Editorial: Shifting state tax burdens makes sense | tax, income, sales ...

There is a trend among Republican-controlled state governments to reduce or eliminate state income taxes to stimulate business and job creation.

Governors and some legislators in Louisiana, North Carolina, Kansas and Oklahoma are considering reforms, some of which would increase sales taxes to offset lost revenue.

"Our current tax system needs to be modernized and reformed," said Nebraska Gov. Dave Heineman, who would end income tax for working Nebraskans and corporations, as well as end taxation of small business, Social Security and retirement income. "How many of you have sons and daughters, grandchildren, brothers and sisters and other family members who no longer live in Nebraska because they couldn't find a job [or the right career]?"

Mr. Heineman also would eliminate $5 billion in sales tax exemptions.

The Register long has supported states experimenting as laboratories of democracy. We will watch with interest the effects on economies and government budgets. Sadly, Democratic-controlled California, which disproportionately relies on taxing higher incomes to finance government, is moving in the opposite direction.

Proposition 30 increased California's sales tax, already among the nation's highest. It also increased the top personal income tax rate from 10.3 percent to 13.3 percent, now the nation's highest.

That gives California the nation's highest marginal rate of 51.9 percent, combining state, federal and local income taxes, payroll taxes for Social Security and Medicare and factoring in tax deductibility, according to analysis by Lynchburg College, Va.

Increasing sales taxes to off-set lost income taxes, as Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal proposes, isn't ideal. By 41 percent to 31 percent, likely voters are against the idea, says Rassmussen Reports.

"This [sales] tax can hurt the business tax climate," says the nonprofit Tax Foundation, "because as the sales tax rate climbs, customers make fewer purchases or seek out low-tax alternatives," resulting in lost profits, jobs and tax revenue.

Another argument is that sales taxes are regressive, falling more heavily on lower-income consumers. We sympathize. Lower-income people can pay a higher percentage of income in sales taxes than do the well-off.

But the progressive income tax rate is unfair, too. Higher-income people not only pay substantially more, they pay proportionately more. That was illustrated recently when millionaire golfer Phil Mickelson said he may leave California for a no-income tax state because, by his calculation, he faces a combined income tax burden of up to 62 percent.

The economic harm of taking nearly two-thirds of a person's earned income should be obvious, as should its unfairness. The progressive income tax also penalizes wage earners for productive work. The sales tax penalizes consumers for discretionary spending. A discriminating shopper can more easily limit sales taxes. To avoid paying more income tax, taxpayers must either earn less or adopt often-convoluted strategies.

The Republican tax-shifting movement isn't perfect, but California could learn from it.

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Source: http://www.ocregister.com/opinion/tax-408991-income-sales.html

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Dealing With Death: The Growing Home Funeral ... - Huffington Post

A little over five years ago, Alison and Doug Kirk held their 9-year-old daughter's hand as she lay on a futon in their Nashville living room, told her they loved her, and watched her take her last breath.

The Kirks had known for a long time that their little girl, Caroline, would die. In her last weeks, she was under hospice care, lived off an oxygen machine, was fed through a tube, and spoke only in small murmurs. It was the normal course for a child born with Niemann-Pick, a terminal disease that gradually leads to the breakdown of the nervous system, brain and lungs.

What happened after Caroline's death was anything but typical.

Alison and Doug carried Caroline upstairs to the bathtub, where they washed her skin and hair, dried her limp, 45-pound body with a towel and placed her head on a pillow on the bed in her old room. Alison slipped a white communion dress on Caroline, turned up the air-conditioning and put ice packs by her daughter?s sides. She put pink lipstick on the child's paling lips, and covered up Caroline's toes and fingers, which were turning blue at the nails, with the family quilt.

Caroline stayed in her bedroom for 36 hours for her final goodbyes. There was no traditional funeral home service, and no coroner or medical examiner was on hand. Caroline's death was largely a home affair, with a short cemetery burial that followed.

"We had taken care of Caroline her whole life," recalls Alison, whose other daughter, Kate, has the same disease and will also have a home funeral. "Why would we give her to someone else once she died?"

Each year, 2.5 million Americans die. For the majority, about 70 percent, deaths happen in a hospital, nursing home or long-term care facility. What happens afterwards is nearly always the same, with few exceptions for religious traditions: A doctor or nurse will sign a death certificate and the body will be whisked to the funeral home, where it's washed, embalmed, dressed, and prepared for a viewing and burial. A family usually sees the dead only a few times: when they die, if there's an open-casket viewing and in the rare case when a casket is opened during burial.

But a small and growing group of Americans are returning to a more hands-on, no-frills experience of death. In the world of "do it yourself" funerals, freezer packs are used in lieu of embalming, unvarnished wooden boxes replace ornate caskets, viewings are in living rooms and, in some cases, burials happen in backyards.

Nobody keeps track of the number of home funerals and advocacy groups, but home funeral organizations have won battles in recent years in states such as Minnesota and Utah that have attempted to ban the practice. Most states have nearly eliminated any requirements that professionals play a role in funerals. It's now legal in all but eight states to care for one's own after death. And the growth of community-based, nonprofit home funeral groups and burial grounds that are friendly to the cause point to an increasing demand.

The reasons vary from the economic to the psychological and cultural. The average funeral costs $6,560, while a home funeral can cost close to nothing. In a society where seeing death and speaking of it is often taboo, home funeral advocates are challenging the notion that traditional funerals are anything but a natural end to life. Instead, they assert, death and mourning should be seen, smelled, touched and experienced.

"There are people who get it and think it's a great idea. And there are people who have been so indoctrinated to think a different way, a less hands-on way, that they can't imagine anything else," says Elizabeth Knox, the founder of Crossings, a Maryland-based home funeral resource organization and the vice president of the National Home Funeral Alliance. Knox travels across the nation to run trainings on do-it-yourself funerals and her book on her daughter's home funeral is what inspired the Kirks to do their own. Her group is one of several that have seen interest grow in recent years. They include Final Passages (California), Natural Transitions (Colorado) and Undertaken with Love (Texas). There are 61 organizations that are members of the NHFA, many of which are run by just one person.

"A lot of people don't want to do anything with touching dead bodies," says Knox. "They consider it creepy. But it can actually be the first step to healing and acceptance of death. Slowing down the process allows all involved to absorb the loss at their own pace. It's an organic emotional and spiritual healing not available from limited calling hours at a remote location."

***
caroline doug

Caroline's father, Doug Kirk, and her when she was five. It was four years before her death.

Caroline died at noon on a Tuesday. Through Thursday morning, her body stayed in her childhood home, surrounded by old dolls, stuffed animals and her favorite books. Friends and family came in and out to say goodbye. Some would get on the bed beside her body, stroking her face and hair. Others would sit across from her in a rocking chair.

"In the morning, I spent time with Caroline. At night, I spent time with Caroline. I would tell her goodnight. It was very calming to sit next to her. I touched her. I kissed her. And I felt like this is where she was supposed to be," says Alison. "I told her things that were happening. I said there had been suffering in the last few days, but it was a relief that she was not suffering anymore."

A few dozen visitors came to the house throughout Wednesday. There was a guestbook in the downstairs hallway, and people would gather to chat on the porch. "Caroline is in her room, and if you want to say goodbye to her, you can do that," Alison would tell each guest. Most went upstairs for private visits in her bedroom. At least one couple decided not to visit her there.

In Tennessee, where the Kirks live, the laws on home funerals are relatively lax. After getting a death certificate -- Alison and Doug had Caroline's pediatrician sign off on one -- a family is free to do what it wants with a dead body within a reasonable amount of time. Alison had a funeral director, who was friendly to her ideas, on-call for urgent needs like figuring out how to patch up a leaking hole in Caroline's stomach once a feeding tube was removed. She also had him bring a hearse with a casket to her home.

caroline kirk grave

For her first birthday, Caroline's aunt gave her a dancing figurine made of glass. Her parents commissioned a whimsical, bigger version of it to rest on Caroline's gravestone in Mount Hope Cemetery, about 20 miles south of Nashville.

"I did look into if we could bury Caroline at our own house. We could have," says Alison. "But it's not like we are on some ancestral ground that has been passed for generations." She opted for a cemetery. Mount Hope, about 20 miles south of Nashville in Franklin, fit her needs. It's small, with a "country feel," she says. "No big landscaping, and not this big uniform place."

On Thursday morning, the family carried Caroline back downstairs. They lifted her into a casket that was a simple, pine box. Alison put The Little Engine That Could next to her daughter. Doug put in a small, leather keychain shaped like a vintage ink jar that he had used since college ("It was a continuity of presence," he says. "I pretty much had it on me or nearby for 26 years ... It was irreplaceable even though it meant nothing to anyone else but me").

He rode in the hearse with his daughter, and before the body was lowered into the ground, the hospice chaplain read "The Circle of Days," an adaptation of a prayer by Saint Francis of Assisi that honors God's creation of the elements, animals and the heavens. Doug sang Caroline's favorite song, one that would always soothe her in times of pain: "Big Rock Candy Mountain." It tells the story of a hobo's idea of paradise.

Afterwards, there was a memorial service at Vanderbilt University, where both parents first met. Religion in any formal sense was absent.

"We wanted a simple funeral because her life was simple," says Alison. "It was short and simple."

She also considers it one of the best decisions she has ever made.

***

It's not always as easy as the Kirks found it to be.

Richard Bentley, a 70-year-old retiree who lives in Tupper Lake in upstate New York, has tried twice to take care of his loved ones when they died. His dad died in 2008 of multiple myeloma, a cancer of the plasma cells, and, 13 years before that, his mother died of an aortic dissection.

New York is one of the few states that requires a funeral director to be present or to sign off on nearly every part of after-death care. Medical examiners and coroners have to turn over bodies to funeral directors, and the law says an undertaker has to personally oversee each funeral. (The other states with similarly restrictive laws are Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Michigan, Nebraska and New Jersey).

For his father, Bentley says the process was unnecessarily intrusive. He wanted a cremation, which would usually require a death certificate, transport of the body and a cremation fee in most states, but he had to meet with his hospice nurse, the town clerk and the local funeral director to arrange all the paperwork necessary. The total cost: $940. He reluctantly obliged.

"One doesn?t wish to think about things like cost and comparison shopping at the time of a loved one?s death," says Bentley. "At the same time, I do not believe, and my father before his passing did not believe, that some stranger should be entitled to walk off with a week?s wages or more in return for a few hours of work at the expense of the loved one?s spouse and children."

Because his mother was airlifted to a hospital in Vermont to have her heart condition treated, Bentley says he had a much easier time with her. She died in the hospital, where he had a family viewing in the chapel, and he was able to take her body -- stored in a box -- from the morgue to his car. He drove her to a crematorium near the Vermont-New Hampshire border (it would have been illegal to transport the body to New York state), where it was cremated over the next few days. Her boxed ashes later arrived via mail to his house, where he held her memorial.

"We would like to see New York state change its funeral law to allow family to handle such matters as filing death certificates, home viewing and preliminary care of the deceased, and transportation of the deceased without the intervention of a licensed funeral director as prescribed by current law," says Bentley, who's on the board of the Memorial Society of the Hudson-Mohawk Region, a group that monitors New York funeral laws and counsels families interested in home funerals. "There is no public need that is satisfied by such laws."

bentleys

Richard Bentley organized home funerals for both of his parents, pictured above during their honeymoon in November 1941. Rachel Mary Bentley died on November 9, 1995 at 77. Paul Bentley died on November 16, 2008 at 91.

The public need for funeral homes -- there are 19,680 in the U.S. today -- is relatively new.

Until the Civil War, death was largely a home matter and home funerals were the norm. It was common at the time for unembalmed bodies to be put in simple caskets and buried in cemeteries that weren?t treated with pesticides. (It?s a growing trend today, known as ?green burial.?) Historians say that our culture?s approach to death in the pre-Civil War years had much to be praised.

"Death was much more ingrained into daily life and cultural life. People were rural-living, mortality rates were higher. Most people died at home," says Gary Laderman, a professor of religious studies at Emory University and author of Rest in Peace: A Cultural History of Death and the Funeral Home in Twentieth-Century America. It was a time before modern hospitals, "a kind of mediator between the living and the dying," he says.

But the war and the need to transport bodies from the South to the North led to widespread embalming. The practice was even more popularized after Abraham Lincoln's embalmed body was taken on a 13-city tour after his assassination in 1865. Mourners gawked at how well it was preserved, according to Laderman.

"The most common thing used to be hands-on family involvement. We Americans have completely forgotten that there is nothing universal about calling the mortuary at 3 in the morning," says Josh Slocum, executive director of the Funeral Consumers Alliance and co-author of Final Rights: Reclaiming the American Way of Death.

Slocum thinks there are two reasons that home funerals haven't taken off: "people not knowing they have the option and the ways laws in many places are written to favor the funeral home industry."

It's nearly impossible to do a home funeral in some places, but the funeral homes and home funerals can often coordinate activities to get around that hurdle. Like the Kirks in Nashville who hired a funeral director to guide them on how to take care of Caroline's body and used the funeral home's hearse, there's been an uptick in families who want to use only select services of a funeral home. Just as hospice care for the dying gradually became mainstream over the decades, newer generations of less traditional funeral directors are more likely to be interested in helping make arrangements for home services, according to the National Funeral Directors Association.

"I don't think there is a funeral director who is opposed to a family being more intimately involved as long as it better meets the needs of a family, but this is an evolving process," says Pat Patton, the co-owner of Patton-Schad Funeral & Cremation Services in Sauk Center, Minn., and a board member of the NFDA. In his 34 years in the business, he's been asked to help arrange one home funeral. "If you don't want what we usually provide, how do we know what you do want? How do we make it work for both of us? Funeral directors are certainly willing to help families take care of their dead at home, but because it's new and different and outside what would be normal for our business, it takes time."

He also isn't sure home funerals are always the right choice.

"In general, deaths at home and a person caring for everything is fine. But we know that, depending on the cause of death, things can go badly in a hurry," says Patton. "Sometimes there can be rapid decomposition, blistering on the skins or fluids leaking from the body, things that a family may not be able to deal with. Our concern related to home funerals is that people may just not be ready."

In a culture where talk of death is avoided, direct experiences like home funerals have benefits and drawbacks. On one hand, seeing and sitting with a dead loved one can help a mourner accept death, says Sue Wintz, who is a consultant and managing editor at New York-based HealthCare Chaplaincy. "That action is part of the healing," says Wintz, who was a hospital and hospice chaplain for 30 years.

But Wintz says that home funerals require "a lot of support and help from your community or family. You can get mentally and physically exhausted."

***

Alison admits that Caroline's funeral was tiring.

Growing up as the youngest sibling in a big Southern Baptist family in Louisiana, she had seen lots of death and had been to plenty of traditional funerals. But even though they were physically easier than services for her daughter, she found them to be emotionally incomplete events (especially so when her parents died).

"My father died from bladder cancer when I was 16. And I just didn't know what I needed at the time to grieve for him,? she says. ?And when my mother died -- the same year I was pregnant with Caroline -- it was just this huge social event."

Her mother?s funeral was held back home in Shreveport at a large church designed to seat a few thousand, with a reception before, a reception after, and lots of talking among hundreds of guests in between.

"There were so many family friends I hadn't seen in years. People just kept on coming to say, 'Hi,' and, 'You've got to see this cousin and that cousin.' I just wanted to be in the sanctuary with my mom with her open casket," she remembers. "I wanted to have a little last time to be in her presence. I wanted to talk to her."

Alison was alone with her mother only for a few minutes. "I was self-conscious because people kept on coming in. But I got to touch her hand briefly. She was very cold. And it was a reminder that it was only her body."

caroline kirk gravestone

When her parents asked her how she was doing, Caroline would often enthusiastically respond by saying "I'm happy and dancing." The phrase is engraved on her memorial stone.

So when Caroline died, Alison spoke to her every day, sometimes every hour.

She wrote entries in an online journal to remember how Caroline?s death felt and to explain her decision to family and friends: "I told Caroline that if she knew what a froufrou outfit I had her in she?d be giving me the business. We compromised in that I let her stay barefoot under her big skirt. The girl never liked shoes ... There were a few changes in Caroline?s body over the next two days, not many, and they served to remind us that this was only her body, that her spirit had been released. Everyone had time to sit with her, read to her ... I frequently found myself running into her room to tell her what I was doing, and it felt so natural."

Before Caroline left the house, the parents took her sister, Kate, into the room where she was held. "We're saying bye to Caroline's body," they told her. "But she will always be your sister and she will always love you."

Kate was 5, and she, too, was already showing signs of Niemann-Pick disease.

Kate is now 11 and in a wheelchair. She was pulled out of fourth grade a few months ago, and has been under home hospice care. She can breathe on her own, but is fed through a tube and has frequent seizures. She's awake for only a few hours each day.

Her condition isn't as complicated as Caroline's. Her decline is almost entirely neurological, and her death will be akin to that of someone dying of Alzheimer's. She could live for a few years or she could have a sudden seizure that would end her life.

The Kirks have purchased a plot next to Caroline's grave for Kate, but have otherwise made few concrete plans for her death. They don't know what she will wear or how she will look. It's not time to plan for that. She's still alive. They do know that she'll die at home in the hands of her parents, hearing the same "I love yous" her sister last heard. There will be no funeral home taking her covered body away, and no wake in a room she's never seen.

"It's a hard thing to have to say the final goodbye to your child," says Alison. "But with Caroline, we made it as good as it could be. I wouldn't change a thing when Kate's time comes."

  • Catholic Prayer For The Dead

    Eternal rest, grant unto him (her) O Lord and let perpetual light shine upon him (her). May he (she) rest in peace (Amen) May their souls and the souls of all the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, rest in peace. Amen.

  • Jewish Prayer For The Dead - Mourners Kaddish

    Exalted and hallowed be His great Name. (Cong: "Amen.") Throughout the world which He has created according to His Will. May He establish His kingship, bring forth His redemption and hasten the coming of His Moshiach. (Cong: "Amen.") In your lifetime and in your days and in the lifetime of the entire House of Israel, speedily and soon, and say, Amen. (Cong: "Amen. May His great Name be blessed forever and to all eternity, blessed.") May His great Name be blessed forever and to all eternity. Blessed and praised, glorified, exalted and extolled, honored, adored and lauded be the Name of the Holy One, blessed be He. (Cong: "Amen.") Beyond all the blessings, hymns, praises and consolations that are uttered in the world; and say, Amen. (Cong: "Amen.") May there be abundant peace from heaven, and a good life for us and for all Israel; and say, Amen. (Cong: "Amen.") He Who makes peace in His heavens, may He make peace for us and for all Israel; and say, Amen. (Cong: "Amen.")

  • Bahai Prayer For The Dead

    O my God! This is Thy servant and the son of Thy servant who hath believed in Thee and in Thy signs, and set his face towards Thee, wholly detached from all except Thee. Thou art, verily, of those who show mercy the most merciful. Deal with him, O Thou Who forgivest the sins of men and concealest their faults, as beseemeth the heaven of Thy bounty and the ocean of Thy grace. Grant him admission within the precincts of Thy transcendent mercy that was before the foundation of earth and heaven. There is no God but Thee, the Ever-Forgiving, the Most Generous.

  • Muslim Prayer Al-Fatiha

    "In the name of God, the Entirely Merciful, the Especially Merciful. All praise and thanks is for to God, [The] Creator, Owner, Sustainer of the Worlds. The Entirely Merciful, The Especially Merciful. Owner of the Day of Recompense. You alone do we worship and You alone we seek for help. Guide us to the Straight Path. The path of those whom Your blessings are upon, Not of those who You have cursed nor of those who have gone astray."

  • Hindu Prayer For The Dead

    The wise have said that Atman is immortal: And that the phenomenon of death is merely the separation of the astral body from the physical body. The five elements of which the body is composed return to their source. Our scriptures teach us that as pilgrims unite and separate at a public inn, so also fathers, mothers, sons, brothers, wives, relations unite and separate in this world. He who thus understands the nature of the body and all human relationships based upon it will derive strength to bear the loss of our dear ones. In Divine plan, one day each union must end with separation.

  • Anglican Prayer For the Dead

    O God, whose mercies cannot be numbered: Accept our prayers on behalf of thy servant N., and grant him an entrance into the land of light and joy, in the fellowship of thy saints; through Jesus Christ thy Son our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Spirit, on God, now and for ever. Amen.

  • Words For Parting

    He is made one with Nature; there is heard His voice in all her music, from the moan Of thunder, to the song of night's sweet bird; He is a presence to be felt and known In darkness and in light, from herb and stone... He is a portion of the loveliness Which once he made more lovely. Words for Parting: 2 The courage of the early morning's dawning, And the strength of the eternal hill, And the peace of the evening's ending, And the love of God, be in our hearts. Words for Parting: 3 Farewell! The world is better for your having lived, We are better for having known you. We loved you living- we love you now. Farewell! Words for Parting: 4 Farewell, traveler. We do not know your destination but our love and gratitude go with you. Rest now- in peace- and in the love we bear you.

Earlier on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/25/home-funerals-death-mortician_n_2534934.html

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