Catalyst simulations for fuel cells may make clean cars a reality

Washington, Sep 18 (ANI): University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers are working towards developing better catalyst for fuel cells in a bid to make clean cars a reality.

If successful, the researchers could make a car that runs on hydrogen from solar power, and produces water instead of carbon emissions.

Materials science and engineering assistant professor Dane Morgan and Ph.D. student Edward (Ted) Holby have developed a computational model that could optimise an important component of fuel cells, making it possible for the technology to have a more widespread use.

The researchers investigated how particle size is related to the overall stability of a material, and showed with their model that increasing the particle size of a fuel cell catalyst decreases degradation and therefore increases the useful lifetime of a fuel cell.

Fuel cells are electrochemical devices that facilitate a reaction between hydrogen and oxygen, producing electrical power and forming water.

In the type of fuel cells Morgan is researching, called proton exchange membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs), hydrogen is split into a proton and electron at one side of the fuel cell (the anode).

The proton moves through the device while the electron is forced to travel in an external circuit, where it can perform useful work, while at the other side of the fuel cell (the cathode), the protons, electrons and oxygen combine to form water, which is the only waste product.

One of the many hurdles to producing efficient fuel cells for widespread use is the catalyst added to aid the reaction between protons, electrons and oxygen at the cathode.

Current fuel cells use platinum and platinum alloys as a catalyst. While platinum can withstand the corrosive fuel cell environment, it is expensive and not very abundant.

Thus, to maximize platinum use, researchers use catalysts made with platinum particles as small as two nanometers, which are approximately 10 atoms across.

These tiny structures have a large surface area on which the fuel cell reaction occurs.

However, platinum catalysts this small degrade very quickly, which means that the fuel cell doesn’t last long.

The researchers have found a possible solution to the rapid degradation problem-when it comes to catalyst particle size, sometimes smaller isn’t better.

In their modelling work, they showed that if the particle size of a platinum catalyst is increased to four or five nanometers, which is approximately 20 atoms across, the level of degradation significantly decreases.

This means the catalyst and the fuel cell as a whole can continue to function for much longer than if the particle size was only two or three nanometers.

“Fuel cells are just one of many energy technologies – solar, battery, etc. – with enormous potential to reduce our dependence on oil and our carbon emissions. Computer simulation offers a powerful tool to understand and develop new materials at the heart of these energy technologies,” said Morgan. (ANI)

Scientists identify ‘tipping points’ at which sudden shifts to new conditions occur

Washington, September 3 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have identified ‘tipping points’ at which sudden shifts to new conditions occur in the world.

The research was done by Martin Scheffer of Wageningen University in The Netherlands and co-authors, including William Brock and Stephen Carpenter of the University of Wisconsin at Madison and George Sugihara of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, California.

They found that abrupt changes in ocean circulation and Earth’s climate, shifts in wildlife populations and ecosystems, the global finance market and its system-wide crashes, and asthma attacks and epileptic seizures share generic early-warning signals that indicate a critical threshold of change dead ahead.

The team found that similar symptoms occur in many systems as they approach a critical state of transition.

“It’s increasingly clear that many complex systems have critical thresholds – ‘tipping points’ – at which these systems shift abruptly from one state to another,” according to the scientists.

Especially relevant, they discovered, is that “catastrophic bifurcations,” a diverging of the ways, propel a system toward a new state once a certain threshold is exceeded.

A system follows a trail for so long, then often comes to a switchpoint at which it will strike out in a completely new direction.

That system may be as tiny as the alveoli in human lungs or as large as global climate.

“These are compelling insights into the transitions in human and natural systems,” said Henry Gholz, program director in the National Science Foundation (NSF)’s Division of Environmental Biology, which supported the research along with NSF’s Division of Ocean Sciences.

“The information comes at a critical time – a time when Earth’s and, our fragility, have been highlighted by global financial collapses, debates over health care reform, and concern about rapid change in climate and ecological systems,” he added.

It all comes down to what scientists call “squealing,” or “variance amplification near critical points,” when a system moves back and forth between two states.

“A system may shift permanently to an altered state if an underlying slow change in conditions persists, moving it to a new situation,” said Carpenter.

According to scientists, “In systems in which we can observe transitions repeatedly, such as lakes, ranges or fields, and such as human physiology, we may discover where the thresholds are.”

“If we have reason to suspect the possibility of a critical transition, early-warning signals may be a significant step forward in judging whether the probability of an event is increasing,” they added. (ANI)

Monkeys ‘groove to Metallica’s heavy metal music’

Washington, Sept 2 (ANI): Monkeys prefer silence to Mozart, but they are big fans of heavy metal music, in particular Metallica, a new study has found.

Music is a sure-shot way to influence human emotions. However, nonhuman primates scarcely respond to human music, and instead prefer silence.

Now, a new report by Charles Snowdon, a professor of psychology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and musician David Teie of the University of Maryland has shown that a monkey called the cotton-top tamarin indeed responds to music.

And the catch here is: the South American monkeys are essentially immune to human music, but they respond appropriately to “monkey music,” 30-second clips composed by Teie on the basis of actual monkey calls.

In the study, the music was inspired by sounds the tamarins make to convey two opposite emotions: threats and/or fear, and affiliation, a friendly, safe and happy condition.

The group of cottontop tamarins were played a variety of music, including Bach, Led Zeppelin and Miles Davis, but they only reacted when heavy metal rock songs by Metallica were played.

The study, published this week (Sept. 1) in the journal Biology Letters, reported that the monkeys could tell the difference: For five minutes after hearing fear music, the monkeys displayed more symptoms of anxiety and increased their movement. In contrast, monkeys that heard “affiliative” music reduced their movements and increased their feeding behavior, both signs of a calming effect.

Monkeys interpret rising and falling tones differently than humans. Oddly, their only response to several samples of human music was a calming response to the heavy-metal band Metallica.

Non-human primates don’t seem to appreciate human music, Snowdon said, although research has suggested they prefer Mozart to rock music and silence to Mozart.

The study opens a new window into animal communication, Snowdon said.

“People have looked at animal communication in terms of conveying information – ‘I am hungry,’ or ‘I am afraid.’ But it’s much more than that. These musical elements are inducing a relatively long-term change in behavior of listeners. The affiliative music is making them calmer; they move less, eat and drink at a higher rate, and show less anxiety behavior,” the expert said. (ANI)

Melanie Clapp | Johnny Knoxville | Naomi Nelson | Naomi Nelson Johnny Knoxville | Johnny Knoxville Girlfriend | Naomi Nelson Knoxville | Clothing Designer Melanie Clapp | Madison | Philip John Clapp

Melanie Clapp | Johnny Knoxville | Naomi Nelson | Naomi Nelson Johnny Knoxville | Johnny Knoxville Girlfriend | Naomi Nelson Knoxville | Clothing Designer Melanie Clapp | Madison | Philip John Clapp

Philip John Clapp known as Johnny Knoxville,”Jackass” star and clothing designer Melanie Clapp wed on May 15, 1995 and Melanie Clapp delivered daughter Madison.

Johnny and Melanie separated in July 2006, announced their separation in February 2007 and filed for divorce in July 2007.

In the docs, it states that Johnny’s estranged wife will receive part of his royalties from the “Jackass Concept” franchise. The majority of Melanie and Johnny’s personal community properties and bank accounts were split down the middle.

The documents also show that neither party will be paying the other spousal support. Knoxville and Clapp have joint legal custody of their daughter Madison, 13. Melanie will receive $6K per month in child support.

Johnny Knoxville has obtained the divorce documents from Johnny’s split from ex Melanie Clapp, which was finalized today.

Naomi Nelson | Johnny Knoxville | Johnny Knoxville Girlfriend | Melanie Clapp | Naomi Nelson Knoxville | Naomi Nelson Johnny Knoxville | Philip John Clapp | Madison

Naomi Nelson | Johnny Knoxville | Johnny Knoxville Girlfriend | Melanie Clapp | Naomi Nelson Knoxville | Naomi Nelson Johnny Knoxville | Philip John Clapp | Madison

Naomi Nelson and Johnny Knoxville ,37, real name is Philip John Clapp but he is renowned and known by his stage name mostly expecting their first baby, she is pregnant since 3 months.

Congrats to the happy couple!

She will be the mother of Johnny’s second child.Knoxville already has a 13-year-old daughter Madison from his ex-wife Melanie Clapp. They had separated in July 2006 when Knoxville filed for Divorce.

Synthetic protein-like molecule may protect against HIV infection

Washington, Aug 18 (ANI): Researchers have used the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and molecular engineering to design synthetic protein-like molecule, which may be able to put a stop to unwanted biological interactions between the cells.

The pioneering study may protect cells against HIV infection.

In a bid to control protein shape, Samuel Gellman, a chemistry professor and his University of Wisconsin-Madison research team, created a set of peptide-like molecules that were successful in blocking HIV infection of human cells in the laboratory.

Adjusting molecular blueprints, Gellman and his colleagues made small structural changes to the backbones of their synthetic molecules to improve stability while retaining the three-dimensional shape necessary to recognize and interact with the HIV gp41 protein.

The resulting molecules, named “foldamers”, are hybrids of natural and unnatural amino acid building blocks, a combination that allows the scientists to control shape, structure and stability with much greater precision than is currently possible with natural amino acids.

The team found that the interaction of synthetic molecules with a piece of HIV protein gp41 physically obstructs the virus from infecting host cells.

The findings have appeared online in the August 17 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Interactions between proteins are not only fundamental to many biological processes, but also to infections like HIV and tumours.

“There’s a lot of information transfer that occurs when proteins come together, and one would often like to block that information flow,” said Gellman.

These synthetic molecules not only interrupt protein-protein interaction, but are also highly resistant to degradation by naturally occurring enzymes, which do not recognize their unusual structure. This means even a low dose of these molecules can remain effective for a longer time.

“We want to find an alternate language, an alternate way to express the information that the proteins express so that we can interfere with a conversation that one protein is having with another,” Gellman explains.

Gellman said the results of their study show that this type of approach could be very useful in designing molecules for antiviral therapies and other biomedical applications.

He said: “You don’t have to limit yourself to the building blocks that nature uses,” Gellman says.

“There’s a huge potential here because the strategy we use is different from what the pharmaceutical and biotech industries now employ.” (ANI)

Swine flu virus more dangerous than previously believed

London, July 14 (ANI): In a new, highly detailed study of swine flu virus, H1N1, researchers have found that the pathogen is more virulent than previously believed.

Led by University of Wisconsin-Madison virologist Yoshihiro Kawaoka, the study has found that the H1N1 virus exhibits an ability to infect cells deep in the lungs, where it can cause pneumonia and, in severe cases, death.

Seasonal viruses typically infect only cells in the upper respiratory system.

“There is a misunderstanding about this virus. People think this pathogen may be similar to seasonal influenza. This study shows that is not the case. There is clear evidence the virus is different than seasonal influenza,” Nature magazine quoted Kawaoka as saying.

He says that the ability to infect the lungs is a quality frighteningly similar to those of other pandemic viruses, notably the 1918 virus, which killed tens of millions of people at the tail end of World War I.

The study has also found another similarity to the 1918 virus-people born before 1918 harbour antibodies that protect against the new H1N1 virus.

Kawaoka reveals that the virus could become even more pathogenic as the current pandemic runs its course, and the virus evolves to acquire new features.

It is now flu season in the world’s southern hemisphere, and the virus is expected to return in force to the northern hemisphere during the fall and winter flu season.

For the study, the researchers infected different groups of mice, ferrets and non-human primates with the pandemic virus and a seasonal flu virus.

They found that the H1N1 virus replicates much more efficiently in the respiratory system than seasonal flu, and causes severe lesions in the lungs similar to those caused by other more virulent types of pandemic flu.

“When we conducted the experiments in ferrets and monkeys, the seasonal virus did not replicate in the lungs. The H1N1 virus replicates significantly better in the lungs,” said Kawaoka.

The study also assessed the immune response of different groups to the new virus, and, surprisingly, found that people exposed to the 1918 virus, all of whom are now in advanced old age, have antibodies that neutralize the H1N1 virus.

The study also indicated that existing and experimental antiviral drugs could form an effective first line of defence against the virus and slow its spread. (ANI)

Presence of neo-Nazis once again haunts US military

Atlanta, July 13 (ANI): The latest revelation on the appearance of at least 40 active-duty US soldiers on a neo-Nazi social networking website has confirmed the controversial government report released in April about the growing presence of white supremacy in the military.

According to the disclosure by the Southern Poverty Law Center, there were at least 40 profiles related to active-duty military members on NewSaxon.org, known as the “fascist Facebook,” csmonitor.com reports.

“I love and will do anything to keep our master race marching,” writes “WhitePride85,” who claims on the site to be a 24-year-old staff sergeant from Madison, Wis.

The civil rights organization, which delivered its report to the House and Senate Armed Services and Homeland Security Committees on Monday, raised new questions about how serious the Army is about rooting out rank-and-file neo-Nazis.

“There are many people in the military using new technology to put up racist profiles, racist music and books that they love that are racist, and as the regulations stand today that’s not grounds for being tossed out of the military,” SPLC spokeswoman Heidi Beirich said.

Undersecretary of Defense David Chu, however, told the SPLC that the Army has zero tolerance for racists in the ranks.

Jeffrey Castro, a spokesman for the Army’s Criminal Investigation Command at Fort Belvoir, Va., said his command investigates supremacist leanings only in relation to felony accusations. “Being a gang member, for instance is not a felony-level crime.”

It’s the unit commander who determines whether a soldier a neo-Nazi, and the Army policy states that commanders cannot, however, dismiss them.

In 2007, the FBI reported on concern about white supremacists recruiting soldiers, saying “hundreds” of neo-Nazis were in the active military.

Such groups hope to utilize their combat skills in “a coming race war,” says former marine TJ Leyden, an ex-white supremacist and author of “Skinhead Confessions.” (ANI)

Novel MRI technique can lead to less breast biopsies in high-risk women

Washington, June 30 (ANI): Researchers from University of Wisconsin-Madison have suggested a new method, that when applied with MRI scans of the breast, can help rid women with increased breast cancer risk of the pain and stress of having to endure a biopsy of the lump or lesion.

It is recommended that women with certain breast cancer risk factors – including inherited genetic mutations, family or personal history of breast cancer, or previous radiation therapy to the chest should receive an annual MRI screening in addition to their yearly mammogram.

During a breast MRI, which lasts about a half hour, the technician injects a contrast agent into a vein in the patient’s arm.

The contrast agent flows throughout the body, including the breasts.

Because they are growing quickly, cancerous lesions often have immature vasculature, and the contrast agent flows in and “leaks” out quickly. Conversely, benign lesions show more gradual in and out flow.

“The tricky ones are the ones that enhance quickly and then fall off more slowly,” said Wally Block, a UW-Madison associate professor of biomedical engineering and medical physics.

“Many of these lesions turn out to be difficult to classify and lead to biopsy,” Block added.

The researchers suggest that right kind of MRI scan can help identify a cancerous lesion based on characteristics about its shape.

For instance, breaks or interruptions in a lesion can indicate a benign fibroadenoma. Lumps with smooth edges often are benign, while those with jagged edges can signal cancer.

With the new technique, an MRI machine acquires data radially and generates a high-resolution, three-dimensional image that radiologists can turn, slice and view from many perspectives – enabling them to study a lesion’s physical characteristics more carefully.

Machines equipped with the technique also acquire more data in less time. (ANI)

Eliot Spitzer claims he’s not like Mark Sanford

New York, June 29 (ANI): Former New York Governor Eliot Spitzer says that he is not similar to South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford.

Spitzer had resigned in March last year, after it was reported that he was a client of a prostitution ring under investigation by the federal government.

On the other hand, on June 24, 2009, Sanford resigned as chairman of the Republican Governors Association, when it was revealed he was in an extramarital affair with an Argentinian, Maria Belen Chapur.

And thus, at a lunch meeting with LMDC executive director Avi Schick at Solo in the Sony Building on Madison, Spitzer was overheard as saying that there’s a huge difference in what he did and what Sanford has done.

“I didn’t fall in love with any of them,” the New York Post quoted him as telling Schick.

Besides, Spitzer didn’t use any taxpayer money on his trysts, while Sanford is reimbursing the state about 12,000 dollars for travel expenses to Buenos Aires. (ANI)

Global demand for food, fiber and fuel may outstrip supply in next 40 years

Washington, June 26 (ANI): A new report has determined that with the caloric needs of the planet expected to soar by 50 percent in the next 40 years, planning and investment in global agriculture will become critically important.

The report was produced by Deutsche Bank, in collaboration with the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies.

It provides a framework for investing in sustainable agriculture against a backdrop of massive population growth and escalating demands for food, fiber and fuel.

“We are at a crossroads in terms of our investments in agriculture and what we will need to do to feed the world population by 2050,” said David Zaks, a co-author of the report and a researcher at the Nelson Institute’s Center for Sustainability and the Global Environment.

By 2050, world population is expected to exceed 9 billion people, up from 6.5 billion today.

Already, according to the report, a gap is emerging between agricultural production and demand, and the disconnect is expected to be amplified by climate change, increasing demand for biofuels, and a growing scarcity of water.

“There will come a point in time when we will have difficulties feeding world population,” said Zaks, a graduate student whose research focuses on the patterns, trends and processes of global agriculture.

“The solution is only going to come about by changing the way we use land, changing the things that we grow and changing the way that we grow them,” he added.

The report notes that agricultural research and technological development in the US and Europe have increased notably in the last decade, but those advances have not translated into increased production on a global scale.

Subsistence farmers in developing nations, in particular, have benefited little from such developments and investments in those agricultural sectors have been marginal, at best.

The Deutsche Bank report, however, identifies a number of strategies to increase global agricultural productions in sustainable ways, including improvements in irrigation, fertilization and agricultural equipment using technologies ranging from geographic information systems and global analytical maps to the development of precision, high performance equipment.

It also stresses on applying sophisticated management and technologies on a global scale, essentially extending research and investment into developing regions of the world.

The report says that investing in “farmer competence” is important to take full advantage of new technologies through education and extension services, including investing private capital in better training farmers.

“First we have to improve yield,” noted Zaks. “Next, we have to bring in more land in agriculture while considering the environmental implications, and then we have to look at technology,” he added. (ANI)

Criss Angel dates a different person every week, says ex Holly Madison

Washington, Jun 21 (ANI): American model Holly Madison has revealed that she did not think much about her relationship with Vegas magician Criss Angel at the start, as he was dating a different person every week.

But after they got to know one another, the relationship between them lasted for an intense four months.

“He dates a different person every week so I didn’t think anything of relationship status would happen,” Fox News quoted Madison as telling Las Vegas Weekly.

“But we would text each other and when I would come out here to work on a photo shoot and it was the first time I’d come out here by myself, we decided to go out together, and I thought that best-case scenario we would be friends with each other, but we just totally hit it off and we got together,” she said.

However the relationship was not meant to be, and in February the two called it quits.

“I think it happened because some people don’t want to be happy and they always look for problems, even if there aren’t any,” she said.

“Some people don’t want to be happy, so they pick away at something until they find problems.

I would have done anything to make it work. He’s the one with the problem, not me,” she added.(ANI)

Criss Angel dates a different person every week, says ex Holly Madison

Washington, Jun 21 (ANI): American model Holly Madison has revealed that she did not think much about her relationship with Vegas magician Criss Angel at the start, as he was dating a different person every week.

But after they got to know one another, the relationship between them lasted for an intense four months.

“He dates a different person every week so I didn’t think anything of relationship status would happen,” Fox News quoted Madison as telling Las Vegas Weekly.

“But we would text each other and when I would come out here to work on a photo shoot and it was the first time I’d come out here by myself, we decided to go out together, and I thought that best-case scenario we would be friends with each other, but we just totally hit it off and we got together,” she said.

However the relationship was not meant to be, and in February the two called it quits.

“I think it happened because some people don’t want to be happy and they always look for problems, even if there aren’t any,” she said.

“Some people don’t want to be happy, so they pick away at something until they find problems.

I would have done anything to make it work. He’s the one with the problem, not me,” she added.(ANI)

Land management practices in agricultural watersheds can affect carbon losses

Washington, June 20 (ANI): In a new study, scientists have determined that specific land management practices in agricultural watersheds, such as manure application, can affect carbon losses.

Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) losses from tile drains are an underquantified portion of the terrestrial carbon cycle.

This is particularly important in the eastern corn belt where tile drainage dominates the agricultural landscape.

Specific land management practices, such as manure application, can play a large role in the export of DOC as soluble organic carbon is applied to or injected into the soil surface.

As animal agriculture intensifies in the upper Midwest, measuring DOC exported through tile drains is important when evaluating carbon budgets and carbon sequestration potential.

Scientists at Purdue University have investigated the impacts of manure application, crop rotation, and nitrogen application rate on DOC losses from tile drains.

Research was conducted over a six-year span (1998-2004) at Purdue University’s Water Quality Field Station, which was designed specifically to measure drainflow and solute losses from agricultural practices.

Forty-eight drainage lysimeters were established at the field site in 1992.

Twelve field treatments included a restored prairie grass, continuous corn rotations and corn-soybean rotations fertilized at three nitrogen rates, and continuous corn rotations fertilized with lagooned swine effluent applied in the spring or fall of each year.

The study determined that annual losses of DOC were not affected by any crop management practice.

However, when drainage-inducing rainfall occurred with one month of manure application, the monthly DOC concentration of the manured plot was greater than that of non-manured plots.

Overall, drainage hydrology was determined to be the largest sole driver of DOC loss.

Greater daily drainflows were associated with higher DOC concentrations compared to lower daily drainflows.

This indicates that larger storms effectively “flush” DOC from the soil systems.

According to Dr. Matt Ruark, now an Assistant Professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, “Understanding the concentrations and amounts of DOC contributed to surface waters from tile drains is essential for evaluating the overall aquatic ecology of a watershed.

“This is of particular importance in the eastern corn belt, where up to 80 percent of the land in agricultural watersheds are tile drained,” he added.

Further research is required to evaluate the fate of tile drainage-exported DOC once it enters the surface water system.

The effect of manure management on the availability of DOC leached into subsurface soil is currently being investigated. (ANI)

Holly Madison set to strip with Mel B in musical Peepshow

London, May 18 (ANI): Hugh Hefner’s former girlfriend Holly Madison is all set to join former Spice Girl member Mel B on the raunchy musical Peepshow.

Madison, 29, has been trying to launch a solo career ever since she broke up with Playboy founder Hefner, reports the Sun.

‘The Girls Next Door’ star, who has been dating Biz Shagger Of The Year Russell Brand, has been given a role in which she is required to bare her breasts.

She will be joining Mel B as a replacement for Kelly Monaco on the show. (ANI)

Russell Brand, Holly Madison’s noisy lovemaking in Las Vegas

Washington, May 9 (ANI): English comedian Russell Brand and Hugh Hefner’s ex-Playboy Playmate Holly Madison reportedly had a noisy sex session that was heard by guests at a Las Vegas hotel.

Brand, 33, is said to have hooked up with 29-year-old Madison during a trip to Sin City with new pal Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs at the weekend.

According to Eonline.com, the two made no secret of their attraction for each other at the Venetian hotel, and were spotted together at restaurant Tao.

“We’re talking moans, screams, the whole he/shebang,” Contactmusic reported the website as saying. (ANI)

Adultery business booming in recession

London, May 4 (ANI): While the world is suffering from the ongoing recession, it has proved to be a boon for adultery business.

Ashley Madison agency, which revels in the motto, “Life is short. Have an affair,” is booming as its membership has soared from one million to 3.6 million in just 12 months.

Noel Biderman, the company’s founder and chief executive said that many couples who would otherwise have divorced were seeking affairs at the moment because of the cost of hiring lawyers and the difficulty of selling the marital home.

The company has recently launched a new promotional campaign, targeting potential adulterers with TV ads placed on peak-viewing daytime slots.

He hopes his business will flourish even more with the launch of a service allowing members to access the site from their mobile phones.

“We’re not just recession-proof, we’re booming,” the Telegraph quoted Biderman, 37, a happily married father-of-two who set up the business in his home city of Toronto in 2001.

The advertisement features an attractive woman enduring a dreadful dinner date with a boorish man.

“Have you ever found yourself on a really bad blind date?” asks the voice-over. “Now imagine that date lasting the rest of your life.”

Although it is free to register with Ashley Madison, but members pay with purchased credits to send messages to other users.

It charges 49 dollars for 100 credits or 249 dollars for 1,000 credits and 50 credits buys 60 minutes of instant messaging time or 10 emails to different users.

Mr Biderman is planning a full launch later this year of the business in Britain and Ireland, where it already has 25,000 registered users.

However, Brent Bozell, president of the Media Research Centre, a conservative monitoring group the commercials has criticised the commercials for promoting “Home Wreckers Inc”. (ANI)

Hugh Hefner: I’m in love with No. 1 girl Crystal Harris

New York, May 1 (ANI): Putting all speculations to rest, Hugh Hefner has confessed that his heart beats for new squeeze Crystal Harris – not ex-flame Holly Madison.

Days after the Playboy mogul was quoted as calling Madison “the love of his life” and wanting her to move into the mansion, Hefner has now insisted that he’s head over heels with his new No. 1 girl Harris.

“I’m in love with Crystal Harris and wouldn’t trade her or the Shannon Twins for anyone in the past,” The New York Daily News quoted Hefner as saying.

The 83-year-old tycoon told Us Weekly that he has “no idea where these crazy stories come from, it was invented by someone to create publicity.”

Although, he’s content with his new love life, Hefner has said that he hasn’t completely shut Madison out of the picture.

“Holly will always be welcome here at the Mansion, but not as a girlfriend. I think she’s happy now and I know I am,” he said. (ANI)

Hugh Hefner: Holly Madison is welcome at mansion ‘but not as a girlfriend’

Washington, Apr 30 (ANI): Hugh Hefner has said that he was misquoted in a recent interview about ex-girlfriend Holly Madison, and claimed that she is welcome at the Playboy mansion, but not as a girlfriend.

Insisting he has moved on from the former ‘Girls Next Door’ star, the Playboy mogul said that the interview with Los Angeles Confidential, which claimed that he wants Madison to move back into the mansion, was taken out of context.

He called her “the love of his life” in the magazine.

“I have no idea where these crazy stories come from,” Us magazine quoted Hef as saying in a statement.

He added: “The idea that I’m pining over former girlfriend Holly Madison and would ‘welcome her back with open arms’ is pure fiction. It was invented by someone to create publicity.

“I’m in love with Crystal Harris and wouldn’t trade her or the Shannon Twins for anyone in the past.

“Holly will always be welcome here at the mansion, but not as a girlfriend. I think she’s happy now, and I know I am.”

The octogenarian tycoon and Madison split up last October after seven years of dating. (ANI)

Hugh Hefner misses “love of his life” Holly Madison

Washington, Apr 29 (ANI): Although it has been months since Hugh Hefner, Holly Madison split up, the blonde still remains the “love of his life” and he would love to welcome her back to the Playboy Mansion.

In an interview with Jason Binn, editorial director of Niche Magazine’s Los Angeles Confidential, the octogenarian tycoon claimed that he still has the same feelings for the former ‘Girls Next Door’ star.

The 83-year-old Playboy boss, however, said that he still doesn’t know what future holds for his relationship with new top squeeze Crystal Harris.

“How serious, and intimate, and important that works out to be, well we’ll have to wait and see because it’s only a couple months old,” Fox News quoted Hef as saying in the upcoming issue.

But while Hef’s heart is still beating for Holly, it doesn’t look like a reunion will happen any time soon.

“I loved my time at the mansion and think the world of Hef. There comes a time in everyone’s life where they need to go their own way,” said Madison.

In the interview Hefner also revealed his two prominent regrets- his two marriages (the first to Mildred Williams in 1949 and then to Playmate Kimberly Conrad in 1989 — to whom he’s still married) and taking his empire public.

“I think the company would have been more closer to home if it had remained a private corporation,” admitted Hefner. (ANI)