Thursday, May 31, 2012

Protein pathways provide clues in leukemia research

Protein pathways provide clues in leukemia research [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 31-May-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: David Ruth
david@rice.edu
713-348-6327
Rice University

Rice, MD Anderson scientists hope detailing networks will help fine-tune therapies

Scientists at Rice University and the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center have successfully profiled protein pathways found to be distinctive to leukemia patients with particular variants of the disease.

Their research involved the creation of a new computational approach to identifying complex networks in protein signaling. They reported their work this month in the journal Proteomics.

With their new method, Rice bioengineer Amina Qutub, MD Anderson clinician and scientist Steven Kornblau and Rice graduate student Heather York analyzed more than a decade's worth of data. They identified patterns in the expression of 203 proteins studied in cells of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients and found nearly 700 protein pairs (from among thousands of possibilities) implicated in such networks.

The goal is to fine-tune therapy for patients, Qutub said. If it's possible to know the protein signaling pathways of particular types of leukemia, she said, then drugs may be found or designed to target the disease by blocking those pathways.

"Leukemia is not just one disease," said Qutub, who attended Rice as an undergraduate and is now an assistant professor of bioengineering based at Rice's BioScience Research Collaborative. "It's many, many diseases lumped into one category. You can't use a sledgehammer approach to treat it, though that's what clinicians have been doing."

"A Phillips head screwdriver does great if you've got a cross on your screw head," Kornblau said. "It doesn't work very well if you've got a slot. Companies have drugs that might work gangbusters in a small fraction of patients, but if you study a large aggregate, it doesn't look like a very active agent. Ideally, if it works in 5 percent of patients and you can pick them out ahead of time, you put them on the right drug and spare the other 95 percent from getting a drug that is not going to help them."

It's not unusual for leukemia patients to go into remission, Qutub said, but most suffer a relapse within two years. "We're trying to figure out what's so different about these patients, and whether we can enhance their therapy. The only way we know to do that is to figure out the protein signature."

Proteins are the workhorses of the cell. Created from blueprints stored in DNA, they pass chemical signals from one to another with instructions on just about every activity a cell is capable of. But when their basic coding is scrambled, they can just as easily cause a cell to self-destruct.

Qutub likened protein signaling pathways to city traffic. "You might take a train, drive a car, walk or take a bicycle, but eventually you would get to your location," she said. "In cancer patients, protein pathways seem to follow patterns. In normal cells, there are predominant pathways, and while you may have the same pathways in cancer cells, they might also have alternate routes and take them, to varying degrees."

Specific routes proteins use to pass signals may be the key to determining their type, so it was worth investigating a treasure trove of data that had been gathered from MD Anderson patients, Qutub said.

The project began with a chance meeting by Qutub and Kornblau at a conference in Colorado on hypoxia. "Steve said, 'You're working with mathematical modeling of hypoxic response. I have a patient set I think you might be interested in.' That's how it started, and it took us down a very different road, using machine-learning algorithms and statistical techniques that hadn't been part of my core research but have now become integral to both this project and other research in the lab," Qutub said.

The World Health Organization had categorized AML patients by certain cell phenotypes, Qutub said, "but very little had been done at the protein level. Our clinical collaborators had started genetic and proteomic studies a while back and identified recurrent patterns of protein expression, some of which were associated with recurrent chromosomal changes like 'inv (16),' the inversion of chromosome 16, or 't(8;21),' which is the transpose of the 8 and 21 chromosomes." They are found in about 15 percent of patients with AML, she said.

"Patients with these two chromosomal changes respond more favorably to current AML therapy," Kornblau said, "and the genes from each of these genetic abnormalities are involved in the same transcription factor complex, creating a mechanistic link. But despite this mechanistic link, they differ in some clinical features and outcome."

Kornblau's data was precisely what Qutub and her group needed. They targeted inv (16) and t(8;21) to learn what protein pathways were common to both of these cytogenetic categories, what might explain their increased responsiveness and what changes were unique to each that might explain their clinical differences. From the mass of data more than 20,000 possible protein pairs they found that 678 pairs related to inv (16) and t(8;21) were significantly different compared with normal cells.

"There are some genetic markers that are definitely associated with a prognosis of leukemia," Qutub said. "And other things can cause leukemia -- acute myeloid in particular -- perhaps even chemotherapy itself. The way cancer patients are treated may be causing mutations and in turn triggering leukemic response."

With their analytical method tried and tested, Qutub and her team can now statistically group patients who present with particular protein pathways by age, gender, therapies and other criteria, and then take a closer look at protein signaling pathways in bone marrow-derived stem cells, a prime suspect in patients who relapse even after decades of remission. "We think something has to be unique about stem cells," she said.

The key problem with all cancers, including leukemia, is their plasticity, she said. "Cancer has multiple ways of getting to the same destination. You try one drug, and cancer's going to circumvent you and go a different way. What we're trying to say is, 'Here are all the possible ways,' so we can begin to target the intersections."

###

The research was supported by the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society and Rice University.

Related links:

Read the abstract at http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/pmic.201100491/abstract

Qutub Lab: http://www.qutublab.rice.edu/

BioScience Research Collaborative: http://brc.rice.edu/home/

Image for download:

http://news.rice.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/HighwayMaps_Proteomics.jpg

New research by scientists at Rice University and the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center profiles protein pathways distinctive to certain leukemia patients. The graphic shows interacting proteins in leukemia cells that can be characterized by networks analogous to highways. (Qutub Lab/Rice University)

Located on a 300-acre forested campus in Houston, Rice University is consistently ranked among the nation's top 20 universities by U.S. News & World Report. Rice has highly respected schools of Architecture, Business, Continuing Studies, Engineering, Humanities, Music, Natural Sciences and Social Sciences and is known for its "unconventional wisdom." With 3,708 undergraduates and 2,374 graduate students, Rice's undergraduate student-to-faculty ratio is 6-to-1. Its residential college system builds close-knit communities and lifelong friendships, just one reason why Rice has been ranked No. 1 for best quality of life multiple times by the Princeton Review and No. 4 for "best value" among private universities by Kiplinger's Personal Finance. To read "What they're saying about Rice," go to www.rice.edu/nationalmedia/Rice.pdf.


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?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Protein pathways provide clues in leukemia research [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 31-May-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: David Ruth
david@rice.edu
713-348-6327
Rice University

Rice, MD Anderson scientists hope detailing networks will help fine-tune therapies

Scientists at Rice University and the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center have successfully profiled protein pathways found to be distinctive to leukemia patients with particular variants of the disease.

Their research involved the creation of a new computational approach to identifying complex networks in protein signaling. They reported their work this month in the journal Proteomics.

With their new method, Rice bioengineer Amina Qutub, MD Anderson clinician and scientist Steven Kornblau and Rice graduate student Heather York analyzed more than a decade's worth of data. They identified patterns in the expression of 203 proteins studied in cells of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients and found nearly 700 protein pairs (from among thousands of possibilities) implicated in such networks.

The goal is to fine-tune therapy for patients, Qutub said. If it's possible to know the protein signaling pathways of particular types of leukemia, she said, then drugs may be found or designed to target the disease by blocking those pathways.

"Leukemia is not just one disease," said Qutub, who attended Rice as an undergraduate and is now an assistant professor of bioengineering based at Rice's BioScience Research Collaborative. "It's many, many diseases lumped into one category. You can't use a sledgehammer approach to treat it, though that's what clinicians have been doing."

"A Phillips head screwdriver does great if you've got a cross on your screw head," Kornblau said. "It doesn't work very well if you've got a slot. Companies have drugs that might work gangbusters in a small fraction of patients, but if you study a large aggregate, it doesn't look like a very active agent. Ideally, if it works in 5 percent of patients and you can pick them out ahead of time, you put them on the right drug and spare the other 95 percent from getting a drug that is not going to help them."

It's not unusual for leukemia patients to go into remission, Qutub said, but most suffer a relapse within two years. "We're trying to figure out what's so different about these patients, and whether we can enhance their therapy. The only way we know to do that is to figure out the protein signature."

Proteins are the workhorses of the cell. Created from blueprints stored in DNA, they pass chemical signals from one to another with instructions on just about every activity a cell is capable of. But when their basic coding is scrambled, they can just as easily cause a cell to self-destruct.

Qutub likened protein signaling pathways to city traffic. "You might take a train, drive a car, walk or take a bicycle, but eventually you would get to your location," she said. "In cancer patients, protein pathways seem to follow patterns. In normal cells, there are predominant pathways, and while you may have the same pathways in cancer cells, they might also have alternate routes and take them, to varying degrees."

Specific routes proteins use to pass signals may be the key to determining their type, so it was worth investigating a treasure trove of data that had been gathered from MD Anderson patients, Qutub said.

The project began with a chance meeting by Qutub and Kornblau at a conference in Colorado on hypoxia. "Steve said, 'You're working with mathematical modeling of hypoxic response. I have a patient set I think you might be interested in.' That's how it started, and it took us down a very different road, using machine-learning algorithms and statistical techniques that hadn't been part of my core research but have now become integral to both this project and other research in the lab," Qutub said.

The World Health Organization had categorized AML patients by certain cell phenotypes, Qutub said, "but very little had been done at the protein level. Our clinical collaborators had started genetic and proteomic studies a while back and identified recurrent patterns of protein expression, some of which were associated with recurrent chromosomal changes like 'inv (16),' the inversion of chromosome 16, or 't(8;21),' which is the transpose of the 8 and 21 chromosomes." They are found in about 15 percent of patients with AML, she said.

"Patients with these two chromosomal changes respond more favorably to current AML therapy," Kornblau said, "and the genes from each of these genetic abnormalities are involved in the same transcription factor complex, creating a mechanistic link. But despite this mechanistic link, they differ in some clinical features and outcome."

Kornblau's data was precisely what Qutub and her group needed. They targeted inv (16) and t(8;21) to learn what protein pathways were common to both of these cytogenetic categories, what might explain their increased responsiveness and what changes were unique to each that might explain their clinical differences. From the mass of data more than 20,000 possible protein pairs they found that 678 pairs related to inv (16) and t(8;21) were significantly different compared with normal cells.

"There are some genetic markers that are definitely associated with a prognosis of leukemia," Qutub said. "And other things can cause leukemia -- acute myeloid in particular -- perhaps even chemotherapy itself. The way cancer patients are treated may be causing mutations and in turn triggering leukemic response."

With their analytical method tried and tested, Qutub and her team can now statistically group patients who present with particular protein pathways by age, gender, therapies and other criteria, and then take a closer look at protein signaling pathways in bone marrow-derived stem cells, a prime suspect in patients who relapse even after decades of remission. "We think something has to be unique about stem cells," she said.

The key problem with all cancers, including leukemia, is their plasticity, she said. "Cancer has multiple ways of getting to the same destination. You try one drug, and cancer's going to circumvent you and go a different way. What we're trying to say is, 'Here are all the possible ways,' so we can begin to target the intersections."

###

The research was supported by the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society and Rice University.

Related links:

Read the abstract at http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/pmic.201100491/abstract

Qutub Lab: http://www.qutublab.rice.edu/

BioScience Research Collaborative: http://brc.rice.edu/home/

Image for download:

http://news.rice.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/HighwayMaps_Proteomics.jpg

New research by scientists at Rice University and the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center profiles protein pathways distinctive to certain leukemia patients. The graphic shows interacting proteins in leukemia cells that can be characterized by networks analogous to highways. (Qutub Lab/Rice University)

Located on a 300-acre forested campus in Houston, Rice University is consistently ranked among the nation's top 20 universities by U.S. News & World Report. Rice has highly respected schools of Architecture, Business, Continuing Studies, Engineering, Humanities, Music, Natural Sciences and Social Sciences and is known for its "unconventional wisdom." With 3,708 undergraduates and 2,374 graduate students, Rice's undergraduate student-to-faculty ratio is 6-to-1. Its residential college system builds close-knit communities and lifelong friendships, just one reason why Rice has been ranked No. 1 for best quality of life multiple times by the Princeton Review and No. 4 for "best value" among private universities by Kiplinger's Personal Finance. To read "What they're saying about Rice," go to www.rice.edu/nationalmedia/Rice.pdf.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


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Clinton says military action in Syria would require international support, including Russia

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Chrome Berlin - PRO Laptop Bag


"Hey Sara," I called to my colleague while exploring the expansive space inside Chrome's Berlin - PRO laptop bag ($220 direct). "See if you can fit into this bag!" My joke fell flat probably because the Berlin doesn't look nearly as big as it is from the outside (or perhaps because my petite co-worker had had enough of me that day).

The Chrome Berlin - Pro easily fits laptops of any size, plus all the cords, cables, and accessories you could ever need ? plus a change of clothes, your lunch, a tablet, and much more (read on to find out what I crammed into it). At 15 by 20 by 10 inches (HWD), when fully expanded, the Berlin's volume measures 25 liters!

The "pro" part of the name refers to the fact that this bag can be used by professional bike messengers, and the Berlin part, I presume, is a nod toward the very German looking style. The Berlin is a no-frills bag, available in black or gray, with a dark red lining. It's coolly edgy, but uncomplicated.

Massive as it is, the Chrome Berlin manages to be comfortable, even when you pack it to the brim because it balances weight both vertically down your back, as well as horizontally across the front of your shoulders and chest by way of a thickly padded strap. The strap fastens with one of Chrome's signature seatbelt buckles, which is very cool, but contributes a considerable amount of weight to the bag's 4.5 pounds. Two additional straps?one of which tucks away into a Velcro slot when not in use?can further secure the Berlin to your frame when the load you're hauling seems otherwise impossibly cumbersome. With the Berlin, it can be done!

To test the bag's capacity, I first packed roughly 18 pounds of clothing (I didn't want to mess with anything fragile just yet) into the Chrome Berlin - PRO and rode seven miles on my bike to a friend's house. This test turned out to be more about my own strength than the bag's, because the Berlin did its job to a tee. On my second trial, I loaded it up with a 13-inch laptop in a sleeve for extra protection, a camera that was also housed in a padded case, an iPad with rubber bumper, my purse, a smartphone, several cords and chargers, and a sweater. Not only did I tote this load without buckling, I got it through airport security, too! For the few weeks that I rode and walked around with the Berlin - PRO, there was nothing that it wouldn't fit or that I couldn't carry if it was in the bag. One Berlin owner says he once carried a chainsaw in this incredible bag! I don't doubt him for a second.

As much as you can pack this bag to the gills, the Berlin - PRO doesn't have a cushioned compartment specifically for a laptop. Two Velcro-secured pouches do a better job of protecting smaller electronics (think smartphone sized), but notebook owners should definitely use a protective sleeve.

Cycling commuters who carry a lot of stuff can't go wrong with Chrome's Berlin - PRO bag. Car and subway commuters will undoubtedly find the Berlin way too big for their average needs. At $220, the bag is an investment, but one worth making if you fit the Berlin profile.

More Cases and Carrying Gear Reviews: ?
??? Crumpler Nhill Heist Laptop Bag
??? Chrome Berlin - PRO Laptop Bag
??? Octa Vacuum Dock + WhaleTail
??? Crumpler Arnold Heist Tablet Bag
??? ChargeIt! 2X (for iPhone 4 and 4S)
?? more

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Your Boat Insurance ? Key Considerations | Internet Revenue Articles

?

Cruising off toward the secluded blue, has the favorable effect of blowing away your life?s strains and cares with the breeze. But, just before you sail away in your gorgeous boat, pause and consider the merits of these questions. Do you have marine or boat insurance in place? Even when the answer that that is ?Yes? then are you positive your insurance requirements are being actually met?

Marine insurance groups vessels corresponding to a type of measurements. ?Boats? are described as measuring in between 16 feet and 25 feet 11 inches in length. Below that size then you are catalogued as small boat namely dinghies, personal watercraft and the like. If your boat is 26 feet and above in length then you will probably need specialist insurance coverage. Now let?s look over some of the ins and outs as applied to regular boat insurance policies.

Physical damage insurance coverage

The insurance company reimburses you for the replacement or recondition of your craft, resulting from the following conditions: boating accident, vandalism, fire, burglary, lightning, typhoons or tornadoes. Included in this coverage are the watercraft itself, its engine or outboard engine and your trailer. Normally the ensuing items are excluded from the dinghy insurance protection, as they are not thought of as being an aspect of your boat?s operations: clothing, video or camera products, jewelry or fashion accessories, cell phones, and food, diving gear and portable electronic devices such as tv set, stereo devices or laptops. You may find they are covered on your typical house insurance or you could ask for separate protection for these.

Tip: I recognize it?s a pain but ? regularly read the small print. At that point you will understand what limits have been placeded on your protection. Can you boat be kept at your residence? Otherwise, must the boat be at your holiday vacation venue? Exactly where does the protection start and end on the waters you can use? A few policies precisely list the requirements and limit the use of your craft.

Individual Liability Coverage

We hope you will never need to find how worthwhile this insurance coverage is. Regular marine boat insurance cover here ranges upwards from $ 3 million and can compensate you when there?s an accident and your boat is held responsible for damaging another premises, boat or trauma.

Uninsured Boat Coverage

This is referred to as the marine insurance parallel to the road vehicle?s uninsured motorist insurance coverage. For example, in the event that the owner of a watercraft who damages yours has run out insurance or worse, doesn?t possess the money, your boat?s repairs will certainly nonetheless be funded.

Passenger Medical Insurance coverage

This protection will recompense the medical expenses suffered by any people carried in your boat. You will definitely discover that generally there is another provision on your policy regulating the amount of people who may be aboard at any one time? make sure you do not bring more as the insurance will at that point be invalid.

Help & Towing Coverage

This part of your policy will compensate you for the expenses sustained should you have the need to call on the emergency services. You might have engine failure or other mechanical failure or damage your boat on rocks calling for a tow line back to port.

What?s the bottom line to all of this? Be insurance conscious in advance of you start your boating season. Take a while to get hands-on and acquaint yourself with understanding so you are able to select the right insurance option, conditions and cover which your boat insurance must include. Then you can take off into the blue understanding you are effectively prepared for any scenario.

To Your Boating Enjoyment!

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Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Causes ringing in the ears and dizziness | Bodybuilding ...



If you experience dizziness and ringing in the ears, you could be suffering from a problem in your inner ear. Vestibular labyrinth, present in the inner ear, helps us maintain our balance. If there is an infection in the inner ear, this could result in dizziness.

Ringing in the ears and dizziness are often inter-related, and people who suffer from tinnitus will also experience dizziness.

?

What Causes of Ringing in the Ear and Dizziness?

?

If the ringing in the ear and dizziness is constant, you should an appointment with your ENT doctor, so that they can run necessary tests to evaluate your hearing and diagnose the reason behind your discomfort.

Some of the common reasons for experiencing dizzy spells and hearing a ringing sound in your ears are as follows:

The most common cause is an inner ear infection. Once the infection is treated with suitable medication and the ear gets better, the ringing and dizziness should slowly fade away.

Acoustic neuroma, a non-cancerous tumor, could also be the reason for dizziness and ringing in the ears. This is essentially a benign growth that is located on the acoustic nerve that connects the inner ear to the brain. Ringing in the ears and vertigo are symptoms of an acoustic neuroma. Imbalance and hearing loss are also possibilities, if you have this growth.

Meniere?s disease is another cause of dizziness and ringing in the ear. This results from a head injury or excessive build-up of fluid in the inner ear.

Vestibular migraines could also be another cause.

?

What are the Treatment Options?

?

Depending on the cause of ringing and dizziness, your doctor will prescribe a treatment plan for you. There are also many natural ringing in the ears treatment options, but make sure you consult with your physician before choosing a treatment plan.

Aromatherapy with essential oils lemon, rose, rosemary, and cypress are recommended to help with better blood circulation. Administer the oil through an aromatherapy diffuser or vaporizer. You could also get a head massage, which will make you feel better.

Alternative therapy like magnet therapy, hypnosis, acupuncture, hyperbaric oxygen, and craniosacral therapy are also being used by holistic healers to control the discomfort and pain one experiences from ringing ears.

Herbs like hawthorn, gingko biloba, melatonin and black cohosh can be used to help ease the pain.

Counseling is a good treatment option if you have been diagnosed with tinnitus, as the condition can take a lot out of you emotionally. Relaxing and going for a neck, head and chest massage, and opting for yoga, meditation or biofeedback help to reduce the pain. You could also opt for homeopathy, which has some remedies for this condition.

Sound therapy is used to distract you form hearing the ringing in the ear. Some of the sounds used are ocean waves, the wind, humming, rainfall, or chants.

If you still don?t feel relief after all this, see your doctor who will look at your condition and treat you or propose techniques that will help you cope better with dizziness and ear ringing.

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James' 32 lift Heat past Celtics, 93-79

MIAMI (AP) ? A big early Miami lead was wasted. Once the Heat took control again, they simply ran away from the Boston Celtics.

And the NBA finals are now three wins away for LeBron James and the Heat.

James scored 32 points and grabbed 13 rebounds, Dwyane Wade scored 10 of his 22 points in the fourth quarter and the Heat beat the Celtics 93-79 on Monday night in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals.

Shane Battier, playing in the conference finals for the first time, scored 10 points and had 10 rebounds for the Heat, who wasted an early 11-point first-half lead before running away to break a halftime tie. Miami outrebounded the Celtics 48-33, and blocked 11 Boston shots.

It was those last two stats that had James lauding the night as a team effort.

"We get a lot of the press, we get a lot of the headlines," James said. "But our teammates, they do everything to help us win ball games."

Kevin Garnett scored 23 points and grabbed 10 rebounds for Boston, which got 16 points, nine rebounds and seven assists from Rajon Rondo and 12 points from Paul Pierce. Ray Allen shot just 1 for 7 from the floor for Boston, which was outscored by 10 in the first quarter and 11 in the third.

"On the road, you can't have two quarters of lulls," Celtics coach Doc Rivers said.

Game 2 is Wednesday night in Miami.

It's the third straight year the Heat and Celtics have met in the playoffs, the third straight year James has seen his postseason path go through Boston as well ? the first of those matchups coming in 2010, his final run with Cleveland.

Each of those came in the first or second rounds, not this close to the NBA finals.

And while both sides would say there's a long way to go in this series, Game 1 winners have a decided edge in any best-of-seven, the conference final being no exception. In the most recent 10 postseasons, teams with 1-0 leads in conference finals have advanced 15 out of 20 times. One of the five instances of a team rallying from a one-game deficit was last year, when Miami ousted Chicago in five games.

Last season's Miami-Boston series ended with James scoring the final 10 points of Game 5, and the start of this year's matchup had him putting on another offensive display.

He had 13 points in the first quarter ? two more than the entire Celtics roster ? and Miami ran out to a 21-11 lead after the opening period. Garnett made three of his four shots in the quarter, while everyone else in Boston green was 2 for 16 from the floor.

"They came to play," Rivers said. "I mean Miami."

The 11 points matched the lowest output by any team in the opening quarter this postseason. The other team to manage that few was San Antonio, which then dropped 32 on the Los Angeles Clippers in the second quarter of their game on May 19.

The Celtics' response was even better.

Boston scored 35 in the second quarter, erasing what was an 11-point deficit early in the period by scoring 27 points in the final 8:46 of the half to pull into a 46-all tie. Rondo, Garnett and Pierce combined to score 23 points in the quarter, looking absolutely vintage, near-perfect offensive execution getting to Miami time and time again. And the Celtics' comeback happened even while they got hit with three technical fouls in the second quarter, plus Allen missing four first-half free throws ? matching his career-worst for an entire game.

In the end, it went down as merely a one-quarter lapse for Miami.

Another technical foul, this one on Rondo, came in the third quarter, likely born from frustration as the Heat started to roll again.

With the game tied at 50, Rondo missed three shots in a 31-second span early in the third, the last of those getting blocked by Battier ? who hit a 3-pointer 11 seconds later. It started a 9-2 Miami burst, including a touchdown pass from Wade to James ? Wade grabbed the rebound of a miss by Pierce, spun and delivered a 90-foot pass to the reigning MVP ? for an easy score.

Miami led by as many as 13 late in the third, before taking a 72-61 lead into the fourth. James scored 10 more in the third, Boston went cold again shooting just 27 percent in the period, and Wade's left-handed bullet pass into the lane set up Joel Anthony for a dunk that pushed the Heat lead to 15 with 10:13 remaining.

"We'll go back and see what we can do better," Rivers said. "And we'll fix it."

NOTES: Heat coach Erik Spoelstra is now 6-0 in Game 1s at home. ... James passed Sam Jones (2,909) for 22nd on the NBA's playoff scoring list with a layup late in the first quarter, and Garnett passed Dirk Nowitzki (1,314) for 22nd on the league's postseason rebound list. ... The Heat left the floor at halftime with a 48-46 lead, then had two points by Anthony taken off after a lengthy reviewed showed he had a basket after the shot clock expired. ... Miami F Chris Bosh did a light pregame workout, but still remains out indefinitely with a lower abdominal strain. He was on the Heat bench for the first time in Miami's last six games.

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Foschini earnings rise, eyes Africa expansion

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Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Remembering prisoners of war (CNN)

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Commercial airing of cooking oil ad stopped

Sunday, May 27, 2012

MANILA -- The Food and Drugs Administration (FDA) has ordered Southeast Asia Foods Inc. (Safi), maker of Golden Fiesta Cooking Oil, to stop airing its commercial for containing "misleading claims."

Safi may also face legal and administrative sanctions for the violation, the order said.

The FDA?s order resulted from a complaint of San Pablo Manufacturing Corp. that Golden Fiesta?s commercials made unfounded claims -- may be re-used for frying food for seven times without affecting the product?s quality, color, or appearance; and 50 percent less saturated than regular oil.

As such, Safi was directed "under pain of legal and/or administrative sanctions, to immediately cease and desist from further airing the same violative advertisement."

FDA, in its resolution, also ordered Safi, pursuant to Section 2, Article 7, Book 3 of the Implementing Rules and Regulations of Republic Act 9711, to reply or comment within a non-extendible period of 10 days from receipt of the order "as to why no further administrative or legal action should be taken against you and your establishment for the aforesaid violation."

Suzette H. Lazo, acting director IV of FDA, said her office conducted an evaluation of the subject of the complaint and was confirmed to be in violation of the said provision that stated, "no claim in the advertisement, promotion, and sponsorship, and other marketing activities shall be made other than those contained in the approved label or packaging of the health product, or as duly approved by the FDA."

SPMC belongs to the government sequestered CIIF-Oil Mills Group and is the maker of market leader Minola Cooking Oil.

With the development, advertising practitioners in the edible oil industry urged the Advertising Board to scrutinize further the claims of advertisers before approving their advertisements to protect the Filipino consumers from "ridiculous claims" and uphold the "truth in advertising."

Dr. Guia Sison, an expert in internal medicine and occupational medicine, said that at the most, cooking oil can be used for up to three times only as repeated heating will cause the oil to produce rancid taste, and release the cancer-causing Polyaromatic hydrocarbon. It will also eliminate the Vitamin fortification in the product, which negates the objective of the law on vitamin fortification. (PNA)

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Monday, May 28, 2012

Communication Skills Relationships | Love Problems

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Premier appeals to Ireland: Vote yes to EU treaty

Dubliners bask in the sunshine on the River Liffey as an anti-EU poster advises voters to reject the European Union's fiscal treaty in Dublin, Ireland, on Friday, May 25, 2012. Ireland's May 31 referendum represents the only popular test of public support for the treaty, which is designed to restrict the ability of eurozone members to run up deficits. Prime Minister Enda Kenny made a televised appeal to his nation Sunday to support the treaty, arguing it would reassure the world that Ireland is serious about tackling its deficits and staying in the euro. (AP Photo/Shawn Pogatchnik)

Dubliners bask in the sunshine on the River Liffey as an anti-EU poster advises voters to reject the European Union's fiscal treaty in Dublin, Ireland, on Friday, May 25, 2012. Ireland's May 31 referendum represents the only popular test of public support for the treaty, which is designed to restrict the ability of eurozone members to run up deficits. Prime Minister Enda Kenny made a televised appeal to his nation Sunday to support the treaty, arguing it would reassure the world that Ireland is serious about tackling its deficits and staying in the euro. (AP Photo/Shawn Pogatchnik)

A huge banner depicting Ireland being bled dry by austerity calls for a "no" vote to the European Union's fiscal treaty in Dublin, Ireland, on Friday, May 25, 2012. Ireland's May 31 referendum represents the only popular test of public support for the treaty, which is designed to restrict the ability of eurozone members to run up deficits. Prime Minister Enda Kenny made a televised appeal to his nation Sunday to support the treaty, arguing it would reassure the world that Ireland is serious about tackling its deficits and staying in the euro. (AP Photo/Shawn Pogatchnik)

A huge banner depicting Ireland being bled dry by austerity calls for a "no" vote to the European Union's fiscal treaty in Dublin, Ireland, on Friday, May 25, 2012. A much smaller placard, lower right, appeals for ``ta'' _ Gaelic for ``yes.'' Ireland's May 31 referendum represents the only popular test of public support for the treaty, which is designed to restrict the ability of eurozone members to run up deficits. Prime Minister Enda Kenny made a televised appeal to his nation Sunday to support the treaty, arguing it would reassure the world that Ireland is serious about tackling its deficits and staying in the euro. (AP Photo/Shawn Pogatchnik)

Pedestrians and commuters pass a poster calling for a "No" vote to the European Union's fiscal treaty in Dublin, Ireland, on Friday, May 25, 2012. Ireland's May 31 referendum represents the only popular test of public support for the treaty, which is designed to restrict the ability of eurozone members to run up deficits. A new poll says 39 percent plan to vote yes, 30 percent no, while 31 percent are unsure. (AP Photo/Shawn Pogatchnik)

DUBLIN (AP) ? Irish Prime Minister Enda Kenny made a nationally televised appeal Sunday to voters to support the European Union's fiscal treaty in a referendum this week, warning that rejection would send the signal that Ireland was not serious about tackling its deficits and was no longer a secure member of the euro currency.

Kenny said a "yes" verdict in Thursday's referendum was essential to ensure that Ireland could tap EU bailout funds in 2013, if necessary. Ireland's current EU-International Monetary Fund loans are due to run out by the end of next year, and the treaty specifies that only ratified members could access future EU loans.

"A strong 'yes' vote will create the certainty and stability that our country needs to continue on the road to economic recovery. This treaty will not solve all of our problems, but it is one part of the solution," Kenny said in his 4-minute TV address to his debt-burdened nation of 4.5 million.

Ireland is the only nation among 25 signatories putting the deficit-fighting treaty to a national vote, and critics of the German-led push for austerity are hoping that Ireland's increasingly euroskeptical voters reject the pact.

Treaty architects ensured that an Irish "no" could not veto progress elsewhere, stipulating that it would require formal ratification from just 12 countries to become law in those countries. And Kenny argued that an Irish rejection would do far and away the most damage to Ireland's own interests.

" Only a 'yes' vote will give Ireland guaranteed access to Europe's permanent rescue fund, the European Stability Mechanism, should Ireland ever need it. I want this country to have the same access as all other euro countries to this insurance policy. This is very important," said Kenny, who has insisted that Ireland should be able to resume normal borrowing on bond markets next year.

Kenny added that Ireland's exceptional reliance on foreign corporate investment also made the treaty's approval essential. Ireland's tepid return to economic growth over the past year has been driven by strong exports from the approximately 950 high-tech multinationals, including 600 U.S. companies, with Irish operations.

"In my recent visits to the United States, in China and elsewhere, the consistent message from both political and business leaders is that they want to see certainty about Ireland's place in the eurozone. A 'yes' vote will provide that certainty and will confirm to investors that Ireland is a reliable place, with stable conditions," he said.

Three opinion polls published in different Sunday newspapers in Ireland all registered a strong lead for the "yes" camp. Middle-class urban voters have consistently polled most strongly pro-treaty, while voters in the rural west and northwest are most strongly opposed.

However, polls during Ireland's EU treaty referendums in 2001 and 2008 also pointed to approval ? only to see higher turnout among anti-EU voters shoot down both treaties. The governments of the day overturned those verdicts by rerunning the referendums the following year, but Kenny insists his government won't restage this contest if he's defeated.

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Online:

Kenny's pro-treaty party, http://www.finegael.ie/voteyes2012/

Anti-treaty group Libertas, http://www.libertas.ie/

Associated Press

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Sunday, May 27, 2012

Break in Patz brings hope, tears to other families

After 33 years, someone has confessed to killing 6-year-old Etan Patz. And people immediately start speaking of "closure."

Patty Wetterling hates the word.

Since 1989, she and her husband have writhed in the same hell as Stan and Julie Patz. Whatever path they might have been on, it was irrevocably altered that October evening when a masked man walked away with their 11-year-old boy, Jacob.

"Once you're a victim of a crime like this, your life takes a very different direction," the St. Joseph, Minn., woman says. "It doesn't really close anything, because everything just became different from that point on. But it does provide answers."

Thanks to the wonders of modern computer graphics, these parents can watch their children "age" ? digitally, at least. But no one can write a program capable of generating the milestones ? high school graduation, college, marriage, parenthood ? that come along with growing up.

Some, like Mike and Maddi Misheloff of Dublin, Calif., exist in a kind of suspended animation, unwilling to move or even redecorate the lost one's bedroom.

Many, like the Patzes, live with the "what ifs." What if they hadn't given in to his "please," hadn't let him make his first solo walk to the school bus stop that May day in 1979?

A few suffer under a cloud of suspicion themselves ? like Judy Moore of Jackson, Ky., whose 6-year-old son, Kelly, disappeared in 1982 while playing in the snow.

Back when Etan vanished, authorities put the children's faces on milk cartons. Today, their names and images flash across the Internet and digital highway signs.

It is a horrifying truth that the best some families can hope for is that their child is being held against their will, says activist John Walsh.

Before her rescue in 2009, Jaycee Dugard was repeatedly raped and gave birth to two daughters during 18 years of captivity at the hands of a known sex offender in California. Still, her mother could eventually put her arms around her again, says Walsh, host of television's "America's Most Wanted."

"Against all hope and reality, every now and then a child comes back alive," says Walsh, whose 6-year-old son, Adam, was abducted from a Florida department store in July 1981 and murdered. "So that's why these people keep their rooms and their phone numbers, because it's part of the staying mentally sane. It's part of the being able to cope with the worst possible thing that could ever happen to you ? your beautiful, loving child disappears."

Through his show, Walsh has helped capture more than 1,200 criminals and bring home about 60 missing children. He knows the Patzes and has shared their heartache each time a lead evaporated, and one "breakthrough" after another ended in disappointment.

"My wife has a wonderful saying," says Walsh. "It's like a mortal wound that you don't die from. It heals over and it has a scab on it. And events like that crack it open, and it bleeds. It'll never die."

Across America, as the Patzes wait to see if they will at last get justice for Etan, parents' hearts are bleeding anew.

___

With their other two children grown and out on their own, the Misheloffs' house is a bit too big for them. But they wouldn't dream of moving while there is still a chance that Ilene might return.

"She has to come back to HER house," her father says.

"This is her home," his wife agrees. "We have to be here for her."

They have left their daughter's room just as it was on Jan. 30, 1989 ? the day she vanished. Not as a shrine, Maddi Misheloff says, but simply because, "It's her room.

"And on the daily hope that we're getting her back," she says.

Ilene was 13 when she disappeared on her way home from Wells Middle School to change into her figure-skating clothes. She had recently competed in her first regional meet, and her family had gotten permission for her to leave while everyone else was in last period.

That morning, Ilene was brushing her hair in the bathroom as Maddi Misheloff walked by on her way out the door to her office job at a physical therapy and medical supply company. The two exchanged a quick "I love you."

Mike Misheloff, an engineer at a Silicon Valley semiconductor company, was driving Ilene and her twin brother, Brian, the mile or so to school. They were running late, and the kids bolted from the car as soon as their father pulled up at the school.

Ilene, a pretty girl with braces and curly brown hair, was wearing a charcoal gray pullover polo sweater, a horizontally striped pink and charcoal skirt, and black, low-top Keds sneakers. She was carrying a dark-blue backpack.

After school, she usually had a snack while she waited for her coach to come pick her up. But she never got home that day.

The couple have been in contact with police off and on since Ilene's disappearance. But they haven't heard anything since the beginning of the year, when the lead investigator was promoted and a new detective took his place.

Both parents have been following the Patz case. But a more recent event brought the emotions flooding back.

In the last few days, a Central Valley man was arrested in the disappearance of a 15-year-old girl. Although no body has been found, police say there is enough evidence to suspect a homicide, Mike Misheloff says.

"We want to know where our child is," his wife says. "Every day without her is torture, and we want her back."

___

When Judy Moore heard that the Patzes second-guess their decision to let Etan walk to the bus stop alone that day, she wept.

"You're reading my mind," she says, the tears coming afresh. "It's pitiful."

Moore, 55, had lost one prematurely born baby at 5 weeks. A judge had given custody of her two older children to her parents because her epilepsy made it difficult for her to care for them, she says.

Kelly, her baby, was all she had left.

Moore and Kelly's father, Bobby Hollan, were divorced. On Feb. 12, 1982, mother and her son were living with Moore's boyfriend in a rented house halfway up Pine Tree Hollow, near the town of Hindman in the eastern Kentucky mountains.

There was a dusting of snow on the ground. Kelly ? a blue-eyed boy with a scar on his upper lip from an operation to repair a birth defect ? had the day off from kindergarten and was begging to go outside and play.

After about two hours, Moore says, she relented. He pulled on his brown boots and the blue wind breaker with the torn zipper and headed for the door.

"He hugged me and said, 'Mom, I love you,'" she says, her voice breaking.

It was around 11:30 a.m.

She sat on the bed and watched him out the window for a while. A couple of hours later, a neighbor yelled down to say that Moore's sister was on the telephone.

When she came back home from the call, she says, Kelly was gone.

Moore assumed he was up the road at his friend Gordon's house, where they watched "The Dukes of Hazzard" together. She went to the kitchen to fix dinner ? soup beans and cornbread.

When Kelly didn't come home for supper, she went up and down the hollow looking for him. It started snowing again.

Police brought out a cadaver dog. No trace was ever found.

Moore says she stopped contacting the police years ago.

"They keep trying to get me to confess to murder," she says incredulously. "I understand that there's mothers out there that do things like this. It makes me sick. I mean, how a mother can do something like that to their own flesh and blood, I'll never understand it."

She says her other two children believe the rumors. They are estranged.

She believes Kelly is still alive. If not, she takes comfort in the thought that he is "one of God's little angels."

"I shouldn't have let him go out in the yard and play that day," she says through her tears. "But I did. It's just stuff that we do, and we can't take it back. I wish we could, but we can't."

___

The outgoing message on the Wetterlings' answering machine says it all.

"Hope is an amazing force that we all need in our lives EVERY day," Patty Wetterling's voice declares.

The evening of Oct. 22, 1989, she and her chiropractor husband, Jerry, were going out to visit with friends. They asked Jacob, 11, to baby-sit his two younger siblings ? Trevor, 10, and Carmen, 8.

They called home to give Jacob the phone number where they were, in case of an emergency. Not long afterward, the children called to say they were bored, and to ask permission to ride their bikes to the video store ? about a mile away.

"No," their mother said instinctively. "Find something to do at home."

Trevor asked to speak to their dad. He promised they would take a flashlight; Jake would wear the father's reflective jogging vest.

The parents conferred, then acquiesced. When Jacob called back around 8:30 to say that Carmen didn't want to come, the Wetterlings agreed with his solution to have the 13-year-old neighbor girl sit with her until they got back with the movie.

"It should have been OK," she says.

The brothers and a friend made it to the store, where they chose their movie ? Leslie Nielsen's cop comedy, "The Naked Gun" ? and bought some candy. They were about halfway home when, the other two boys told authorities, a masked gunman emerged from a driveway.

He ordered them to throw their bikes into a ditch and lie down. After asking each boy his age, he told Trevor and the friend to run toward the nearby woods and not look back.

But after a short distance, they did turn around ? just in time to see the man leading Jacob away by the elbow.

There have been many leads over the years.

"We have had leads in the last two weeks," Wetterling says.

Wetterling was a stay-at-home mom when Jake vanished. Today, she is director of sexual violence prevention for the Minnesota Department of Health.

She takes heart in the fact that a relative turned in the man now charged with murdering Etan.

"We all need answers," she says of her family, the Patzes and all the others. "We believe somebody else knows something ... They've also carried an awful heavy load, and it's time to come forward."

But that doesn't mean she has given up on finding Jacob alive.

"I'm not just looking for a murderer to come forward; I'm looking for information," she says. "I pray for that."

___

Online:

Ilene Misheloff's search page: http://www.find-ilene.org

___

Associated Press researcher Judith Ausuebel contributed to this report.

___

Allen G. Breed is a national writer, based in Raleigh, N.C. He can be reached at features(at)ap.org.

Follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/AllenGBreed

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Michigan State Football: All-Time 10 Best Quarterbacks

Now that we have finished up all of the ?Top 10? for each position on the hardwood, it is now time that we focus are attention to the gridiron. First up we have everyone?s favorite position, quarterback. Michigan State Football is not known for producing great quarterbacks, but there have been enough quarterbacks that have made an impact that we were able to put together a decent list. So, for all you football and MSU fans out there, check out the list of the best quarterbacks in the history of MSU football below:

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10. Dan Enos (1987-1990)

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Enos, now the head coach at Central Michigan University, is ranked fourth all-time in completion percentage in MSU history, completing 62.1 percent in his two years as a starting quarterback. Also, Enos ranks 12th in passing yards with 3,837, and 11th in career yards with 4,301.

9. Ed Smith (1976-1978)

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In 1978, Smith led the Spartans to a share of the Big Ten Championship. During this season Smith threw for 2,226 yards, 20 touchdowns and only eight interceptions. Smith ranks fifth in passing touchdowns in MSU history with 43, and he ranks sixth in passing yards in MSU history with 5,706 yards.

8. Dave Yarema (1982-1986)

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Dave Yarema ranks in the top 10 in many MSU passing categories such as: passing yards (fifth, 5,809 yards), passing touchdowns (fourth, 44 touchdowns), interceptions (tied for third, 33), completion percentage (seventh, 60.5 percent), and passing efficiency (eighth, 134.4). Yarema had his best season as a senior where he passed for 16 touchdowns and threw for 2,581 yards.

7. Bill Burke (1996-1999)

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The former Michigan State southpaw was the first ever quarterback in MSU history to throw for 400 yards in a game when he did it in 1999 in a 34-31 victory against that team in Ann Arbor. Burke ranks amongst the top Spartan quarterbacks in every major category, including touchdowns, where he ranks third with 46 in his career.

6. Tony Banks (1994-1995)

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Tony Banks has had the best NFL career of all MSU quarterbacks in recent history, and honestly, that is the only reason he made this list. Usually I don?t do these lists by the athletes career outside of East Lansing, but I felt that someone had to represent MSU at the professional level, and Banks was the guy. Banks didn?t have a great career at MSU, only playing for two years, as he threw 20 touchdown in his career (10th all-time) with 21 interceptions, but Banks was the first quarterback drafted in the 1996 NFL Draft when he was selected by the St.Louis Rams in the second round. During his career in the NFL, Banks threw for over 15,000 yards and threw 77 touchdowns and 73 interceptions. He played for the Rams, Ravens, Redskins, and Texans during his 10-year career.

5. Brian Hoyer (2004-2008)

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Before there was Cousins, there was this man right here. Brian Hoyer was not exceptionally good at one area of the quarterback position, but he was good enough to get the job done. Hoyer ranks fourth in passing yards in MSU history with 6,159 yards, and he ranks seventh in career passing touchdowns with 35. He is also one of only four quarterbacks in MSU history to pass for over 4,000 yards in a season, and Hoyer had 13 career 200-yard passing games, which ranks third MSU history.

4. Jeff Smoker (2000-2003)

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With one of the most ironic names in sports history, Jeff Smoker was apart of one of the most high-powered offenses in MSU history. Smoker was the quarterback who was lucky enough to have the services of Charles Rogers during his college stint, and he took full advantage of Mr.Roger?s talent. Smoker is second all-time in passing yards in MSU history with 8,932, and second in passing touchdowns with 61. Nobody in MSU history threw more passes than Smoker, as he threw 1,150 and completed 685. For all of you U of M fans who may have forgotten about one of the biggest plays in MSU history, completed by Smoker, I did the honor of giving you guys the link so that you can reminisce and re-live this great time in Spartan football history.

3. Drew Stanton (2002-2006)

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Drew Stanton was easily the most exciting quarterback to watch in MSU history, as he could run and throw the ball with the best of them in college football during his time at MSU. Stanton ranks in the top ten in all major quarterback categories, and has the best completion percentage in MSU history completing 64.2 percent of his passes. Also, Stanton ranks 20th in MSU history in rushing attempts with 332 carries and he racked up 1,512 yards on those carries. Stanton is the best play-maker at the quarterback position that has come through East Lansing, and even though he has not had a great NFL career, his contributions on the football field at Michigan State will never be forgotten.

2. Earl Morrall (1953-1955)

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Who? If you have never heard of Earl Morrall before reading this list don?t feel too bad because I hadn?t either until I started to do research for this article. Earl Morrall played football during the era where running the ball was like breathing, running was the game. While his numbers may not seem like ?top 10? caliber numbers, you must remember that you have to place him within his context when evaluating his play. Morrall is another on of those players that I couldn?t ignore his post-college success, and honestly, that is the reason why he is so high on this list. First, while at MSU, Morrall threw for over 2,000 yards in his career, which during the period in which he played was VERY good. Also, he is the third most efficient quarterback in MSU history with a rating of 140.5. He led the Spartans to a Rose Bowl victory in 1956 over UCLA, finishing off a 9-1 season for the Spartans. Morrall only threw 13 touchdowns in his career at MSU, with 16 interceptions, but that was enough for the 49ers to make him with the second overall pick in the 1956 NFL Draft. During his time in the NFL Morrall was a three time Super Bowl winner, two time Pro Bowl selection, he won the NFL Comeback Player of the Year award in 1972, and he was named the NFL MVP is 1968. Morrall was clearly the best Spartans quarterback of all-time when you look at his whole career, and unfortunately for me, I wasn?t able to watch him play.

1. Kirk Cousins (2007-2012)

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Kirk Cousins, b.k.a Mr. Perfect, is the most productive quarterback in Michigan State history. Cousins is on top of the list on several MSU passing records. He is the leader in pass completions (723), passing yards (9,131), passing touchdowns (66), and passing efficiency (146.1). Also, no Spartan quarterback has won more games than Cousins (27), and he is tied for sixth in Big Ten history in completion percentage (64. 1 percent). While all of these stats are impressive,? Cousins most impressive stat during his tenure at Michigan State is that he has NEVER lost to that team in Ann Arbor as a starter. When you come to Michigan State that has to be one of your main objectives, and not many have shown the winning attitude quite like Cousins. Aside from football, Cousins is a class act man. He is the type of guy that you would want your kids to be like. From academics, to athletics, to the community, Cousins was one of the most productive players in MSU history on and off the field.

About James Edwards III

I cover MSU basketball and football for isportsweb.com. Also, I'm a sophomore at Michigan State University where I am majoring in journalism. Hailing from Flint, Michigan, follow me on twitter @J_Edwards_MSU for sports talk.

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Community Corner: Folklife Fest, a community garage sale

Northwest Folklife Festival

Hundreds of performers in traditional and ethnic music on 25 stages, participatory dancing, craft vendors, food court, 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Saturday, Sunday, 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Monday, Seattle Center, Seattle; free, suggested donation $10/person or $20/family (206-684-7300 or www.nwfolklifefestival.org).

Hydro Fever: Hydroplane memorabilia vendors, model hydro racing for kids, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday, Hydroplane and Raceboat Museum, 5917 S. 196th St., Kent; free (206-766-9620 or www.thunderboats.ning.com).

Seattle Center Playway: Opening weekend of the season for inflatable rides and zip line, part of the Next 50 celebration, 11 a.m.-7 p.m. Saturday, Sunday, Monday, then Saturdays-Sundays through June 24, daily June 29-Sept. 3, Seattle Center, Seattle; prices vary (206-684-7200 or www.seattlecenter.com/playway).

Tour the Locks: One hour guided tours, 11 a.m., 1 and 3 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays, 1 and 3 p.m. Mondays-Fridays, meet at the Visitor Center, Hiram M. Chittenden Locks, 3015 N.W. 54th St., Seattle; free (206-783-7059).

Lakewood-Seward Park Community Garage Sale: Rummage sale, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Sunday, Lakewood Seward Park Community Club, 4916 S. Angeline St., Seattle, and sales throughout the neighborhood (206-722-9696 or www.lspcc.org).

Arboretum Walking Tour: May In Bloom tour theme to see plants in the UW Botanic Garden, 1 p.m. Sunday, Graham Visitors Center, 2300 Arboretum Drive E., Washington Park Arboretum, Seattle; free (www.uwbotanicgardens.org).

Chateau Ste. Michelle Stay-Cation: Wine, collector cars, music, food trucks, noon-4 p.m. Sunday, Chateau Ste. Michelle, 14111 N.E. 145th St., Woodinville; free (425-488-1133 or www.ste-michelle.com/events/wineryCalendarDetail/571).

Mounger Pool: Outdoor big pool with 50-foot corkscrew slide and warmer, shallower little pool, public swims, swimming lessons, water exercise programs daily, Mounger Pool, 2535 32nd Ave. W., Seattle; $3.25-$4.75 (206-684-4708 or www.seattle.gov/parks).

Compiled by Madeline McKenzie

For more community events, go to seattletimes.com/listings (search "community").

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