13/06/2011

Adele: the girl with the mighty mouth

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SING ALONG WITH... ADELE

ADELE (24)

rolling in the deep

watch the video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rYEDA3JcQqw

There’s a fire starting in my heart
Reaching a fever pitch,
it’s bringing me out the dark
Finally I can see you crystal clear
Go head and sell me out
and I'll lay your shit bare

See how I leave with every piece of you
Don’t underestimate the things that I will do

There’s a fire starting in my heart
Reaching a fever pitch
And its bring me out the dark

The scars of your love remind me of us
They keep me thinking that we almost had it all
The scars of your love they leave me breathless
I can’t help feeling
We could have had it all
Rolling in the deep
You had my heart inside of your hand
And you played it
To the beat

Baby I have no story to be told
But I’ve heard one of you
And I’m gonna make your head burn
Think of me in the depths of your despair
Making a home down there
It Reminds you of the home we shared

The scars of your love remind me of us
They keep me thinking that we almost had it all
The scars of your love they leave me breathless
I can’t help feeling
We could have had it all
Rolling in the deep
You had my heart inside of your hand
And you played it
To the beat

Throw your soul through every open door
Count your blessings to find what you look for
Turned my sorrow into treasured gold
You pay me back in kind and reap just what you sow

We could have had it all
We could have had it all
It all, it all it all,
We could have had it all
Rolling in the deep
You had my heart inside of your hand
And you played it
To the beat


Lily Allen Is Married – and Pregnant!

Lily Allen Is Married – and Pregnant!
Update Saturday June 11, 2011 07:00 PM EDT Originally posted Saturday June 11, 2011 11:05 AM EDT
Lily Allen Is Married – and Pregnant! | Lily Allen
Sam Cooper and Lily Allen
Beretta/Sims/REX/REX USA
Lily Allen has two things to smile about.

The singer, 26, married Sam Cooper at St. James the Great Church in Gloucestershire, England, on Saturday – and the newlyweds are expecting a baby, her rep confirms.

Dressed in a gown with long lace sleeves and a fishtail skirt by French designer Delphine Manivet, the bride was given away by her father, Keith Allen, and then carried a bouquet of white roses as she made her way out of the church with her new husband to a waiting car as a crowd cheered.

"It's beautiful that she is pregnant, and I am very happy for her. She is very happy about that – it is something wonderful," Manivet told British paper The Telegraph. "For me, and for her too, when you're pregnant you want to show that, but also be respectful, so the dress was perfect for her for that moment."



Cooper revealed the happy baby news to wedding guests, according to the U.K.'s Daily Mail.

The baby news comes seven months after Allen and Cooper announced her heartbreaking miscarriage.

The wedding, which took place in the village of Cranham in the English countryside, was no secret. Allen's wedding date was leaked to the press by an unknown guest, who sent the save-the-date card to British newspapers in March.

On Friday, Allen and Cooper were spotted arriving at the church for their rehearsal. Allen's dad, an actor and musician, was also spotted with a ukulele – perhaps planning to serenade the happy couple.

Cooper, a decorator and business owner, popped the question during a romantic getaway last Christmas.

Video: Brooke Shields Flubs Lines -- 3 Times -- at Tony Awards

Video: Brooke Shields Flubs Lines -- 3 Times -- at Tony Awards

Better luck next time?
During the opening musical number at Sunday's Tony Awards in NYC, Brooke Shields struggled to remember the lyrics during the live telecast.
PHOTOS: Look back at last year's Tony Awards
After the 46-year-old mother of two flubbed the lines three times, she stopped mid-song and told host Neil Patrick Harris, "I don't know what I'm doing! Oh my God!"
PHOTOS: Brooke and other famous teen models
Fortunately, a crew member in the audience quickly handed her the lyrics, allowing Shields to properly finish the song.
Tell Us: Did Brooke's nerves get the best of her?

Catherine Zeta-Jones Dazzles in First Comeback Appearance

Catherine Zeta-Jones Dazzles in First Comeback Appearance

1307970707_catherine-zeta-jones-290.jpg
Credit: Kevin Mazur/WireImage
Monday – June 13, 2011 – 9:29am
Catherine Zeta-Jones reminded the world why she's a star as a presenter at Sunday's Tony Awards in NYC. PHOTOS: Catherine's radiant (and pregnant!) Oscar moment It was the Oscar- and Tony-winning actress' first appearances since mid-April, when she briefly checked into a mental health facility, seeking treatment for Bipolar II disorder. Handing out two trophies -- for best actor in a leading role in a play (Mark Rylance, Jerusalem) and in a musical (Norbert Leo Butz, Catch Me If You Can) -- the Welsh beauty, 41, dazzled in a curve-hugging red, sequined Elie Saab gown and jewels by van Cleef and Arpels. PHOTOS: Catherine way before she was famous The mom of two kids with husband Michael Douglas, Jones' mental health battle came on the heels of Douglas' own fight with stage-four throat cancer. "She's great!" Douglas, 66, told Us Weekly last Thursday of his wife, who's been shooting rock musical Rock of Ages in Miami with Julianne Hough, Tom Cruise, Russell Brand, Alec Baldwin, Malin Akerman and Mary J. Blige. PHOTOS: Guess the age difference between these famous couples "She's doing a great job."

Angelina Jolie Goes Without Makeup, Wears Own Clothes in New Ad

Angelina Jolie Goes Without Makeup, Wears Own Clothes in New Ad

1307968077_angelina-jolie-louis-vuitton-290.jpg
Credit: Annie Leibovitz for Louis Vuitton
Monday – June 13, 2011 – 8:35am
In a brand-new print ad for Louis Vuitton's "Core Values" campaign, a barefoot, bare-faced Angelina Jolie, wearing her own casual clothes, savors a solo moment of Zen aboard a wooden boat floating in a green marsh in Cambodia's Siem Reap province. PHOTOS: Goth to earth goddess! Angelina's style transformation over the years Unveiled Monday morning in Women's Wear Daily, Jolie's stark, beautiful new shot (with a weathered, monogrammed LV Alto bag at her side) was photographed by legendary photographer Annie Leibovitz who, according to WWD, had to shoo Jolie's elder four kids out of the picture frame to get her photo. PHOTOS: Angelina, Brad Pitt and their globe-trotting kids "People are not used to seeing Angelina in this situation," Vuitton executive vice president Pietro Beccari tells WWD of the chill, makeup-free image. The 36-year-old star first discovered Cambodia in 2000 while filming Lara Croft: Tomb Raider, and is the birthplace of her eldest son Maddox, 10. "I like the fact that it's a real moment," Beccari added. "This travel message we give through personal journeys is a fundamental one for the brand." PHOTOS: Angelina vs. Jen Aniston -- who's the biggest style icon? Jolie -- was reportedly paid millions for the ad, which she'll donate to charity -- joins other celebs who've already starred in their own "Core Values" LV campaign like Bono, Sean Connery, Keith Richards and Catherine Deneuve. PHOTOS: How Angelina and another screen legend led parallel lives "This campaign is about a very special person and a very special journey," Beccari noted of Oscar-winner Jolie, who remains active in community development and conservation in Cambodia. Tell Us: What do you think of Jolie's ad?

Nicotine treatment 'could control obesity'

Nicotine treatment 'could control obesity'

Smoker lighting up Nicotine in cigarettes decreases food intake and body weight by acting on particular neurons.

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Scientists have identified a group of neurons in the brain responsible for smokers' lack of appetite.
In an article in the journal Science, Yale University researchers describe experiments on mice which found nicotine activates neurons to send signals the body has had enough to eat.
However they are not the same neurons which trigger a craving for tobacco.
As a result, the researchers say nicotine-based treatments could help control obesity.
A research team from Yale University School of Medicine and Baylor College of Medicine in Houston performed a combination of molecular, pharmacological, behavioural and genetic experiments on mice.
They found that nicotine influences a collection of central nervous system circuits, known as the body's hypothalamic melanocortin system, by activating certain receptors.
These receptors, in turn, increase the activity of pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) neurons, known for their effects on obesity in humans and animals.
Targeting cells
When subjected to nicotine, mice lacking the POMC pathway did not lose weight, but mice with the pathway did.
The researchers also found that these receptors were of a different type to those known to trigger tobacco craving in smokers.

Start Quote

It could perhaps motivate smokers who are afraid to quit because of fears of putting on weight.”
End Quote Prof Marina Piccioto Yale University
Marina Picciotto, senior study researcher and professor of psychiatry at Yale University, said the research could be beneficial.
"Imagine a nicotine-based medicine which could only target those cells which stop eating and not trigger the need for tobacco," she said.
"This suggests it is possible to get the effect of appetite suppression without also triggering the brain's reward centres."
Side effects
Prof Picciotto cautioned that the impact of a nicotine-based medication would be limited because smokers who are leaner when they give up smoking only gain 2.5 kilos of weight on average.
Clinical trials in humans would also be necessary to explore the side effects on blood pressure.
She said: "It could perhaps motivate smokers who are afraid to quit because of fears of putting on weight."
And it could also have an impact on other groups, she says.
"There are some groups of people who take up smoking to control their weight. It is tragic to think people would take up smoking for this reason."
Amanda Sandford, research manager for ASH, Action on Smoking and Health, said it was already known that pure nicotine could be safely used to wean smokers off their tobacco habit.
"If nicotine could also be used to tackle obesity then it could be a valuable tool in tackling two of the most critical public health problems that we face today," she said.

Urine test could hold key to early cancer diagnosis

Urine test could hold key to early cancer diagnosis

Urine samples A simple urine test could identify cancers of the gut, stomach and pancreas, researchers say

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Cancers of the gut, stomach and pancreas could be detected much sooner with a simple urine test, new research suggests.
Edinburgh University scientists have identified key proteins in the urine of patients with advanced cancers.
The findings could help the detection of these cancers in people who have not yet started to show symptoms.
It would enable patients to be diagnosed much earlier, leading to improved survival rates.
Only about 10% of patients with the cancers, known as cancers of the upper gastrointestinal tract, are still alive five years after diagnosis.
It is because the cancers, which tend to be aggressive, are often diagnosed at an advanced stage.
Dr Holger Husi, of Edinburgh University's tissue injury and repair group, said: "The aim of this work is to enable these cancers to be diagnosed much earlier.
"This would help us to treat the cancer before it has a chance to spread.
"The majority of these cancers are currently diagnosed late where no surgery is possible due to its advanced stage.
"Earlier diagnosis would mean that curative surgery or chemotherapy would be possible for more patients."
Thousands of proteins
The research, published in the journal Proteomics-Clinical Applications, compared urine samples from patients with upper gastrointestinal cancers with urine samples from people who were cancer-free.
Scientists analysed the samples to identify thousands of proteins.
They then identified six particular proteins, which were present in 98% of the cancer cases but absent in almost 90% of samples from patients without cancer.
The researchers then narrowed molecules down to two proteins, S100A6 and S1009, which are most likely to appear in samples from patients with cancer but absent from the other samples.
The scientists now want to discover whether people with early stage cancers, which have not yet been diagnosed, have the same levels of proteins present.
It would involve analysing samples from at least 1,000 volunteers and tracking the participants over a number of years to identify those who were then later diagnosed with upper gastrointestinal cancers.

Researchers' hope of 20 new vaccines in next decade

baby being vaccinated Researchers hope to develop 20 new vaccines in 10 years.

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Researchers writing in The Lancet say there is the potential to develop 20 new or improved vaccines in the next decade.
A group of scientists says funding is crucial - but so is trust and confidence in vaccines.
They identify AIDS and malaria vaccines as the most important areas for research.
But the authors say neglected tropical diseases, such as leprosy, should also be investigated.
And in a "call to action", the scientists say: "We must also consider vaccines beyond classic infections, such as insulin-dependent diabetes, cancers and degenerative diseases.
'Fragile' confidence "We need to find the requisite funds for the research and development of about 20 improved or novel vaccines in the next decade or beyond.

Start Quote

It is perhaps surprising that the public aren't always comfortable with immunisation.”
End Quote Professor Richard Moxon Oxford University
"This call to action comes at a crucial time. In some communities, recent declines in vaccine uptake provide a stark reminder that public confidence and trust in immunisation is fragile and requires attention."
Professor Richard Moxon, from Oxford University, came up with the idea for the series of papers looking at the future of vaccine research.
He said: "Considering the unambiguous and beneficial track record of immunisation, it is perhaps surprising that the public aren't always comfortable with it.
"It's complex. Perhaps one of the things that's most important is that vaccines are given to healthy people - often children.
Safety issues "Safety issues loom very large because there's very little awareness of many of the diseases that have been prevented by vaccines, such as polio and whooping cough."
Professor Moxon said he believed an AIDS vaccine was still many years away, but there might be an effective malaria vaccine within five years.
He and his fellow authors are calling on developing countries to shoulder more of the responsibility for financing vaccination programmes.
They said: "Most developing countries accord too low a priority to health in their budgets.
"They must be persuaded to take more of the burden themselves on behalf of their poorer citizens."
Funding for vaccines in developing countries will be examined at a crucial meeting in London on Monday, when an effort is made to raise more than £2m for immunisation programmes over the next four years.

Parts of England officially facing drought conditions

Parts of England officially facing drought conditions

Liam Dutton explains the weather conditions that have led to a drought being declared

WATCH THE VIDEO: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-13722013

How can gardeners cope with the 'drought'?
Northern Europe's farmers feel the heat in the dry season
Parts of England are officially in a drought following the dry spring, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) has said.

Areas of East Anglia are in drought, with parts of the Midlands, South West and South East in a "near-drought" state.

In the drought-affected areas, Anglian Water and Cambridge Water say there is no threat to public water supplies.

But Severn Trent Water says there may be restrictions if rainfall stays low.

And Thames Water, which serves London and the Thames Valley, has reassured its customers that hosepipe bans are unlikely this year.

The British Retail Consortium said the dry weather had created "another unwelcome upward pressure on food prices".

Both the South East and central-southern region of England have had their driest spring on record.

Across England and Wales as a whole it has been the driest spring since 1990, prompting the Environment Agency to issue advice on how best to reduce water use.

It comes as large areas of northern Europe are facing drought after one of the driest European springs on record.

But not all areas of the UK have suffered from the dry weather. Scotland has had 20% more rain than usual for spring, while snow flurries were reported at the summit of Mount Snowdon in north Wales.

Continue reading the main story
Water-saving tips
Wash a car using a bucket
Reuse bath water on plants and in your garden
Let your grass grow
Keep a jug of water in the fridge instead of running a cold tap
Don't let water waste while waiting to get into a shower
Source: Environment Agency
Environment Secretary Caroline Spelman has held a second drought summit to review the impacts of the continuing dry weather.

She said: "Water companies are confident that supplies are high enough so that widespread restrictions to the public are unlikely. We're doing all we can to reduce the impact on agriculture and wildlife, but everyone can play their part.

"Households know how to use less water and everyone can do their bit to use water more wisely, not only through the summer, but throughout the year."

Low levels of water are causing considerable problems for farmers, with crop yields being hit.

In parts of the Fens, some farmers and growers have volunteered to irrigate only at night to reduce evaporation, and co-operatives have formed to share limited amounts of water available.


Bewl Water in Kent is at 80% of its capacity after some areas of the UK saw just 4mm of rain in May Ahead of talks with the government later, Peter Kendall, president of the National Farmers Union, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme there was a need to look at long-term solutions such as having enough reservoirs and "computer-controlled drip feed irrigation".

Mr Kendall said there would be calls for an approach in which authorities "talk to farmers in advance" and "don't just turn the tap right off" to "allow farmers to eke out supplies".

He said: "It would be crazy if you have a big investment and you say 'no water from now on'.

"We would much rather say, 'Actually, it's getting low, you can have 30% or 40% of your water.'

"That's the sort of initiative we need and then we need to look longer term at how we can plan to become more resilient."

The NFU president urged ministers to "keep talking to the farmers" and "make sure we make food production a priority".

'Strategic' response

The British Retail Consortium's food director, Andrew Opie, said: "Farming is an uncertain business. Few years have a perfect pattern of weather and retailers are again working with suppliers to make sure there continues to be affordable food in the shops.

"East Anglia is prone to dry weather and there will be more of these conditions in the future. Many large producers have already invested in private irrigation systems to deal with low rainfall and make sure crops grow successfully."

He pointed out that, although the weather had created a problem for some commodities, such as wheat and other cereals, the dry conditions have produced bumper crops of foods such as raspberries and asparagus.

Craig Bennett, of environmental campaign group Friends of the Earth, said most water companies had "dramatically improved their efforts to reduce leakage", despite the failure of a few to meet their targets.

But he was critical of the overall approach taken by successive governments.

He said: "Although water companies generally have upped their game, government has completely failed to up its game. We have seen successive governments fail to address this issue properly."

"Mr Bennett went on: "We see precious little action by successive governments in between floods and droughts to put long term measures in places and have a strategic response to this."

He called on the government to use planning regimes to make sure infrastructure was built in a way that did not put more demand on water resources.

For example, he said housing developments were being built where there was already "extreme pressure on water resources".

The Environment Agency said the specific areas of the Anglian region suffering from a drought were Lincolnshire, Cambridgeshire, parts of Bedfordshire and Northamptonshire and western Norfolk.

Drought mapRain map: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-13722013

Deaths from E. coli still rising in Germany

Deaths from E. coli still rising in Germany

Test samples of bean sprouts in a German lab, 10 Jun 11 Investigators still want to know how bean sprouts became contaminated
The death toll has risen to 35 in Germany's E. coli epidemic and health officials say about 100 patients have severe kidney damage.
The source of infection has been identified as bean sprouts from an organic farm in northern Germany.
At least 3,255 people have fallen ill, mostly in Germany, of whom at least 812 have a complication that can be fatal.
About 100 patients with damaged kidneys will need transplants or life-long dialysis, one health expert said.
Karl Lauterbach, an epidemiologist who is also an opposition Social Democrat (SPD) politician, warned that E. coli infections were growing worldwide.
Since the start of the outbreak in May, all but one of the deaths have been in Germany.
Investigators say they believe organic bean sprouts from a farm in Bienenbuettel, Lower Saxony, were responsible. The farm's produce has been withdrawn from sale.
Several workers from the farm have fallen ill with the virulent new E. coli strain.
Biological challenge
Germany's national disease agency, the Robert Koch Institute (RKI), said the death toll rose to 35 at the weekend, but the rate of new infections was declining.
Yet it is still not clear how the bean sprouts became contaminated with the bug, which normally lives in the guts of cattle and sheep.

Health advice

  • Wash fruit and vegetables before eating them
  • Peel or cook fruit and vegetables
  • Wash hands regularly to prevent person-to-person spread of E. coli strain
Source: UK Health Protection Agency
Health experts quoted by the Associated Press news agency said the toxin produced by the new E. coli bug in Germany was especially potent.
The German strain causes not only bloody diarrhoea but also neurological disorders, including paralysis in some cases. The potentially fatal complication is called haemolytic uraemic syndrome (HUS).
Tests show that the strain has genes that make it resistant to many antibiotics.
Germany plans to tighten its checks on fresh vegetables and there are calls to speed up lab reporting procedures.
Consumer Affairs Minister Ilse Aigner said she had asked regional authorities across Germany to prioritise checks on growers and importers of bean sprouts, including handlers of imported seeds.
Germany has lifted its warning against eating raw cucumbers, tomatoes and lettuce, but kept it in place for the sprouts.
The European Commission has offered 210m euros (£186m; $303m) to European farmers who have seen a dramatic loss of income since the outbreak started in early May.
Initially Germany mistakenly blamed Spanish cucumbers - a move which brought some Spanish vegetable exporters to a standstill.

Laser is produced by a living cell



Cell emitting laser light (M Gather) The single-cell lasers were less than 20 millionths of a metre across

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A single living cell has been coaxed into producing laser light, researchers report in Nature Photonics.
The technique starts by engineering a cell that can produce a light-emitting protein that was first obtained from glowing jellyfish.
Flooding the resulting cells with weak blue light causes them to emit directed, green laser light.
The work may have applications in improved microscope imaging and light-based therapies.
Laser light differs from normal light in that it is of a narrow band of colours, with the light waves all oscillating together in synchrony.
Most modern forms use carefully engineered solid materials to produce lasers in everything from supermarket scanners to DVD players to industrial robots.
The new work, by Malte Gather and Seok Hyun Yun at the Wellman Center for Photomedicine at Massachusetts General Hospital in the US, marks the first time the phenomenon has been seen in a living system.
The pair used green fluorescent protein (GFP) as the laser's "gain medium", where light amplification takes place.
GFP is a well-studied molecule, first isolated from jellyfish, that has revolutionised biology by acting as a custom-made "torch" that can light up living systems on command.
In the new work, cells derived from human kidney cells were genetically engineered to produce GFP.
Bathed in light
The cells were then placed one at a time between two tiny mirrors, just 20 millionths of a metre across, which acted as the "laser cavity" in which light could bounce many times through the cell.
Upon bathing the cell with blue light, it could be seen to emit directed and intense green laser light.
The cells remained alive throughout and after the process. The authors note in an accompanying interview in the journal that the living system is a "self-healing" laser; if the light-emitting proteins are destroyed in the process, the cell will simply produce more.
"In cellular sensing, we may be able to detect intracellular processes with unprecedented sensitivity," they said.
"For light-based therapeutics, diagnosis and imaging, people think about how to deliver emission from an external laser source deep into tissue. Now we can approach this problem in another way: by amplifying light in the tissue (itself)."

Spanish police website hit by Anonymous hackers


Spanish police officer holds Anonymous mask A member of Spain's Technological Investigation Board displays an Anonymous mask
The website of Spain's national police force has been briefly knocked offline by hacker collective Anonymous.
The attack on the site was carried out in retaliation for the arrest of three Spanish men the police claimed were 'core' members of the group.
The hackers managed to keep www.policia.es offline for about an hour from 2130 GMT on 12 June.
Spanish authorities would not confirm that Anonymous was behind the attack, saying only that the site was offline.
However, a statement was posted on a website linked to Anonymous, claimed responsibility for the hack, which it called #OpPolicia.
The group said it had used a distributed denial of service attack (DDoS) which bombards a target website with so much data that it becomes overwhelmed.
A spokesman for the Spanish police said the cause of the outage had not yet been established.
"A website can collapse if too many people try to access it at once. I cannot confirm the link with the Anonymous group," said the spokesman.
In its statement, Anonymous said the DDoS attack was a "direct response to the Friday arrests of three individuals alleged to be associated with acts of cyber civil disobedience attributed to Anonymous."
The group said DDoS attacks were a legitimate form of peaceful protest. Some of its members are thought to have carried out similar attacks on Turkish government websites to protest against net censorship.
Anonymous also denied that the men arrested were part of the "core" of Spanish members of the group.
"They did not arrest any core group, because we don't have a core group," said Anonymous in its statement.