Sunday, November 4, 2012

Tumor-causing cells are squishier

ScienceDaily (Nov. 2, 2012) ? A new tool developed by scientists at The Methodist Hospital separates tumor-causing cancer cells from more benign cells by subjecting the cells to a microscopic game of Plinko -- except only the squishiest cells make it through.

As reported in this week's Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (early edition online), the more flexible, tumor-causing cells navigated a gamut of tiny barriers, whereas the more rigid, more benign cells had trouble squeezing through 7 micrometer holes. Methodist scientists worked with University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center researchers to test the device with different kinds of cancer cells.

The work supports the hypothesis that cell squishiness indicates tumor potential. Most normal cells contain a developed cytoskeleton -- a network of tiny but strong rod-shaped proteins that give cells their shape and structure. In their feverish drive to divide, cancer cells may be diverting resources away from developing a cytoskeleton in favor of division, hence the squishiness.

"We have created many pathways for cells to cross barriers," said Methodist nanomedical faculty Lidong Qin, Ph.D., the project's principal investigator. "The throughput of a MS-Chip is at the level of one million cells. When a stiff cell blocks one particular barrier, many other bypasses will allow flexible cells to flow through."

Cancer stem cells are known to be squishier than other cancer cells. The team of scientists showed that flexible cells separated by the MS-Chip exhibited gene expression patterns consistent with cancer stem cells.

"Many papers indicate the presence of cancer stem cells means a worse prognosis for patients," said cancer scientist Jenny Chang, M.D., co-principal investigator and director of Methodist's Cancer Center. "Yet they are not typically quantified by doctors."

Subsequent analysis of separated cells by the Methodist and MD Anderson team showed the flexible cells were less likely to express cell cytoskeleton genes and more likely to express the motility genes that could contribute to metastasis.

By testing for the presence of metastatic cells, doctors may be able to tell whether cancer treatment was successful, or an as-yet untreated cancer's likelihood of metastasizing to another part of the body.

A growing awareness of cancer stem cells' role in cancer metastasis and recurrence and has been frustrated by the absence of technology that makes this knowledge useful to doctors and their patients. Up to now, there has been no way of quickly and reliably separating and identifying the more dangerous tumor-causing cells from a biopsy.

The new device, which was developed at Methodist, successfully enriched tumor-causing cells from a mixture of cancer cells. It is called the Mechanical Separation Chip, or MS-Chip. Cells separated by the device can be easily collected and studied. The current standard for cell separation, flow cytometry, is relatively slow and relies on cell surface biomarkers.

"Our microfluidics cell separation via MS-Chip provides a high throughput method that can particularly sort cells to different levels of stiffness, which opens a new avenue to study stiffness related cellular and molecular biology," Qin said. "Downstream molecular analysis, including genomic and proteomic profiling of the cell subtypes, provides an approach to identifying new biomarkers relevant to cancer stem cells and cancer metastasis."

Right now, each MS-Chip costs about $10 to produce.

"If massively produced, MS-Chip cost could be at the level of one dollar per chip," Qin said. "Running a mechanical cell separation will be even less expensive than flow cytometry cell sorting."

This work was funded by grants from the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas, the U54-CA149196-Pilot Project, the Emily Herrmann Research Fund, Golfers Against Cancer Foundation, and the State of Texas Rare and Aggressive Breast Cancer Research Program.

Also contributing to the PNAS report were Weijia Zhang, Dong Soon Choi, Yen H. Nguyen, Helen Wong, and Melissa D. Landis (The Methodist Hospital Research Institute), and Kazuharu Kai, Takayuki Iwamoto, and Naoto T. Ueno (University of Texas MD Anderson). Qin is also an assistant professor of cell and developmental biology at the Weill Cornell Medical College of Cornell University, and Chang is a Weill Cornell professor of medicine.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Methodist Hospital, Houston, via Newswise.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. W. Zhang, K. Kai, D. S. Choi, T. Iwamoto, Y. H. Nguyen, H. Wong, M. D. Landis, N. T. Ueno, J. Chang, L. Qin. Microfluidics separation reveals the stem-cell-like deformability of tumor-initiating cells. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1209893109

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/biochemistry/~3/eHSxBdpI33g/121102115114.htm

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Arcade Fire's Win Butler Praises Obama | Music News | Rolling Stone

November 2, 2012 12:15 PM ET

Win Butler performs at a Cinema for Peace event in Los Angeles.

Michael Buckner/Getty Images For J/P Haitian Relief Organization and Cinema For Peace

Arcade Fire?frontman Win Butler praises President Barack Obama in an entry for Dave Eggers and Jordan Kurland's?political project 90 Days, 90 Reasons, and quips that, as an American living in Canada, he'd like?"four more sweet years of Canadians liking Americans." Full text of the letter follows below.

Barack Obama is perhaps the greatest president of modern times at communicating directly with foreign populations. He has also changed the way the government communicates with its own citizens about the outside world.

I am excited for four more years of an Obama presidency for many reasons, but the one I am going to write about is selfish: I want four more sweet years of Canadians liking Americans. The Republicans will try to convince America that President Obama being a good communicator is somehow a bad thing. Often times politicians act as if the only use of public speaking is trying to get elected. In fact, this kind of personal charisma is perhaps the most direct way a president can pursue America's interests abroad. Being able to communicate in a compelling way, and engaging other countries as partners and adults, is in America?s best interest.

There was a great example of this over the summer when Mitt Romney visited London for the Olympic games. In attempting to pander to a U.S. audience and show how "presidential" he was, he ended up convincing our greatest ally that he?s prone to terrible gaffes that could jeopardize relationships with our allies ??delicate relationships where a few misplaced words can do great harm.

The most compelling recent example of President Obama's abilities as a communicator came in his recent address to the United Nations. This speech was broadcast all over Canada and the world, and it detailed America?s vision for human rights, democratic change in the Middle East and its priority to change the global status of women.

I felt so proud ??as an American citizen living in a socially progressive country like Canada ??that our president understands that there are global moral imperatives that unite us all.

To read the new issue of Rolling Stone online, plus the entire RS archive: Click Here

Source: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/arcade-fires-win-butler-praises-obama-20121102

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Saturday, November 3, 2012

Ousting of police chief highlights Argentina's vulnerability to organized crime

A police chief is accused of organizing a pay-out scheme with local drug traffickers. With rampant police corruption, Argentina may be ill-prepared for the rise of powerful trafficking organizations.

By Geoffrey Ramsey,?InSight Crime / November 2, 2012

? InSight Crime researches, analyzes, and investigates organized crime in the Americas. Find all of Geoffrey Ramsey's research here.

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Evidence of police corruption in northern Argentina illustrates how vulnerable the country is to organized crime, as domestic demand for cocaine rises and the country emerges as a regional trafficking hub, with one of Colombia's biggest capos captured there this week.

The case of Hugo Tognoli, former police commissioner of the northern Santa Fe province, provides a useful insight into the institutional crisis currently faced by the Argentine police. Mr. Tognoli was accused of receiving kickbacks from drug trafficking organizations based in Santa Fe. He resigned on Oct. 19, and briefly went missing before turning himself in to authorities on Oct. 21. Tognoli denies the charges against him.

RELATED: Think you know Latin America? Take our geography quiz!

Public prosecutors accuse Tognoli of organizing a scheme with local drug trafficking networks in which he took monthly payments of $150,000 in exchange for allowing them to operate in his area. The evidence against the police commissioner suggests that such arrangements were a hallmark of his leadership style. Investigators claim to have a record of a text message exchange between one of Tognoli?s subordinates and a brothel owner, in which the latter asked how much the commissioner would charge him to sell cocaine. ?30,000 [pesos a month, or about $6,300] directly to Tognoli,? was the response.

As La Nacion notes, the arrest of Tognoli is not the only example of corruption in Santa Fe. The Buenos Aires-based daily claims that the province is a hotbed of drug trafficking, with hundreds of millions of dollars in illicit profits moving through Rosario, its largest city. Police collusion with illicit activity is widespread. Law enforcement sources consulted by La Nacion described an ?anarchic? situation among police in Rosario, with lower level officers ? increasingly dissatisfied with their cut of drug profits ? charging traffickers of their own accord to operate in several neighborhoods in the city.

InSight Crime Analysis

Police corruption in Argentina, which has long been an issue, has taken on greater importance in light of the country?s emergence as a hub in the regional cocaine trade. Authorities are seeing a sharp rise in drug seizures, corresponding to a surge in demand for cocaine in the country. ?With cocaine consumption ? particularly of a kind of crack cocaine known as ?paco? ? taking off in Argentina, it has become the second largest consumer of the drug in Latin America after Brazil, accounting for an estimated 25 percent of cocaine use in the region.

In addition to serving as a major market for cocaine, the country is increasingly used as a transit point for trafficking networks. Argentina serves as a key link to both West Africa and the European cocaine market, which has seen an uptick in demand?in recent years.

This surge in cocaine traffic has accompanied growing concern among officials over the presence of powerful transnational criminal organizations in the country. The Sinaloa Cartel?s Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman was rumored to have taken refuge in Argentina in mid-2011, and a former lieutenant of Colombian drug kingpin Daniel "El Loco" Barrera was killed in April while hiding out in Buenos Aires.

With police corruption rampant in Argentina, the country may be ill-prepared for the rise of powerful drug trafficking organizations. President Cristina Fernandez [de Kirchner] created a new security ministry in 2010, partly out of a wish to address the problem, appointing the reform-minded Nilda Garre at its head. Ms. Garre has proven to be an innovative figure, overseeing a shake-up of the federal police command and promising to root out police corruption at all levels. Still, as the Tognoli case illustrates, the Argentine government will be hard pressed to tackle corruption without addressing both the culture of abuse and the financial incentives that drive police officials to accept money from criminals.

The country is also used as a hide-out for Colombian traffickers, with Urabe?os boss?Henry de Jesus Lopez, alias "Mi Sangre,? captured in a Buenos Aires supermarket this week.

RELATED: Think you know Latin America? Take our geography quiz!

? Geoffrey Ramsey is a writer for Insight ? Organized Crime in the Americas, which provides research, analysis, and investigation of the criminal world throughout the region. Find all of his research here.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/Qf0K9ZzK5_A/Ousting-of-police-chief-highlights-Argentina-s-vulnerability-to-organized-crime

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Elephant in South Korean zoo imitates human speech

Kosik, a 22-year-old Asian elephant, puts his trunk in his mouth to modulate sound next to his chief trainer Kim Jong-gab at the Everland amusement park in Yongin, South Korea, Friday, Nov. 2, 2012. Kosik uses his trunk to pick up not only food but also human vocabulary. He can reproduce five Korean words by tucking his trunk inside his mouth to modulate sound. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)

Kosik, a 22-year-old Asian elephant, puts his trunk in his mouth to modulate sound next to his chief trainer Kim Jong-gab at the Everland amusement park in Yongin, South Korea, Friday, Nov. 2, 2012. Kosik uses his trunk to pick up not only food but also human vocabulary. He can reproduce five Korean words by tucking his trunk inside his mouth to modulate sound. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)

Kosik, a 22-year-old Asian elephant, puts his trunk in his mouth to modulate sound next to his chief trainer Kim Jong-gab at the Everland amusement park in Yongin, South Korea, Friday, Nov. 2, 2012. Kosik uses his trunk to pick up not only food but also human vocabulary. He can reproduce five Korean words by tucking his trunk inside his mouth to modulate sound. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)

(AP) ? An elephant in a South Korean zoo is using his trunk to pick up not only food, but also human vocabulary.

An international team of scientists confirmed Friday what the Everland Zoo has been saying for years: Their 5.5-ton tusker Koshik has an unusual and possibly unprecedented talent.

The 22-year-old Asian elephant can reproduce five Korean words by tucking his trunk inside his mouth to modulate sound, the scientists said in a joint paper published online in Current Biology. They said he may have started imitating human speech because he was lonely.

Koshik can reproduce "annyeong" (hello), "anja" (sit down), "aniya" (no), "nuwo" (lie down) and "joa" (good), the paper says.

One of the researchers said there is no conclusive evidence that Koshik understands the sounds he makes, although the elephant does respond to words like "anja" and "nuwo."

Everland Zoo officials in the city of Yongin said Koshik also can imitate "ajik" (not yet), but the researchers haven't confirmed the accomplishment.

Koshik is particularly good with vowels, with a rate of similarity of 67 percent, the researchers said. For consonants he scores only 21 percent.

Researchers said the clearest scientific evidence that Koshik is deliberately imitating human speech is that the sound frequency of his words matches that of his trainers.

Vocal imitation of other species has been found in mockingbirds, parrots and mynahs. But the paper says Koshik's case represents "a wholly novel method of vocal production" because he uses his trunk to reproduce human speech.

In 1983, zoo officials in Kazakhstan reportedly claimed that a teenage elephant named Batyr could reproduce Russian to utter 20 phrases, including "Batyr is good." But there was no scientific study on the claim.

Researchers believe Koshik learned to reproduce words out of a desire to bond with his trainers after he was separated from two other elephants at age 5.

Koshik emerged as a star among animal enthusiasts and children in South Korea after Everland Zoo claimed in 2006 that he could imitate words, two years after his trainers noticed the phenomenon. His growing reputation prompted Austrian biologist Angela Stoeger-Horwath and German biophysicist Daniel Mietchen to study him in 2010, zoo officials said.

Oh Suk-hun, a South Korean veterinarian who co-authored the research paper with Stoeger-Horwath and Mietchen, said the elephant apparently started imitating human speech to win the trust of his trainers.

In April, a children's science book called "Joa Joa, Speaking Elephant" was published. The cover photo showed Koshik opening his mouth wide while raising a trunk over his trainer's head.

Researchers said Koshik was trained to obey several commands and "exposed to human speech intensively" by trainers, veterinarians and zoo visitors.

Shin Nam-sik, a veterinary professor at Seoul National University who has seen Koshik, agreed with researchers' finding that the elephant was able to mimic human speech.

"In Koshik's case, the level of intimacy between him and his trainer was the key factor that made the elephant want to sound like a human," Shin said.

Kim Jong-gab, Koshik's chief trainer, said the elephant was timid for a male when he first came to Everland Zoo, so trainers often slept in the same area with him. Kim thinks that contact helped Koshik feel closer to humans.

Kim said he has another phrase he wants to teach Koshik: "Saranghae," or "I love you."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/aa9398e6757a46fa93ed5dea7bd3729e/Article_2012-11-02-SKorea-Talking%20Tusker/id-71dd5197519441a49b06e3b891fbfd0d

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Moving up and out | DavidsonNews.net

Posted on 01 November 2012.

Girl Scout Cadettes from Troop 3029 entertained Pines' residents of Health Care for Halloween.  (Leaders are Cary Anne Melton and Cheryl Knesel)

Girl Scout Cadettes from Troop 3029 entertained Pines? residents of Health Care for Halloween. (Leaders are Cary Anne Melton and Cheryl Knesel)

brenda barger sig
Good-bye Halloween.? Hello All Saints Day.? Hope everyone is staying warm and ready for an extra hour of sleep this weekend when we ?fall back? one hour to return to Eastern Standard Time.

Hurricane Sandy has impacted so many along the Eastern coast.? Today Around ?Davidson visits with Suzy and Buzz Yoder who had to evacuate their post on Cape Lookout.? We also hear about Sam and Ava Spencer who traveled to Maine last week but returned home just before the storm.? In addition there is news about Nancy Cable?s new position.? And don?t forget Movember kicks off today with events listed in our Noteworthy Note.

HEADING INLAND FOR THE YODERS

Suzy and Buzz Yoder are there to greet you at Cape Lookout National Park Suzy and Buzz Yoder are there to greet you at Cape Lookout National Park

Suzy and Buzz Yoder are there to greet you at Cape Lookout National Park

Some may know Suzy and Buzz Yoder by their more academic names of Suzanne and Lauren but to friends in Davidson, it is just Suzy and Buzz.? Having retired from academia at Davidson College in 2008, this energetic couple decided, as health permitted, to undertake one adventure each year.? Taking advice from Davidsonians Ken and Sauni Wood who volunteer in national parks frequently, Suzy and Buzz spent four months in Alaska two years ago.? There they were caretakers in Nancy Lake State Park for four months.

This fall the Yoders decided to stay closer to home and are volunteering for two months at Cape Lookout National Park.? They have a cabin with responsibilities to greet fishermen and see that the park area is well kept.? A daily ferry from Davis Shore brings campers, RV?s and visitors to the long, thin strand of barrier island.? Suzy and Buzz are enjoying learning about the island and stories of its history,?from the fishermen.? A special perk is watching the turtles nest on the shore.

For every five days on the island, the Yoders have two days off to come ashore for provisions or travel in the area.? Last Thursday when they began their two days off, they learned that the island was being evacuated due to Hurricane Sandy. So they came home to their house in Davidson to wait for the ?All Clear? call from the Park Service to return to Cape Lookout.

Enjoying their brief respite in Davidson, Suzy and Buzz got to visit with their daughter, Jocelyn and her husband, Benn Weddington, of Mooresville.? They have four children but only two presently at home.? The Yoder?s son, Reinald, and his wife, Christine, are living in Decatur, GA.? Reinald teaches computer science at Marist High School while Christine is a professor of Hebrew at Columbia Seminary.

Nice to reconnect with the Yoder family.

President Clayton Spencer joined her parents, Sam and Ava Spencer, on the bench while family gathered behind them. (l-r) Frank Spencer, Gary Henschen and his wife, Ellen Spencer Henschen, Will and Ava Carter

President Clayton Spencer joined her parents, Sam and Ava Spencer, on the bench while family gathered behind them. (l-r) Frank Spencer, Gary Henschen and his wife, Ellen Spencer Henschen, Will and Ava Carter

HOORAY FOR CLAYTON!

What an exciting time for Sam and Ava Spencer to see their younger daughter, Clayton Spencer, installed as the new president of Bates College in Lewiston, Maine.? Traveling with their son, Frank Spencer of Charlotte, Sam and Ava took a non-stop flight to Portland, Maine on Thursday, October 25.? From there it was a short drive to Lewiston and their accommodations at the Guest House.

Bob and Ann Williams took part in Clayton's inaugural proceedings at Bates

Bob and Ann Williams took part in Clayton?s inaugural proceedings at Bates

The inauguration festivities began on Friday with wonderful pomp and circumstance that accompanies such an event.? Beautiful fall weather made the occasion even nicer.? Clayton, wearing her father?s academic cap from his installations as president at Mary Baldwin and Davidson Colleges, became the 8th president of Bates.? The college, founded by abolitionists in 1855, currently has a student body of close to 1800 and is considered one of the leading liberal arts colleges in the nation.

Friday evening the Spencers attended a gala dinner and dance.? In addition to their younger son, Frank, Clayton?s sister, Ellen Spencer Henschen and her husband, Gary (a Davidson alum), came from Atlanta for the weekend as did many cousins.? Clayton?s children, Will and Ava Carter, were also there. Will is an NYU graduate who now works at Goldman Sachs in NYC. Ava is a Harvard University senior working in genomics.? A number of Davidson graduates and friends were on hand for the inauguration weekend including Bob and Ann Williams, former Davidson residents and of course, Meg and Don Kimmel(Meg is an Assistant Vice President at Bates in the Communications Office).

Clayton Spencer

Clayton Spencer

Saturday found the Spencer family at the football game followed by a dinner for family at the President?s House, a wonderful three story New England home dating from 100 years ago.? Sunday was a quiet day for Clayton to spend time with her parents before their early Monday flight back to Charlotte.? How fortunate they were to arrive home before the hurricane battered the Northeast.

For more information on the inauguration, visit www.bates.edu/news.

A NEW JOB FOR NANCY CABLE

Nancy Cable (photo by Phyllis Graber Jensen of Bates' Communications)

Nancy Cable (photo by Phyllis Graber Jensen of Bates? Communications)

It is nice to catch up with Nancy Cable since she left Davidson as Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid a few years back.? Nancy most recently was Vice President and Interim President at Bates College but now is moving on to Jacksonville, Florida, to lead The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations. The press release can be found at www.avdf.org.

Nancy?s will begin her new job in the spring of 2013.? Congratulations to Nancy on this wonderful appointment.? Catching up with her daughters we learned that Katie Wells is close by in Charlotte teaching history at Country Day School. Younger sister, Gretchen Wells, is working in New York City and pursuing a theatre career.? Nancy?s brother, Davis Cable and his wife, Libby, are also in Charlotte and are parents of Davidson College student, Andy Cable.

Nancy?s mother, Jane Cable, continues to live in Naples, FL, and is delighted to have her daughter in the same state once more.

NOTEWORTHY NOTE ? MOVEMBER IS HERE

Okay, fellas, this is the month to raise money and awareness about men?s health by growing a mustache. ?Summit Coffee?s Tim Helfrich and his brother, Brian, scheduled a month of fun events to mark Movember last year and this fall is no different.? This morning you can get a straight razor shave ? your last upper lip shave for a month ? for $10 at Raeford?s Barber Shop with a portion of the charge donated to Summit?s fund raising.

So it is time to sprout some stuff on your upper lip and join the official Summit Coffee Mo? Team as a mustache grower, by following?this link and registering.

Great idea and great fun!? Thanks, Summit.

SEND US YOUR NEWS

Have news for Around Davidson? Write to Brenda Barger at hbbarger@gmail.com.

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Source: http://davidsonnews.net/blog/2012/11/01/moving-up-and-out/

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Path now available for iPad

The social network Path has been updated with support for the iPad. In portrait, it has a design that you would expect -- sidebar on the left with your stream to the right. In landscape, a summary of the posts for the day are displayed as a collage of photos, movies, music, locations, and book previews. It's a very visually appealing to consume the content shared by your friends.

Swiping left and right will advance between days and tapping on a post in the collage will display it larger with likes, comments, and other relevant information to the right. The design is very nice and functional.

Path was off to a decent start when it first released and was proving to be a decent alternative to Facebook and Twitter especially considering that it integrates with both services, but after it was discovered that Path uploaded users' entire address books to their servers many people deleted their accounts immediately and never returned even after Path apologized and fixed the security hole. It's a shame, because Path actually has a very nice interface and is a refreshing change to Facebook, Twitter, and Google+.

Is anyone planning to give Path another chance now that it's available on the iPad?

Free - Download Now



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/KhMyL_vG-kU/story01.htm

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Three Ways to Know You're ?Called to Write?

At a recent writer?s conference, I spoke to someone who was, in their own words, trying to figure out whether they were ?called to write.? It was a strange question to hear from someone? at a writer?s conference. I mean, the fact that they would invest so much time and money just to see whether or not they were called to write said a lot about their passion for the subject.

Anyway, it?s a question that gets asked a lot by aspiring authors. I?ve whittled my answer to this question down to three.

But first, a distinction needs to be made between between being called to write and being called to publish. Long before I?d ever felt a desire to pursue publication, I began a journal. I took that journal seriously and, even though I intended no one else to read it, I strove to write it well. That journal eventually blossomed into two journals. For now, those journals are collecting dust on the bottom shelf of a book cabinet like fossils from a bygone era. At the time, I was ?called to write? them. Their circulation, however, was another story.

Likewise, it?s possible that there?s a writing project heavy on your heart whose circulation should be limited. The compulsion you feel to write the story should in no way be the determinant as to how many people read it.? Some may feel ?called to write? simply as a means of catharsis. Others may feel ?called to write? to simply provide bedtime stories for their children or grandchildren. These are just as much ?callings? as are others. However, there?s a big difference between writing for personal growth or your circle of friends and family, and whether you will begin investing time and money in pursuing broader, more professional, range of publishing. Don?t confuse the call to write with the call to publish.

So when I speak of the ?call to write? here, I?m speaking more in terms of pursuing professional publication. Having issued that qualifier, here?s three ways that you can know you?re called to write:

1.) TALENT: You?re good with words. You?re naturally imaginative. Without prodding or coercion you think about framing things in literary or narrative form. You are not intimidated by the prospects of sitting down and gathering thoughts and images into a cohesive cast. In fact, you are strangely challenged by the prospect. Perhaps this started when you were a child. You were the storyteller of your group. You loved to see the sparkle in other kids eyes when you told a tale. Perhaps you enthralled your parents and siblings with your flamboyant antics. Then again, maybe it?s the ability you have to find solace in ideas, to retreat into your office or easy chair, to derive unusual satisfaction investing hours in the unraveling of a plot or a thesis. You finish a great novel and something rises up in you saying, ?I can do that.? You are inspired by a great film and leave the theater saying ?I can do that.? Whatever the case, there is at least a kernel of writing talent, a seed that you water and cultivate, a spark that you fan into flame. Yes, yes. It may be raw and juvenile. But it?s there.

Of course, people will say that when it comes to writing, talent is subjective. Readers find virtue in all kinds of things. It?s true? to a degree. And with hard work any author can improve. But without raw writing talent, improving is relative. This isn?t to say that an average wordsmith can?t become better. Nor am I suggesting that good writers are always ?found.? Many great writers labor in publishing obscurity. But for the most part: Talent gets noticed (see #3). Without raw writing talent ? an ear for words, patience and discipline in constructing those words, and imagination in telling tales ? one cannot confidently claim to be ?called to write.?

2.) DRIVE: A person may have the raw talent to write, but without the drive you will never be able to tell it. The drive to write is what keeps one plugging away in the face of constant rejection. The drive to write is what keeps one finding writing time no matter what their schedule looks like. The drive to write is what keeps a good writer always striving to become a better writer. In ?How to Become a Writer? Lorrie Moore gives this blunt recommendation to aspiring authors:

?First try to be something, anything, else. ?[Y]ou should become a writer only if you have no choice. Writing has to be an obsession ? it?s only for those who say, ?I?m not going to do anything else.??

Do you have that kind of drive? Then you might be ?called to write.? One of my first big confirmations as a writer came in the form of a rejection letter. I?d been trying to get something published in a professional speculative fiction magazine. After several form rejections, I finally received a personalized email from the senior editor extolling the virtues and outlining the problems they had with a short story they were declining. It was bittersweet, but hugely encouraging. I knew I was on the right track. That rejection stoked my drive to be published. If you are are not easily dissuaded, if you can weather professional critique, bad reviews, and rejection, and continue getting up for more, then maybe you are ?called to write.?

3.) CONFIRMATION: If we are really called to anything, that thing should bear a stamp of approval from both God and man. When I was shopping for an agent, I remember the frustration of receiving one rejection after another. I recall the day I opened an email from one agent who said that she loved my stuff. I just sat there with my wife at my side and wept. The confirmation of other published writers, agents and industry professionals is huge in determining your ?call to write.? If? readers ? and those whose living is to sell to them ? can?t vet your writing, you?re in trouble as a professional writer.

Sometimes confirmation will happen along the way; we will write a story intended only for limited personal circulation only to discover it?s good enough to enjoy a bigger circulation.? William Young, author of the mega-best-seller The Shack, originally wrote the story as a parable for his friends and family. But he found their response so overwhelming that it forced him to consider broader publishing. The rest is history. Do you have confirmation from a larger circle than just your mother and BFFs that your writing is good? Do you have confirmation from peers and professionals that you are ?called? to write?

My own journey toward becoming a writer is inglorious. I started late and have stumbled along. Even after signing with an agent and contracting to be published, I still wrestle with my ?call to write.? Is this equivocation consistent with all authors? I don?t know. I do know it comes back to this: Every calling is great, when greatly pursued. If God?s given you the talent to write, the drive to develop that talent, and the confirmation from peers and professionals that you have it, then there?s a good chance you you are ?called? to write.

* * *

Question: Do you think there?s a difference between a ?call to write? and a ?call to be published?? So how do you know you?re ?called? to write? And what other factors do you think help someone determine whether or not they are really ?called? to write?

Source: http://mikeduran.com/2012/11/three-ways-to-know-youre-called-to-write/

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Friday, November 2, 2012

US Cellular bringing LTE to 30 additional markets on November 5th

DNP US Cellular bringing LTE to over 30 markets on November 5th

US Cellular announced on Wednesday that it will increase its LTE network coverage by 30 new markets on November 5th. The first territories to be be summarily blessed are: Iowa, Wisconsin, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Illinois, Maryland, Missouri, New Hampshire, Vermont, Virginia and West Virginia. While this is great news for customers who call these states home, the carrier has yet to detail which cities will be making the jump to 4G. In the meantime, we'd advise keeping an eye on US Cellular's coverage map to see if your stomping grounds made the cut. For an encore, the carrier will light up Rockford, Illinois; Medford, Oregon; Yakima, Washington; and Knoxville, Tennessee at an undisclosed time. As for its LTE-ready smartphone roster, your current options are a trio of Samsung-made Android devices: Galaxy S III, Galaxy Note II and the Galaxy Metrix. Hopefully, as America's eighth largest wireless carrier's LTE footprint increases, so will its stable of suitable handsets. Until then, US Cellular 4G hopefuls, we hope you like the taste of TouchWiz.

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US Cellular bringing LTE to 30 additional markets on November 5th originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 31 Oct 2012 21:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/10/31/us-cellular-lte-30-markets-on-november-5th/

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Thursday, November 1, 2012

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