Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Study reveals stem cells in a human parasite

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

From the point of view of its ultimate (human) host, the parasitic flatworm Schistosoma mansoni has a gruesome way of life. It hatches in feces-tainted water, grows into a larva in the body of a snail and then burrows through human skin to take up residence in the veins. Once there, it grows into an adult, mates and, if it's female, starts laying eggs. It can remain in the body for decades.

A new study offers insight into the cellular operations that give this flatworm its extraordinary staying power. The researchers, from the University of Illinois, demonstrated for the first time that S. mansoni harbors adult, non-sexual stem cells that can migrate to various parts of its body and replenish tissues. Their report appears in the journal Nature.

According to the World Health Organization, more than 230 million people are in need of treatment for Schistosoma infections every year. Most live in impoverished areas with little or no access to clean water. Infection with the worm (also known as a blood fluke) can lead to damaging inflammation spurred by the presence of the worm's eggs in human organs and tissues.

"The female lays eggs more or less continuously, on the order of hundreds of eggs per day," said U. of I. cell and developmental biology professor and Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator Phillip Newmark, who led the study with postdoctoral researcher James J. Collins III.

"The eggs that don't get excreted in the feces to continue the life cycle actually become embedded inside host tissues, typically the liver, and those eggs trigger a massive inflammatory response that leads to tissue damage."

Children are especially vulnerable to the effects of infection, in some cases experiencing delays in growth and brain development as a result of chronic inflammation brought on by the parasites.

The new study began with an insight stemming from years of work on a different flatworm, the planarian, in Newmark's lab. Collins thought that schistosomes might make use of the same kinds of stem cells (called neoblasts in planarians) that allow planarians to regenerate new body parts and organs from even tiny fragments of living tissue.

"It just stood to reason that since schistosomes, like planaria, live so long that they must have a comparable type of system," Collins said. "And since these flatworms are related, it made sense that they would have similar types of cells. But it had never been shown."

In a series of experiments, Collins found that the schistosomes were loaded with proliferating cells that looked and behaved like planarian neoblasts, the cells that give them their amazing powers of regeneration. Like neoblasts, the undifferentiated cells in the schistosomes lived in the mesenchyme, a kind of loose connective tissue that surrounds the organs. And like neoblasts, these cells duplicated their DNA and divided to form two "daughter" cells, one of which copied its DNA again, a process that normally precedes cell division.

"Stem cells do two things," Newmark said. "They divide to make more stem cells and they give rise to cells that can differentiate."

Collins had labeled the cells with fluorescent markers. This allowed him to watch how they behaved. He noted that over the course of a few days, some of the labeled cells migrated into the gut or muscle, to become part of those tissues.

"We label the cells when they're born and then we see what they grow up to become," Collins said. "This is not conclusive evidence that these cells are equivalent to the planarian neoblasts, but it is consistent with the hypothesis that they are."

The researchers went deeper, determining which genes were turned on or off, up or down in the proliferating cells as compared with the non-dividing cells. They identified a gene in the proliferating cells that coded for a growth factor receptor very similar to one found in planarians. When the researchers switched off the parasite's ability to make use of this gene (using a technique called RNA interference in worms grown in the lab), the proliferating cells gradually died out.

"We postulated that these cells are important for the longevity of the parasite," Collins said. "Now we can start asking which genes regulate these cells."

"We started with the big question: How does a simple parasite survive in a host for decades?" Newmark said. "That implies that it has ways of repairing and maintaining its tissues. This study gives us insight into the really interesting biology of these parasites, and it may also open up new doors for making that life cycle a lot shorter."

###

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign: http://www.uiuc.edu

Thanks to University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign for this article.

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

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127019/Study_reveals_stem_cells_in_a_human_parasite

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British cardinal will skip upcoming papal conclave

VATICAN CITY (AP) ? In a season of startling change for the Catholic Church, the latest break with tradition was as unexpected as it was a wakeup call to the 115 men who will elect the next pope.

Britain's highest-ranking Catholic leader resigned and removed himself Monday from the upcoming conclave, saying he did not want allegations that he engaged in improper conduct with priests to be a distraction during the solemn process of choosing the next leader of the church's 1.2 billion-member flock.

It was the first time a cardinal has recused himself from a conclave because of personal scandal, according to Vatican historians.

The Vatican insisted that Pope Benedict XVI accepted Cardinal Keith O'Brien's resignation purely because O'Brien was nearing the retirement age of 75 ? not because of the accusations.

But O'Brien himself issued a statement Monday saying he would skip the conclave because he wanted to avoid becoming the focus of media attention at such a delicate time.

"I do not wish media attention in Rome to be focused on me ? but rather on Pope Benedict XVI and on his successor," said O'Brien, who had been archbishop of St. Andrews and Edinburgh. "However, I will pray with them and for them that, enlightened by the Holy Spirit, they will make the correct choice for the future good of the church."

Through his spokesman, O'Brien has contested allegations made Sunday in a British newspaper that three priests and a former priest had filed complaints to the Vatican alleging that the cardinal acted inappropriately with them.

There were no details about the behavior, and the Observer newspaper did not name the priests. It said the allegations date back to the 1980s.

The cardinal's action comes in the wake of a grassroots campaign to shame another cardinal, retired Los Angeles Cardinal Roger Mahony, into refraining from participating because of his role protecting sexually abusive priests.

Mahony, however, has defiantly said he would participate in the voting for the new pope.

The difference boils down to the fact that O'Brien himself was accused of improper behavior, whereas Mahony was shown to have covered up for other priests who raped and molested children. That distinction has long shielded bishops from Vatican sanction.

Several other cardinals who will elect the next pope have been accused ? and some have admitted ? to failing to protect children from abusive priests. If all of them were to recuse themselves for negligence, the College of Cardinals would shrink by quite a few members.

Terrence McKiernan of BishopAccountability.org, an online database of records on clergy abuse cases, urged other whistleblowers to come forward if they have information about other compromised cardinal electors.

"It is a public demonstration of the role that clerics with inside information can have in bringing accountability to a church where secrecy has led to a crisis of sexual misconduct," he said. "Cardinals who are tainted by the crisis cannot choose the person who will solve it."

With O'Brien's recusal and the decision of a frail Indonesian cardinal to stay home, there are expected to be 115 cardinals under age 80 who are eligible to vote in the conclave.

Separately Monday, Benedict changed the rules of the conclave, allowing cardinals to move up the start date if all of them arrive in Rome before the usual 15-day waiting period between the end of one pontificate and the start of the conclave. It was one of his last acts as pope before stepping down Thursday.

The date of the conclave's start is important because Holy Week begins March 24, and Easter Sunday is March 31. In order to have a new pope in place for the church's most solemn liturgical period, he would need to be installed by Sunday, March 17, a tight timeframe if a conclave were to start on March 15, as previous rules would have required.

Also Monday, Benedict decided that the contents of a secret investigation into the 2012 leaks of Vatican documents won't be shared with the cardinals ahead of the conclave. Benedict met Monday with the three elderly cardinals who conducted the probe and decided that "the acts of the investigation, known only to himself, remain solely at the disposition of the new pope," a Vatican statement said.

Speculation has been rife in the Italian media that the three cardinals ? Julian Herranz, Jozef Tomko and Salvatore De Giorgi ? would be authorized to share the information with fellow cardinals before the conclave. That assumed the cardinal electors would want to know details about the state of dysfunction in the Vatican bureaucracy and on any potentially compromised colleagues before possibly voting one into office.

Benedict appointed the three men last year to investigate the origins of leaks, which revealed petty wrangling, corruption, cronyism and even allegations that senior Vatican officials conspired to out a prominent Catholic newspaper editor as gay.

The pope's butler was convicted of aggravated theft in October for having stolen the papers and given them to a journalist who then published them in a blockbuster book.

The three cardinals cannot share the full contents of their investigation, but it's unclear if they could give subtle hints about potential papal candidates to the electors. The Vatican's assertion that only the pope knew the contents of the dossier was a clear message to readers of Italian newspapers, which have run several articles purporting to know the contents of the report.

O'Brien's decision to remain home rather than participate in the conclave made his the first head to roll in the remarkable two weeks since Benedict, 85, stunned the world and announced he was becoming the first pope in 600 years to resign.

Monday's announcement marked a dramatic end to a career that got off to a rocky start when in 2003, as a condition of being made a cardinal, O'Brien was forced to issue a public pledge to defend church teaching on homosexuality, celibacy and contraception. He was pressured to make the pledge after he had called for a "full and open discussion" on such matters.

At the time, O'Brien said he had been misunderstood and wanted to clarify his position. But it's clear now he never really changed his mind. On Friday, three days before his resignation was made public, O'Brien told the BBC that celibacy should be reconsidered since it's not based on doctrine but rather church tradition and "is not of divine origin."

It appeared to be something of a parting shot, reasserting beliefs that he had kept quiet for a decade.

At home, at O'Brien's St. Mary's Roman Catholic Cathedral in Edinburgh, his decision was met with shock and disbelief.

"There are a lot of unanswered questions here, and I am unhappy about that. People can make such serious charges while remaining anonymous," said David Murphy, an administrator from Edinburgh. "It's like he's been hounded out of office without a proper chance to defend himself."

But Peter Mitchell, a churchgoer from Fife, conceded that the church may have to brace itself for scandal. "These don't appear to be random allegations. We are talking about three serving priests who are being very specific, and I don't think they would lie in this way."

O'Brien said in a statement that he was in "indifferent health" and had offered his resignation last November ? a statement confirmed by the Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi.

Lombardi said the pope had merely acted on the resignation now as he clears up final tasks before stepping down. Usually the pope waits until after a cardinal's 75th birthday to accept a resignation. In this case, Benedict acted a few weeks early.

___

Katz reported from London

___

Associated Press Writer Ben McConville in Edinburgh also contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/british-cardinal-skip-upcoming-papal-conclave-210958525.html

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

Iowa college keeps need-blind admissions policy

Iowa college keeps need-blind admissions policy
February 23, 2013 16:39 CST

GRINNELL, Iowa (AP) -- Leaders at Grinnell College have decided not to scrap its need-blind admissions policy -- for now.

Grinnell is one of the nation's wealthiest private liberal arts colleges, managing a $1.5 billion endowment that has grown to among the country's largest, thanks to investment advice from former trustee and Omaha billionaire investor Warren Buffett. But the Des Moines Register reports (http://dmreg.co/UVeEIz) that the college's board of trustees had been considering pulling back from its need-blind admissions policy -- where acceptance is not based on ability to pay -- because of budget concerns.

On Saturday, the board voted to keep the need-blind policy, but will revisit the issue in the fall of 2015. If the college hasn't made sufficient progress toward fundraising and tuition revenue goals, it may end the need-blind policy.

Information from: The Des Moines Register, http://www.desmoinesregister.com

Information from: The Des Moines Register, http://www.desmoinesregister.com

Source: http://www.kgan.com/template/inews_wire/wires.regional.ia/2feb0b36-www.kgan.com.shtml

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Sony's PS4 System Should Become Real by Mid-2013

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Wedding Ring Flushed, Then Found A Week Later

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. ? We?ve all been there, a close call with something valuable falling down the drain or worse.

Recently Joe Meyers was on the receiving end of a fateful flush and a free falling wedding ring.

Joe and Angela Meyers have been happily married for four years, with a custom ring on Joe?s finger to prove it.

But a week ago he took that ring off to wash his hands and it took a dive into the now swirling waters of the toilet.

?I went to put it on and I either nicked my finger or I lost the grip and down it went, down the toilet,? said Meyers.

Like a scene from the movie Lord of the Rings, Meyers? ring was on it?s own course through the Grand Rapids sewer system.

?I didn?t know how she (his wife Angela) was going to react, so I was like, Ang?? She was like, what? I just flushed my ring down the toilet,? he said.

Angela responded, ?My first reaction was what?? Are you serious??

They couple?s own quest to retrieve the ring proved unsuccessful so they called the Grand Rapids sewer maintenance department.

Angela said the person who answered the phone kept her expectations in check, ?He goes, I don?t want to get your hopes up thinking I?m going to bring a ring to you.?

Adam Wohlfert said he was in the area when he heard about the Meyers? problem.

?A lot of time we will get calls from people losing their keys down a storm drain or a wallet,? said Wohlfert.

When Wohlfert heard about the job, he didn?t have much hope.

?It would be a matter of time before it ends up in a 48 inch sewer pipe and it?s just lost in a pile of dirt,? said Wohlfert.

But he did have an idea, ?We?ll block the outgoing pipe with that basket and the ring just kind of rides the flow.?

His plan worked. ?I shut the water off and sure enough there it is, just sitting right there.?

Wohlfert was able to get the ring back to it?s owner.

?I said here you go, he was very appreciative, very thankful and then I was on my way,? he said.

Angela said she was beyond thankful to get the ring back, ?He went down into the sewer to get a piece of metal that meant nothing to him.?

That would have been the end of this story until Angela finally realized exactly who brought the ring back.

?I said Adam Wohlfert? Oh my God.? That is a third cousin of mine,? said Angie.

Family aside, Meyers just wanted to say thank you to the city workers for the time they took just to look.

?I was really overwhelmed by that,? Angela said.? ?I just couldn?t believe what he did.?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/wxmi-news/~3/H9eT1wSOUgw/

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

John Shinal's Tech Investor: How big will the Apple freak-out be?

By John Shinal

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) ? I?m guessing the executive team and other top managers at Apple are freaking out a little bit right now, after a preliminary court victory by hedge-fund manager and dissident shareholder David Einhorn late Friday.

David Einhorn, president of Greenlight Capital, speaks in October 2010 at the New York Value Investing Congress.

If the air of invincibility at Apple /quotes/zigman/68270/quotes/nls/aapl AAPL +1.06% ?wasn?t pierced with the death of Steve Jobs, it should be clear to the executive management team now that it needs to take greater account of shareholders than Jobs ever did.

Granted ? and just to be clear ? this is a preliminary victory for Einhorn, who?s won the right to have the issue voted on separately from other shareholder proposals at Apple?s annual meeting in Cupertino, Calif., next week.

/conga/story/2013/02/oscars.html 250972

And the fact that he lost on his second motion for an injunction against Apple took some luster off this first-round win in the legal battle. I?m also not a big fan of Einhorn?s motivation, which looks to be greed. But the financing of public tech companies is a capitalist undertaking, and he clearly knows the rules.

Einhorn is trying to prevent Apple from democratizing the process of handing out preferred shares, which dilute the ownership stakes of common shareholders. Presumably, Einhorn is guessing that if you let common shareholders have a say in the matter, they?ll vote to spread the wealth around. In other words, they will choose to have Apple dole out cash with dividends paid to all owners of Apple stock, over a proposal that rewards a smaller number of preferred shareholders.

Fighting as hard as Einhorn is to stop Apple from handing out its cash the way CEO Tim Cook and the board want to is a dangerous move for anyone who would also wish for Apple?s long-term success.

Presumably, Einhorn is guessing that if you let common shareholders have a say in the matter, they?ll vote to spread the wealth around.

Einhorn was denied his bolder legal desire, which was to have an even greater say in how Apple hands out dividends.

Cook?s tenure has grown rocky over the past year, as the features of the iPhone 5 underwhelmed a bit ? while the new video technology was a breakthrough for the company, that was about it ? and because Apple?s stock has gotten chopped down to $450 from $700 last summer. Related column by Howard Gold: Four reasons Apple won?t see the $700 mark again.

The company recorded meager profit growth in the fourth quarter, fueling the late-January selloff that triggered Einhorn?s action. See full report on Apple?s first-fiscal-quarter earnings and Mark Hulbert column: Apple?s drop shows price of popularity.

/quotes/zigman/68270/quotes/nls/aapl AAPL 450.81, +4.75, +1.06%

Off peak

Apple shares over past year.

Cook and his team don?t need any further distractions, and now they must make an argument to shareholders in favor of the democratization plan he and the board put together.

Einhorn?s becoming worked up about how Apple takes care of income investors ? i.e., those in it for dividends rather than growth ? suggests that he doesn?t see much in the way of capital gains coming from his current stake in the company.

The slowdown in Apple?s growth rate late last year is one piece of evidence ? maybe not a conclusive piece but neither an immaterial one ? that the company has reached a different phase in its life cycle.

If true, Apple would have become more like its fellow tech titans, including Microsoft /quotes/zigman/20493/quotes/nls/msft MSFT +0.98% ?and Cisco Systems /quotes/zigman/20039/quotes/nls/csco CSCO +0.67% , each of which also grew into a market cap that made it the world?s most valuable company ? for a time.

/quotes/zigman/68270/quotes/nls/aapl

US : U.S.: Nasdaq

Volume: 11.58M

Feb. 22, 2013 4:00p

Market Cap

$418.88 billion

/quotes/zigman/20493/quotes/nls/msft

US : U.S.: Nasdaq

Volume: 30.50M

Feb. 22, 2013 4:00p

Market Cap

$230.26 billion

Rev. per Employee

$774,085

/quotes/zigman/20039/quotes/nls/csco

US : U.S.: Nasdaq

Volume: 19.87M

Feb. 22, 2013 4:00p

Market Cap

$110.69 billion

Rev. per Employee

$709,074

John Shinal, a former technology editor of MarketWatch, is based in San Francisco.

Source: http://feeds.marketwatch.com/~r/marketwatch/pf/~3/7FHS2K5ZqZw/story.asp

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Military-base civilians face furloughs

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Source: http://www.floridatoday.com/article/20130221/NEWS01/302210033/1006/rss01/Military-base-civilians-face-furloughs

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Friday, February 22, 2013

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Featured Story

At least 14 people were injured when a man threw a grenade at a dance party in Cambodia, Xinhua reported Sunday.

The attack took place around 9.15 p.m. Saturday in Takrey ...

Source: http://www.cambodiantimes.com/index.php/sid/212748676/scat/d805653303cbbba8

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3.5m downloads on, CloudOn takes its Microsoft Office editing suite to Android smartphones

CloudOn, the mobile app for creating, editing and managing Microsoft Office and Adobe documents in the cloud, has today announced the launch of version4.0 of its productivity workspace, which sees it finally rolled out for Android smartphones.

Just to recap, CloudOn taps Dropbox, Box, Google Drive and ? since December ? SkyDrive integration, to deliver full Microsoft Office capabilities, transforming tablets and smartphones into mobile workspaces capable of accessing Office documents on the go. The app uses cloud technology to connect to Microsoft Office software on CloudOn?s servers, so in effect your device is used as a screen.

While it was already available for Android tablets, with this latest launch, CloudOn now lets users create and edit Word documents, Excel spreadsheets and PowerPoint presentations from their handheld Android device, and compatible handsets for the timebeing will be the Samsung Galaxy S III, Galaxy S II Skyrocket, Galaxy Nexus, Galaxy Note, Galaxy Note II and the Galaxy Nexus 4G LTE, though more will be added in due course.

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The Android smartphone incarnation offers similar functionality to the version available on other platforms, and the look, feel and functionality will be familiar to anyone who uses Office on a regular basis.

The app also draws on an Android-customized Microsoft office ribbon, tailored so that touch-reliant functions such as changing the size of a font or enabling tracked changes are made easier.

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With version 4,.0, CloudOn is also including landscape mode which, let?s face it, is particularly vital to minimize scrolling in smaller-screened devices.

e1 520x292 3.5m downloads on, CloudOn takes its Microsoft Office editing suite to Android smartphones

In addition, the latest smartphone version includes CloudOn FileSpace, which is where users can add notes and view all their activity on a single file, including edits, for real-time updates on documents.

Back in June last year, CloudOn raised $16m in Series B funding to help it move beyond ?Office for tablets?. This was announced a few weeks after it rolled out in fifteen countries across Europe and in Israel, and then landed in an additional 60 countries globally followed by 12 more in Latin America. To mark today?s launch, the Palo Alto-based company has also announced 3.5 million downloads to date.

The new Android app is live now.

? CloudOn | Android (Smartphones)

Source: http://thenextweb.com/apps/2013/02/21/3-5m-downloads-on-cloudon-takes-its-microsoft-office-editing-suite-to-android-smartphones/

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Native Instruments announces Traktor DJ for iPad, brings the mix to iOS (video)

Native Instruments announces Traktor DJ for iPad, brings the mix to iOS

DJ apps for iPad? There's a bunch. But -- if you're at all familiar with the craft -- there's a very notable name absent from the crowd. Until today that is. Native Instruments set the high watermark for DJ software with its desktop-based Traktor application, and now it's available in compact iOS form. Designed by the same team as the full-fat version, aspiring DJs can enjoy two waveform-based decks, with three-band EQ, eight effects (ported over from Trakor Pro) all redesigned from the ground up for the iPad's touch-based input. The interface eschews the conventional virtualization of a turntable set-up, instead creating a workflow more congruent with the hardware's form factor. Notably, a new "Freeze" mode stops the waveform from galloping on, letting you tend to cue points, loops etc or slice it into samples for "playable" parts. There's also interaction between the mobile and desktop versions via dropbox-based media sync, so any tracks loops and so on made on the move can be seamlessly transported to your club performance too. Think an iPad app is nice and all, but want a little more spice? Well, hook it up to one of the firm's popular Audio 6 or Audio 10 interfaces (via the USB connection kit) you just got proper pre-listen and cue functionality too. Traktor DJ is available today for $19.99, and if you're still undecided, there's a demo video after the break that might just swing it for you.

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Source: Native Instruments

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/lICctZ4ujv4/

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Thursday, February 21, 2013

Palm oil casualty? 14 pygmy elephants fall prey to pesticides in Borneo

Malaysian wildlife officials say 14 dead pygmy elephants were found last month in Borneo, apparently poisoned by chemicals used by farmers on the country's massive palm-oil plantations.

By Jason Motlagh,?Correspondent / February 11, 2013

A Borneo pygmy elephant looks for food along the Kinabatangan river in Malaysia's state of Sabah on the Borneo island in this file photo.

Bazuki Muhammad/REUTERS/File

Enlarge

A rare breed of elephant appears to be the latest casualty of the palm oil boom that is sweeping Malaysian Borneo, reigniting an already heated debate over the pros and cons of the world?s cheapest cooking oil.?

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Malaysian wildlife officials say 14 dead pygmy elephants were found last month in the wilds of Sabah Province, apparently poisoned by chemicals used by farmers to keep pests from eating the palm fruit grown on plantations that blanket vast swaths of the countryside.

In once instance, a 3-month old baby elephant was photographed nuzzling its mother, who lay on the ground next to three other corpses. For activists, the image is emblematic of nature?s losing battle with man in and around the farms.

Favored in developing countries for its versatility and long shelf life, palm oil is now found in more than half of processed foods in Western supermarkets, from cosmetics to Girl Scout cookies. Surging global demand has generated billions in profits for Indonesia and Malaysia, the world?s first- and second-largest producers, bringing prosperity to once poor corners.

The boom is changing the complexion of Borneo, the resource-rich island they share that is one home to one of the oldest rainforests on earth. But environmental groups say the palm oil boom is driving the expansion of plantations deeper into hyper-diverse tracts of forest, accelerating global warming and forcing rare species like the?pygmy elephant and orangutan into deadly confrontations with humans.

In a statement following the elephant report, Dionysius S.K. Sharma, executive director of World Wildlife Fund-Malaysia, said the ?central forest landscape in Sabah needs to be protected totally from conversions? and called for "frequent and large-scale patrolling" of forests to protect elephants. Yet he conceded this would be a "massive task" given the remoteness of the terrain and large areas involved.?

The scale of the plantations is massive. Take a flight from Kota Kinabalu, the provincial capital, to Lahad Datu, also known as ?Palm City,? and permaculture reigns: Palm plantations sprawl for miles on end, occasionally pocked with the smokestacks of large processing facilities. The largest are owned by agribusiness giants like Sime Darby and Wilmar International, with clients that include top consumer goods companies Unilever and Nestle.

Business booming

Thanks in part to new US laws mandating the removal of oils rich in trans-fats, business has never been better.

In 2011, the export of palm oil and palm-based products netted the Malaysian economy $27 billion, a fivefold increase over the past decade. With such profits at hand, the Malaysian government wants to double the area under cultivation by 2020.

This is welcome news to longtime residents of Lahad Datu, the coastal?town that has been transformed in years from a crime-ridden backwater to an investment-friendly hub. Real estate prices are soaring, investors are pouring in and the streets are safer than ever, replete with fast-food franchises and shiny hotels. ??This place is opening up, finally,? says Arnan Angkut, at a bustling seaside teashop. ?We are doing much better than before because of palm oil.?

But this kind of enthusiasm could spell long-term trouble for communities in the region and beyond.

A joint study published in October by Stanford and Yale universities revealed that land-clearing operations for plantations in Borneo have emitted more than 140 million metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions in 2010 alone, equal to annual emissions from about 28 million vehicles. Over the past two decades, about 6,200 sq. mi. of primary and logged forested land have been destroyed in Borneo.

Orangutan populations reduced by half

Activists say that palm oil deforestation and hunting have already combined to reduce Bornean orangutan populations to half the total of the 1980s. At this rate, some predict the iconic animal could be extinct within years.

For its part, the pygmy elephant, a rare sub-species of the African elephant, is in even greater peril: WWF-Malaysia estimates there are about 1,200 left in the wild. And Malaysian wildlife authorities have said they expect to find more dead elephants as they comb the jungle.

*Jason Motlagh reported this story on a grant from the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/ZfEOPB1FxNU/Palm-oil-casualty-14-pygmy-elephants-fall-prey-to-pesticides-in-Borneo

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Saturday, February 16, 2013

Mark Zuckerberg?s sister moves from Facebook to real books

Image: AP Photo/Richard Drew, file

THE SISTER OF Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has a two-book deal.

HarperCollins has announced that Randi Zuckerberg, a social media executive and entrepreneur who left Facebook in 2011, is planning a memoir/lifestyle book titled Dot Complicated and a children?s story.

Dot Complicated is scheduled for release in November and will combine personal and professional insights for the digital age, from Zuckerberg?s years as Facebook?s marketing director to becoming a mother in 2011.

Dot Complicated also is the name of her online newsletter.

Zuckerberg said in a statement technology has changed almost every part of people?s lives, resulting in a digital society ?that feels a lot like the wild, wild west.?

I am thrilled to be working with HarperCollins to share some of my own crazy experiences on the front lines of social media and to inspire people of all ages to embrace technology, as well as the new set of social norms that come along with it.

Zuckerberg, who has founded her own Zuckerberg Media company, is known in part for opposing anonymity online, saying it enables cyberbullying.

Her brother co-founded Facebook in his Harvard University dorm room in 2004, and his net worth is estimated at $9.4 billion.

Un-friended: Mark Zuckerberg?s sister leaves Facebook to start her own firm>

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Source: http://thedailyedge.thejournal.ie/randi-zuckerberg-facebook-795779-Feb2013/

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Friday, February 15, 2013

96% West of Memphis

All Critics (79) | Top Critics (20) | Fresh (75) | Rotten (3)

It tells the story of a terrible crime compounded by a grave injustice that's been remedied, but only in part, so it's impossible to have a single or simple response to the movie.

What sets this film apart from previous efforts to document the story is that Jackson and Walsh financed a private investigative team with legal and forensic experts who re-examined old evidence, conducted new interviews and found new witnesses.

Happy, sad, inspiring, infuriating, right and terribly wrong, all at the same time.

Berg's film is as much an indictment of the state of Arkansas' legal system as it is the prosecution.

Berg's film helps illuminate a case that should certainly be the shame of the state of Arkansas, and perhaps the criminal justice system of the entire United States.

Dubious evidence; suspicious confessions; conveniently located "poor white trash" (Echols' words) to take the rap: The case stank from the beginning, Berg's film argues.

Somewhere along this narrative's mammoth timeline, examining the construction of modern social heroes became more important than the memories of three little boys.

Together with the rich material comprising interviews with family and friends, the footage shot in the various court rooms and at the crime scene is riveting

A powerful, touching and very infuriating documentary, although Berlinger and Sinofsky got there first and did it best

Amy Berg's West of Memphis does bring new information to light, which is why this somewhat procedural feature is so important.

In all, the director has assembled a powerful film, but the celebrity component feels rather unnecessary.

A frankly extraordinary document about the three innocent children who were murdered in West Memphis, Arkansas and the three innocent teenagers who spent 18 years in prison for the crime.

(Director Amy) Berg's doc is gripping, often infuriating, but in the end hopeful about the ability of truth and innocence to prevail thanks to the efforts of those who strive against all obstacles to uphold them.

The new film is largely a recap of the older ones, with more celebrity testimonials and fewer Metallica songs but little fresh insight into the miscarriage of justice it chronicles.

Extols the efforts of celebrities to win the release of three innocent men [and is] suspenseful when it's straightforward-the best CSI investigation that money can buy.

Nearly overwhelms you with hopelessness, if not an adrenaline rush of rage - even if you're familiar with the case.

It's a beautifully done piece of work in its own right, yet viewed beside the trilogy which preceded it, it comes across a bit like "Paradise Lost 3b - the Celebrity Edition."

A whodunit in which truth devastatingly becomes a luxury.

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Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/west_of_memphis/

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Western drought improves fortunes of Florida cattlemen



Cary Lightsey of the Lightsey Cattle Co., above, a sixth-generation Lake Wales cattle rancher, says Florida is one of the few states where cattle herds and profits have improved.

THE LEDGER ARCHIVE / RICK RUNION

Published: Thursday, February 14, 2013 at 1:00 a.m.
Last Modified: Wednesday, February 13, 2013 at 8:30 p.m.

While other segments of the U.S. cattle industry are struggling, the 2013 outlook for the cow-calf operations, the dominant segment in Florida, continues to run with the bulls.

"Calf prices were at record levels last year," said Kevin Good, senior analyst at CattleFax. "We expect that to continue."

CattleFax, based in Centennial, Colo., collects, analyzes and disseminates information on U.S. and global beef markets for its members representing all segments of the cattle industry from calf producers to meat-packing companies and retailers.

Two Polk County ranchers agreed with that positive outlook for the Florida industry.

"We've made the most we've ever made in the last few years," said Cary Lightsey, a sixth-generation cattle rancher based in Lake Wales with about 9,000 head across the state. "Fortunately Florida is one of the very few states where cattle herds are higher now than they were five years ago."

"We've had a few good years, and the indications are 2013 will be another good year," said Will Putnam, vice president of Putnam Groves Inc., which also has a cattle herd of more than 1,000 head.

Like most Florida ranchers, Lightsey and Putnam operate cow-calf operations that supply calves generally sold by 1-year-old to ranches in other states, where they continue to grow until ready for slaughter.

The ranchers said that the Florida industry has prospered while their counterparts west of the Mississippi River are struggling after several years of drought.

"Drought relief is undoubtedly the best remedy to the current situation facing the industry," according to the February CattleFax report. "Record high input prices and contraction concerns can only ease if precipitation reaches much of the United States."

Feed crop devastated

Last year's drought destroyed about a third of the U.S. corn crop, the main ingredient in cattle feed, Lightsey said.

As a result, the percentage of the 2012-13 U.S. corn crop for animal feed, after subtracting for human consumption and ethanol production, shrank to 5.8 percent, the lowest in 40 years, said Chad Spearman, a CattleFax analyst.

That led to historic high prices, which are expected to hold for the first half of this year.

Meanwhile the drought dried up grazing land and sent hay stocks as of Dec. 1 to the lowest level in 55 years, Spearman said. That also led to record high prices, but CattleFax projected hay stocks would recover if rain returns to the Midwest and Southwestern states as anticipated.

The past several years of drought and high feed prices have forced cattle ranchers in other states to downsize their herds by selling more animals for slaughter.

The U.S. cattle population has declined by more than 7 million head during the past six years to less than 90 million head for the first time since the early 1950s, Spearman said.

With fewer cattle to support existing capacity at feedlots and packing plants, those segments have been losing money despite record high retail beef prices, Randy Blach, CattleFax CEO, told the conventioneers.

"Record high prices are no guarantee of profits," Blach said. "We have record high prices, but we also have record high break even points."

Despite losses farther up the chain, Florida cow-calf ranches benefit because the grazing operators, feedlots and packing companies farther up the chain need a certain number of cattle to stay in business, Blach and Lightsey said.

When cattle are not available from herds in other states, the demand for Florida calves increases.

The good times for Florida ranchers will continue until weather and market conditions allow their counterparts to rebuild their herds, Lightsey and Putnam agreed.

Even if that began today, it would take several years to rebuild to pre-drought herd sizes.

Source: http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20130214/article/302149990

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Iraq's top judge removed over ties to Saddam party

BAGHDAD (AP) ? Iraq's panel tasked with purging government ranks of former members of Saddam Hussein's party has removed the country's top judge from his post because of alleged ties to the now-dissolved Baath party.

The deputy chief of the country's Justice and Accountability Committee, Bakhtiar Omar al-Qadhi, said on Thursday that the decision to remove Chief Judge Medhat al-Mahmoud from the Supreme Judicial Council was based on "strong evidence" supplied by parliament.

Al-Qadhi wouldn't discuss the details, saying that al-Mahmoud has 60 days to appeal.

After the U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam in 2003, al-Mahmoud was appointed supervisor for the Justice Ministry and in 2005 he took over the Supreme Judicial Council that oversees courts nationwide.

Phone calls to the 80-year-old judge's office and to his spokesman were not immediately answered.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/iraqs-top-judge-removed-over-ties-saddam-party-125106840.html

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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Paul Ryan reacts to Obama (CNN)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/284490697?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Snapchat Publishes Self-Destructing Link to Android Beta App

Wired News Wednesday 13th February, 2013

Snapchat published a link to a beta version of its Android app on Tuesday and, just as the wildly popular app?s shared photos and videos self destruct, this link too was built to be destroyed. But, we?ve found a simple way around it. In the wee hours this morning, Snapchat posted a link to

Read more

Source: http://www.greekherald.com/index.php/sid/212540300/scat/d805653303cbbba8

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Simulation helps scientists better understand the origin of our solar system

Feb. 13, 2013 ? Simulations boost the significance of image and measurement data from space missions: based on the example of an asteroid, Bernese astrophysicist Martin Jutzi shows how collisions with other celestial bodies can be reconstructed and that even the internal structure of so-called protoplanets can be described. These models help to understand the development of our solar system.

Four and a half billion years ago, dust particles in a giant, dusty gas cloud combined to form increasingly large clumps. These collided, aggregated and thus grew into planets. Between the planetary orbits of Mars and Jupiter, however, hundreds of thousands of smaller fragments remained. They formed the so-called asteroid belt and hardly changed their composition since then. Asteroids thus contain an inestimable amount of information on the origin of our solar system. In research, particular attention is paid to an asteroid called Vesta: with a diameter of around 500 kilometres, it is one of the three largest asteroids and considered to be a protoplanet. Moreover, it is the only known asteroid to have an earth-like structure -- with a core, mantle and crust.

Computer simulation reconstructs collisions between asteroids

Using a three-dimensional computer simulation, Martin Jutzi from the Center for Space and Habitability (CSH) at the University of Bern has now accurately reconstructed how Vesta collided with other asteroids twice over a billion years ago. The models show that the protoplanet owes its elliptical shape to these collisions and that they also scarred its surface structure. The simulations also enable detailed conclusions on the composition and properties of Vesta's interior to be drawn for the first time, which helps us to better understand the evolution of the solar system.

After all, the formation of planets largely depends upon collisions between celestial bodies. "Our method facilitates especially informative analyses of image and measurement data from space missions," says Martin Jutzi. The study, which was conducted in collaboration with researchers from the EPFL, France and the USA, features as the cover story in the February 14 issue of Nature.

Models uncover hidden secrets

Previously, observations with the Hubble Space Telescope provided initial evidence of a giant crater at Vesta's south pole. Then, in 2007, NASA's "Dawn" probe began its space voyage into the solar system's past. Starting in the summer of 2011, it closely orbited Vesta for one year. Images from within the visible range as well as other measurement data provided information on the asteroid's topography and the composition of the minerals that are visible on its surface. It became apparent that the crater observed by Hubble at Vesta's south pole is actually composed of two partially overlapping basins.

Based on this information, the computer simulations by Jutzi's team now demonstrate exactly how two consecutive impacts of celestial bodies led to the formation of the observed overlapping basins, which almost span the entire southern hemisphere of Vesta. The models show the size (66 and 64 kilometres in diameter), velocity (5.4 kilometres per second) and the impact angle of the bodies that collided with Vesta. This reveals a lot about the properties of the objects that were near the protoplanet a billion years ago.

The final images of the simulations closely resemble the shape and topography of Vesta's southern hemisphere as observed by the Dawn mission. The models even accurately reproduce the spiral-shaped structures inside the youngest crater which are visible on images from the Dawn mission. "This shows how reliable our method is," rejoices Jutzi. The researchers assume that the models also provide information about previously hidden features of Vesta. For instance, the simulations reveal that the material exposed by the impacts comes from depths of up to 100 kilometres. "Based on the sort and distribution of this material we are able to precisely reconstruct the various inner layers of Vesta," explains Philippe Gillet, Direktor des Earth and Planetary Science Laboratory der EPFL.

"The fact that we can now look inside such protoplanets makes entirely new perspectives in the research on the history of our solar system possible," says Jutzi.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Bern.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. M. Jutzi, E. Asphaug, P. Gillet, J.-A. Barrat, W. Benz. The structure of the asteroid 4?Vesta as revealed by models of planet-scale collisions. Nature, 2013; 494 (7436): 207 DOI: 10.1038/nature11892

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/computers_math/information_technology/~3/7uxbp91_2jc/130213132013.htm

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Did North Korea Test A 'Miniature' Nuclear Bomb?

An official with the Korea Meteorological Administration shows a seismic image of a tremor caused by North Korea's nuclear test, in Seoul on Tuesday.

Kim Jae-Hwan/AFP/Getty Images

North Korea's latest nuclear weapons test is much more powerful than the previous two, according to estimates made by instruments that measure seismic waves from the blast. It's about the size of the bomb that devastated Hiroshima in World War II.

But it's not so easy to verify the claim that the nuclear explosive has also been miniaturized. That's a critical claim because a small warhead would be essential if the rogue regime chose to threaten the United States with a nuclear-tipped missile.

Big bombs are easier to make, but they aren't all that useful as a threat.

"It doesn't do the North Koreans much good if they have to put it in a truck," says Jeffrey Lewis, the director of the East Asia Nonproliferation Program at the Monterey Institute of International Studies. But the threat level obviously rises as the bombs get more compact.

And that's the claim with the North Korean nuclear test.

"KCNA, the Korean news agency, has come out and said it was a smaller and light design, I believe were the exact words," says James Acton, a senior associate in the nuclear policy program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

It may be possible to glean more information about that claim if gases from the underground test have escaped into the atmosphere. Sniffer aircraft scoop up air samples that might be used to learn more details about the design of the explosive.

"Even if it's possible to infer some design details, any conclusions are only likely to be fairly tentative," Acton says. "So although I think it may well have been a miniaturized device, we actually may never know."

The United States undertook hundreds of nuclear tests before developing reliable small warheads. But Acton says the North Korean program has been designed from the start to produce a compact weapon. That means it could have made real strides, even though this is just the third test.

"There's also the possibility that the North Koreans have received outside assistance. That could make their task of creating a miniaturized warhead easier," he says.

Even if North Korea has produced a compact warhead, it doesn't yet have the ability to strike the United States with a nuclear-tipped intercontinental ballistic missile. North Korean engineers have launched missiles into space, but Acton says so far they haven't shown that they can build a warhead that is rugged enough to re-enter the earth's atmosphere at hypersonic speeds and blistering temperatures.

"Not only do you have to have a weapon that's light enough to fit in the nose cone and small enough to fit in a nose cone, you also have to have a re-entry vehicle and design combination that is durable enough to survive the rigors of re-entry," Acton says.

Even so, North Korea may have the ability to threaten its neighbors with a warhead on a shorter-range missile, which moves more slowly and can carry a bigger warhead.

"Some of the missiles that they have ? the shorter range missiles ? they might only be looking at a payload of about three feet, in which case we'd have to believe that that's doable," says Corey Hinderstein, vice president of the international program at the Nuclear Threat Initiative.

As things stand, the nation could build a handful of weapons. North Korea is apparently no longer producing plutonium, and there's probably enough on hand for about a dozen warheads. Some of that plutonium could have been used in the latest test. But there's another possibility.

"The real interesting question is whether this used highly enriched uranium," Hinderstein says.

It's harder to build a compact nuclear warhead with uranium, compared with plutonium, but it is possible. And uranium can be enriched in secret. No reactor is required.

"At least publicly, they have declared that they are not producing any highly enriched uranium for nuclear weapons ? that all of their interest in uranium enrichment has been in support of their nuclear energy program," Hinderstein says.

So if the sniffer aircraft detect a uranium bomb, that would be a very significant finding about the North Korean nuclear program.

"It doesn't necessarily change their capability, but it may change the number of weapons they could have at their disposal in the near future," Hinderstein says.

It's nothing to panic about, she adds, but clearly with each advance the situation becomes more uncomfortable.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/02/12/171818226/did-north-korea-test-a-miniature-nuclear-bomb?ft=1&f=1007

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US Army Opens Largest Military Solar PV Array

Posted by Christian Crisostomo on Tuesday, February 12, 2013 ? Leave a Comment ?

Whenever the word ?green? gets associated with something military, the idea of uniforms, camouflage, or even the alternative meaning of ?rookie? comes into mind.

The U.S. Army however, is now clearly poised to change our mindset about that. That is because they are about to open what could possibly be the largest solar array installation that they have constructed.

The development of the large solar PV array at the White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico has finally reached its completion. An almost countless number of panels that cover approximately 42 acres of land will be providing more than 4 megawatts of electricity to the entire base. The system is guaranteed to reduce energy consumption by up to 10%, allowing the base to technically save about 35,358M BTU in a single year.

The solar array was started by the Energy Savings Performance Contract (ESPC) project, which was awarded and managed by the U.S. Army Engineering and Support Center. The facility had an overall construction and development cost of about $16.5 million. It started by about July 2012, and was technically completed by the end of the year, December 2012. The Energy Savings Contractor that was chosen for this particular project was Siemens Government Technologies Inc. (of Arlington, Virginia).

While we could mainly see this as an effort to extend renewable energy projects to the military, it is actually more or less a strategic move to economize energy. Many energy facilities usually have over the top energy budgets, usually rising from the keeping and maintenance of either inefficient or outdated equipment in their respective headquarters or bases. With the solar array, they hope to break it even with the yearly 10% reduction, or cut down significantly on prices eventually, as the system gradually pays for itself.

As of January 16, 2013, the opening ribbon-cutting ceremonies have been completed, and the array is now fully operational.

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Source: http://www.theenvironmentalblog.org/2013/02/army-opens-largest-military-solar-pv-array/

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Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Obama to focus on economy in State of Union speech (Reuters)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/284200064?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Rare papal resignation not a cause for anxiety or worry: Canadian archbishop

TORONTO - Surprise, a lack of understanding and even some disappointment ? those were among the initial emotions expressed by a number of Canadians on Monday after Pope Benedict XVI announced he would be resigning at the end of the month.

Canadians holding high office in the Catholic church acknowledged the Pope's move was unconvential and a shock for the church, but said it was something Benedict did for the good of the church.

"This is not a cause for anxiety or worry because the church has been, is now, and always will be in the hands of God, and guided by God," said Archbishop Richard Smith, who is also president of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops.

"This particular decision, as surprising and unprecedented as it is in modern times, is thoroughly consistent with the witness that (Benedict) has given us through many, many years. It is something that he has taken with serious thought, solely for the good of the church."

Benedict becomes the first pontiff to step down in 600 years. The 85-year-old declared he would resign Feb. 28, citing a lack of strength to do the job.

The news drew exclamations from parishioners, some of whom headed to mid-day mass specifically to seek further information on the Pope's startling announcement.

"I'm so sad," said Ana Amos, 48, as she headed into St. Michael's Cathedral in Toronto. "I cried when Pope John Paul died, and next I was happy that another pope came, but now he is resigning, I don't know why?"

Other Canadians mourned Benedict's impending departure.

"We have never had such a brilliant man in the papacy. It's going to be quite a loss," said Helene Hoffman before she sat down for mass. "He's a great Pope, it's just strange that he's leaving."

There were those, however, who thought Benedict's move was the right one.

"We need somebody younger to be able to carry out the duties of the pope," said Maria Ebhabha. "I think he did a good thing, because he's old."

A conclave of cardinals will select Benedict's successor in Rome in the coming weeks. Among those being mentioned as a strong contender is Quebec native, Marc Cardinal Ouellet, who currently heads the Congregation for Bishops, which vets bishops nominations worldwide.

The Archbishop of Toronto, Thomas Cardinal Collins, who will be among those choosing the next pope, offered few thoughts on Ouellet's chances, saying it was too early to speculate on Benedict's successor.

For Collins, Benedict's resignation heralds a time of deep reflection on the qualities desired in the next pope, and signals a period during which the current pontiff's contributions to the faith ought to be celebrated.

"I think the whole church gathers together at such a time in prayer for the college of cardinals and this most profound mission we have," he said. "I think it is a time for us to give thanks to God for the tremendous leadership of Pope Benedict who speaks with clarity and charity.

In Collins's estimation, Monday's news was no cause for faith in the church to be shaken.

"Normally popes have gone till death and this is a change in that," he admitted. "Not having Pope Benedict as Pope is obviously a great shock for the church and a loss for the church ... but each person has to read the time and their own person, and what is best and that's entrusted to the pope to read that."

The last pope to resign was Pope Gregory XII, who stepped down in 1415 in a deal to end the Great Western Schism, a dispute among competing papal claimants.

Whether Benedict's resignation will pave a path for more modern-day resignations, however, remains to be seen, said Queen?s University teaching fellow Robert Dennis, who specializes in the history of the modern Vatican.

"There really is no modern equivalent for it," said Dennis, who is also vice president of the Canadian Catholic Historical Association.

"I don't know if we can say this will be the norm going forward. I think it will very much be a matter of the conscience of the individual person."

Regardless of how the move impacts the highest offices of the church, for those in the pews, Dennis said Benedict's resignation will take some time to be digested, but ought to eventually be accepted as one which wasn't made lightly.

"Nobody has a memory of this happening, obviously. So it will probably affect people in different ways," he said. "That a pope can move on from the office is probably something not everyone will feel comfortable with, and at the same time there's recognition that the office has demands and there's a very human element...that there is perhaps the need for someone that has a more youthful vitality."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rare-papal-resignation-not-cause-anxiety-worry-canadian-002217507.html

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