Stig Östlund

måndag, januari 07, 2013

JAMA

Någon slutgräns för antalet nyhetsbrev sätter vi inte;)

 

JAMA, The Journal of the American Medical Association, is a weekly peer-reviewed medical journal published by the American Medical Association. Since 2011, the editor-in-chief is Howard C. Bauchner (Boston University), who succeeded Catherine D. DeAngelis, who had served since 2000.[1] The journal was established in 1883, with Nathan Smith Davis as founding editor. The acronym JAMA was added in 1960. The journal has French and Spanish language editions.

Current Issue



Basic View | Expanded View




Nancy R. Kressin, PhD; Joshua M. Atz, DVM


Topics:
 

Carolien Roos, MD; Marc E. A. Spaanderman, MD, PhD; Ewoud Schuit, MSc; Kitty W. M. Bloemenkamp, MD, PhD; Antoinette C. Bolte, MD, PhD; Jérôme Cornette, MD; Johannes J. J. Duvekot, MD, PhD; Jim van Eyck, MD, PhD; Maureen T. M. Franssen, MD, PhD; Christianne J. de Groot, MD, PhD; Joke H. Kok, MD, PhD; Anneke Kwee, MD, PhD; Ashley Merién, MD; Bas Nij Bijvank, MD; Brent C. Opmeer, PhD; Martijn A. Oudijk, MD, PhD; Mariëlle G. van Pampus, MD, PhD; Dimitri N. M. Papatsonis, MD, PhD; Martina M. Porath, MD, PhD; Hubertina C. J. Scheepers, MD, PhD; Sicco A. Scherjon, MD, PhD; Krystyna M. Sollie, MD, PhD; Sylvia M. C. Vijgen, MSc; Christine Willekes, MD, PhD; Ben Willem J. Mol, MD, PhD; Joris A. M. van der Post, MD, PhD; Fred K. Lotgering, MD, PhD; for the APOSTEL-II Study Group
Includes:Supplemental Content
Olof Stephansson, MD, PhD; Helle Kieler, MD, PhD; Bengt Haglund, PhD; Miia Artama, PhD; Anders Engeland, PhD; Kari Furu, PhD; Mika Gissler, PhD; Mette Nørgaard, MD, PhD; Rikke Beck Nielsen, MSc; Helga Zoega, PhD; Unnur Valdimarsdóttir, PhD
Includes:Supplemental Content
Sana M. Al-Khatib, MD, MHS; Anne Hellkamp, MS; Gust H. Bardy, MD; Stephen Hammill, MD; W. Jackson Hall, PhD; Daniel B. Mark, MD, MPH; Kevin J. Anstrom, PhD; Jeptha Curtis, MD; Hussein Al-Khalidi, PhD; Lesley H. Curtis, PhD; Paul Heidenreich, MD; Eric D. Peterson, MD, MPH; Gillian Sanders, PhD; Nancy Clapp-Channing, RN, MPH; Kerry L. Lee, PhD; Arthur J. Moss, MD
Includes:Supplemental Content

ONLINE FIRST
Kathleen A. Page, MD; Owen Chan, PhD; Jagriti Arora, MS; Renata Belfort-DeAguiar, MD, PhD; James Dzuira, PhD; Brian Roehmholdt, MD, PhD; Gary W. Cline, PhD; Sarita Naik, MD; Rajita Sinha, PhD; R. Todd Constable, PhD; Robert S. Sherwin, MD
Includes:Supplemental Content

Katherine M. Flegal, PhD; Brian K. Kit, MD; Heather Orpana, PhD; Barry I. Graubard, PhD
Includes:CME, Supplemental Content

Clinician's Corner
Jeffrey L. Carson, MD; Paul A. Carless, MMedSc (Clin Epid); Paul C. Hébert, MD, MSc


Claudio Galli, MD, PhD; J. Thomas Brenna, PhD


Topics:
 
Charalambos Vlachopoulos, MD; Dimitrios Richter, MD; Christodoulos Stefanadis, MD, PhD


Topics:
 
Ankur Sethi, MD; Mukesh Singh, MD; Rohit Arora, MD


Topics:
 
Evangelos C. Rizos, MD, PhD; Evangelia E. Ntzani, MD, PhD; Moses S. Elisaf, MD, PhD


Topics:
 
Athanase D. Protogerou, MD; Thomas T. van Sloten, MD; Coen D. A. Sethouwer, MD


Topics:
Bernhard M. Kaess, MD; Ramachandran S. Vasan, MD; Gary F. Mitchell, MD


Topics:
Steffie Woolhandler, MD, MPH; David U. Himmelstein, MD


Topics:
 
Carrie Colla, PhD; Elliott Fisher, MD, MPH; Jonathan Skinner, PhD


Topics:
Quoc-Dien Trinh, MD; Maxine Sun, BSc


Topics:
 
Laine Thomas, PhD; Eric D. Peterson, MD, MPH


Topics:
 




Thomas B. Cole, MD, MPH


Topics:
 

Rebecca Foust


Topics:
 


Ann R. Punnoose, MD; Cassio Lynm, MA; Robert M. Golub, MD



Topics:
 

Defense secretary

President Obama plans on Monday to nominate Chuck Hagel, the former Republican senator from Nebraska and Vietnam veteran, to lead the Pentagon as Defense secretary, according to two sources familiar with the nomination process./USATODAY

Wikipedia: Charles Timothy "Chuck" Hagel (born October 4, 1946) is an American politician and former United States Senator from Nebraska. A recipient of two Purple Hearts from his time as an infantry squad leader in the Vietnam War, Hagel returned home to start a career in politics and business, making millions as a co-founder of Vanguard Cellular. A member of the Republican Party, Hagel was first elected to the Senate in 1996. He was reelected in 2002 and then retired in 2008. Hagel is currently a professor at the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University, the chairman of the Atlantic Council, and co-chairman of the President's Intelligence Advisory Board. In January 2013, major media outlets reported that Hagel would be nominated to serve as Secretary of Defense by President Barack Obama


söndag, januari 06, 2013

Romantik

Minton’s Playhouse



NEW YORK TIMES



 
Efforts to revive Minton’s Playhouse, on West 118th Street in Harlem, have sputtered throughout the years.

This old dive in Harlem has been shuttered for about as long as it had been open. Yet Minton’s Playhouse will always be known as the cradle of bebop, where the likes of Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonious Monk and Charlie Parker jammed into the night.


Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minton's_Playhouse

Apropå bebop:

 

Radioteatern




Guldgruva för teaterintresserade. Radioteatern.
http://sverigesradio.se/sida/default.aspx?programid=4453
I kväll sände SR "Ett drömspel", Bara en sån sak som skådespelarna...högsta betyg! Lyssna själv.

Tack Radioteatern !

Ibra pierde su web y el dueño le exige 11 retos para devolvérsela

 


Internacional | FRANCIA | INTERNACIONAL

Ibra pierde su web y el dueño le exige 11 retos para devolvérsela

Nicolas N. le desafía con ironía: "¡Zlatanéame si puedes!". Le pide que haga uno de los 11 retos que le pide. Entre ellos dejarse abofetear o tres abonos vitalicios del PSG.


 
As.com
Ibra pierde su web y el dueño le exige 11 retos para devolvérsela
Una captura del estado actual de la página web oficial de Ibrahimovic. |

El dominio Zlatan.Fr. ha sido adquirido por un internauta que nada tiene que ver con Zlatan Ibrahimovic y el 'ladrón' de la web ha retado con mucha ironía al delantero sueco para devolvérselo. Lo realmente sorprendente es que el dueño de la web (cuyo dominio estaba libre) ha desafiado al delantero sueco del PSG a cumplir uno de los once desafíos.

El dueño de la web se llama (o eso dice) Nicolás N. y la frase con la que reta a Ibra es la siguiente: "¡Zlatanéame si puedes!", en clara referencia al dicho que se ha incorporado recientemente a la Academia de la Lengua Sueca y que significa "dominar con fuerza" como homenaje a su gran capitán.
LOS ONCE DESAFÍOS A ZLATAN IBRAHIMOVIC:
1- Vivir un mes en su casa para poder presumir de que 'Ibra' pasó una temporada pernoctando en su sofá.
2- Jugárselo a una tanda de penaltis en el Parque de los Príncipes.
3- Regalarle una camiseta del PSG que diga "Después de Zlatan, tú eres el mejor".
4- Conseguirle tres abonos vitalicios del club.
5- Disputar un combate de taewkwondo.
6- Entregarle un mechón de pelo para arrebatarle su fuerza como Dalila hizo con Sansón.
7- Ganarle un partido al FIFA13.
8- Recibir una bofetada pública sin replicar.
9- Enviarle un póster firmado y con el torso desnudo a su novia.
10- Lograr que Neymar fiche por el PSG durante el actual mercado de invierno de 2013.
11- Pedirle simplemente que le devuelva el dominio, pero "con beso y guiño de ojo" incluido.

Svårt att finna en riktig ”svensk”

På framförallt nätet om debatterad artikel o Icakuriren:

Svårt att finna en riktig ”svensk”

13-01-02 14:33
Katarina Mazetti
Katarina Mazetti

Våra svenska landskapsdräkter är bara drygt hundra år gamla. Nu föreslår Katarina Mazetti en ny Sverigedräkt för Jimmie Åkesson och hans partimedlemmar.
Häromdagen läste jag om en Sverigedemokrat som oroade sig för att man på ett dagis i landet funderat på om det var dags att införa lite nya sedvänjor vid högtider, inte bara det vanliga gamla luciafirandet.
”Ska vi nu inte få fira våra kära svenska högtider?”, klagade han.
Svenska högtider?
Vet den mannen att Lucia var ett katolskt helgon från Syrakusa som vi firar genom att sjunga en neapolitansk fiskarvisa?
Han påminde mej om ett gäng Sverigedemokrater som kom till folkmusikfestivalen i Umeå för några år sedan. Med aggressivt framskjutna hakor hävdade de att den svenska folkmusiken borde hållas Ren, ingen jäkla mångkultur. Vi stirrade på dem i stum förvåning. Vi hade alltid spelat polska, schottis och vals, men ska man vara noga kommer ordet ”polska” från Polen och schottis från Skottland. Den enda rent svenska folkmusiken är väl näverlur och kohorn, och att kula eller köla – det vill säga ett sångsätt som går ut på att med gäll röst vråla hem korna.
Lite synd om dem är det allt, alla som vill avstå från mångkultur. Bort med jazz och blues som har afrikanska rötter, och bort med pop och rock också då förstås. Bort med den klassiska musiken, det mesta kommer från Centraleuropa. Vad blir kvar? Thore Skogman och Göingeflickorna?

Om sådant här läser man ibland på internetsajten Avpixlat, en sajt som ger samma symtom som vinterkräksjukan.
Men är jag egentligen svensk, jag som har namnet Mazetti från en fattig italiensk stenhuggare som kom till Sverige på 1800-talet? Visserligen var de andra sju i generationen farfarsfar till mormorsmor vanliga svenska småbönder, pigor och sjömän, men NÄR blev vi Mazettis svenskar? Farfar, halvitalienaren? Min far, kvartingen?
En statistiker i bekantskapskretsen säger att det är mycket svårt att finna en ”svensk” som i tre generationer inte har en enda utlänning. Som att hitta en vit älg i skogen ungefär. De finns, men få har sett en. Kanske borde någon grävande journalist snoka lite i Sverigedemokraternas stamtavlor, de har ju själva begärt en sorts etnisk rensning i riksdagen.
(Allra renast är förstås de folkslag som isolerat sej i generationer och bara gifter sej med varann. De sitter där gravt inavlade med hängande hakor, svåra genetiska sjukdomar och en IQ på 70).

Borde vi förresten se misstänksamt på folk från Skåne, Halland och Blekinge som bara varit ”svenska” i sådär 300 år? Inte hälften så svenska som folk från Finland, som var svenska i 800 år!
Svenska ”landskapsdräkter” skapades av romantiska kulturpersoner för drygt hundra år sen. De satte ihop lite plagg som var vanliga i vissa trakter och kallade dem typ Blekingedräkten. Jimmie Åkesson borde inte ha gula knäbyxor, han borde bära bomberjacka, kängor och tatueringar, den klassiska Sverigedräkten för det folkslag som bildade basen i hans parti.
Av Katarina Mazetti


Katarina Mazettis krönika har väckt starka reaktioner och fått många kommentarer. Men på grund av grova påhopp har jag valt att släcka ner hela kommentarsfältet.
Helena Rönnberg, chefredaktör Icakuriren

La Liga

Omgång  18
 
R. Madrid - R. Sociedad4-3
Barcelona - Espanyol 4-0
Mallorca - Atlético kl 21:00 ikväll-
Rayo - Getafe i morgon kl 20:00-
Celta - Valladolid3-1
Sevilla - Osasuna1-0
Granada - Valencia1-2
Deportivo - Málaga1-0
Levante - Athletic3-1
Zaragoza - Betis1-2

Pictures received from FITSAT-1 on 5840 MHz

Amateurradio
    
On December 22 members of AMSAT-DL succeeded in receiving 18 images from the
5840 MHz high-speed downlink of the amateur radio satellite FITSat-1     

 In total 22 images were transmitted in the test and 18 were received at the amateur radio facility at Bochum.

The FITSAT-1 CubeSat was developed by students at the Fukuoka Institute of Technology (FIT) in Japan. As well as the high-speed data downlink on 5840.0 MHz the satellite carries several amateur radio payloads: a CW beacon on 437.250 MHz, a telemetry beacon on 437.445 MHz and an optical Morse code LED experiment.

FITSAT-1, also known as NIWAKA, was one of five CubeSats launched to the International Space Station (ISS) on July 21. They were integrated with the J-SSOD small satellite deployer on the the Japanese Experiment Module Kibo and deployed by the Kibo robotic arm on October 4.

The 5840.0 MHz transmitter on FITSAT-1 runs about 2 watts output. It supports a data rate of 115.2 kbps and can send a JPEG 640x480 VGA picture in just 6 sec.

The images received at Bochum can be seen on the AMSAT Deutschland Facebook page
https://www.facebook.com/amsat.deutschland

They are also on the site of Mineo Wakita JE9PEL
http://www.ne.jp/asahi/hamradio/je9pel/fitsat58.htm#584

FITSAT-1
http://www.fit.ac.jp/~tanaka/fitsat.shtml

A brief update on the Bochum facility can be seen in the Nov/Dec 2011 edition of the UK Microwave Group newsletter Scatterpoint
http://www.microwavers.org/scatterpoint/2011/Scatterpoint_1111.pdf

Control Software for the Amateur Radio Bochum Facility
http://amsat.org/amsat-new/articles/G3RUH/

President Obama

New York Times har nyhetsbrev som man kallar "My Alert". Man väljer ett specifikt intressområde och blir sedan bra uppdaterad. Själv har jag valt "Obama" och blir uppdaterad om mycket (gott som ont) som är relaterat till denne, min kanske störste favorit bland USAs presidenter. 
Härunder det senaste "My Alert" som kom mailad i morse.
Anm.: Att jag använder ordet 'mailad' i stället för  'epostad' må förlåtas.

January 6, 2013 Compiled: 12:19 AM (Swedish Time 06:19)

By MICHAEL R. GORDON (NYT)
In a long-awaited memoir, Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal says disputes with the White House began at the beginning of President Obama’s first term.

 

By ANNIE LOWREY (NYT)
Days after one high-stakes standoff over finances was resolved, the two sides are getting ready for another as Congress prepares to address the nation’s borrowing limit.

lördag, januari 05, 2013

Idag börjar SVT Play visa fler gamla program !

Södertäljerånet

http://www.vgtv.no/#!/video/59942/ny-øyenvitnevideo-se-hele-skytedramaet-i-sverige-sterke-bilder

Watch President Obama's weekly address.





Former C.I.A. Officer Is the First to Face Prison for a Classified Leak






Saturday, January 5, 2013 12:32 PM EST






The first C.I.A. officer to be convicted of disclosing classified information to a reporter in more than six decades is scheduled to be sentenced to 30 months in prison on Jan. 25. John Kiriakou is to be sentenced as part of a plea deal in which he admitted e-mailing the name of a covert officer to a reporter.
His prosecution, as well as five others, has been lauded on Capitol Hill as a long-overdue response to a rash of dangerous disclosures and defended by both President Obama and Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr.
Mr. Kiriakou is remorseful, up to a point. “I should never have provided the name,” he said.
Supporters say Mr. Kiriakou neither intended to damage national security nor did so. Some see a dark paradox in the impending imprisonment of Mr. Kiriakou, who in a 2007 appearance on ABC News defended the C.I.A.’s use of desperate measures to get information but also said that he had come to believe that waterboarding was torture and should no longer be used.

7.6 quake rocks Alaska, triggers tsunami warning

 

Los Angeles Times | January 5, 2013 | 2:11 AM (Swedish Time 11:11 AM)
Officials say a tsunami warning is in effect for parts of southern Alaska and coastal Canada after a strong earthquake shook the region.
 
For the latest information go to www.latimes.com.

Lapland, From Icy Plunge to Blazing Sky




 


Russ Juskalian for The New York Times
The northern lights above Finnish Lapland.
 
“LADIES and gentlemen, the northern lights are on,” announced a member of our group, breaking the predinner weariness. It had been another long day of cross-country skiing, but his message spurred us to action. In a flash, the cabin was filled with the sound of crinkling jackets and snow pants; a few minutes later, Arctic air was blasting across our faces.
 
Multimedia
 
nytimestravel on Twitter
 
Russ Juskalian for The New York Times
Huskies complaining about taking a break.
As I made my way across the snow, I craned my head skyward. Streaks of green plasma arced beyond silhouettes of slender pines. The effect was something like the swirls of phosphorescent plankton magnified a billion times. When I wandered back to our cabin hours later — after bumping into a pair of aurora borealis-hunting Finns in the woods who offered swigs of coffee liquor — I nearly stumbled into a reindeer.
Such is the magic of Finnish Lapland, a 38,000-square-mile region of dense pine forests, lakes and bald mountains.
There were seven of us on this weeklong trip last February in the small town of Akaslompolo, about 95 miles north of the Arctic Circle. My friend Iina, a Finn, and our de facto guide, had sold us on the idea of renting a log cabin, with tales of dancing skies, burning saunas and the likelihood that “you’ll become infected with Lapland madness, which makes you return again and again.”
The madness began on our way there, with a 13-hour, 600-mile overnight train ride on the Aurora Borealis Express — starting in Helsinki and skirting the Swedish border past the Gulf of Bothnia — to Kolari, the northernmost passenger train station in Finland. And it was aided by cases of cheap Estonian booze, courtesy of Iina’s father. Though we had three train compartments among us, we all squeezed into one for a few hours, drinking, joking about what we’d just gotten ourselves into and watching a blur of pure-white landscape slip by outside the windows.
From the Kolari station — tepee-shaped like a traditional Lapland hut and surrounded only by trees and snow — it would take less than an hour by bus to get to the twin villages of Akaslompolo and Yllasjarvi (combined population around 600), on Yllas, a smooth, treeless mountain known as an Arctic fell.
Early excavations suggest that this part of Lapland was inhabited as long as 11,300 years ago by the native ancestors of the Sami indigenous people, who still herd reindeer and eke out a living in the northernmost parts of Finland. Today, Yllas (pronounced OO-lahs) is a winter paradise for cross-country skiers and other outdoor enthusiasts, with over 200 miles of ski tracks, dozens of wilderness huts (some with saunas) and uninterrupted stretches of fells, frozen wetlands and dense spruce and birch forests. From herding reindeer to raising and racing huskies, many of the few people who live here work in tourist-related industries.
The first thing I noticed about Lapland was the light, in pastels of greens, blues, pinks and purples. The sun, which never ventures far above the skyline in the spring or fall and doesn’t even breach the horizon for a brief period in the dead of winter, casts long morning and afternoon light all day.
Our wood-framed two-level cabin was one of about two dozen on a small dead-end street leading into the forest. Like many, it was part of a time share whose owners made it available for rent. On our first afternoon in Akaslompolo, we strapped on narrow skis and took the short path from our cabin, through the trees, to the closest ski track. It wasn’t yet 4 p.m., but the blue and yellow of midday had given way to purples. Iina provided basic lessons in cross-country technique — something every Finn, it seems, is born an expert at — while the rest of us marveled more at the surroundings than the instructions.
The distracting beauty of the place was a recreational hazard. I kept expecting Santa, or a yeti, to emerge from the snow-blanketed forest. Perhaps it was my lack of focus during our short training session, or my continually drifting gaze to the blue-black sky overhead as it transitioned through layers of green to a blood-red horizon, but after a two-mile climb up a lighted ski track, I aimed back down the hill and bit it. Hard. The cartwheeling fall became my first, painful, souvenir from Lapland.
 
Read more  --> http://travel.nytimes.com/2013/01/06/travel/lapland-from-icy-plunge-to-blazing-sky.html?pagewanted=2&nl=todaysheadlines&emc=edit_th_20130105
 

Marine Life of California's Rocky Shores



A California sea hare (<em>Aplysia californica</em>), a type of sea slug, inking
A California sea hare (Aplysia californica), a type of sea slug, inking.

Looking a little like a rabbit, sea hares are a common treasure in Santa Barbara's Coal Oil Point tidepools. They can get up to 16 pounds but are usually more like three to four pounds in the lower pools. Although these slugs appear to be just a big blob, they have a hidden trick--beautiful purple ink that can be released from a gland in their mantle cavity if you reach inside the skin flaps on the top and tickle them. In nature, this acts as a smoke screen (similar to an octopus' ink).

California sea hares are herbivorous [Swedish: 'växtätande'], with a diet consisting primarily of red and brown seaweed, which gives the animal its typically dark coloration.

This is just one of the thousands of species of "tidepool treasures"--marine plants and animals found in the small bodies of water left by the ebbing tide that fill the rock basins and depressions along California's rocky shores. To learn more, see "More about this Series," below. [Image 59 in a series. See
Image 60.]

More about this Series
This series of images examines the various marine life that can be found in the different sea levels, or zones, of the rocky shores of the California coast. The images were photographed by Genevieve (Genny) Anderson of the biological sciences department, Santa Barbara City College, as part of her ongoing research on the subject.

Rocky shores provide a stable substrate for plant and animal life or organisms, as opposed to sandy beaches where the substrate (sand) is constantly moving. When the tide goes out then the influences of the air and weather (sun, rain, snow) begin to play important roles--more with the higher zones.

At any tide level on a rocky shore, a pool of water--called tidepools--can be left with the receding tide. These pools provide welcome ocean water for marine life left high and dry with a receding tide. The pools highest in the intertidal may become very hot due to the sun which may not be comfortable for some species. The pools closest to the low tide have the least influence from the air and weather and thus the greatest variety of marine life. These tidepools often mirror what is actually subtidal (below the lowest low tide, as opposed to intertidal which is between the tides). As the water goes down, most of the ocean creatures go out with it, but some can't move and are left on rocks. These creatures must be adapted to withstand not only the dryness of their area, but waves, storms, wind and rain. It is their ability to withstand dryness, and their interactions with each other (eating, being eaten, competing for space, and reproducing) that determine who dominates within the rocky intertidal areas.

In examining the marine life of the exposed rocky surfaces of California's shores, it is easiest to look at these rocky surfaces where they live in "zones." Above five feet, the surface is covered only by the highest high tide and thus dry three-quarters of the day. This is called the "Splash" Zone. Then, between five feet and two and a half feet, the surface is covered alternately by both high tides so it is dry between the high tides--about half a day. This band is called the "High Tide" Zone. Between sea level and two and a half feet the rocks are only left dry at the low, low tide. This area is thus dry only a quarter of each average day and called the "Mid Tide" Zone. Then there is what we call the "Low Tide" Zone, the area below sea level that is exposed for only a few hours every few weeks at special "minus" tides (remember, zero sea level is the average of the low, low tides).

To learn more about Genevieve (Genny) Anderson's research on marine life along California's rocky shores, visit her Web page,
"California Tidepools (Rocky Shores)." Anderson, who has been a teacher of marine biology and biological oceanography at Santa Barbara City College for over 30 years, has other interesting lesson plans and lecture material available on her website, Here.
Credit: Genny Anderson, Santa Barbara City College

Lance Armstrong Is Said to Weigh Admission of Doping




BREAKING NEWS
Friday, January 4, 2013 9:41 PM EST





 


Lance Armstrong, who this fall was stripped of his seven Tour de France titles for doping and barred for life from competing in all Olympic sports, has told associates and antidoping officials that he is considering publicly admitting that he used banned performance-enhancing drugs and blood transfusions during his cycling career, according to several people with direct knowledge of the situation. He would do this, the people said, because he wants to persuade antidoping officials to restore his eligibility so he can resume his athletic career.
For more than a decade, Armstrong has vehemently denied ever doping, even after antidoping officials laid out their case against him in October in hundreds of pages of eyewitness testimony from teammates, e-mail correspondence, financial records and laboratory analyses.
When asked if Armstrong might admit to doping, Tim Herman, Armstrong’s longtime lawyer, said: “I do not know about that. I suppose anything is possible, for sure. Right now, that’s really not on the table.”
Several legal cases stand in the way of a confession, the people familiar with the situation said.

READ MORE »

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/05/sports/cycling/lance-armstrong-said-to-weigh-admission-of-doping.html?emc=na

fredag, januari 04, 2013

Solar Eruption

 

A solar eruption gracefully rose up from the sun on Dec. 31, 2012, twisting and turning. Magnetic forces drove the flow of plasma, but without sufficient force to overcome the sun’s gravity much of the plasma fell back into the sun.

The length of the eruption extends about 160,000 miles out from the Sun. With Earth about 7,900 miles in diameter, this relatively minor eruption is about 20 times the diameter of our planet.
› See video and relative size of Earth to eruption on 'Solar Ballet on the Sun' feature.

Image Credit: NASA/SDO

This Map Shows Where Everyone Is Moving To And From In America

torsdag, januari 03, 2013

China Overtakes Sluggish Europe in Car Sales


Chinese consumers bought more cars than their European counterparts in 2012.Zoom
 
Chinese consumers bought more cars than their European counterparts in 2012.
 
While European consumers spent much of 2012 fretting about the economic crisis, China managed to surpass the Continent in automobile sales for the first time. Given China's growing middle class, the trend looks set to continue. China will probably outpace Europe in vehicle production this year, too. /Der Spiegel

Boehner reelected as House speaker


 
 

SAUL LOEB/AFP/GETTY IMAGES - Rep. John Boehner (R-Ohio) gives a thumbs-up as he walks on the House floor, during the opening session of the 113th Congress.
 


House Speaker John A. Boehner narrowly won reelection Thursday to a second term overseeing a chamber that has proved most difficult for him to manage, surviving a rebellion from the most conservative wing of his GOP caucus.
The vote followed several recent insurrections from rank-and-file Republicans that left Boehner (R-Ohio) in a less powerful posture heading into critical negotiations this year.

Bloggarkiv