Home » Archives by category » News » World News (Page 889)

Date of Birth : 4 October 1976 (34 years old) Place of Birth : San Francisco, USA Dated : Benicio del Toro, Leonardo DiCaprio, Adam Sandler Alicia Silverstone is an American actor who started out doing tv-commercials already at age 6. Had her big break in the movie Clueless from 1995. Has dated Adam Sandler. Alicia is also a vegan. Alicia has won several awards for her film performances including MTV Movie Awards, National Board of Review, and Young Artist Awards. She has been nominated for an Emmy award and a Golden Globe Award. During her career, she turned down several key roles in films, including Dede Truitt in The Opposite of Sex, and a role in Scream 3. She was also considered for the roles in Scream 2, Bewitched, Little Women and Heartbreakers Speaks fluent French. Alicia Silverstone Photo’s :

Continue reading …
Flood risk to new homes being ignored, says report

Houses still being built on floodplains despite higher risk of flooding, says Committee on Climate Change Local authorities are continuing to allow tens of thousands of houses to be built on floodplains, despite a growing risk of flooding as climate change takes hold, according to a new report from the government’s climate adviser. The report, from a sub-unit of the Committee on Climate Change , also found a marked increase in the risk of drought across the country. At present, only 8% of key water “resource zones” – catchment areas for water – are in danger of a shortfall in supplies, even in a severe drought. Within 15 years, that number is likely to be about 45% if nothing is done, meaning millions of people could be affected. Lord Krebs, chair of the adaptation sub-committee, called on the government to begin taking action urgently, in order to head off much greater problems with drought and flooding. These could include tougher building regulations so that all houses were equipped with water-saving devices, including water meters, and those at risk of flood with preventive measures, ranging from sealed airbricks to raised floors and flood-resistant paint. He said: “By taking steps to manage this vulnerability, local communities, businesses and households can save money today and reduce the costs of climate change in the future.” At present, the UK is coping with these problems, but the committee warned that in key areas of infrastructure, such as water supply and flood protection, the country was “near its limits… and could be pushed over the edge by climate change”. Government cuts earlier this year reduced the number of flood defence projects by a thousand. Krebs said he was surprised at how many houses are still built on floodplains around the UK – around 12,000 to 16,000 every year in England alone. He said one of the key reasons could be aesthetic: houses built on high ground, where they are less at risk of flood, are more visible than those set in a valley, where they are at much greater flood risk. If people object to houses being visible in their view, that could put local authorities off attempting to build on more suitable ground. “My assumption is that local authorities are making trade-offs between floodplain building and considerations of natural beauty,” he said. David Symons, director at environmental consultancy WSP Environment & Energy, said planning policy should be changed drastically. He said: “Current planning policies provide too much wriggle room for local authorities. Although local authorities do have to consider and consult on flood risk, they have the power to ignore these findings completely and grant planning permission to new developments regardless of the risks. ” This was exacerbated by the government’s new assumption in favour of development, and because the government changed the way it funds flood mitigation – it now encourages match funding from the private sector for flood protection investments. “This means that development in the floodplain could be more likely if a developer is willing to pay the premium as part of obtaining planning permission,” said Symons. This could mean developers simply pay an upfront cost, leaving the householders to cope with the after-effects. Other infrastructure at risk from the effects of climate change includes roads and railways, the electricity grid, and communications networks. The committee’s report called for the companies involved to investigate further how they could cope with the possible effects. Krebs also urged people to take low-cost measures to help keep their houses cool in hot summers – these could be as simple as curtains. Flooding Climate change Committee on Climate Change Green politics Local government Fiona Harvey guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Four in 10 Britons will get cancer

Number of people in Britain living with cancer rose from 1.5 million to 2 million in a decade, according to health charity More than four in 10 Britons will be diagnosed with cancer at some point in their lives, according to a study by a leading health charity. Figures obtained by Macmillan Cancer Support show that 42% of Britons had cancer before they died – compared with around 35% a decade ago. The study, which analysed data from 2008, also revealed that 64% of cancer sufferers will eventually die from the disease. Ciaran Devane, the chief executive of Macmillan Cancer Support, said: “It is really alarming that the number of people who will get cancer is now well past one in three, and that there are so many more people with cancer today than even 10 years ago.” Macmillan said the number of people living with cancer had risen from 1.5 million in 1998 to 2 million in 2008 – an increase of 35%. Experts believe this is because more people are getting the disease and, as treatment improves, those who have it are surviving longer. Two million people in the UK have had a cancer diagnosis, according to the charity. This is expected to double within the next two decades. Devane said the NHS was facing a challenge because of the rising rates. “The NHS needs to recognise cancer’s long-term impact on people’s lives, to plan better services and to develop more personalised care. We have a massive challenge ahead if we are to keep up with the relentless toll cancer takes on people’s health, and the NHS must rise to it.” Cancer Health guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

Date of Birth : 6 February 1986 (25 years old) Place of Birth : Walnut Creek, California, USA Alice Greczyn was discovered by a talent manager who set her career in motion. She has later on starred in the television series “Windfall”, “Lincoln Heights” and “Privileged”. The actress Alice Greczyn has also participated in several movies such as “Sleepover” and “The Dukes of Hazzard”. Alice Greczyn Photo’s :

Continue reading …

Shhh, nobody tell Moody’s . Today’s debt ceiling talks at the White House may have been the testiest yet: Eric Cantor says President Obama got ticked and “abruptly” left the room, reports Politico . “I know why he lost his temper,” says Cantor. “He’s frustrated. We’re all frustrated.” He quoted Obama as…

Continue reading …

Amazon will have a tablet computer of its own out by October to compete with the iPad, reports the Wall Street Journal . Insiders say the Android device will have a 9-inch screen but no camera. Amazon also plans two Kindle updates: One version will have a touch-screen and the other…

Continue reading …
Animal experiments rise by 1%

Home Office figures show that numbers of fish used have increased by 23%, but other animals decreased More than 3.7m scientific procedures were carried out using animals in 2010, an increase of around 100,000 on the previous year, according to data released by the Home Office. The rise is largely due to the production of more genetically modified mice and greater use of fish in basic biological and medical research. Excluding the 1.6m procedures involving the breeding of GM animals – mostly mice – the 2010 total was up by 1% from 2009. The number of procedures is not equivalent to the number of animals used – one animal might undergo several procedures, and the act of breeding a genetically modified animal counts as a procedure in itself. “If we exclude genetically manipulated breeding, there’s an increase of less than 1% in the total numbers,” said Judy McArthur Clark, chief inspector at the Animals Scientific Procedures Inspectorate of the Home Office. “That’s largely due to the increase in the use of fish. Fish numbers went up by 23%, about 93,000 animals. That’s more than the 1% increase, which means there’s an accompanying decrease in other species.” Professor Dominic Wells, of the neuromuscular disease group at the Royal Veterinary College, said one of the reasons that scientists are breeding more GM mice is because they have refined their procedures. “Instead of creating animals that are adversely affected by the genetic modifications, we will very often keep two lines of mice, neither of which show an adverse phenotype until they are crossed. You can therefore generate precisely the number that you need in order to conduct that experiment. By breeding two lines we increase the number of animals used but we decrease the overall severity of what we’re doing.” Primates, dog, cats and horses get special protection under the law and the total number of procedures on these groups was 19,773, around 0.5% of the total. Among the non-human primates, there was a 10% increase in procedures since 2009, though the number of actual animals used has dropped, according to McArthur Clark. “The main change in the number of procedures is accounted for by new-world primates, such as marmosets, and the main reason for the increase is that it’s a very fluctuating figure. The baseline numbers are quite small – one extra experiment or study in the year can actually have quite an impact on the numbers. Mainly these animals are used for collections of blood and tissue that are then used in pharmaceutical R&D. The number of old-world primates, macaques, the numbers have come down there, minus 2% on the numbers for 2009.” Procedures using dogs dropped by 2% – most of these were purpose-bred beagles mostly used in pharma development and safety evaluation – while the procedures on cats dropped by 32%. There was also a fall of 11% in the number of animals used in toxicological tests, as a greater proportion of tests can now be used to satisfy more than one regulatory requirement. Professor Roger Morris, head of the school of biomedical sciences at Kings College London, said 90% of his work was done with individual molecules and cells in culture. “But real diseases are diseases of the whole body, and can only be studied in the whole body. To take the example of Parkinson’s – a disease that is very common and devastating. Part of this disease is a dopamine deficiency in the neurons, but the underlying cause is a complex set of interactive problems, that probably involves an inflammatory or autoimmune component. Thus we need to understand the interaction between two very complex bodily systems – the brain, and the immune system, to understand the defects causing this multi–tissue, multi–step disease. We can’t study that in tissue culture of individual cells.” Barney Reed, senior scientist at the RSPCA, described the rise in procedures as “astonishing”, pointing out that they equated to a 37% increase in animal use over the past decade. He also raised concerns over the implementation of a new EU directive on animal research into UK law that would legally allow the UK to drop its standards in many areas of inspection and practice in the use of animals. “A watered-down law could mean laboratory animals in the UK being allowed to suffer ‘long-lasting, unalleviated, severe pain, suffering or distress’, it could allow some animals such as dogs to be kept in even smaller housing, and some UK laboratories may not be visited by Home Office officials for years at a time – this is simply unacceptable,” he said. Martin Walsh, head of the Home Office’s animals scientific procedure division, said he welcomed the EU directive because it would raise standards across the continent to the UK level. “We’re ahead of the game in lots of areas. It’s not going to reduce the protection of animals in the UK.” He added that the Home Office was also looking at ways to meet a commitment in the government’s coalition agreement, which pledged to reduce the use of animals in scientific research and end the testing of household products on animals. Officials hope to publish a consultation on their ideas before the summer recess of parliament, said Walsh. Animal research Zoology Animals Alok Jha guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Animal experiments rise by 1%

Home Office figures show that numbers of fish used have increased by 23%, but other animals decreased More than 3.7m scientific procedures were carried out using animals in 2010, an increase of around 100,000 on the previous year, according to data released by the Home Office. The rise is largely due to the production of more genetically modified mice and greater use of fish in basic biological and medical research. Excluding the 1.6m procedures involving the breeding of GM animals – mostly mice – the 2010 total was up by 1% from 2009. The number of procedures is not equivalent to the number of animals used – one animal might undergo several procedures, and the act of breeding a genetically modified animal counts as a procedure in itself. “If we exclude genetically manipulated breeding, there’s an increase of less than 1% in the total numbers,” said Judy McArthur Clark, chief inspector at the Animals Scientific Procedures Inspectorate of the Home Office. “That’s largely due to the increase in the use of fish. Fish numbers went up by 23%, about 93,000 animals. That’s more than the 1% increase, which means there’s an accompanying decrease in other species.” Professor Dominic Wells, of the neuromuscular disease group at the Royal Veterinary College, said one of the reasons that scientists are breeding more GM mice is because they have refined their procedures. “Instead of creating animals that are adversely affected by the genetic modifications, we will very often keep two lines of mice, neither of which show an adverse phenotype until they are crossed. You can therefore generate precisely the number that you need in order to conduct that experiment. By breeding two lines we increase the number of animals used but we decrease the overall severity of what we’re doing.” Primates, dog, cats and horses get special protection under the law and the total number of procedures on these groups was 19,773, around 0.5% of the total. Among the non-human primates, there was a 10% increase in procedures since 2009, though the number of actual animals used has dropped, according to McArthur Clark. “The main change in the number of procedures is accounted for by new-world primates, such as marmosets, and the main reason for the increase is that it’s a very fluctuating figure. The baseline numbers are quite small – one extra experiment or study in the year can actually have quite an impact on the numbers. Mainly these animals are used for collections of blood and tissue that are then used in pharmaceutical R&D. The number of old-world primates, macaques, the numbers have come down there, minus 2% on the numbers for 2009.” Procedures using dogs dropped by 2% – most of these were purpose-bred beagles mostly used in pharma development and safety evaluation – while the procedures on cats dropped by 32%. There was also a fall of 11% in the number of animals used in toxicological tests, as a greater proportion of tests can now be used to satisfy more than one regulatory requirement. Professor Roger Morris, head of the school of biomedical sciences at Kings College London, said 90% of his work was done with individual molecules and cells in culture. “But real diseases are diseases of the whole body, and can only be studied in the whole body. To take the example of Parkinson’s – a disease that is very common and devastating. Part of this disease is a dopamine deficiency in the neurons, but the underlying cause is a complex set of interactive problems, that probably involves an inflammatory or autoimmune component. Thus we need to understand the interaction between two very complex bodily systems – the brain, and the immune system, to understand the defects causing this multi–tissue, multi–step disease. We can’t study that in tissue culture of individual cells.” Barney Reed, senior scientist at the RSPCA, described the rise in procedures as “astonishing”, pointing out that they equated to a 37% increase in animal use over the past decade. He also raised concerns over the implementation of a new EU directive on animal research into UK law that would legally allow the UK to drop its standards in many areas of inspection and practice in the use of animals. “A watered-down law could mean laboratory animals in the UK being allowed to suffer ‘long-lasting, unalleviated, severe pain, suffering or distress’, it could allow some animals such as dogs to be kept in even smaller housing, and some UK laboratories may not be visited by Home Office officials for years at a time – this is simply unacceptable,” he said. Martin Walsh, head of the Home Office’s animals scientific procedure division, said he welcomed the EU directive because it would raise standards across the continent to the UK level. “We’re ahead of the game in lots of areas. It’s not going to reduce the protection of animals in the UK.” He added that the Home Office was also looking at ways to meet a commitment in the government’s coalition agreement, which pledged to reduce the use of animals in scientific research and end the testing of household products on animals. Officials hope to publish a consultation on their ideas before the summer recess of parliament, said Walsh. Animal research Zoology Animals Alok Jha guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

Date of Birth : 29 July 1987 (23 years old) Place of Birth : Brazil Dated : Pierre Casiraghi Alice Dellal is a model who is known for her edgy style, she has sported a half shaved head and a nose ring, not very normal for a working model! She’s the sister of gallery owner Alex Dellal and daughter of former brazilian model Andrea dellal. Alice Dellal Photo’s :

Continue reading …

Date of Birth : 29 July 1987 (23 years old) Place of Birth : Brazil Dated : Pierre Casiraghi Alice Dellal is a model who is known for her edgy style, she has sported a half shaved head and a nose ring, not very normal for a working model! She’s the sister of gallery owner Alex Dellal and daughter of former brazilian model Andrea dellal. Alice Dellal Photo’s :

Continue reading …