Thursday, April 25, 2013

It is what it is: College Football Playoff

PASADENA, Calif. (AP) ? The name says it all: College Football Playoff.

The major college football conference commissioners named the new postseason system that starts in 2014 on Tuesday, the first of three days of meetings at a resort hotel in the Rose Bowl's backyard.

Out with the Bowl Championship Series and in with the College Football Playoff.

"I don't think you can ever go too wrong calling something what it is," Pac-12 Commissioner Larry Scott said. "Things that make sense tend to stand the test of time."

Next on the agenda is to pick three more bowls for the six-bowl semifinal rotation ? the Rose, Orange and Sugar are already in ? and where the first championship game will be held on Jan. 12, 2015. That comes Wednesday.

Four bowls have bid to be part of the rotation. The clear front-runners are the Cotton, Chick-fil-A and Fiesta. The Holiday Bowl in San Diego also put in a bid, but even its organizers acknowledged they are a long shot at best.

The finalists to host the first championship game are Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas, the billion dollar home of the NFL team and the Cotton Bowl, and Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Fla., home of the NFL's Buccaneers and the Outback Bowl.

Arlington is the favorite, but the competition has been serious.

"I'm glad it has," Big 12 Commissioner Bob Bowlsby said Tuesday. "I think it will give us a better outcome."

Even before an official announcement about the name was made on Tuesday, the website www.collegefootballplayoff.com was up and running and allowing fans to vote on a new logo. And there also was a Twitter handle: (at)cfbplayoff.

"It's really simple. It gets right to the point," BCS executive director Bill Hancock, who will hold the same position in the playoff system, said at a short news conference.

"Nothing cute. Nothing fancy. We decided it would be best to call it what it is."

Premiere Sports Management in Overland Park, Kan., was hired to help come up with a name and brand the new system. A committee of commissioners handled the naming of the new system, and Hancock said they ran through "in the neighborhood of three dozen" names.

Scott said: "We're clearly trying to make a clear break from the BCS."

The new postseason format will create two national semifinals to be played New Year's Eve or New Year's Day, with the winners advancing. The six bowls in the playoff rotation will host marquee, BCS-type games on New Year's Eve or New Year's Day during the seasons they do not host a semifinal.

The first semifinals will be played at the Rose and Sugar bowls on Jan. 1, 2014.

Also on the agenda this week for the commissioners will be the composition of the selection committee that will set the field for the playoff. They have said they would like the committee to be similar to the one that picks the teams for the NCAA basketball tournament, made up of conference commissioners and athletic directors.

Bowlsby said he expected both current and former administrators to have a spot on the committee.

"The hardest thing is making sure we're arming whoever is on the committee with the tools that it takes to differentiate among closely proximal teams," Bowlsby said. "You have to have some metrics available to differentiate between three, four, five, six and seven.

"You can't just say we like blue uniforms and not gold uniforms. You've got to arm the committee with the tools that it takes to do their job."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/college-football-playoff-071605389--spt.html

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Research spinoff ReXceptor gets license for Alzheimer's treatment

Research spinoff ReXceptor gets license for Alzheimer's treatment [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 25-Apr-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Marv Kropko
mrk107@case.edu
216-368-6890
Case Western Reserve University

CLEVELAND Case Western Reserve's Technology Transfer Office has granted an exclusive license of a novel Alzheimer's Disease (AD) treatment strategy to spinoff company ReXceptor Inc., which plans to initiate early-stage human clinical trials of the medication within the next few months.

Gary Landreth, PhD, the Riuko and Archie G. Co Professor of Neurosciences, and his then-graduate student, Paige Cramer, PhD, co-founded ReXceptor after discovering that bexarotene (a medication trademarked as Targretin) reversed AD symptoms in mice within 72 hours of a single dose of treatment. Published last year in the journal Science, their results drew international interest, including stories in the Wall Street Journal and on CNN.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration originally approved bexarotene for the treatment of cutaneous T-cell lymphomasa form of skin cancerin 1999. But Landreth, director of the medical school's Alzheimer's Research Laboratory, Cramer and their colleagues found that the medication significantly clears amyloid beta, a protein implicated in the development of Alzheimer's disease when it accumulates in the brain.

The researchers demonstrated that a dose of bexarotene (a retinoid X receptor (RXR) agonist) clears amyloid beta build-up by 25 percent within six hours, an effect that lasted for up to three days. Cognitively impaired mice resumed normal behaviors (demonstrating a restored sense of smell and instinctive interest in nest-building) within 72 hours of receiving the drug.

More than 5.4 million Americans suffer from Alzheimer's disease today, and that figure is expected to more than triple by the year 2050. Translating Case Western Reserve's groundbreaking research into a treatment available for patients is a complex process, but the researchers have great hope for the promise of their approach.

The first stage of testing will involve healthy volunteers, explained Michael Haag, the university's interim director of technology management and the chief executive officer for ReXceptor. Essentially, the researchers hope to prove that the medication acts on amyloid beta in the human brain in a manner similar to the one observed in animal studies. In lay terms, bexarotene functions as a kind of chaperone that escorts the problematic protein out of the cerebral area.

"This is an important proof-of-mechanism study that is a prerequisite for subsequent clinical evaluation of this drug in Alzheimer's patients," Landreth explained.

To date ReXceptor has secured $1.4 million to advance its work. This support includes a landmark collaboration between the Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Foundation and the BrightFocus Foundation to fund early-stage research. The arrangement includes The Charles Evans Foundation/Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Award to ReXceptor of $500,000 and a $250,000 contribution from BrightFocus to the collaboration with ADDF. The company also received two anonymous investments totaling $450,000, and $200,000 from Case Western Reserve.

This new funding has allowed ReXceptor to enter into a formal partnership with C2N Diagnostics, which will assist the company with the initiation and coordination of the clinical trial. C2N Diagnostics will provide its proprietary stable isotope labeling (SILK) platform to measure the metabolism of both brain-derived amyloid beta and apolipoprotein E in the human clinical study.

Haag credited the university's Office of Research and Technology Management, along with the medical school's chief translational officers and Council to Advance Human Health, with providing critical guidance and support in bringing the company to this stage.

###

Those interested in learning more about Alzheimer's disease clinical trials can link to the Alzheimer's Association website, or to BrightFocus Foundation for additional resources.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Research spinoff ReXceptor gets license for Alzheimer's treatment [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 25-Apr-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Marv Kropko
mrk107@case.edu
216-368-6890
Case Western Reserve University

CLEVELAND Case Western Reserve's Technology Transfer Office has granted an exclusive license of a novel Alzheimer's Disease (AD) treatment strategy to spinoff company ReXceptor Inc., which plans to initiate early-stage human clinical trials of the medication within the next few months.

Gary Landreth, PhD, the Riuko and Archie G. Co Professor of Neurosciences, and his then-graduate student, Paige Cramer, PhD, co-founded ReXceptor after discovering that bexarotene (a medication trademarked as Targretin) reversed AD symptoms in mice within 72 hours of a single dose of treatment. Published last year in the journal Science, their results drew international interest, including stories in the Wall Street Journal and on CNN.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration originally approved bexarotene for the treatment of cutaneous T-cell lymphomasa form of skin cancerin 1999. But Landreth, director of the medical school's Alzheimer's Research Laboratory, Cramer and their colleagues found that the medication significantly clears amyloid beta, a protein implicated in the development of Alzheimer's disease when it accumulates in the brain.

The researchers demonstrated that a dose of bexarotene (a retinoid X receptor (RXR) agonist) clears amyloid beta build-up by 25 percent within six hours, an effect that lasted for up to three days. Cognitively impaired mice resumed normal behaviors (demonstrating a restored sense of smell and instinctive interest in nest-building) within 72 hours of receiving the drug.

More than 5.4 million Americans suffer from Alzheimer's disease today, and that figure is expected to more than triple by the year 2050. Translating Case Western Reserve's groundbreaking research into a treatment available for patients is a complex process, but the researchers have great hope for the promise of their approach.

The first stage of testing will involve healthy volunteers, explained Michael Haag, the university's interim director of technology management and the chief executive officer for ReXceptor. Essentially, the researchers hope to prove that the medication acts on amyloid beta in the human brain in a manner similar to the one observed in animal studies. In lay terms, bexarotene functions as a kind of chaperone that escorts the problematic protein out of the cerebral area.

"This is an important proof-of-mechanism study that is a prerequisite for subsequent clinical evaluation of this drug in Alzheimer's patients," Landreth explained.

To date ReXceptor has secured $1.4 million to advance its work. This support includes a landmark collaboration between the Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Foundation and the BrightFocus Foundation to fund early-stage research. The arrangement includes The Charles Evans Foundation/Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Award to ReXceptor of $500,000 and a $250,000 contribution from BrightFocus to the collaboration with ADDF. The company also received two anonymous investments totaling $450,000, and $200,000 from Case Western Reserve.

This new funding has allowed ReXceptor to enter into a formal partnership with C2N Diagnostics, which will assist the company with the initiation and coordination of the clinical trial. C2N Diagnostics will provide its proprietary stable isotope labeling (SILK) platform to measure the metabolism of both brain-derived amyloid beta and apolipoprotein E in the human clinical study.

Haag credited the university's Office of Research and Technology Management, along with the medical school's chief translational officers and Council to Advance Human Health, with providing critical guidance and support in bringing the company to this stage.

###

Those interested in learning more about Alzheimer's disease clinical trials can link to the Alzheimer's Association website, or to BrightFocus Foundation for additional resources.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-04/cwru-rsr042513.php

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Carville and Matalin working on joint memoir

(AP) ? James Carville and Mary Matalin, political rivals and personal bedfellows, are collaborating on a book in which they will again agree to disagree.

The longtime strategists have a deal with Blue Rider Press for a memoir with the working title "You Can Go Home Again." Officials with Blue Rider, an imprint of Penguin Group (USA), told The Associated Press on Thursday that the book is scheduled for 2014.

Carville, a Democrat, and Matalin, a Republican, previously worked together on the 1993 release "All's Fair."

According to Blue Rider, Matalin and Carville will share political war stories, their takes on current and past events and how they managed to stay married for 20 years and raise two children.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-04-25-US-Books-Carville-and-Matalin/id-3a0ed75dfaa44f5e8fb28bf29a32e849

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Wednesday, April 24, 2013

'Dancing' knocks off another contestant

By Drusilla Moorhouse, TODAY contributor

The fight is finally over for Victor Ortiz on "Dancing With the Stars." After floundering for weeks at the bottom of the scoreboard, the welterweight champion and his partner, Lindsay Arnold, were KO'd Tuesday night.

ABC

The bad news did nothing to tarnish the boxer's gleaming grin.

"I'm happy to get this far," he told hosts Tom Bergeron and Brooke Burke-Charvet, admitting with a rueful laugh: "I definitely need some dance moves!"

So do Andy Dick and Sean Lowe, both of whom were in jeopardy of going home. But once again, the comeback comedian was declared safe, leaving "The Bachelor" star to await his fate in the bottom two.

Spared for another week, will Sean follow judge Len Goodman's advice and "set (his) sights higher" than just trying to beat Andy?

And do any of the guys stand a chance of beating Zendaya, Kellie Pickler or Aly Raisman? The trio of dancing queens were of course declared safe again, followed by Ingo Rademacher and Jacoby Jones.

Both men reteamed with Zendaya and Victor for another performance of their group paso doble routine to Stevie Wonder's "Higher Ground." (The fans, who voted for the encore, obviously appreciated the guys' toned torsos more than the judges, who gave the win Monday night to Team Samba.)

Also appearing on the results show were Olly Murs, who sang "Troublemaker," and Will.i.am, performing his new single "#thatPower."

Leading man honors, however, go to Ingo's adorable son Peanut. The 4-year-old was caught on camera after Monday night's show yelling, "See you at the after-party" like a seasoned Hollywood star.

Do any of the dudes stand a chance at winning the mirror-ball trophy? Tell us at the after-party on our Facebook page!

Source: http://theclicker.today.com/_news/2013/04/23/17885270-victor-ortiz-knocked-out-of-dancing-with-the-stars?lite

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Recipe for low-cost, biomass-derived catalyst for hydrogen production

Apr. 24, 2013 ? In a paper to be published in an upcoming issue of Energy & Environmental Science, researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory describe details of a low-cost, stable, effective catalyst that could replace costly platinum in the production of hydrogen. The catalyst, made from renewable soybeans and abundant molybdenum metal, produces hydrogen in an environmentally friendly, cost-effective manner, potentially increasing the use of this clean energy source.

The research has already garnered widespread recognition for Shilpa and Shweta Iyer, twin-sister high school students who contributed to the research as part of an internship under the guidance of Brookhaven chemist Wei-Fu Chen, supported by projects led by James Muckerman, Etsuko Fujita, and Kotaro Sasaki.

"This paper reports the 'hard science' from what started as the Iyer twins' research project and has resulted in the best-performing, non-noble-metal-containing hydrogen evolution catalyst yet known -- even better than bulk platinum metal," Muckerman said.

The project branches off from the Brookhaven group's research into using sunlight to develop alternative fuels. Their ultimate goal is to find ways to use solar energy -- either directly or via electricity generated by solar cells -- to convert the end products of hydrocarbon combustion, water and carbon dioxide, back into a carbon-based fuel. Dubbed "artificial photosynthesis," this process mimics how plants convert those same ingredients to energy in the form of sugars. One key step is splitting water, or water electrolysis.

"By splitting liquid water (H2O) into hydrogen and oxygen, the hydrogen can be regenerated as a gas (H2) and used directly as fuel," Sasaki explained. "We sought to fabricate a commercially viable catalyst from earth-abundant materials for application in water electrolysis, and the outcome is indeed superb."

." ..the best-performing, non-noble-metal-containing hydrogen evolution catalyst yet known..."

This form of hydrogen production could help the scientists achieve their ultimate goal.

"A very promising route to making a carbon-containing fuel is to hydrogenate carbon dioxide (or carbon monoxide) using solar-produced hydrogen," said Fujita, who leads the artificial photosynthesis group in the Brookhaven Chemistry Department.

But with platinum as the main ingredient in the most effective water-splitting catalysts, the process is currently too costly to be economically viable.

Comsewogue High School students Shweta and Shilpa Iyer entered the lab as the search for a cost-effective replacement was on.

The Brookhaven team had already identified some promising leads with experiments demonstrating the potential effectiveness of low-cost molybdenum paired with carbon, as well as the use of nitrogen to confer some resistance to the corrosive, acidic environment required in proton exchange membrane water electrolysis cells. But these two approaches had not yet been tried together.

The students set out to identify plentiful and inexpensive sources of carbon and nitrogen, and test ways to combine them with a molybdenum salt.

"The students became excited about using familiar materials from their everyday lives to meet a real-world energy challenge," Chen recounted. The team tested a wide variety of sources of biomass -- leaves, stems, flowers, seeds, and legumes -- with particular interest in those with high protein content because the amino acids that make up proteins are a rich source of nitrogen. High-protein soybeans turned out to be the best.

To make the catalyst the team ground the soybeans into a powder, mixed the powder with ammonium molybdate in water, then dried and heated the samples in the presence of inert argon gas. "A subsequent high temperature treatment (carburization) induced a reaction between molybdenum and the carbon and nitrogen components of the soybeans to produce molybdenum carbides and molybdenum nitrides," Chen explained. "The process is simple, economical, and environmentally friendly."

Electrochemical tests of the separate ingredients showed that molybdenum carbide is effective for converting H2O to H2, but not stable in acidic solution, while molybdenum nitride is corrosion-resistant but not efficient for hydrogen production. A nanostructured hybrid of these two materials, however, remained active and stable even after 500 hours of testing in a highly acidic environment.

"We attribute the high activity of the molybdenum-soy catalyst (MoSoy) to the synergistic effect between the molybdenum-carbide phase and the molybdenum-nitride phase in the composite material," Chen said.

Structural and chemical studies of the new catalyst conducted at Brookhaven's National Synchrotron Light Source (NSLS) and the Center for Functional Nanomaterials (CFN) are also reported in the paper, and provide further details underlying the high performance of this new catalyst.

"The presence of nitrogen and carbon atoms in the vicinity of the catalytic molybdenum center facilitates the production of hydrogen from water," Muckerman said.

The scientists also tested the MoSoy catalyst anchored on sheets of graphene -- an approach that has proven effective for enhancing catalyst performance in electrochemical devices such as batteries, supercapacitors, fuel cells, and water electrolyzers. Using a high-resolution transmission microscope in Brookhven's Condensed Matter Physics and Materials Science Department, the scientists were able to observe the anchored MoSoy nanocrystals on 2D graphene sheets.

The graphene-anchored MoSoy catalyst surpassed the performance of pure platinum metal. Though not quite as active as commercially available platinum catalysts, the high performance of graphene-anchored MoSoy was extremely encouraging to the scientific team.

"The direct growth of anchored MoSoy nanocrystals on graphene sheets may enhance the formation of strongly coupled hybrid materials with intimate, seamless electron transfer pathways, thus accelerating the electron transfer rate for the chemical desorption of hydrogen from the catalyst, further reducing the energy required for the reaction to take place," Sasaki said.

The scientists are conducting additional studies to gain a deeper understanding of the nature of the interaction at the catalyst-graphene interface, and exploring ways to further improve its performance.

In the paper, the authors -- including the two high-school students -- conclude: "This study unambiguously provides evidence that a cheap and earth-abundant transition metal such as molybdenum can be turned into an active catalyst by the controlled solid-state reaction with soybeans?The preparation of the MoSoy catalyst is simple and can be easily scaled up. Its long-term durability and ultra-low capital cost satisfy the prerequisites for its application in the construction of large-scale devices. These findings thus open up new prospects for combining inexpensive biomass and transition metals?to produce catalysts for electro-catalytic reactions."

Additional collaborators in this research were Chiu-Hui Wang and Yimei Zhu of Brookhaven Lab.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by DOE/Brookhaven National Laboratory.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Wei-Fu Chen, Shilpa Iyer, Shweta Iyer, Kotaro Sasaki, Chiu-Hui Wang, Yimei Zhu, James T. Muckerman, Etsuko Fujita. Biomass-Derived Electrocatalytic Composites for Hydrogen Evolution. Energy & Environmental Science, 2013; DOI: 10.1039/C3EE40596F

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/z7rfSFKmS_U/130424103132.htm

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How Much Food Can You Buy for 5 Bucks Around the World?

Five dollars does not always equal five dollars. Well, I mean, it does but you could definitely stretch your dollar better in another country. Take bananas, for example, $5 gets you 8.5 pounds of it in America but $5 in Ethiopia gets you a whopping 25 pounds of bananas! And more importantly: beer. In China you can get a 12-pack for $5 bucks. Try getting that in America (you only get 4 beers for the same Lincoln). At least we're not as expensive as Australia, right? [BuzzFeed via FoodBeast] More »
    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/GkYDOJskeOc/how-much-food-can-you-buy-for-5-bucks-around-the-world

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Moneysaver PSA: Limited Time Gaming Deals For Tuesday - Kotaku

Set your iPhone's alarm, Amazon's got Gold Box deals on video games, and we've got all the details right here.

Starting at 3am EST, Amazon will be running limited time sales on several games and accessories. The deal ends either when time expires or when stock is sold through. We're going to list the offers below, times are all Eastern Standard. Thanks goes to Cheap Ass Gamer for the info. [Amazon Gold Box]

All Day
? PS3 God of War: Ascension ($40) | $55+ elsewhere
? PS3 God of War Legacy PS3 Bundle ($280) | $327+ elsewhere

3-8am
? 360 Gears of War: Judgment ($45) |

8-10am
? 360 Halo 4 ($30) | $38+ elsewhere

10am-12pm
? PS3/360 Hitman: Absolution ($19) | $31+ elsewhere

12-2pm
? PC/Mac Starcraft II: Wings of Liberty ($18) | $40+ elsewhere

2-3pm
? PS3/360 Dead Space 3 ($40) | This is currently $33 on Groupon, we'd advise you get it there.

3-5pm
? Tritton 720+ 7.1 Surround Headset for PS3 and 360 ($100) | $150+ elsewhere

5-7pm
? Turtle Beach Ear Force PX51 Premium Wireless Dolby Digital Gaming Headset ($200) | $222+ elsewhere

7-9pm
? 3DS/Vita Zero Escape: Virtue's Last Reward ($30) | $40+ elsewhere

9-11pm
? 360 Forza Horizon/Forza Horizon Limited Edition ($20) | $40 elsewhere | Why both versions are listed is not currently clear.

11pm-Midnight
? 360 Kinect Sports Ultimate Collection ($15) | $43+ elsewhere

Midnight-2am
? Lego Lord of the Rings ($20) | Which platforms is not currently clear, probably all of them.

Dig in, I'll update this throughout the day. Come back at 2:15pm for an all-new Moneysaver, and check out all the other deals in Monday's full Moneysaver roundup. Follow me on Kinja for deals as I post them, and check out Deals.Kinja.com for even more discounts.

Welcome to the new Moneysaver, now brought to you by the Commerce Team. Our aim is to bring Kotaku readers the best gaming deals available. And to be very clear, we also make money if you buy. We're making new improvements every day, and we want your feedback.

Basically every major release of the past several months is on sale today, and for every platform.? Read?

Source: http://kotaku.com/moneysaver-psa-limited-time-gaming-deals-for-tuesday-477584825

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