Saturday, December 31, 2011

Jeremy London facing domestic violence charge

Jeremy London will fly away all right ? to the slammer if authorities prove the allegations against him.

Prosecutors in Riverside, Calif., have charged the ex-"Party of Five" and "Seventh Heaven" star with domestic violence stemming from the scuffle he got into last month with his estranged wife Melissa Cunningham.

MORE: Actor Jeremy London's Rep Denies Alleged Domestic Abuse

A rep for the Riverside District Attorney's Office said prosecutors filed the misdemeanor count two days ago after London's baby mama filed a police report alleging the actor assaulted her outside her home on Nov. 18 when the two got into an argument over custody of their child. A warrant was subsequently issued for his arrest ? standard in such cases.

The D.A. could not specify how much jail time the 39-year-old thesp might face if he's convicted.

But London told E! News exclusively that the charge was without merit.

"This is just more of [Melissa's] insanity," the erstwhile "Celebrity Rehab" participant said. "I'd never lay a finger on a woman. And the only allegation is that I pulled her hair."

While it sounds like a he said-she said-style scenario, a source close to Jeremy tells E! that Melissa had been approached to do a reality show (purportedly by producers behind "The Real Housewives" franchise) and that she needed to drum up "drama" for the show.

MORE: Jeremy London Kidnapped at Gunpoint, Forced to Take Drugs

The source adds that Cunningham reportedly even went so far as to call Jeremy's twin brother, Jason London, and his wife, asking them to participate given that they haven't always been on the best terms with Jeremy (like the time Jeremy filed a restraining order against his sibling and his mom).

Given the reputed reality-series overture, the couple didn't exactly buy her abuse claims after the incident, notes the insider.

A lawyer for Cunningham was unavailable for comment.

? Reporting by Baker Machado and Katie Rhames

PICS: Mug-Shot Mania

? 2011 E! Entertainment Television, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45820290/ns/today-entertainment/

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Now At 1.4M Members, Fab.com Turns Up The Social With A ?Live Feed?

fabfeeddExclusive - Fab.com, the ridiculously fast growing e-commerce startup, is launching a new social shopping feature today that lets members view and interact with any activity on the design flash sales site in real-time. Dubbed the 'live feed' and reminiscent of Facebook's early iterations of what is now the News Feed, it captures what users are purchasing, sharing, commenting on etc.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/TH3JzilanpQ/

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Friday, December 16, 2011

[OOC] Avalia: Life in the Cities

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but in his ability to forget what is forgiven.

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Research Data: Share Early, Share Often

Hmmm, you really do need to read the climategate 2 letters, don't you.

From message 4241.txt, a communication from Rob Wilson to Ed Cook (and others):

I first generated 1000 random time-series in Excel ? I did not try and approximate the persistence structure in tree-ring data. The autocorrelation therefore of the time-series was close to zero, although it did vary between each time-series. Playing around therefore with the AR persistent structure of these time-series would make a difference. However, as these series are generally random white noise processes, I thought this would be a conservative test of any potential bias.

I then screened the time-series against NH mean annual temperatures and retained those series that correlated at the 90% C.L.

48 series passed this screening process.

Using three different methods, I developed a NH temperature reconstruction from these data:

1. simple mean of all 48 series after they had been normalised to their common period

2. Stepwise multiple regression

3. Principle component regression using a stepwise selection process.

The results are attached.

Interestingly, the averaging method produced the best results, although for each method there is a linear trend in the model residuals ? perhaps an end-effect problem of over-fitting.

The reconstructions clearly show a ?hockey-stick? trend. I guess this is precisely the phenomenon that Macintyre has been going on about.

Surely this vindicates Mann -- by proving that it does indeed turn white noise into hockey sticks! Not only is Mann wrong, but the hockey team knows it perfectly well! There are letters where people openly lament being involved with the hockey stick type reconstructions (and other places, e.g. where they "hid the decline" in tree ring data) because they are terrible science and because they are openly worried that sooner or later people will catch on. As indeed they have, although they have won the PR war (another great Mann quote) to such an extent that even though they themselves know that the hockey stick is bogus and that white noise fit according to Mann's cherrypicking methodology will produce nothing but hockey sticks, it just won't die, will it? Thanks to people like you!

We could review the specific Climategate 2 letters where Jones talks about deliberately trying not to give away data to the people who requested it (something I would call "stonewalling", except that the circumstance in question is a FOIA request that was only a missed deadline away from being "a crime" upon the release of the CG emails), or about the points where it turns out that he does a lousy job of keeping records (problems with Excel spreadsheets) and no longer can reproduce his own results because he doesn't know what data he used, if you like.

Or we could look at the many, many other places where internal communications show that the hockey team is well aware of many problems with their own results and consistently choose not to let the general public know about them lest we be led to doubt their conclusion. Then we could read Feynman's lovely article on "Cargo Cult Science": http://www.lhup.edu/~DSIMANEK/cargocul.htm [lhup.edu]. See how close you think the hockey team comes to Feynman's fairly modest standard for good, honest science, while reading Mann going on about the importance of winning the PR war, getting journal editors fired, and generally doing his very best to eliminate all challenge to his papers, or, if he can't manage that, eliminating the challengers themselves.

But really, read them yourself. Don't accept what people tell you about them, read them! Then tell me that this is honest science, well done.

rgb

Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/QrG7dSEEYvc/research-data-share-early-share-often

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Vitals - Genetic test can help tailor breast cancer care

By Robert Bazell, Chief Science and Health Correspondent

A new study finds that a genetic test can help tailor care specifically to each breast cancer patient.

After a? mammogram, Dorothy Warren learned she had something called DCIS -- almost breast cancer, but not quite the same.

"You're gonna tell me I have cancer and I have stage zero, and it's not real invasive cancer?? I was not only fearful, but confused," Warren said.

Dr. Pamela Otto, a breast radiologist at the University of Texas, San Antonio, says DCIS consists of cancer cells that are inside the milk ducts.

Doctors?cannot be sure if it will spread -- or if the patient needs to be treated with radiation or mastectomy.

Today's study, presented at a major breast cancer conference in San Antonio, finds that a genetic test called Oncotype Dx? can help with decisions about how to treat these cases. It gives a score, indicating how high the risk is.

Dr. Kathy Miller, a cancer expert at Indiana University School of Medicine, calls this "huge news" for women: ?It allows us to make individualized treatment decisions.?

These results are part of a big movement to try to use genetic markers to tailor the care to each patient.

Experts say only about one-quarter of DCIS patients need radiation.

"Now we can look and say what is your specific risk?? Are you in the three-fourths who have a very low risk,? said Dr. William Wood, a cancer surgeon at Emory University School of Medicine.

This finding could give useful guidance?for tens of thousands?of women every year.

Source: http://vitals.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/06/9258413-genetic-test-can-help-tailor-breast-cancer-care

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Angelina Jolie on Nightline: About That Whole Marrying Brad Pitt Thing ...


Angelina Jolie is making the media rounds for her directorial debut, In the Land of Blood and Honey, but the mom of six tackles difficult subjects in real life as well as on film.

The actress, 36, and her partner Brad Pitt, 47, are trying to balance their busy careers with raising Maddox, 10, Pax, 8, Zahara, 6, Shiloh, 5 and Knox and Vivienne, 3.

Like us, the brood is getting more curious about their marital status by the year ...

Angelina Jolie on Nightline

When Nightline asked if she has plans to marry Brad. Her response: "The kids asked me the other day and I asked if it was just because they wanted to have a big cake."

"They see movies that have the people getting married... you know, the happily ever after. Shrek and Fiona are married ... We have explained that our commitment when we decided to start a family was the greatest commitment you could possibly have."

"Once you have six children, you're ... you're committed."

True, in a sense. The couple has offered a number of different explanations for not tying the knot over the years, and despite celebrity gossip reports every few months suggesting a secret wedding is in the works ... none is in the works.

Angelina's full Nightline interview airs tonight at 11:35 p.m.

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/12/angelina-jolie-on-nightline-about-that-whole-marrying-brad-pitt/

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Monday, December 5, 2011

2.6 million Afghans at risk of hunger from drought (AP)

MAZAR-E-SHARIF, Afghanistan ? Zara, an Afghan mother of seven, doesn't know what to tell her children when they ask about dinner.

"I simply tell them that we must wait until their father gets home to see if he's going to bring anything," she said, speaking from under a dusty blue burqa covering her from head to toe.

Zara, who uses just one name, is one of an estimated 2.6 million Afghans facing food shortages after one of the worst droughts to strike northern Afghanistan in a decade, according to Afghan officials and aid agencies. Already living in poverty in a country at war, many have been left destitute by the drought, which has affected 14 of Afghanistan's 34 provinces ? all in the north.

Wells have dried up. Hundreds of children have been treated for malnutrition. Families are selling their animals at below-market prices. People are moving to cities to try to find food, water, work and, in some cases, a refuge from the fighting.

The Afghan government and aid agencies are racing to help them before snow blocks access to remote areas.

Rahmatullah Zahid, disaster coordinator in Balkh province, which has been hard-hit by the drought, said he is not worried yet about people starving to death, but he wonders how people will survive the winter, especially in remote areas.

"If the weather gets very, very cold in the remote areas and if the aid doesn't come, those families will be in danger of starvation," he said.

Beyond the relief effort, aid officials are trying to figure out how to end a vicious cycle of drought, drought relief and drought again in an area of the country that has suffered water and food shortages in eight of the past 11 years. Instead of trying to cultivate chronically dry land, perhaps farmers could grow almonds or grapes, which require less water than wheat, or industry could be lured to the area to extract its prevalent gas and oil.

Zara and her family moved to Mazar-e-Sharif, the capital of Balkh province, so her husband, whose crops dried up, might find work as a day laborer.

She and hundreds of others who fled the rugged Alburz Mountains in the province gathered last week in a dirt lot in Mazar-e-Sharif to receive large canvas bags of kitchen supplies, blankets, lamps and other items, including a phone card. The aid was distributed by the Norwegian Refugee Council.

"We have very little food," Zara said, squatting next to her aid bag. "If my husband finds work, he can buy some breads and vegetables on his way home, but otherwise there is nothing."

As she spoke, a light mist began to fall. The rain came too late. The crops were ruined months ago.

"There was no rain so everything was burned up," said Mir Ahmad, a 58-year-old wheat farmer who also moved to Mazar-e-Sharif from the mountains.

"There is not much work here in the city right now," he said, fingering a strand of yellow prayer beads as the large blue bags were unloaded from a truck. "Some days there is nothing and I have to borrow food or money to feed my family."

The U.N. issued an appeal for $142 million on Oct. 1 to help those hit by the drought in 14 northern provinces, where up to 80 percent of non-irrigated fields yielded little to no crops. So far, about $49 million has been pledged by aid groups, the U.S. and European nations.

The Afghan government also is distributing about 40,000 tons of wheat, 5,000 tons of rice, 10,000 tons of wheat seed and 20,000 tons of animal feed.

Sayed Anwar Rahmati, the governor of neighboring Sar-e-Pul province, said more aid is needed.

"Every day people are coming and complaining," he said. "The crops were lost and the cattle were seriously affected."

Zainab Noori, a member of the local council in nearby Bamiyan province, said people in six districts were waiting for aid.

"If the aid is not delivered in the next month, the road will be blocked by snow," she said. "At least 50 families have left already to go to Kabul and Iran to find work."

Aidan O'Leary, head of the U.N. office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, said repeated droughts in northern Afghanistan suggest that economic development is needed in addition to drought relief.

"What you're dealing with here is basically trying to maintain a rural, agrarian lifestyle in a climate that might not be conducive," O'Leary said. "What's the solution? Are you looking at better seeds? ... Are you looking at alternative crops? Are you looking at alternative livelihoods?"

With the international focus on pulling troops from Afghanistan, it's difficult to get nations sending development aid to discuss long-term solutions that would end the need for drought relief in the north every couple of years, he said. Compounding the problem is that while international aid has been flowing into Afghanistan for years, only a fraction has been targeted to reducing poverty, he said.

O'Leary noted a World Bank report this month that said the expected decline in international aid will have only a modest impact on the poor. The report said the majority of aid was spent to improve security and governance mostly in more urban areas where there is less poverty.

Ironically, it rained both days last week that O'Leary traveled to the north to check on drought aid with Michael Keating, deputy special representative of the U.N. secretary-general for Afghanistan with responsibility for relief, recovery and reconstruction. The first day it sprinkled. The second day it poured. Muddy water filled deep ruts in unpaved roads in Dawlat Abad district.

Keating and O'Leary tried to visit a nearby village, but one of the heavily armored U.N. vehicles in their convoy got stuck. They left the vehicle, turned around and drove on better roads to their next stop: a medical center where children are being treated for acute malnutrition.

The number of cases of malnutrition treated at the clinic increased threefold after the drought, said Dr. Said Mahmood Shah, nutrition coordinator for Save the Children. In the summer months, up to 90 malnourished children showed up at the center where a tiny office was crowded with cardboard boxes of eeZee Paste Nut, a peanut butter-like food with high energy, proteins and nutrients.

Now, rain, snow and poor roads have prevented some children from getting help, Shah said. "There are lots of cases, but they can't get here," he said.

The last stop was a meeting with villagers, including women who had received seeds and tools as part of a backyard garden project run by ActionAid, a British aid group.

One of the women, Jan Bibi, said that because of the drought, she and 10 other members of her family eat only once a day. Bibi, who is in her 70s with no land or home of her own, said she had not eaten meat for six to eight weeks.

"We are sticking to one meal a day," Bibi said, holding up a forefinger. "This year, it's really, really bad."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111203/ap_on_re_as/as_afghan_empty_plates

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