Monday, January 31, 2011

kim kardashian w magazine


kim kardashian w magazine

Kim Kardashian's anger was upset Sunday night episode of "Kourtney and Kim Do New York" when he saw a sneak peek of his now controversial November 2010 nude photo spread in W magazine.

After Khloe came to town to help the family store DASH, the episode of Kim's excitement turned to hedge the article "high-end fashion magazine, which claimed her naked body would be obscured by silver paint and words, but nothing else.

"I thought the nude shoots?" Kourtney said.

Kim explains that the artist that his "breasts" to the cover and other parts of his anatomy, all slathered with deep silver paint in one of the openings.

"Even though I agreed to the nude, I fully covers the work," Kim said.

But it turned out the kitschy pictures by Mark Seliger remained as it was, which appear more naked than their W Kim Playboy spread, she said.

"It's just absurd," he said in tears, when you get a sneak peek at the magazine. " This is a serious porn! "

The 30-year star of the reality sisters Kourtney and Khloe explained that it was crying because she felt "to take advantage." He added that he was going to fire someone - presumably her mother, who is essentially her manager.

But does not cover showed a naked clubbing does not solve anything. So Kim went to her sisters, a cheer that seemed to work until Scott Disick, Kourtney infant, father only to someone else (although, to be honest, I defend the honor of Kim, Kourtney later thought, I apologize for accusing him before the fight).

Kim has not improved mood the next day, when her mother told her that the W magazine printed and shipped.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

obama gun grabbing


obama gun grabbing

He's shooting his wife Gabby Giffords Congress was the subject of gun rights and gun control regular conversation like no other event in modern memory. The political and philosophical debate was raging in the social circles of Washingtonians will be difficult to imagine. If Americans have a constitutional right to bear arms, then the government denies the right of a mentally ill person who is legally reprimanded for not monitoring the state law to buy a gun? What is the legal limit, which specifies that a person - and a U.S. citizen - be legally competent and secure the right to possess firearms? Should Obama start grabbing the person that the government is also mentally - and, if so, who determines the limits?

The Wall Street Journal writes,

Arizona shot which killed six people and aimed at an armed member of Congress thrust into the spotlight, how difficult it is for most states in the United States to stay away from weapons to people struggling with mental health. Since 1968, federal law prohibits the sale of weapons to anyone deemed mentally unfit. But first, the court decides that someone is unfit, a very high standard. Even in cases where gun purchasers are deemed mentally unfit, they can still legally buy a gun is a private seller is necessary because there is no screening at all.

In the case of murder suspect Jared Lee Loughner, his face a few obstacles when buying a gun from Arizona, has some of the most lax gun laws in the country. A community college campus police informed in advance of Mr. Loughner disruptive behavior during class. But has not begun the judicial process. The record was not in the system.

huntington s disease


huntington s disease

The University of Massachusetts Medical School (UMMS) and the Lundbeck Inc., today announced a research collaboration to further develop therapies to slow or stop the progression of Huntington's disease (HD). There is currently no way to stop or reverse the course of HD, a challenging inherited neurodegenerative disease, a progressive three-motor, cognitive and emotional symptoms.1 This cooperation led to the creation of a study group of scientists to support RNAi-based therapies as a possible way to selectively suppress the production of mutant huntingtin (mHtt), the abnormal protein causes HD.2

RNA interference, or RNAi is a natural process of cell to turn off or silence the activity of specific genes. HD is assigned to a particular gene, making it a promising target for RNAi-based therapy, because the production of a mutant protein, possibly as mHtt blocked by scrapping or reducing the gene activity.3

"Our main idea is that RNAi can be used to selectively reduce the production of mutant huntingtin is slow or block the progression of HD, but it is also assumed that the excessive neural function can inhibit huntingtin gene silencing by interfering in the most important signaling events," said Aronia Neil, MD, UMMS professor of medicine and cell biology and principal investigator of the study. "This research collaboration will allow us to identify promising RNAi-based therapeutic action of selective mutant huntingtin test vehicles with the aim of restoring normal nerve function. We have a long way to push this research forward, and this is the next step Lundbeck very exciting. "
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