Monday, December 31, 2012

Best Parenting Tweets: What Moms And Dads Said On Twitter This Week

It finally happened. After weeks of shopping and decorating and cooking and wrapping, Christmas came and went, leaving only a trail of new toys in its wake -- and parents on Twitter grappling with the aftermath. Kristen Chase summed up the phenomenon of doting nanas and papas gifting toys that kids like and parents hate, tweeting: "'Oh look, no 'off' button and it takes 400 watch batteries, PERFECT!' -All Grandparents everywhere." And Tanis Miller warned of the dangers of asking kids to name their favorite presents, explaining, "You'll taste the bitterness of defeat when you realize it wasn't a gift you bought." Oof.

Of course, with the kids home from school (surrounded by treats aplenty), moms and dads had much to say on Twitter about all aspects of parenting. From musings on the micro-management of art projects to how many gadgets are required to get through one flight, here are this week's most entertaining parenting tweets.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/29/best-parenting-tweets_n_2382623.html

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Thursday, December 13, 2012

PayDay Loans Online Mag For ProAdvice and Finance News ...

Two Republican senators and a congressman questioned the purchase of a Chinese company of the bankrupt battery manufacturer A123 System. Wanxiang Group Corp. won the auction conducted under the supervision of the US Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware. The Chinese company will buy some of A123?s assets for $256.6 million.

A123?s government business was bought by Navitas Systems. US Representative Bill Huizenga said that Wanxiang?s acquisition of A123 raised some concerns even if the defense operations were sold to another entity.

Johnson Controls was expected to buy A123?s automotive unit but Wanxiang interceded and provided bankruptcy financing. The Republicans were concerned about the $249 million grant that the US Department of Energy gave to A123 in order to increase its manufacturing capacity. Now the Chinese company owns the capacity.

Senators Chuck Grassley of Iowa and John Thune of South Dakota repeated their concerns they have raised before. Thune called President Barack Obama?s energy policy a win-win for China and lose-lose situation for the taxpayers.

Of the $249 million grant, $133 million was already forwarded to A123. The remaining balance would not be given to Wanxiang, even if it manages to clear the final obstacles in acquiring the batter company. The money was used on facilities and equipment to be used in the United States and the government expects those assets to remain in Michigan and anywhere else in the country.

According to Energy Department spokesman Bill Gibbons, the department worked through the bankruptcy process to make sure that the equipment and plants that were partially paid for by the Recovery Act would stay in Michigan and give American workers more job opportunities.

It has been reported that a court hearing to grant approval for the sale is set for Tuesday. The Committee for Foreign Investment in the US will also review the Wanxiang deal.

Source: http://www.paydayloansmag.com/republican-lawmakers-question-wanxiang-group-purchase-of-a123-systems/

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Monday, December 10, 2012

DNA study finds many genetic mutations are rare and recent

Human DNA contains myriad individual differences that influence a host of traits, be they eye color or the ability to digest milk. Now a study shows that most of those tiny genetic variations are rare ? and they arose in the very recent history of our species.

Joshua Akey, a geneticist at the University of Washington in Seattle, led a consortium of scientists who examined the DNA of 4,298 European Americans and 2,217 African Americans. Limiting their analysis to the parts of the genome that contain instructions for making proteins, the study authors found more than 1 million sites where the building blocks of DNA ? the nucleotides known by the letters A, C, G and T ? varied in at least one of the subjects.

Most of those individual variants were rare, with each one found in fewer than 0.5% of the people in the sample. In nearly half of the cases of mutations, each variant was detected in only one person, according to their report last month in the journal Nature.

This meant that the genetic changes must have cropped up very recently, because otherwise there would have been ample time for them to spread through generations of people and show up in many more of the study participants, the authors said.

The scientists were even able to estimate the age of variations based on how rare or common they were ? and found that about 73% of the mutations had occurred in the last 5,000 to 10,000 years.

The percentage of rare ? and therefore recent ? mutations was greater in European Americans than African Americans, the team reported. That fits with the history of Homo sapiens: The ancestors of Europeans went through explosive population growth when they left their homeland in Africa tens of thousands of years ago.

The scientists also tried to gauge the likelihood that these mutations would influence someone's risk for disease and other traits. If a gene region had exactly the same structure in humans, apes and other vertebrates, they reasoned, it must be important; any changes there would thus be more likely to harm. So would any mutation that would alter the properties of a protein.

These mutations were even more likely to be recent: Fully 86% of them arose within the last 5,000 to 10,000 years.

It's not really surprising that the more-likely-to-be-harmful mutations would be rare and recent, Akey said. Any mutation that was truly toxic would quickly be weeded out from a population, and even those that were merely damaging would reduce a person's chances of passing on their genes, so they would disappear eventually too.

The results give a sense of just how quickly the human population has expanded in the last 10,000 years ? and how that has affected our genetic makeup, said Shamil Sunyaev, a computational geneticist at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston who wasn't involved in the study. Without that population explosion, there would have been fewer chances for mutations to occur and the proportion of recent mutations would not have been so high.

There is a practical lesson as well, Akey added. In recent years, medical researchers have been working hard to find patterns of common genetic mutations that are linked to common diseases. Maybe they need to focus more attention on the rare mutations instead, he said.

The study is "really the first to get at this in a fashion you'd like to see ? with large data sets and lots and lots of people," said Stanford University geneticist Michael Snyder, who wasn't involved in the study.

Snyder added that you can see such mutations accruing in recent studies that have shown, in families with autistic children, for example, that many affected children carry brand-new DNA changes that arose spontaneously in a parent.

rosie.mestel@latimes.com

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/latimes/news/science/~3/hA3Dfyr48Ww/la-sci-human-genetic-variation-20121210,0,812992.story

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