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Kate Moss gives up partying for love's sake Print E-mail
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Written by ANI   
Tuesday, 07 October 2008

London, Oct 7 (ANI): Supermodel Kate Moss has reportedly toned down her wild ways for sake of Jamie Hince.

According to sources, Moss has rekindled romance with the Kills popstar after promising to cut down on her wild partying.

They split last month when the 39-year-old Kills star grew fed up with her social life.

But Kate, 33, is so in love she has now pledged to calm down in an effort to keep hold of her man, reports the Mirror.

She told a friend: "Me and Jamie are fine. He wasn't best pleased with me going out all the time but it wasn't a massive issue and it's all sorted now. We're really happy."

Hince, who is touring America with his band, will reunite with Kate once he is back.

"The romance is back on. Kate loves Jamie. It wasn't a difficult decision for her to tone down the partying because she's committed to making the relationship work," a pal said. (ANI)

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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 07 October 2008 )
 
Actress Lumley to convince Parliament to let Gurkhas stay in UK Print E-mail
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Written by ANI   
Monday, 13 October 2008

London, Oct.13 (ANI): Actress Joanna Lumley has said that she will join Gurkha soldiers in Parliament to fight for their right to settle in the UK.

Campaigners are pressurising the Government to implement new policy allowing veterans who left the service before 1997 to live here.

Last month a High Court judge ruled the Government's immigration policy excluding them was unlawful and in need of urgent review.

More than 2,000 former Gurkha soldiers have been refused permission to settle in the UK because they retired before July 1997.

According to the Daily Star, Lumley will be in the gallery of the House of Lords this afternoon with Justice campaign co-ordinator Peter Carroll to see the third reading of a bill, which would see a change in the law.

She will then meet soldiers and supportive MPs.

Lumley, whose own father served with the Gurkhas for 30 years, said: "I will be in Portcullis House asking for MPs on all sides of the House to support this bill and our Gurkha heroes.

"The fact that the bill has enjoyed cross Party support in the Lords is a magnificent and hopeful sign. The Government has a historic opportunity to put right this terrible wrong. Letting this bill stand will honour our debt."

A similar bill has been introduced in the House of Commons by Bob Russell, Liberal Democrat MP for Colchester.

Campaigners are hoping to garner a million signatures for their petition and persuade the Government to pass the new laws. (ANI)

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Last Updated ( Monday, 13 October 2008 )
 
Bush playing Cupid for daughter Barbara and Michael Phelps? Print E-mail
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Written by ANI   
Wednesday, 27 August 2008

New Delhi, August 27 (ANI): Golden Olympian Michael Phelps has apparently made a special place in U.S. President George W. Bush's daughter Barbara's heart, for she reportedly kept on telling her friends that the swimmer could be spectacular during the Beijing Games.

"Barbara, 26, often talked about Phelps, 23, with her friends even before the Beijing Olympic Games," chinaview.cn quoted the Globe Magazine as saying in a report.

The journal said that Barbara's words suggested that she admired Phelps' swimming skills, and considered him to be a charming and handsome athlete.

The report also said that the U.S. President might like to play Cupid, for it was he who introduced Barbara to Phelps after he won his unprecedented eight-gold quest in men's 400 individual medley final on August 10.

Bush is said to have invited Phelps to be a special guest in White House next month.

He is also said to have mentioned that he would let Barbara accompany Phelps during the stay. (ANI)

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Last Updated ( Wednesday, 27 August 2008 )
 
Scientists identify 'hub' of fear memory in brain cells Print E-mail
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Written by ANI   
Monday, 29 September 2008

London, September 29 (ANI): Experiments on mice conducted by Emory University researchers have revealed that a protein required for the earliest steps in embryonic development, beta-catenin, also plays a key role in solidifying fear memories in the brain.

Study leader Dr. Kerry Ressler, associate professor of psychiatry and behavioural sciences at Emory University School of Medicine, says that beta-catenin can be a potential target for drugs to enhance or interfere with memory formation.

For probing beta-catenin's role in fear memory formation, Ressler and his graduate student Kimberly Maguschak used a variety of approaches to probe beta-catenin's role in fear memory formation - such as stabilizing the protein with a pulse of the psychiatric drug lithium, and injecting a virus that could remove the gene for beta-catenin from brain cells.

The researchers made the mice learn to dread a certain tone that was followed by an electrical shock, and the animals would show that fear by freezing.

"We found that after beta-catenin is taken out, the mice can still learn to fear the shocks. But two days later, their fear doesn't seem to be retained because they spend half as much time freezing in response to the tone," Nature magazine quoted Maguschak as saying.

She said that beta-catenin appeared to be turned on in the amygdala - a brain region thought to be important for forming memories of emotionally charged events - and involved in signalling during the learning process.

"However, after the process of moving memories from short-term to long-term is complete, beta-catenin doesn't appear to be necessary anymore," she said.

"Injecting the virus after that point has no effect on the ability of the mice to express their fear memory," she added.

The researchers also observed that lithium salts, when given to the mice before training, made them even more afraid of the tone two days later.

Chemically, lithium inhibits an enzyme that usually targets beta-catenin for destruction, causing beta-catenin to become more active.

Maguschak, however, insisted that lithium was an imprecise tool for studying beta-catenin because it affects several enzymes in the brain.

Ressler added: "Psychiatrists have used lithium to treat mania and bipolar disorder for decades, but how it works is not well-understood. Importantly, we gave the mice one acute dose of lithium, rather than letting it build to a stable level like in the clinical situation. It's not clear whether there is a connection between mood regulation and how lithium functions in our experiments with fear memory."

Based on their observations, the researchers came to the conclusion that medications that inhibit beta-catenin could transiently interfere with memory formation after trauma, helping to prevent post-traumatic stress disorder.

They further said that medications that enhance beta-catenin function within the brain might serve as new therapies to treating disorders of memory, such as Alzheimer's disease.

Ressler revealed that his team was planning to dissect the contribution of beta-catenin's different functions: cell adhesion and developmental signaling.

According to him, when over-activated by genetic mutations, beta-catenin could drive tumour formation in several tissues, such as the colon, the skin and the kidney.

"It's possible we will see that a number of genes involved in cancer also are involved in learning and memory," he says.

A research article describing the study has been published in the journal Nature Neuroscience. (ANI)

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Last Updated ( Monday, 29 September 2008 )
 
Astronomers find evidence for cloudy weather on failed stars Print E-mail
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Written by ANI   
Saturday, 04 October 2008

Washington, Oct 4 (ANI): A team of University of Hawaii, California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and MIT astronomers, using one of the Keck telescopes on Mauna Kea, has found evidence for cloudy weather on failed stars.

The star in question, 2M1404B, has a mass of about 3 percent of the mass of our sun and lives with its slightly more massive sibling, 2M1404A, 75 light-years away in the constellation of Centaurus.

While 2M1404A is socked in by thick clouds, the cloud layer in 2M1404B seems to be breaking up into patches.

Both failed stars are "brown dwarfs," objects whose mass is between that of large gaseous planets, such as Jupiter, and ordinary stars.

These are not normal stars because they are not massive enough to fuse hydrogen, so they cool and fade as they become older.

Normally, the more massive a star or brown dwarf is, the more radiation it emits. So, the team was surprised to find that 2M1404B emits 60 percent more near-infrared radiation than its higher-mass sibling.

"While smaller discrepancies have been seen in three other brown dwarf pairs, the size of this anomaly is most easily explained by clouds breaking up," said Dagny Looper, a UH graduate student and lead author of the study.

After a stable childhood during which it exhausts its deuterium (heavy hydrogen) fuel, a brown dwarf steadily cools down until materials such as enstatite (a common mineral) and iron condense to form thick globe-covering clouds.

Like smog on Earth, the dust absorbs light, causing a brown dwarf to appear dimmer in the near infrared (at a wavelength of 1.2 micrometers) than it would without the clouds.

But when brown dwarfs cool down even further, to temperatures comparable to those observed in 2M1404B (about 1700 degrees F or 900 C), the clouds suddenly disappear.

The resulting clear skies cause the brown dwarf to appear brighter at certain wavelengths.

According to team member Dr. Adam Burgasser, an assistant professor at MIT, similar brightenings have been seen in clear patches in Jupiter's cloud decks.

"There appears to be an interesting connection between the clouds on planets and the clouds on brown dwarfs," he said.

"Like many other brown dwarf binaries, the separation in the sky between the two components is very small," commented team member Dr. Chris Gelino.

"The adaptive optics system on Keck II is playing a crucial role in our understanding of brown dwarf physics, especially with discoveries like this one," he added. (ANI)

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Last Updated ( Saturday, 04 October 2008 )
 
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