Archive for February, 2009

Party Planning

Friday, February 27th, 2009

I will be holding a party soon and I am thinking about all the finishing touches at the moment. I have decided on the food I am serving and the flowers that I will be having on the table. However, I just want something a little bit special on the table. As it is a special party to celebrate the fact that my group of friends and I, have known each other for twenty years, I thought that it would be nice to give everyone a small gift. I have found some dear little photo frames and I am going to put a mini photo in each of the group of us. I am now looking for something to wrap them up in.

I tend to put gifts in cellophane bags so that they match everything and then tie them up with some coloured ribbons. However, I would like this to be more of a surprise so that I can see everyone’s faces as they open the gifts and so I have decided on getting something that is not see through. I have found some really nice gift boxes which match in with my colour scheme and will look really pretty, I just hope that they have enough in stock and can get them to me in time!

Need a Dog Bite Layer in California? Know Your Rights!

Friday, February 27th, 2009

Everyday, many people are bitten by dogs. Dogs attack for many reasons, and many times the bites are unwarranted. If you are ever attacked by a dog, try to identify it and find out who the owners are. You may be entitled to compensation. You can find out how good your chances are by consulting with dog bite attorneys. Los Angeles is known to be the home of many dangerous dogs, so if you live in or around that area, then odds are you’ve come across mean dogs a time or two.

Getting medical help for a dog bite is expensive. Sometimes even surgery is required. With a good dog bite lawyer in California, you may be able to get all your medical expenses paid for. You should get medical treatment and make your claim as soon as possible. Not only will it help your chances of winning the lawsuit, but you’ll also be bringing other families’ attention to the dog.

Good, experienced dog bite attorneys in Los Angeles will help you every step of the way. All you have to do is contact one right away for a consultation, so that you can learn about your rights and options.

Suffering From a Personal Injury? Arizona Lawyers Can Help You!

Friday, February 27th, 2009

If, for any reason, you need Arizona personal injury lawyers to help make your case, then you’ll be glad to know that there are many experienced attorneys and firms throughout the state. If you or a family member is suffering from an injury due to the careless actions of someone else, you need to have your rights preserved and protected.

There are many reasons why you need to contact Phoenix or Scottsdale personal injury lawyers, the most obvious being that your hospital bills need to be taken care of. Hospital and emergency bills will add up a great deal, and before you know it, you may owe more money than you’ll ever be able to afford. The only way you can ensure that it will all be taken care of is by contacting Scottsdale or Phoenix personal injury attorneys and asking for help.

Some are reluctant to take their personal injury claims to court. They worry that others will look down on them, or accuse them of being “greedy”. If you are truly worried about your finances, and the root of your worrying is due to carelessness ane negligence of others, then don’t be afraid of calling Arizona personal injury lawyers. Many are experienced and reliable and will give you great advice.

Kisses unleash chemicals that ease stress levels

Saturday, February 14th, 2009

“Chemistry look what you’ve done to me,” Donna Summer crooned in Science of Love, and so, it seems, she was right. Just in time for Valentine’s Day, a panel of scientists examined the mystery of what happens when hearts throb and lips lock. Kissing, it turns out, unleashes chemicals that ease stress hormones in both sexes and encourage bonding in men, though not so much in women.

Chemicals in the saliva may be a way to assess a mate, Wendy Hill, dean of the faculty and a professor of neuroscience at Lafayette College, told a meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science on Friday.

In an experiment, Hill explained, pairs of heterosexual college students who kissed for 15 minutes while listening to music experienced significant changes in their levels of the chemicals oxytocin, which affects pair bonding, and cortisol, which is associated with stress. Their blood and saliva levels of the chemicals were compared before and after the kiss.

Both men and women had a decline in cortisol after smooching, an indication their stress levels declined.

For men, oxytocin levels increased, indicating more interest in bonding, while oxytocin levels went down in women. “This was a surprise,” Hill said.

In a test group that merely held hands, chemical changes were similar, but much less pronounced, she said.

The experiment was conducted in a student health center, Hill noted. She plans a repeat “in a more romantic setting.”

Hill spoke at the session on the Science of Kissing, along with Helen Fisher of Rutgers University and Donald Lateiner of Ohio Wesleyan University.

Fisher noted that more than 90 percent of human societies practice kissing, which she believes has three components — the sex drive, romantic love and attachment.

The sex drive pushes individuals to assess a variety of partners, then romantic love causes them to focus on an individual, she said. Attachment then allows them to tolerate this person long enough to raise a child.

Men tend to think of kissing as a prelude to copulation, Fisher said. She noted that men prefer “sloppy” kisses, in which chemicals including testosterone can be passed on to the women in saliva. Testosterone increases the sex drive in both males and females.

“When you kiss an enormous part of your brain becomes active,” she added. Romantic love can last a long time, “if you kiss the right person.”

Lateiner, a classical scholar, observed that kissing appears infrequently in Greek and Roman art, but was widely practiced, despite the spread of skin disease at that time by facial kissing. And there was a potential for social faux pas by kissing the wrong person at the wrong time.

Overall, the science of kissing — philematology — is under-researcherd, Hill concluded.

YouTube testing video downloads

Friday, February 13th, 2009

YouTube said it is dabbling with letting people download videos to computers as an alternative to watching clips streamed over the Internet.

Video owners would be able to offer downloads for free or for small fees paid through a Google Checkout service, according to YouTube product manager Thai Tran.

“Many video creators on YouTube want their work to be seen far and wide,” Tran wrote in a YouTube blog post.

“They don’t mind sharing their work, provided that they get the proper credit.”

YouTube has been seeking ways to make money off videos shared at the popular website and address complaints from film and television studios worried that pirated material is swapped there.

“We’ve started working with a few partners who want their videos shared universally and even enjoyed away from an Internet connection,” Tran wrote.

Video copyright owners would be able to provide Creative Commons permits that license YouTube members to reuse content within specified limits.

“We’re also testing an option that gives video owners the ability to permit downloading of their videos from YouTube,” Tran noted.

Lecture videos from classes at a set of US universities including Stanford and Duke are being offered as free downloads at YouTube as part of a test of the service. YouTube channels for Khan Academy, Household Hacker and Pogobat are also participating in the test of the potential “distribution and revenue-generating tool,” according to Tran.

Royal watchers can track British Queen on website

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

More than 30 years after she sent her first email, the Queen will unveil a new version of her website on Thursday that allows her subjects to keep track of the royal family using an online map.

The revamped site, www.royal.gov.uk, displays the royals’ past and future engagements on an interactive Google map.

Other features include direct links to royal video clips on YouTube, job listings and a new section on the royals’ animals.

There are currently openings for trainee butlers, whose duties include delivering “tea and coffee trays, breakfast trays and newspapers … in an efficient and discreet manner.”

While the Queen has yet to start a blog, the site will have new audio and video footage, including her first public speech.

Broadcast on October 13, 1940 while she was still Princess Elizabeth, the speech was a message to the children of the Commonwealth, many of them living away from home due to World War Two.

With a discreet royal crest at the top of each page and a clear layout, the site is designed to be more user-friendly. It is the third version of the site, first launched in 1997.

The Queen will inaugurate it at a Buckingham Palace reception with scientist Tim Berners-Lee, who invented the World Wide Web while working at the CERN laboratory in Switzerland.

The Queen sent her first email in 1976 during a visit to an army base.

Big Bang experiment to restart in September

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is to begin firing its proton beams once again at the end of September after being shut down abruptly in the midst of recreating conditions in the moments after the Big Bang.

“The new schedule foresees first beams in the LHC at the end of September this year, with collisions following in late October. A short technical stop has also been foreseen over the Christmas period,” the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) confirmed in a statement Monday.

The LHC has been hailed as a scientific accomplishment but the experiment to understand how the universe came to acquire its current shape had to be halted after the $5.4 billion machine developed a snag Sep 19, 2008 - just nine days after experiments began.

The CERN said Monday the experiment will run through to autumn next year, ensuring that scientists have enough data to carry out their first new physics analyses and have results to announce in 2010.

The Geneva-based body said technical specialists were of the opinion that the new schedule is tight but realistic. “The schedule we have now is without a doubt the best for the LHC and for the physicists waiting for data,” said CERN Director General Rolf Heuer.

“It is cautious, ensuring that all the necessary work is done on the LHC before we start-up, yet it allows physics research to begin this year.” This new schedule represents a delay of six weeks with respect to the previous schedule, which foresaw the LHC “cold at the beginning of July”.

CERN said the delay has been caused by factors such as implementation of a new enhanced protection system for the busbar and magnet splices; installation of new pressure-relief valves to reduce the collateral damage in case of a repeat incident; application of more stringent safety constraints; and scheduling constraints associated with helium transfer and storage.

“The enhanced protection system measures the electrical resistance in the cable joints (splices) and is much more sensitive than the system existing on 19 September,” it added.

CERN, the world’s leading laboratory for particle physics, has 20 member-states. Six countries - India, Israel, Japan, Russia, the US and Turkey - and two international organisations have observer status.

Few in U.S. see doctor or get medication for flu: study

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

Only a small percentage of people who get influenza or a similar illness are ever prescribed drugs shown to help the virus, according to a study released on Monday.

The survey of flu patients also showed that about five percent of U.S. children see a doctor or nurse for influenza-like illness, compared to just about 2 percent of adults.

Thomson Reuters Healthcare surveyed insurance claims covering nearly 20 million people with health insurance over two flu seasons in 2005-2006 and 2006-2007.

Anywhere between 5 percent and 20 percent of the population gets flu in a given flu season, the CDC estimates.

The researchers, part of one of the research divisions of media and information firm Thomson Reuters, were looking at influenza-like illnesses, which include influenza proper but also other respiratory diseases that cause fever, cough and other symptoms.

They found that 4 to 6 percent of patients with influenza like illnesses filled a prescription for an antiviral medication. Roche and Co’s Tamiflu and GlaxoSmithKline’s Relenza are both recommended for treating influenza.

But most clinics do not use on-the-spot flu tests, and use of the drugs is low.

Doctors usually recommend only rest, fluids and perhaps analgesics for treating viruses such as flu, although influenza kills 36,000 Americans in an average flu season, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Most of those who die are elderly or have chronic disease, but the Thomson Reuters data showed that patients with flu-like illness who seek medical treatment are more likely to be children.

“Approximately 1 in 18 children, 1 in 38 elderly persons, and 1 in 45 adults used influenza-like-illness-related inpatient or outpatient services in each flu season,” the report reads.

This works out to 5.6 percent of children, compared to 2.6 percent of the elderly.

But older people in general did use doctors more often.

“A greater percentage of elderly enrollees (53.4 percent) than adult (32.4 percent) or child enrollees (26.4 percent) used any inpatient or outpatient health services in flu season 2006-2007,” the report reads.

DUI attorney for you

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

The term DUI stands for drinking under the influence of alcohol. There are a number of cases that involve drunk drivers and it is up to the attorney to find out the truth. A Massachusetts DUI attorney is one who is very well versed with the complexities and facts that arise when such cases are put in court. Ignition interlock device or IID is device is affixed within the interior of the person’s car. The principle of working of this device is similar to that of a breath analyzer. The IID also asks at specific time intervals for a breath sample so that if the person who is driving is drunk he will not be able to continue. The IID in such cases will turn off the ignition, switch on hazard light and start an inbuilt siren to warn people.

A hardship license is a certificate issued to a minor who is 14 or 15 years of age. The individual who procures such a license is not permitted to drive heavy vehicles or tow vehicles. However if an individual carrying a hardship license finds himself in a situation in which he is the only one who is qualified to drive a vehicle he is allowed to do so.

Egypt police beat, detain blogger: rights group

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

Egyptian police have beaten and detained a 22-year-old Egyptian blogger and activist who has expressed support for Gaza, an Egyptian human rights group said on Monday.

A statement from the Cairo-based Arabic Network for Human Rights Information said police officers on Friday beat Diaa Eddin Gad in front of his house in the Nile Delta province of Gharbiya, put him in a police car and drove off.

Police gave no reason for the arrest, and have not yet disclosed where Gad is being held, according to the group.

An interior ministry spokesman did not return calls asking for confirmation of the detention.

Gamal Eid, director of the Network, described Gad as a member of the liberal Wafd party and the Kefaya (Enough) protest movement, and said he had attended protests against the recent 22-day Israeli offensive on the Gaza Strip.

Gad’s website Sawt Ghadib or “An Angry Voice,” (http://soutgadeb.blogspot.com) contains pro-Gaza slogans and news and commentary on the Israeli offensive, as well as strident denunciations of Egypt’s President Hosni Mubarak and security services.

“Bloggers have become a major target of the police authorities in Egypt, and all these assaults are committed outside the law or under the cloak of the emergency state,” the statement said.

Also on Friday, police detained Egyptian-German political activist and blogger on Gaza Strip issues Philip Rizk.

In a separate release, the Network said that Egyptian police had carried out a raid on Rizk’s house early on Monday, searching it and demanding Rizk’s father accompany them to his office, which the police said they wanted to search.

The release said police threatened to use force on Rizk’s father, also a dual national, if he refused, but were dissuaded by the presence of a lawyer from the Network and an official from the German embassy.