Thursday, May 23, 2013

LeAnn Rimes asks daily forgiveness for cheating

Celebs

3 hours ago

Most people get to keep their marital mistakes private, but not country singer LeAnn Rimes. National magazines wrote about the tangled end of the singer's first marriage, and now Rimes tells "Entertainment Tonight" she asks for forgiveness "on a daily basis" for breaking her marriage vows.

Rimes wed backup dancer Dean Sheremet in 2002, and in 2009, cheated on him with actor Eddie Cibrian, who was himself married to reality-show personality Brandi Glanville at the time. Cibrian and Rimes wed in 2011.

She knows she did wrong, Rimes said. "I've definitely asked for forgiveness on a daily basis,"she told ET's Nancy O'Dell on Wednesday. "We are human beings who are going to sin and make mistakes."

Coming to grips with the affair is a topic of some of the songs on her new album "Spitfire," which comes out June 4. In one song, Rimes sings plaintively, "Oh, what have I done?"

She says she hopes her music will set the record straight about her actions. "I feel like so many people have written the story that they think will sell a magazine, or the story that they want to believe, but it's so 180 of what has been written," she told O'Dell. "People have had the lies to twist for so long they might as well have the truth to twist now."

The new song "You've Ruined Me" is about Cibrian, and includes the lyrics, "Guess my hands are tied here/How far do you want to take this/If my mouth's done too much talking/You should stop me with your kiss."

"You meet someone that is all of those things that you would love to have in a relationship," she said while explaining the song to O'Dell. "And so to go anywhere from that moment and that relationship and that love is just ... you've ruined me forever."

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/leann-rimes-asks-forgiveness-cheating-daily-basis-6C10037836

packers Dancing With The Stars All Stars Joseph Gordon-Levitt space shuttle Torrey Smith Brother fiona apple CJ Spiller

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Southwest Chicago Post: Crime News Update

Editor's note: The crime news reported by the Southwest Chicago Post---taken directly from Chicago Police Department incident reports---is not by any means an exhaustive catalogue of all crime reported in the Chicago Lawn (8th) District. For example, it typically does not include news of crimes committed in the eastern and southern sectors of the district---because the Southwest Chicago Post's coverage area is primarily the neighborhoods that border Midway Airport and secondarily because including the relatively large volume of crime news from elsewhere in the district would be a logistical challenge. We make this note to offer a little helpful perspective and remind everyone that while crime is definitely a concern in all parts of the district (as it always has been), crime remains relatively low overall in Sector 1. May all of us work together diligently to keep it that way. May all of us also remember that a person charged with a crime is presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

* * *


A 20-year-old Clearing man is set to appear in court on misdemeanor charges of stealing a bicycle from an open garage a block away from his home.

Childress Harrison III of 6416 South Long will appear in Cook County Circuit Court Branch 34-4, 151 West 51st Street, at 1:00 p.m. Monday, June 17, according to CPD.

He also is set to appear in Cook County Circuit Court in Bridgeview on Monday, June 3 to answer to bail bond violation charges, according to the Cook County Sheriff's Office.

At 5:10 p.m. Wednesday, May 8, CPD responded to a 911 call of a theft in progress near 64th and Lorel. They said that when they arrived on scene, they were met by a 29-year-old Clearing man who said that he saw two men walking with a purple mountain bike near 6416 South Long. Police said he further stated that the two had gone inside the house.

Another person, a 37-year-old West Lawn man, told police that he saw the two offenders take the bike from an open garage on the 6400 block of south Lorel.

Police said they investigated and took Harrison into custody, along with Stafford Williams, 21, of 3622 South State.

The bike was returned to its owner, a 60-year-old Clearing woman, police said.

Police said that Harrison and Williams matched the descriptions given by police dispatchers. Further, they were positively identified by the two witnesses.

* * *


A 25-year-old man from the Northwest Side's Belmont Cragin neighborhood is charged with burglary after he allegedly broke into the Chicago Industrial Catalytic warehouse, 4427 West 45th Street, and stole seven catalytic converters.

Jose Cruz of 2620 North Menard is charged with burglary.

Police responding to a burglar alarm at about 10:40 a.m. Friday, May 17 said they spotted Cruz hiding under a truck backed up to the loading dock. A 49-year-old Cicero man employed at the warehouse told police he did not know Cruz, and the truck had no business being there. The seven converters were found in the truck. The employee identified them as the company's property.

* * *


Two people were taken to Christ Hospital in stable condition after they were stabbed during a family party near 61st and Massasoit.

The crimes occurred at about 10:30 p.m. Saturday, May 18. Police responding to a "battery in progress" call said they saw a group of people outside a home, hollering at each other. They said they saw a 25-year-old Garfield Ridge man with two stab wounds to his body; and inside, a 39-year-old woman of the Massasoit address, also stabbed.

With CFD ambulances on the way, police asked the woman for details on what had occurred. She claimed she was not aware who stabbed her but said it happened while she was trying to break up an argument. Police said that she then became uncooperative and verbally combative with them.

Police noted that all adults at the party seemed to be intoxicated to varying degrees.

Several claimed the person who stabbed the victims is a man who lives at the address, but who apparently fled before police arrived.

Police also said that two of the men at the party are reputed gang members.

* * *


A fight at the Watra nightclub, 4758 South Pulaski, left two men nursing minor injuries.

At about 2:35 a.m. Sunday, May 19, a 23-year-old West Lawn man was on the dance floor when he was hit on the head with a beer bottle by another man.


The attack led to a multi-sided fight that spilled out onto the sidewalk, where a 26-year-old Clearing man was punched in the face.

According to the victims, the two attackers (described only as white Hispanic men) then fled in a maroon Ford Explorer.

* * *


Want to work directly with Chicago Police to prevent crime in your neighborhood? If you live in Beat 815 or 821 (see map), come to St. Bruno School (south entrance) at 7:00 p.m. Wednesday, June 5. Hear updates on crime in your neighborhood and learn how you can work with neighbors and police to make the community safer and better for all.

* * *


A 19-year-old Hearst area woman told police that as she was walking near 48th and Cicero just before 4:00 a.m. Sunday, May 19, she was shot in the head by attackers wielding a BB or pellet gun.

Police interviewed her while she was being treated at Mt. Sinai Hospital. She only described her attackers as three white Hispanic boys or men in a red SUV.

* * *

A 20-year-old Back of the Yards man who told police he was walking home said he was beaten and robbed while walking on a sidewalk near 51st and Kenneth at noon Wednesday, May 15.

He said he was accosted from behind and asked "What you be about and what do you have?" He said he was then hit in the face and knocked to the ground, as one assailant pummeled him and the other went through his pockets.

He said they stole his cell phone and fled on foot. He described them only as white Hispanic boys or men ages 17-20.

* * *

A 40-year-old West Lawn woman who heard a noise near her garage at 2:45 a.m. Saturday, May 18 and went to investigate, saw a burglar fleeing with a bicycle and a shop vac.

The burglar apparently broke a window to gain access to the garage near 66th and Central Park.

The criminal is described as a white Hispanic man about 5'8 tall, with long black hair.

* * *

Burglars broke into a garage near 62nd and Springfield and stole two air hammer drills and an air compressor.

The crime was discovered by the victim, a 59-year-old man, at 8:00 a.m. Thursday, May 16 when he saw the overhead door off its rails.

* * *

A 33-year-old Clearing man bringing his 61-year-old mother home from a doctor's appointment found her apartment ransacked.

The crime was discovered at 11:45 a.m. Thursday, May 16. The criminals had pried open the front door of the residence near 63rd and Neenah and stolen a TV, a laptop computer and an IPad.

* * *

Burglars forced their way through a back window of a house near 78th and Keating and stole 10 gold rings and chains.

The crime was discovered by a 24-year-old babysitter when she returned to the home at 1:30 p.m. Thursday, May 16 and found the premises ransacked. The victim, a 40-year-old man, was at work at the time.

* * *

Want to work directly with Chicago Police to prevent crime in your neighborhood? If you live in Beat 834 (see map), come to Bogan High School at 7:00 p.m. Thursday, June 6. Hear updates on crime in your neighborhood and learn how you can work with neighbors and police to make the community safer and better for all.

* * *

A burglar entered the unlocked rear door of an apartment building near 61st and Kolmar and stole a bicycle and assorted tools from a basement storage area.

The crime was discovered by the victim, a 53-year-old man, at 3:00 p.m. Wednesday, May 15. The man told police that he and his 16-year-old son toured the neighborhood and discovered a West Lawn teenager (a former friend of his son) riding the stolen bike. They demanded and got it back without incident.

The CPD incident report gave no indication on whether the tools were recovered.

* * *

A 23-year-old Burbank man told police that he was beaten and robbed by three men on a sidewalk near 79th and Kostner at 10:20 p.m. Wednesday, May 15.

The man said he was walking to work when the crime occurred. He said that he was robbed of his cell phone and a set of keys. He described the attackers as black men age 18-20, 5'8 to 6'0 and 150-180 pounds.

Police at the scene said they saw no evidence of injuries on the man reporting the crime.

# # #

Source: http://www.swchicagopost.com/2013/05/crime-news-update_21.html

long beach state beasley trailblazers michael beasley jermaine jones hbo luck unc asheville

Chrome for Android updated with tab history on slates, fullscreen for handsets

Chrome for Android updated with tab history on slates, fullscreen for handsets

Google's like the gift that keeps on giving. Following earlier news of a Drive for Android update, the team from Mountain View today rolled out a new version of its Chrome browser for mobile devices. This update brings the same features we saw a little over a month ago in the Beta channel, however Google's now deemed them ready for prime time. That (along with some undisclosed under-the-hood enhancements) includes the pseudo-fullscreen mode that's triggered by scrolling the page and, for tablets, the ability to view the tab history by way of the browser back button. For those who decided to skip the experimental version, you'll find the app in its stable form up for download at the Google Play link below.

Update: Google is back with additional news about its mobile Chrome browser, this time for the iOS version. In the coming days, iPhone and iPad users will find a new version of Chrome that allows users to submit voice queries into the Omnibox. The addition will mimic the functionality of Google Search for iOS, which accepts queries such as "How many miles from San Antonio to Dallas?" and "What's the weather in Rome?" Likewise, the update will introduce the ability to open links in Chrome from other iOS apps, along with quicker reloading of webpages from the browser cache. Hop the break for a quick peek.

Filed under: , , ,

Comments

Via: TechCrunch

Source: Google Play, Google Chrome Blog

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/22/chrome-for-android-update/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

giada de laurentiis howard hughes nationwide race wanderlust gone tyler perry good deeds pretty in pink

Senate Committee Poised to Beat Up On Apple (Powerlineblog)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/307148733?client_source=feed&format=rss

Charles Durning Webster Ny Mcdonalds Restaurants Open on Christmas Day jessica simpson santa tracker happy holidays

Timing of cancer radiation therapy may minimize hair loss

May 20, 2013 ? Discovering that mouse hair has a circadian clock -- a 24-hour cycle of growth followed by restorative repair -- researchers suspect that hair loss in humans from toxic cancer radiotherapy and chemotherapy might be minimized if these treatments are given late in the day.

The study, which appears in the early online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), found that mice lost 85 percent of their hair if they received radiation therapy in the morning, compared to a 17 percent loss when treatment occurred in the evening.

The researchers, from the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, the University of Southern California (USC) and the University of California, Irvine (UCI), worked out the precise timing of the hair circadian clock, and also uncovered the biology behind the clockwork -- the molecules that tells hair when to grow and when to repair damage. They then tested the clock using radiotherapy.

"These findings are particularly exciting because they present a significant step towards developing new radiation therapy protocols that include minimizing negative side effects on normal tissues, such as hair or bone marrow, while maintaining the desired effects on cancer cells," says Maksim Plikus, assistant professor of developmental and cell biology at UCI and the study's first author. "We will now apply our findings to design novel circadian rhythm-based approaches to cancer therapy."

The scientists can't say their findings will directly translate to human cancer therapy because they haven't yet studied that possibility. But they say it is becoming increasingly clear that body organs and tissues have their own circadian clocks that, when understood, could be used to time drug therapy for maximum benefit.

"There are clocks everywhere in the body -- clocks that have their own unique rhythm that, we found, have little to do with the central clock in our brains," says the study's co-lead investigator, Satchidananda Panda, an associate professor in Salk's Regulatory Biology Laboratory and an expert on circadian rhythm.

"This suggests that delivering a drug to an organ while it is largely inactive is not a good idea. You could do more damage to the organ than when it is awake, repairing and restoring itself," says Panda. "If you know when an organ is mending itself, you might be able to deliver more potent doses of a drug or therapy. That might offer a better outcome while minimizing side effects."

Panda uses genetic, genomics and biochemical approaches to identify genes under circadian regulation in different organs and to understand the mechanism of such regulation. Plikus at UCI and Cheng-Ming Chuong, professor of pathology at the Keck School of Medicine of USC and the study's co-lead investigator, are experts on hair regeneration.

These researchers and their colleagues teamed together to find and then take apart the mouse hair circadian clock. It was a long and difficult study, Chuong says.

"Hair is a very complicated organ, featuring different types of cells going through different stages in the life cycle in a very tiny space," Chuong says. "We found that hair in mice grows fast in the morning and slows down at night, engaging a very powerful clock."

Every time hair cells divide, they pick up DNA damage that needs to be repaired. The scientists discovered that mice hair cells repair that damage primarily in the evening. This process is akin to using a kitchen dishwasher, Panda says.

"Most of us run the dishwasher after we have accumulated a lot of dirty dishes -- we don't run it every time a dish is dirty. The same is true for cells. They clean up -- repair their DNA -- at one time each day," Panda says.

Radiotherapy damages DNA in cells that divide rapidly, which is why it is used against growing cancer cells. That means that DNA damage to hair cells from radiotherapy delivered in the morning is not repaired until the evening, leading to hair loss. Damage from radiotherapy at night, however, is minimized because hair cells, already in the process of repairing DNA, can quickly heal.

"While we don't yet know if human hair follows that same clock we found in mice hair, it is true that facial hair in men grows during the day, resulting in the proverbial 5 o'clock shadow. There is no 5 a.m. shadow if you shave at night," Panda says.

The researchers found that cancer cells do not have circadian clocks, because they are dividing all the time.

"That means cancer therapy does not have to be timed to be more effective," Panda adds. "The timing has to do with minimizing collateral damage from normal cells affected by these treatments."

Scientists know for certain that other organs, such as the liver, use a circadian clock, and they suspect that all human tissue is similarly regulated, although the clocks may be timed differently.

"There are many clinical implications for this cacophony of internal clocks, beyond the timing of drug therapy," Panda says. "For example, some researchers suspect that obesity and diabetes occurs when an organ or organs -- perhaps the liver or stomach or pancreas -- should be sleeping, but is awoken by food that needs to be processed.

"These local clocks do a lot more things than the central clock in the brain, which primarily regulates sleeping," he says. "This field of research is exciting and may, someday, contribute to human health."

Other contributing authors are Christopher Vollmers and Amandine Chaix from Salk, Damon de la Cruz from USC, and Raul Ramos from UCI.

The study was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (AR 42177, AR47364, DK091618, P30 CA014195), The Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust, the Dana Foundation, the Glenn Foundation for Medical Research and the Edward Mallinckrodt Jr. Foundation. The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/health_medicine/genes/~3/BUO49hE0GvY/130520163607.htm

louisville ky lotto winners mega ball winning numbers baltimore county current tv megamillions ncaa basketball tournament 2012

Goldman exits China's ICBC, seven years and billions later

By Fiona Lau and Elzio Barreto

HONG KONG (Reuters) - Goldman Sachs Group Inc raised $1.1 billion by selling its remaining shares in Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, ending a seven-year old investment and handing the Wall Street firm a return of nearly four times its original stake.

Goldman's relationship with ICBC was similar to that of other big global financial institutions that purchased stakes in Chinese banks and insurers. While the relationship was profitable, involved some cooperation and helped Chinese lenders become some of the world's biggest banks, few products or strategic benefits emerged.

The selldown also comes at a time when Goldman, like other big Western banks, is keen to boost its balance sheet ahead of new capital requirements.

Prior to its 2006 initial public offering, ICBC was a technically insolvent state institution, reeling from the bad loans that had saddled China's financial industry.

ICBC's fortunes turned after it went public, and the bank grew along with China's economic boom. The bank's $240 billion market value is now just shy of the combined worth of J.P. Morgan Chase & Co and Barclays .

Goldman agreed to invest $2.58 billion in ICBC in January 2006, using internal funds that invest a mix of client, employee and corporate cash. With the final selldown, the last of six, gross proceeds from the sales would be $10.1 billion.

Calculating Goldman's own profit on the stake is tricky because not all of the investment came from its own balance sheet, and the cost of acquiring and maintaining the ICBC stake is unknown.

Goldman late on Monday sold 1.585 billion Hong Kong-traded shares of ICBC at HK$5.50 each, equivalent to a 2.5 percent discount to Monday's close of HK$5.64, a person familiar with the matter told Reuters. The deal, which was marketed in a range of HK$5.47-$5.50 per share, totaled HK$8.72 billion ($1.1 billion).

ICBC shares fell 2 percent to HK$5.53, compared with a 0.6 percent decline in the benchmark Hang Seng index <.hsi>.

CHINA GAME

Bank of America , Citigroup , UBS and Royal Bank of Scotland all bought into Chinese banks shortly after Goldman's deal, as Beijing prepared to float its major financial institutions on the Hong Kong and Shanghai stock exchanges.

Goldman began to sell its ICBC stake in 2009. The New York bank, like other foreign financial groups, was able to reap a hefty windfall from China holdings at the time, when cash was precious post financial crisis.

But unlike other foreign banks that sold out of China quickly, Goldman remained.

Goldman increased its pace of ICBC sales in the last few years, as banks needed to meet tougher capital requirements under the global Basel III accord, with asset sales one of the quickest ways for them to bolster their balance sheets. U.S. regulators are still in the process of finalizing how they will implement Basel III, though banks are under pressure from investors to show they can meet the requirements regardless of whether the laws have been finalized or not.

Goldman also has a securities joint venture and a 12 percent stake in Taikang Life Insurance Co.

Other foreign banks still have holdings in Chinese lenders. Among them, HSBC Plc owns a 19.9 percent holding in China's Bank of Communications Co Ltd and Spain's BBVA's has a 15 percent stake in China Citic Bank Corp Ltd .

Goldman's sale on Monday is its third in about a year. The New York-based investment bank raised $2.5 billion from a partial selldown of ICBC in April 2012, most of which was bought by Singapore state investor Temasek Holdings Ltd , and another in January 2013 worth $1 billion.

Since 2006, Goldman has reported $3.5 billion in net revenue related to ICBC in quarterly filings.

$1 = 7.7620 Hong Kong dollars)

(Reporting by Fiona Lau of IFR and Elzio Barreto in Hong Kong; Additional reporting by Lauren Tara LaCapra and Denny Thomas; Editing by Miral Fahmy, Michael Flaherty, Jeffrey Benkoe and Edwina Gibbs)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/goldman-exits-chinas-icbc-seven-years-billions-later-041654572.html

Jason Molina UCF Pigeon Forge Fire cyprus cyprus Bracketology Erin Go Bragh