Soprano Jurinac dies aged 90-Vienna State Opera (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? Bosnian-born soprano Sena Jurinac, who made her name at the Vienna State Opera in the 1940s and 50s, has died aged 90, the opera house said on Wednesday.

She passed away on Tuesday at her home near Augsburg in southern Germany, it added in a statement.

"We mourn the passing of a legendary artist who not only had a lasting influence on the Vienna State Opera but on the entire opera world as well," said Dominique Meyer, director of the company.

Jurinac was born in Travnik in 1921, and after training and singing in Zagreb signed up to the Vienna State Opera.

Her debut there came in 1945, in the opera's first performance after the end of World War II, as Cherubino in Mozart's "The Marriage of Figaro."

Among her most-performed roles in Vienna were Octavian in "Der Rosenkavalier," Mimi in "La Boheme," Donna Elvira in "Don Giovanni" and Elisabeth in "Don Carlos." She retired from the opera house in 1982.

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/music/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111123/music_nm/us_opera_senajurinac

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Venezuela receives first gold shipment from Europe

Soldiers stand guard as an armored truck containing gold reserves arrives to the Central Bank in Caracas, Venezuela, Friday Nov. 25, 2011. President Hugo Chavez's government began repatriating Venezuela's gold reserves from European banks Friday as the first shipment arrived on a flight from Paris. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos)

Soldiers stand guard as an armored truck containing gold reserves arrives to the Central Bank in Caracas, Venezuela, Friday Nov. 25, 2011. President Hugo Chavez's government began repatriating Venezuela's gold reserves from European banks Friday as the first shipment arrived on a flight from Paris. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos)

Soldiers stand guard as an armored truck containing gold reserves arrives to the Central Bank in Caracas, Venezuela, Friday Nov. 25, 2011. President Hugo Chavez's government began repatriating Venezuela's gold reserves from European banks Friday as the first shipment arrived on a flight from Paris. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos)

Soldiers escort trucks containing gold reserves to the Central Bank in Caracas, Venezuela, Friday Nov. 25, 2011. President Hugo Chavez's government began repatriating Venezuela's gold reserves from European banks Friday as the first shipment arrived on a flight from Paris. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos)

(AP) ? President Hugo Chavez's government began repatriating Venezuela's gold reserves from European banks Friday as the first shipment arrived on a flight from Paris.

Troops guarded the shipment in a caravan of at least five armored trucks that carried the gold to the Central Bank in Caracas.

A group of government supporters cheered and waved flags as the caravan passed, with soldiers holding their rifles at the ready. Two light tanks escorted the shipment.

Chavez announced in August that his government would retrieve more than 211 tons of gold held in U.S. and European banks.

Chavez announced earlier Friday that the first of the gold was on its way.

"It's coming to the place it never should have left. ... The vaults of the Central Bank of Venezuela, not the bank of London or the bank of the United States," Chavez said. "It's our gold."

He said that previously the gold was held in Britain. He didn't specify the bank nor say how much was in the shipment.

The leftist president has said his decision to repatriate the gold reserves is aimed at helping to protect the oil-producing country from economic troubles in the United States and Europe.

Economist Pedro Palma, who is a professor at the Institute of Higher Studies of Administration, said he saw no economic justification for moving the gold.

"From the economic point view, it is the same to have it here as in England. The reserves will not change because of this," Palma said. He said it seemed to be an attempt to show the public "heroic actions" on the part of the government.

Chavez's opponents have called the plan costly and ill-advised.

Central Bank president Nelson Merentes said the gold has been held abroad since the late 1980s as backing for loans requested from the International Monetary Fund by prior governments.

With the gold in Venezuela, Merentes said, "it's a guarantee" for the country.

"If there's some problem in the international markets, here it's going to be safe," Merentes said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-11-25-LT-Venezuela-Gold/id-4e026da4976f4e989dfacd3cff1d4436

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Scientists working hard to build a better turkey

The great majority of today's domesticated turkeys may not be able to fly, but their ancestors sure got around. The quintessential New World bird, Meleagris gallopavo, was already an Old World favorite by the time colonists in North America first celebrated any Thanksgiving feasts. Today's turkey researchers are investigating the big bird's genetic heritage and biology as part of an effort to improve several aspects of its cultivation.

In 2010, a team of researchers from numerous labs in the United States announced the sequencing of more than 90 percent of the turkey genome. This represented a big step in turkey research, but efforts continue.

"Once you identify genes, the next step is to figure out what they do," said Rami Dalloul, a poultry and immunology researcher at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in Blacksburg.

"What we've been doing for the past almost year is building upon that sequence and trying to figure out, are there traits in the original [wild] bird that might be useful for today's bird?" said Julie Long, a poultry researcher at the research arm of the U.S. Department of Agriculture in Beltsville, Md.

The researchers have been working with the genetic material from the most popular domesticated commercial breed, the broad breasted white turkey. It is descended from turkeys domesticated in modern Mexico by predecessors of the Aztecs. The birds were well-established as a food source by the time the Conquistadors arrived. The Spanish took the birds back to Europe, and they quickly spread across the continent.

"Very quickly the domesticated turkey became, as far as I could tell, the real first New World food to be adopted in Europe," said Andrew F. Smith, a food historian and the author of "The Turkey: An American Story."

"When the Pilgrims and when the Jamestown colonists arrived, they had already eaten turkey," Smith said.

Smith said that by the 1550s, turkeys were already popular at Christmas dinners in England. When colonists came to the New World, they found large populations of wild birds that provided a reliable food source.

Colonists eventually began raising turkeys, but did not domesticate the wild birds.

"The commercial birds that we eat today were actually developed in the United States," said Long. "But they were developed on stocks that came from Europe that originally came from Mexico."

A whole different breed
After hundreds of years of breeding, today's commercial turkeys are far removed genetically from the wild turkeys from Mexico, which were already isolated from any of the five subspecies of wild turkeys found in the United States today.

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The genetic sequence of the domestic turkey differs from its wild turkey relatives, and can be used to illustrate differences between the animals.

"Once you have the baseline, which is the domestic turkey, then you have a good reference genome to come back to and then make a valid comparison," said Dalloul.

Wild turkeys have a gene that makes them resistant to a type of toxic fungus sometimes found in corn and soybeans. This toxin can be deadly on its own or lower a turkey's resistance to other infections and cause death that way.

The domestic breed no longer carries that resistant genetic trait.

"If you can bring back that gene into the domestic population, then you can have these birds again more resistant to [the toxin]," said Dalloul.

No natural mating
Even the intended consequences of commercial turkey breeds have introduced complications. Breeders developed birds with more white meat. The resulting turkeys, such as the broad breasted white, grow muscle quickly, and, as the name suggests, that muscle is concentrated in the breast area.

"[The breast] protrudes quite a bit and physically gets in the way when the birds need to reproduce," said Long. "In the commercial turkey industry there are no birds that naturally mate."

The great majority of turkey farmers must therefore depend upon artificial insemination, said Long. She suggested that there may be rare exceptions among small farms raising older breeds of turkeys, called heritage breeds, which may reproduce naturally. Artificial insemination is a laborious job in turkey facilities, as the sperm from male toms must be collected and female hens inseminated weekly.

"The amazing thing about the turkey hen is she's capable of keeping viable sperm cells for up to ten weeks after a single insemination," said Long. "The best we can do and still maintain high levels of fertility is about six hours."

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If turkey researchers could find a way to increase the amount of time that they can store sperm for later use, it might make the process of artificial insemination easier and less time-consuming. This is a primary area of research for Long, who hopes that further study of molecular DNA may help explain other reproductive issues as well, including why some hens lay more eggs than others.

More Thanksgiving science:

Chris Gorski is a writer and editor for Inside Science News Service. This report was originally published as "The Globe-Trotting Turkey" on the InsideScience.org website.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45422952/ns/technology_and_science/

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Connecticut killer calls self "most hated" man (Reuters)

NEW HAVEN, Conn (Reuters) ? Convicted killer Joshua Komisarjevsky told a judge presiding over a jury deciding whether he should face the death penalty on Wednesday that he believes he is "one of the most hated people in America."

Objecting to a defense plan to show his 9-year-old daughter's videotaped testimony to the jury, Komisarjevsky said the move would hurt her more than it would help him.

"Her memorialized words will affect her emotionally and psychologically in the future if she believes she is party to assisting the effort to put me to death," Komisarjevsky told Judge Jon Blue while the jury was outside the courtroom in New Haven Superior Court.

The girl has already received death threats, according to her attorneys.

Komisarjevsky, 31, was convicted of murder, rape and arson in the deaths of Jennifer Hawke-Petit and her two daughters Hayley and Michaela, and of beating Dr. William Petit, the sole survivor of the brutal home invasion in Cheshire, Connecticut in July 2007.

The jury that convicted him is deciding whether to sentence him to death or life in prison without parole.

His accomplice Steven Hayes was convicted separately of similar charges and has been sentenced to death.

Speaking for the first time in his two-month trial, Komisarjevsky objected in court on Wednesday to showing the jury his daughter's videotaped testimony because he did not want her to have to justify statements that "help one of the most hated people in America."

Komisarjevsky, dressed in a black suit, defied his attorney's advice and in a deep calm voice asked that the child be spared further emotional harm that would be caused by playing the videotape for the jury.

A recorded interview with the girl was made with the help of social workers. Komisarjevsky's lawyer hopes her testimony will help sway a jury to spare his life.

Judge Blue denied the objection, saying Komisarjevsky's attorney should be allowed to represent his client as he sees fit.

The jury was later shown the videotape, which was hidden from the public to protect the child's identity.

(Editing by Barbara Goldberg and Greg McCune)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111123/us_nm/us_crime_connecticut_murders

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Mexico army seizes drug lord's $15 million

Mexico's army seized nearly $15.4 million from the organization of the country's most powerful drug lord, Joaquin "Shorty" Guzman, officials said Tuesday, marking a rare financial blow to cartels.

The seizure was revealed the same day U.S. border police revealed the third discovery in a week of drug-smuggling tunnel under the border with Mexico.

In Mexico, the military said it found the cash was found in a vehicle on Nov. 18 in the northern border city of Tijuana and that it was linked to Guzman's operations.

The haul marked the second-largest cash seizure by the military since President Felipe Calderon sent the country's armed forces out to battle drug cartels in 2006, the statement said. Some $26 million was captured in September 2008 in Culiacan, the capital of Guzman's home state of Sinaloa.

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About 45,000 people have died in the conflict in the last five years and the government has captured or killed dozens of top level drug smugglers.

Story: 3 police officers found dead in Mexico border city

But critics complain the government has barely dented cartel finances. Total seizures add up to only a tiny fraction of the $18 billion to $39 billion in estimated annual revenue generated by Mexican and Colombian drug traffickers.

Mexico's biggest cash seizure to date was made by the attorney general's office when officials found more than $200 million stuffed in the walls of a Mexico City mansion in 2007, which at the time was the world's biggest ever seizure of drug money.

Guzman, Mexico's most wanted man, runs an empire of methamphetamine, marijuana and cocaine smuggling that has earned him a spot on Forbes magazine's list of billionaires.

Tunnel in Arizona
In Nogales, Ariz., the U.S. Border Patrol said a 319-foot long tunnel was discovered on Monday. It measured 3-feet wide by 2-feet tall, and ran for 100 feet into Mexico at a depth of about 20 feet.

It was chiseled through solid rock and was equipped with electricity, lighting and water pumps, and it was held up by support beams and plywood shoring, the Border Patrol's Tucson sector said in a news release.

While securing the tunnel, agents also found 26 bundles of marijuana weighing more than 430 pounds. One suspect was arrested by authorities in Mexico, Border Patrol agent Colleen Agle said.

The tunnel was the third discovered running under the porous U.S.-Mexico border in less than a week, and the 21st illicit passageway found beneath the streets of Nogales in the past two years.

Last Wednesday Authorities in California announced the find of an underground passageway that stretched 400 yards to an industrial park south of San Diego from Tijuana, Mexico. They seized more than 17 tons of marijuana and arrested two men.

The same day, authorities in Nogales found another smaller passageway beneath the porch of a house that ran 70 feet from a drain in Nogales in Mexico.

Agle said Mexican smugglers are increasingly turning to tunneling in a bid to beat beefed-up border security in the city, where a tall, new steel border fence was completed earlier this year.

"As we have been putting more resources along the border in this area, we are really taking away a lot of the traditional avenues for smuggling contraband and illegal aliens," Agle told Reuters.

She added that the majority of illicit passageways found under the city keyed into the extensive storm drain system that runs under the two Nogales, and contributes to making them such a hotspot for tunnelers.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45408974/ns/world_news-americas/

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Engadget's holiday gift guide 2011: bags and cases

Welcome to the Engadget Holiday Gift Guide! We're well aware of the heartbreaking difficulties surrounding the seasonal shopping experience, so we're here to help you sort out this year's tech treasures. Below is today's bevy of curated picks, and you can head back to the Gift Guide hub to see the rest of the product guides as they're added throughout the holiday season.

Santa may be able to toss a few thousand laptops in his bright red sack with nary a scratch to be seen -- but you sure can't. You'll want to keep those goods sparkly and new for as long as possible, and that's what today's gift selections are all about - getting your tech from A to B in the safest, most stylish way possible. There's plenty of choice for transporting your goodies, ranging from the bland to the bizarre, from rucksacks to courier bags, silicone to silk -- there is literally something for everyone. Finding a one-size-fits-all solution is going to be nigh-on impossible, but we're hopeful that what we've got here will be just the ticket to re-wrap what you just unboxed.

Continue reading Engadget's holiday gift guide 2011: bags and cases

Engadget's holiday gift guide 2011: bags and cases originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 23 Nov 2011 12:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Greenhouse gases soar; no signs warming is slowed (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Heat-trapping greenhouse gases in the atmosphere are building up so high, so fast, that some scientists now think the world can no longer limit global warming to the level world leaders have agreed upon as safe.

New figures from the U.N. weather agency Monday showed that the three biggest greenhouse gases not only reached record levels last year but were increasing at an ever-faster rate, despite efforts by many countries to reduce emissions.

As world leaders meet next week in South Africa to tackle the issue of climate change, several scientists said their projections show it is unlikely the world can hold warming to the target set by leaders just two years ago in Copenhagen.

"The growth rate is increasing every decade," said Jim Butler, director of the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Global Monitoring Division. "That's kind of scary."

Scientists can't say exactly what levels of greenhouse gases are safe, but some fear a continued rise in global temperatures will lead to irreversible melting of some of the world's ice sheets and a several-foot rise in sea levels over the centuries ? the so-called tipping point.

The findings from the U.N. World Meteorological Organization are consistent with other grim reports issued recently. Earlier this month, figures from the U.S. Department of Energy showed that global carbon dioxide emissions in 2010 jumped by the highest one-year amount ever.

The WMO found that total carbon dioxide levels in 2010 hit 389 parts per million, up from 280 parts per million in 1750, before the start of the Industrial Revolution. Levels increased 1.5 ppm per year in the 1990s and 2.0 per year in the first decade of this century, and are now rising at a rate of 2.3 per year. The top two other greenhouse gases ? methane and nitrous oxide ? are also soaring.

The U.N. agency cited fossil fuel-burning, loss of forests that absorb CO2 and use of fertilizer as the main culprits.

Since 1990 ? a year that international climate negotiators have set as a benchmark for emissions ? the total heat-trapping force from all the major greenhouse gases has increased by 29 percent, according to NOAA.

The accelerating rise is happening despite the 1997 Kyoto agreement to cut emissions. Europe, Russia and Japan have about reached their targets under the treaty. But China, the U.S. and India are all increasing emissions. The treaty didn't require emission cuts from China and India because they are developing nations. The U.S. pulled out of the treaty in 2001, the Senate having never ratified it.

While scientists can't agree on what level of warming of the climate is considered dangerous, environmental activists have seized upon 350 parts per million as a target for carbon dioxide levels. The world pushed past that mark more than 20 years ago.

Governments have focused more on projected temperature increases rather than carbon levels. Since the mid-1990s, European governments have set a goal of limiting warming to slightly more than 2 degrees Fahrenheit (1.2 degrees Celsius) above current levels by the end of this century. The goal was part of a nonbinding agreement reached in Copenhagen in 2009 that was signed by the U.S. and other countries.

Temperatures have already risen about 1.4 degrees Fahrenheit (0.8 degrees Celsius) since pre-industrial times.

Massachusetts Institute of Technology professors Ron Prinn, Henry Jacoby and John Sterman said MIT's calculations show the world is unlikely to meet that two-degree goal now.

"There's very, very little chance," Prinn said. "One has to be pessimistic about making that absolute threshold." He added: "Maybe we've waited too long to do anything serious if two degrees is the danger level."

Andrew Weaver at the University of Victoria, Granger Morgan of Carnegie Mellon University and Gregg Marland of Appalachian State University agreed with the MIT analysis that holding warming to two degrees now seems unlikely.

"There's no way to stop it. There's so much inertia in the system," Morgan said. "We've committed to quite a bit of warming."

Prinn said new studies predict that if temperatures increase by more than two degrees, the Greenland ice sheets will start an irreversible melting. And that will add to sea level rise significantly.

"Over the next several centuries, Greenland slowly melts away," Weaver said.

___

Online:

World Meteorological Organization's Greenhouse Gas Bulletin: http://bit.ly/vu04vB

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Annual Greenhouse Gas Index: http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/gmd/aggi/

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/energy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111121/ap_on_sc/un_greenhouse_gases

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Maze Solving Robot Mouse Makes Real Lab Mice Look Downright Stupid [Video]

Even after spending years solving countless placemat mazes at restaurants around the world, I'm still no match for this robotic micromouse that races through this giant maze in just 3.921 seconds, shaving a full second off the previous record. More »


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Scienceblogging: Scitable - a Q&A with Khalil Cassimally

Hi, thank you for taking your time for answering a few questions about the past, present and future developments of the science blogging ecosystem. Let me begin with you ? can you tell our readers, please, who you are, where you come from and how you got into science blogging?

Hi all, I just completed a research year in the fields of developmental biology and neuroscience in Australia which concludes my undergraduate study. Prior to coming to Australia, I spent three years studying in Malaysia. I?m not from Australia or Malaysia though; I?m from Mauritius, a small tropical island in the Indian Ocean. It?s the kind of place most people hope to go to for a great vacation spent at the beach, under the sun. And that?s my home, ha!

I started writing about science when I was 16. I enjoyed writing and science in general so it felt natural to start writing about science. I was never much of a geek back then to be honest but as I started writing more about science, I gradually (and proudly) transformed into one. But my major foray into science blogging happened some three years ago when I got in touch with Scitable?s senior scientific editor. Back then Scitable only had a handful of blogs, including Student Voices, a group blog for students by students. I started contributing sporadically to Student Voices and then went on to manage the blog. Now, I manage Scitable?s network of 16 blogs and 3 forums.

Everyone seems to agree that the summer of 2010 saw some big and important changes in the science blogging ecosystem. What are your own thoughts on this? Where do you think it will go next, over the next couple of years?

Although I was part of the science blogosphere back then, I was still relatively unaware of the happenings. So, although I was surprised by the mass exodus from Scienceblogs.com, I did not know what to make of it. Now that I know more about the science blogosphere, I can see how the exodus actually helped me (and I suppose a number of other newcomers to science blogging) to identify myself as a science blogger.

Back then Scienceblogs.com was a hub for many of the renown science bloggers of the time. It looked like an impenetrable community of top-notch science bloggers. As a young science blogger, I could only aspire to such quality of science writing but could not identify myself with those bloggers. Yes, they were science bloggers just like I was but they were blogging on Scienceblogs.com! They were unreal, untouchable? I did not feel part of the same community even though I too was a science blogger.

When Scienceblogs.com broke apart, those great bloggers started blogging elsewhere on networks that included lesser-known science bloggers and that was when it hit me. Even though there is a gulf in quality between those renown bloggers and myself, we are all doing the same thing here, we are in the same boat: we all want to spread our love for science. So no matter how young or inexperienced I might be, the thing that mattered the most was my enthusiasm for communicating science. This was when I started to take my blogging a little more seriously.

How do you personally read science blogs? Do you use feeds, or social networks, or some other ways of keeping track of the science blogging world? How do you find new blogs?

I use RSS feeds for a small number of blogs. But mostly, I don?t read blogs, I read blog posts. I end up at many interesting blog posts every day through Twitter. Which is great because I?m always reading from new people all the time so I get exposed to many different views and interests.

Tell us a little bit more about Scitable?s science blogging network. What is it about? How did it come about? By what process do you add bloggers to the network ? do they apply, do you invite them, or some other way?

Scitable is an endeavour of Nature Education, the educational division of Nature Publishing Group. Scitable offers a great number of high-quality articles, easily accessible for undergraduates especially. In addition, Scitable also hosts a network of science blogs. The network is a place for students, budding researchers, scientists and anybody with an interest in science to come together and share their views about anything science.

Scitable bloggers are students (from high school level to postgrad level), post-grads, lecturers and scientists, each with a different passion and interest. This diversity ensures that different members of the science community are represented on the network.

We love student science bloggers and we want to help in promoting these young voices. Student Voices is always accepting new bloggers, plus it publishes a number of guest posts. It?s as easy as emailing us if you want to do some science blogging on Scitable.

Where do you see Scitable?s science blogging network within the global science blogging ecosystem ? what is its position, how does it differ from others, what is the target audience, what unique service does it provide?

The focus of the Scitable network is very much, but not restricted to, students. We want to push the voices of students to the foreground and we want to engage and motivate our student readers and hopefully get them as excited about science as we all are here.

Our bloggers can blog about anything science they like or are interested in. There is only one rule and that?s to have fun. If you have fun when you?re doing something, the end-product is nearly always great.

What is next for Scitable?s science blogging network (as far as you are free to reveal)?

We are working on giving the network much more exposure on the Scitable website to make sure that bloggers reach as many people as they can with their blog posts. We?re also working on some new stuff which will be great for both our bloggers and readers. Can?t say much more at this point though!

Thank you so much for this interview.

?

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=4c5a45508fc94f10f7c4cc815cde57ab

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