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Former star NFL quarterback Steve McNair 36 years old and  Saleh Kazemi, 20 years old has been identified as the woman found dead near him, was his girlfriend or some other jealous ex lover. It is believed that McNair had been dating Saleh Kazemi for several months. McNair, with Peyton Manning won the league’s  the Most Valuable Player award in 2003.

Saleh Kazemi was recently cited for DUI while driving a car registered  in the name of McNair.

As reported before Steve McNair was found by friends Wayne Neely and Robert Gaddy, dead of multiple gunshot wounds. A pistol laid near the body of Sahel Kazemi. Played 13 seasons on the NFL, and most of the time for the Tennessee Titans.

Majora Tavares – Mayara Tavares – The Union – U.S. President Barack Obama – Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi – French President Nicolas Sarkozy – Mayora Tavares, G8 delegates – Mayora Tavares junior delegate from Brazil – G8 summit in L’Aquila – Italy – Obama Picture – Steve Fossett Found – Obama Picture – Tail to the Chief – Obama Pictures – Obama picture – Obama Sarkozy – Obama in Italy – Obama July 2009 Photo

Majora Tavares – Mayara Tavares – The Union  – U.S. President Barack Obama – Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi – French President Nicolas Sarkozy – Mayora Tavares, G8 delegates – Mayora Tavares junior delegate from Brazil – G8 summit in L’Aquila – Italy – Obama Picture – Steve Fossett Found – Obama Picture – Tail to the Chief – Obama Pictures – Obama picture -  Obama Sarkozy – Obama in Italy – Obama July 2009 Photo

U.S. President Barack Obama, Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi ,French President Nicolas Sarkozy, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, take their places with  G8 delegates, including  Mayora Tavares 17-year-old junior delegate from Brazil, for a family photo at the G8 summit in L’Aquila, Italy July 9, 2009.

Archaeologists discover largest mud-brick temple yet found in northeastern Egypt

Washington, May 5 (ANI): Archaeologists have found a 3,000-year-old carving in the largest mud-brick temple yet found on northeastern Egypt’s northern Sinai Peninsula.

According to a report in National Geographic News, the carving shows ancient Egyptian pharaoh Ramses II offering gifts to Geb, God of earth.

The temple is among four ancient places of worship discovered at a site near the Egyptian border near the Suez Canal, the country’s archaeology agency announced on April 21.

Found among the ruins of a fortified city, the temples would likely have been the first stop in Egypt for travelers from ancient Palestine and other points east.

Designed to impress on visitors Egypt’s grandeur and might, the city appears to have been the Egyptian military’s headquarters during the New Kingdom (1539-1075 B.C.), a time of war and conquest (ancient Egypt time line).

“This temple was very, very beautiful. Visitors would understand this temple is a good example of Egyptian culture,” said Mohamed Abdel-Maqsoud, who made the discovery for Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquities.(ANI)

Black Eyed Peas, Miley Cyrus lead singles chart

LOS ANGELES/NEW YORK (Billboard) – The Black Eyed Peas’ “Boom Boom Pow” led Billboard’s Hot 100 singles chart for a second week on Thursday, while box office champ “Hannah Montana: The Movie” accounted for six tunes on the tally.

“Hannah Montana” star Miley Cyrus’ “The Climb” rose two places to No. 8. “Hoedown Throwdown,” also from the movie, jumped 34 places to No. 28. Co-star Taylor Swift’s “Crazier” climbed 31 places to No. 38.

Miley Cyrus and Billy Ray Cyrus’ “Butterfly Fly Away” debuted at No. 72. “Let’s Get Crazy” re-entered at No. 75, and “You’ll Always Find Your Way Back Home” moved up nine to No. 88. Both are credited to Cyrus’ alter ego Hannah Montana. The soundtrack album jumped three places to No. 2 on the Billboard 200, which as published on Wednesday.

After the Peas, the top tier of the Hot 100 was barely changed, with Lady GaGa’s “Poker Face” holding at No. 2; Flo Rida’s “Right Round” at No. 3; Soulja Boy Tell’em featuring Sammie’s “Kiss Me Thru The Phone” at No. 4; Jamie Foxx featuring T-Pain’s “Blame It” at No. 5; T.I. featuring Justin Timberlake’s “Dead and Gone” at No. 6; Kid Cudi’s “Day ‘N’ Nite” at No. 7; and the Fray at No. 9 with “You Found Me.” The All-American Rejects fell two to No. 10 with “Gives You Hell.”

Top-debut honors went to Kellie Pickler’s “Best Days Of Your Life,” which entered at No. 50 after the 2006 “American Idol” finalist appeared on the show’s April 8 episode.

(Editing by Dean Gooodman at Reuters)

Lucknow zoo welcome kittens of rare fishing cat

Lucknow, Apr 14 (ANI): The zoological park at Lucknow welcomed with great ecstasy kittens of rare fishing cat and cares for them with utmost attention.

Barely a week old, the kittens were brought just two days ago to the zoo after their mother, reportedly, abandoned them in a jungle in the Terai belt.

And now the pretty tiny felines are being taken care of by the zoo staff members.

The diet happens to be goat’s milk.

According to Renu Singh, director of the zoo, in her decade long career, this is the first ever instance that she has seen the fishing cats and indeed she is elated at the rare addition.

“It’s a very rare variety and belongs to schedule I category. It’s an endangered species. The distributions of these cats are very less and are not found in many places. They are found in wet lands in the Terai belt,” said Renu.

Found mainly around the water bodies, marshy land, mangroves, fish is the main prey of this feline and hence named the fishing cat.

These cats have partial webs in its claws, which helps them to scoop out fish from the water easily. Interestingly, unlike the other cats which are allergic to water the fishing cats swim similar to the tigers.

The fishing cat is placed under schedule (I) of the Wildlife Protection Act, which makes them an endangered species. By Kamna athur (ANI)

Reports Of More Body Parts Being Found

There are reports of more body parts being found in Hertfordshire, which could be linked to a murder investigation in which other limbs were discovered. Skip related content
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Reports Of More Body Parts Being Found

Police said part of Gore Lane near Standon in the east of the county was closed following a call from a member of the public around 6pm on Saturday.

Specialist forensic teams have been at the scene and there is a cordon in place.

Detectives from the Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire Major Crime Unit and detectives in Leicestershire have been involved in a joint murder investigation.

It follows the discovery of body parts in Hertfordshire and Leicestershire in recent weeks.

The officers have been told about reports of the latest discovery.

Police say it is too early to say what has been discovered near Gore Lane or to confirm whether it is linked to the ongoing joint murder investigation.

A police spokesperson said: “What we can say is that what has been found has been there for some time and that there is a likelihood it will be linked to the murder investigation.”

Ancient statue found buried at Egypt Giza pyramids

Maintenance workers at Egypt’s Giza Pyramids have found an ancient quartzite statue of a seated man buried close to the surface of the desert, the culture ministry said on Tuesday.

The statue, about life-size at five feet tall, was found north of the smallest of Giza’s three main pyramids, the tomb of the fourth dynasty Pharaoh Mycerinus, who ruled in the 26th century BC, the ministry said in a statement.

The man was wearing a shoulder-length wig and was seated in a simple chair, his right hand clenched on his knee and holding an object. His left hand was resting on his thigh.

The culture ministry said the statue had a number of cracks in a shoulder, its chest and base, and some facial features had been worn away. The head of the statue was only about 16 inches below ground level.

The statue bore no inscriptions, making it hard to identify, though the style suggested it might date to the early years of the Old Kingdom of ancient Egypt, close to Mycerinus’s time.

The Giza complex, containing the pyramids and the Sphinx, on the outskirts of the Egyptian capital, is one of the country’s most popular tourist sites, attracting millions of visitors every year.

Window or aisle seat? Go aisle on planes, says study

Mulling over the window or the aisle seat on your next flight? Pick the aisle to help avoid dangerous blood clots — and flying business class will make no difference, according to a U.S. study.

A review of medical issues associated with commercial flights found that in-flight medical events are becoming more common as more elderly people and those with pre-existing medical conditions fly and also flights last for longer.

But researchers from the U.S.’s Lahey Clinic Medical Center confirmed that sitting in the aisle can help ward off potentially dangerous deep-vein thrombosis or blood clots.

They found that 75 percent of cases of deep-vein thrombosis were due to people not moving enough and most sufferers were in non-aisle seats where passengers tended to move less.

Mark Gendreau, who led the study, said it made no difference if people were sitting in economy class or business class when it came to blood clots.

Wearing compression stockings has been proven to reduce the risk, said the report published in the British medical journal The Lancet, as well as other common sense recommendations such as drinking lots of water and cutting back on alcohol and caffeine.

Studies showed that the risk of developing blood clots on a flight rose up to four-fold, depending on study methods, with the risk starting to rise on flights of over four hours and peak on flights of more than eight hours.

Gendreau played down concerns about catching an infection off someone on a plane — unless they were within two rows of you.

And for jet lag, try a dose of melatonin at the bedtime of the desired destination.

But while the researchers found a greater number of in-flight medical events, they found most were minor with cardiac, neurological, and respiratory complaints the most serious events.

But the researchers did suggest looking at the quality of cabin air which has been linked to passenger and flight crew complaints of dry eyes, stuffy nose, and skin irritation, as well as headaches, lightheadedness, and confusion.

Gendreau said air passenger needed to have a clear understanding of the medical consequences of commercial flights.

“Individuals need to be aware of the possible medical complications of air travel, and physicians should identify people at potential risk from air travel and advise them of any necessary treatments to travel safely,” he said in a statement.

More convictions in Germany for attack on Indians

Leipzig (Germany), Feb 25 (DPA) A German court convicted three more men Tuesday of assault in connection with a 2007 attack on a group of Indian migrants.

After a dance-floor brawl, the Indians fled across a street to a pizza parlour, pursued by a crowd of German men. Police were also injured as they drove back the mob in the eastern town of Muegeln.

Leipzig prosecutors said Tuesday evening that the court in Oschatz had handed one man, aged 22, a suspended, 20-month jail term after he pleaded guilty to causing grievous bodily harm, perjury and sedition.

Witnesses said he hit the Indians and yelled racist insults.

Another man, 24, received a suspended term of 14 months for participating in causing grievous bodily harm. Witnesses said he kicked an Indian man who was lying on the ground.

A man who was 18 at the time of the August 2007 violence was found guilty of an assault before the mob chase and was ordered to do community service. Witnesses said he released a pepper spray into the face of an Indian running from the dance tent before the mob chase.

Eight Indians had been attending the dance during a town festival when the violence broke out. They suffered bruises and cuts.

Witnesses said worse might have happened if the police had not intervened so quickly.

The incident caused shock in India and calls for the government to act. Indian diplomats protested to German authorities.

A series of German men have been convicted of assault and sedition. The most serious penalties were suspended jail terms.

Prosecutors in Leipzig said Tuesday’s convictions completed the inquiry, and nobody else would be charged.
DPA

‘Encounter’ in Noida

Two suspected car-borne criminals, one of them wielding a carbine, were shot dead in an encounter with the Noida (Phase II) police’s team on Monday night. The police, however, could not identify the alleged robbers even hours after the encounter.

Noida’s Senior Superintendent of Police Naveen Arora said, “One carbine and a country-made revolver were recovered from the site, we are checking our records to ascertain their identities. They had come to rob.

” “On the basis of a tip-off, the area was searched and the suspect whiteMaruti Esteem car – registration number UP 83 B 3939 – was found in Noida Phase II,” Arora said. When the police team asked the car’s occupants to stop, they, police said, opened fire.

Later, the duo slipped out of the car while firing and made a desperate bid to escape under the cover of the forest near the Hindon. “They tried to cross over to the other side even though the police kept firing at them,” said Arora.

The exchange of fire continued for around 30 minutes, leaving the duo along with police constable Dharamender Singh injured. The duo were declared ‘brought dead’ at the hospital while the constable was given treatment.
Kapil Datta

Australia mourns bushfire victims

Canberra, Feb 22 (Xinhua) Tens of thousands of Australians have converged on Melbourne Sunday for the national day of mourning following Victoria’s deadly bushfires.

Victorian Premier John Brumby said Sunday the event would be a ‘magnificent opportunity for Victorians and Australians to come together’.

Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, British Princess Anne and Maltese President Eddie Fenech-Adami are expected to attend the ceremony. Hundreds of survivors have been shuttled from fire-ravaged rural towns to join the event.

At least 209 people were killed in the massive bushfire starting from Feb 7. Firemen continue to battle fresh blazes and some bodies are still to be found.

The service will be broadcast live on television and radio around Australia, while a bushfire appeal concert will also be held later on Sunday at the Sydney Opera House.
Xinhua

Battle of oranges unleashes Italy’s Carnival spirit

Once a year the reserved people of Italy’s Piedmont region at the foot of the Alps follow the advice of an old Latin adage and go a bit mad.

Solid evidence that “Semel in anno licet insanire” is an edict the Piedmontese take seriously can be found on the streets of Ivrea — a town near the northwestern city of Turin — during the last three days of Carnival.

Teams dressed in brightly coloured costumes wage a fierce orange-throwing battle that leave the cobbled streets of Ivrea covered in a thick carpet of mashed orange pulp.

Bystanders are encouraged to wear a red cap to avoid being targeted by the “aranceri” (orange-throwers).

But it might still be difficult to dodge the oranges altogether when hundreds are flying everywhere as aranceri on foot battle their rivals standing on carts drawn by horses.

Even when taking shelter behind the large fishing nets stretched in front of buildings, it is impossible for spectators to avoid getting splattered by pulp and juice.

Some 6,000 people are divided into nine teams. Participants range in age from young children to veterans like Basilio Mobolo, who threw his first oranges at age 11 in 1964.

Some enrol at an even younger age.

“I should not say it aloud but I don’t even remember when I started: I must have been about five,” said 26-year-old farmer Daniele Vota. “I guess it can be a little dangerous for children, but then Carnival is Carnival. And if you are born here you’ve got it in your blood.”

About 180 people were treated for minor bruises on Sunday, the first of three days of orange-pelting, according to the event’s organisers.

Last year’s battle sent four to five people to hospital, said Franca Piscitelli of the Red Cross.

“For the local people, a black eye is something to be proud of,” she added.

Two legends account for the origins of Carnival celebrations in this Piedmont town best known for being the base for Olivetti, once a major industrial company whose typewriters feature in exhibits of Italian design.

Oranges replaced beans in the Carnival battle in the middle of the 19th century.

One legend says poor people in the Middle Age would throw beans into the streets to show their feelings of resentment towards their feudal lord.

A more dramatic tale tells of Violetta, the proud daughter of a miller and symbol of Ivrea’s Carnival, who was bound by feudal laws to spend her wedding night with a local marquis. To save her honour for her betrothed she chops off the head of the marquis and starts a popular revolt.

More than 200 years after the first Carnival, the fighting between people on the ground and those on the carts symbolises the struggle among commoners and the tyrant’s henchmen.
Valentina Za

Govt fills up backlog vacancies of SCs/STs

New Delhi, Feb 23 (PTI) Ahead of the Lok Sabha polls, government today said it had filled up backlog vacancies of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, through a special recruitment drive. A drive was launched in August 2004 for filling up a total backlog vacancy of 74,008, Home Minister P Chidamabaram said.

“Of the total available vacancies of 26,358, 20,705 seats were filled up with direct recruitment. About 47,650 posts were available in the promotion quota, of which no candidates were found for 11,366 posts despite expansion of the area of consideration,” he said, describing it as “impressive”.

The drive covered all the ministries and their attached departments, sub-ordinate offices, public sector undertakings and autonomous bodies. A fresh Special recruitment Drive was launched in November 2008 to fill up the remaining backlog reserved vacancies and the drive would also cover Other Backward Classes.

PTI.

Passenger planes increasingly contaminated by ‘toxic’ fumes

Melbourne, Feb 16 (ANI): Some of the most popular airlines in the world have high levels of “toxic” fumes on their aircrafts, which could prove dangerous to both passengers and crew, according to a probe.

German television network ARD, along with Swiss broadcasters Schweizer Fernsehen, took swab samples and found levels of a dangerous toxin onboard several planes.

Leading toxicologist Professor Christian van Netten analysed 30 swabs in total, which were taken by undercover journalists, and found that twenty-eight samples contained high levels of tricresyl phosphate (TCP).

Found in modern jet oil, TCP can lead to drowsiness, headaches, respiratory problems or neurological illnesses-a condition scientifically know as Aerotoxic Syndrome.

The researchers said that because the air in aircraft cabins is usually not filtered, TCP could easily seep in via air conditioning and inhaled by cabin crew and passengers.wedish pilot Neils Gomer revealed in February last year that he was almost completely incapacitated by toxic fumes, which also left passengers in a “zombie-like condition”.

According to The Telegraph, the incidents of contaminated air on aircraft are referred to in hundreds of reports filed by pilots in recent years.

Last year, Australia’s Civil Aviation Safety Authority set up an independent team to investigate the possibility of dangerous toxins on passenger planes.

And the Expert Panel on Aircraft Air Quality (EPAAQ) includes medical doctors and a professor of toxicology and the University of New South Wales.

“Following the ongoing debate on whether cabin air quality is an issue, we have set up a 10-man team of experts to look at all the research that has been done; any information from Australia and to review all the evidence,” News.com.au quoted CASA spokesman Peter Gibson as saying.

He said that though many people made claims, no definitive scientific evidence had been found to prove aircraft poisoning to date.

Gibson said: “While we haven’t heard of people getting sick regularly when they get off aircraft, we do take the claims seriously and want to know about it. The evidence is simply not there at this stage that aeroplanes are making people sick.”

He is hoping that the results from the investigation would be released in 2010. (ANI)

Astrology Is Not Science, But Superstition!

Astrology Is Not Science, But Superstition! The clash between rational and disciples of astrology has been continuing for hundreds of years.

The first group believes that astrology is a mere superstition and a nice gambit to deceive people, while the later group has wide regards for it.

After the introduction of internet or other sophisticated technology, the attraction of Indian astrology knows no bounds.

The foundation of Indian astrology or Jyotisha is the idea of bandhu of the Vedas or scriptures, which is the link between the microcosm and the macrocosm.

There is a big difference between the Indian and western astrology. Whereas Western astrology favors the tropical zodiac, the Jyotisha system uses the sidereal zodiac. The difference, due to the precession of the equinoctial points, gets clear over time.

Jyotisha consists of various nuanced sub-systems of interpretation and prediction with elements not found in Hellenistic astrology, such as its system of lunar mansions (nakshatras).

Besides all this, do you consider ‘Astrology’ as a science? It may be but the rational prefer to hurl scathing attacks against this always.

This approach came into light once more when Prof. Dr. Jayant Narlikar, an eminent scientist and internationally acclaimed astro-physicist, attacked over it recently.

He said, “Astrology is not science, but superstition.”

Narlikar was speaking at a seminar “Astrology-a pseudo-sience” in Rourkela last night organised by the Orissa Rationalists Association.

Moreover, he also mentioned various researches that proved the misconceptions of astrology and the pertinent gurus to a great extent.

While speaking on an investigation in the recent past, Dr. Jayant stated, “We took the horoscope of 100 mentally retarded and 100 bright children and jumbled them up. Finally, we tried to find out from the astrologers whether they can spot them rightly in which 50 persons participated. We gave 40 horoscopes to each individual. Surprisingly many did not return their findings to us and of those who did the highest was 22 correct answers and 17 was the average. And it was like the chances one takes with coins where the chances of heads and tails always come.”

“Our future lies in our hands and not on the position of planets,” added Prof. Narlikar.

But, the number of convinced people among viewers is still unknown.

Three Chinese migrants die trying to swim to Hong Kong for work

Three Chinese migrants die trying to swim to Hong Kong for work Hong Kong – Three illegal immigrants from China have been found dead in waters off Hong Kong after they apparently tried to swim to the wealthy former British colony, a news report said Tuesday.

The bodies were found in separate locations on Saturday and Monday and the victims are believed to have come from southern China, where tens of thousands of people have been made jobless by factory closures.

One of the three men, found on the western side of Hong Kong’s New Territories, was wearing an inflatable life ring and is believed to have drowned trying to swim across the border, the South China Morning Post reported.

The bodies of the two other men were found along the coast close to Hong Kong’s border with mainland China which can be crossed at sea by a swim of just 500 metres, said police officers quoted by the newspaper.

Police surveillance in waters around the Hong Kong and China border has been stepped up because of fears that more people will try to cross into the city of 6.9 million illegally in search of work, said a marine police superintendent.

Southern China, known as the world’s workshop because of its huge export manufacturing base, has been particularly hard hit by the global economic slump with thousands of factories closing down.

Hong Kong reverted to Chinese rule in 1997 under a “one country, two systems” arrangement. It has an independent economy and maintains strict border controls with mainland China. (dpa)

Tzipi Livni’s meteoric rise from obscurity

Tzipi Livni's meteoric rise from obscurityTel Aviv – Ten years ago Tzipi Livni was a novice legislator, entering parliament for the first time. Now, three general elections later, she finds herself within grasping distance of the prime minister’s chair at the centre of the horseshoe-shaped cabinet table in the centre of the Knesset.

By Israeli standards, it has been a meteoric rise. While her two main opponents in Tuesday’s election, Benjamin Netanyahu and Ehud

Barak, have also enjoyed similar fast-tracks to the top, the former entered politics after several high-profile public service jobs, while the latter “parachuted” into politics (to use the Israeli term) directly from a distinguished military career.

Livni’s rise to the top is in no small part due to a shift in her ideological thinking, which has seen her abandon the hawkish, hardline ideology of the Likud Party, in favour of the political centre.

In an interview with The New York Times in June, she said she was raised on two key values, which she later found contradictory – “that the whole (Biblical) land of Israel was our heritage,” and “the need to respect others, not to control others’ lives.”

“I reached my own conclusion, that there is a need to divide the land,” she said. “I still believe in our right to the whole land, but felt it was more important to make a compromise.”

Livni was one of the first to follow former premier Ariel Sharon when he broke away from the Likud to form the Kadima party in late 2005.

When Sharon was felled by a massive hemorrhagic stroke several weeks before the March 2006 elections, she was briefly touted as a possible replacement at the head of the centrist party, but when Ehud Olmert was chosen, she was quick to declare her support for him.

Her reward was the foreign ministry, and when Israel renewed negotiations with the Palestinians at the end of 2007, she was appointed head of the Israeli negotiating team, even though her relations with Olmert had by then soured dramatically.

She won the leadership of Kadima after Olmert, besieged by investigations into his alleged corruption, quit the party leadership, and she won by emphasizing that she represented a new, cleaner style of politics, in contrast to her unpopular predecessor.

This was to have been the fulcrum of her election campaign, but events, in the form of Israel’s three-week-long offensive in the Gaza Strip, intervened.

The offensive was a boon to Netanyahu, who had for months been demanding that Israel take tough measures against Hamas and other militant groups in the enclave.

The offensive, launched after repeated rocket barrages on Israel from the salient, was popular among the Israeli public, and Livni, mindful of losing votes to Netanyahu, who for months had been advocating a harsh Israeli response to the rockets, began adopting an increasingly belligerent tone.

She has thus urged a harsh response to continued rocket attacks from Gaza, and even spoke of a new offensive in the enclave if necessary.

But at the same time, she has been careful not to alienate the more moderate among her supporters, letting it be known, for example, that she had been in favour of an early end to the offensive in the Strip.

These seemingly contradictory attitudes provide ammunition to her detractors, who say is a sphinx, liked by many not because they know who she is, but because they do not know.

Other critics also say she at times appears cold and shows no emotion, while supporters stress her integrity, authenticity and her analytical and decision-making abilities.

She prefers to call herself a pragmatist.

Livni was born in Tel Aviv on July 5, 1958. Her roots are in the “aristocracy” of Israeli right wing politics. Both her parents were in the pre-State armed group Irgun. Her father Eitan served as the group’s operations officer and, after being captured by the British mandate authorities, led a daring breakout from Acre jail in 1947. He served three terms in parliament after Israel was founded in 1948.

Livni graduated in law at Bar Ilan University, near Tel Aviv, served as a lieutenant in the Israeli army and was an agent in the Mossad intelligence organization.

Her public life began when she was appointed Director General of the Government Companies Authority, placed in charge privatizing government companies and monopolies.

She entered parliament in 1999, on behalf of the Likud, and quickly caught the eye of then-Likud leader Ariel Sharon. When Sharon was elected premier in 2001, Livni found herself in the cabinet, holding a succession of portfolios, culminating in her appointment as foreign minister.

Livni, who plays the drums for relaxation , says she prefers jeans to a suit and sneakers to high heels, has been a vegetarian since age 12. She is married to a Tel Aviv attorney, and is the mother of two sons. (dpa)

People desire genetic testing for diseases, but not designer babies

Washington, January 27 (ANI): People are increasingly inclining towards additional genetic testing for life altering and threatening medical conditions like mental retardation, blindness, deafness, cancer, heart disease, dwarfism and shortened lifespan from death by 5 years of age.

This has emerged following a study by researchers at NYU Langone Medical Center.

The study, however, has also shown that people are less interested in prenatal genetic testing for traits including tall stature, superior athletic ability and superior intelligence.

“Our research has discovered that although the media portrays a desire for ‘designer babies’, this does not appear to be true among consumers of genetic testing services,” said Feighanne Hathaway, MS CGC, a certified genetic counselor at the NYU Cancer Institute.

Revealing their observations in the online edition of the Journal of Genetic Counseling, the researchers say that consumers desire more genetic testing than what is currently offered, but their selection of tests have limits on enhancements.

Prior to their initial visit with a genetic counsellor at NYU’s Human Genetics Program, 999 patients completed a one-page, 10 question categorical survey to assess their attitude towards reproductive genetic testing between July 2006 and February 2007.

The consumers were asked to indicate traits and conditions for which they would choose reproductive genetic testing by circling answers from a list of thirteen that included both diseases and enhancements.

The researchers observed that the majority of the respondents would elect for the screening of mental retardation, deafness, blindness, heart disease, and cancer.

The results indicate that less than half of population (49.3%) would choose testing for a condition that resulted in death by 5 years of age, whereas even less parents would choose testing for conditions that results in death by 20, 40, and 50 years of age, respectively.

According to the researchers, only a minority of respondents would want genetic testing for enhancements like athletic ability or superior intelligence.

The majority of the respondents also indicated that there were no conditions for which genetic testing should never be offered.

“As our knowledge and abilities in molecular genetics continues to expand, so does our ability to detect certain conditions and traits prenatally,” said Dr. Harry Ostrer, Director of Human Genetics Program at NYU Langone Medical Center.

“Our study gauged the consumers’ opinion towards reproductive testing for diseases and enhancements. Our research has found that a majority of respondents would elect to have prenatal genetic testing for life altering conditions but most respondents did not desire testing for enhancements. This survey also demonstrated that there was a desire for additional reproductive testing for medical conditions or life altering diseases, than currently offered,” the researcher added.

The group also studied whether learning about risk for disease to oneself might dissuade an individual from undergoing prenatal genetic testing, and found that about 80 per cent of the respondents would still have testing if it revealed increased risk for disease for oneself including Parkinson’s disease, early menopause, breast cancer and if it revealed non-paternity.

They said that their study indicated an increase in consumer demand for genetic testing, which may already be exceeding the number of available genetic counsellors.

Consumers may have also followed their own personal values or belief systems when assessing choice for genetic tests and that genetic counselors may want to develop a policy statement about new genetic tests that are becoming available and the ethical concerns regarding prenatal testing for life altering conditions.

The authors concluded: “It seems unlikely that the ‘Age of Designer Babies’ is near at-hand.” (ANI)

Gene therapy proves beneficial for patients with rheumatoid arthritis

Washington, Jan 27 (ANI): German scientists have found evidence that gene therapy reduces symptoms in patients with rheumatoid arthritis.

The study led by an investigator at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) was conducted on two patients with severe rheumatoid arthritis.

Originally conceived as a means of treating genetic diseases, such as cystic fibrosis and hemophilia, gene therapy involves implanting a normal gene to compensate for a defective gene in the patient.

“This study helps extend gene therapy research to nongenetic, nonlethal diseases,” explained principal investigator Christopher Evans, PhD, Director of the Center for Advanced Orthopaedic Studies at BIDMC.

He added: “Rheumatoid arthritis [RA] is an extremely painful condition affecting multiple joints throughout the body. Arthritis is a good target for this treatment because the joint is a closed space into which we can inject genes,” adds Evans, who is also the Maurice Muller Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery at Harvard Medical School.

RA is a classic autoimmune disease, which develops when, for unknown reasons, the body’s immune system turns against itself, causing joints to become swollen and inflamed.

Evans had earlier identified interleukin-1 as a good target for drug therapy to cure the disease. But, he added that there was another question to deal with: How could he effectively reach the joints to block the actions of this protein?

And he found the answer in gene therapy-by implanting a gene in the affected joint, he was able to stimulate production of a human interleukin-1 receptor antagonist protein, which serves to block actions of the interleukin-1 protein.

“The idea is that by remaining in place, the new gene can continuously block the action of the interleukin-1 within the joints. In essence, the gene becomes its own little factory, continuously working to alleviate pain and swelling,” said Evans.

In 2005 Evans and colleagues demonstrated that the IL-1Ra gene could be safely transferred to human joints in patients with RA.

And in the current study, the authors aimed to prove that the therapy was not only safe, but that it was of therapeutic benefit.

For the study, they recruited two subjects, both of whom were postmenopausal females under the age of 75 with a diagnosis of advanced rheumatoid arthritis.

Tissue was removed from the subjects’ knuckle joints and then a harmless retrovirus was inserted into the tissue cells, in order to serve as a “vector” to transport the gene into the patients’ joints.

After being placed in culture to grow and replicate, the cells were injected back into the afflicted joints.

Evans said that after four weeks, patients reported reduced pain and swelling.

“In one of the two subjects, these effects were dramatic, and the gene-treated joints remained pain-free even though other joints experience flares,” he said.

Laboratory tests showed that tissues removed from the subject’s joint tissue synthesized lower amounts of disease-related proteins, which confirmed that the reduction in pain and swelling was due to actions of the implanted gene.

“Existing treatments for rheumatoid arthritis are costly and need to be administered regularly. This paper provides us with the first real evidence that painful symptoms can indeed be lessened through gene therapy,” said Evans, adding that in addition to risk of side effects, not all patients respond well.

Work is going on the use of gene therapy for the treatment of osteoarthritis, as well as rheumatoid arthritis.

The study is published in the upcoming issue of the journal Human Gene Therapy. (ANI)

Meet the world’s only immortal creature!

London, Jan 27 (ANI): In what is the first case of immortality in a living organism, scientists have recognized Turritopsis nutriculaas as the only known animal that is capable of rejuvenating itself.

According to a report in the Times, jellyfish usually die after propagating, but Turritopsis reverts to a sexually immature stage after reaching adulthood and is capable of rejuvenating itself.

The 4-5mm diameter creature, technically known as a hydrozoan, is the only known animal that is capable of reverting to its juvenile polyp state.

Theoretically, this cycle can repeat indefinitely, rendering it potentially immortal.

Found in warm tropical waters, Turritopsis is believed to be spreading across the world as ships’ ballast water is discharged in ports.

Though solitary, they are predatory creatures and evolve asexually from a polyp stage.

The switching of cell roles is usually seen only when parts of an organ regenerate. However, it appears to occur normally in the life cycle of the Turritopsis. (ANI)