четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Jeremain Lens keeps place in Netherlands squad

With Arjen Robben injured, PSV Eindhoven winger Jeremain Lens was named Friday in the Netherlands squad for the World Cup runner-up's first two European Championship qualifiers.

Netherlands coach Bert van Marwijk named a squad that included most of the players who lost the World Cup final to Spain for Group E qualifiers in San Marino on Sept. 2 and against Finland in Rotterdam four days later.

Lens, who scored a goal in his international debut in the Netherlands' 1-1 draw with Ukraine earlier this month, was one of the few new additions.

Vurnon Anita of Ajax is expected to play at left back instead of Giovanni van Bronckhorst, who retired after …

Cause of death: Bureaucratic failure

For too many of the nine million uninsured children in America, the lack of health coverage can literally mean the difference between life and death.

Children are dying because their health coverage under Medicaid or the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHlP) ran out, was not renewed in a timely manner or simply does not cover the services a child needs. Some of these deaths occurred because attempts to gain access to health care are ensnarled in red tape. The impact of this oppressive bureaucracy on children is tragically illustrated by the death of Devante Johnson of Houston, Texas.

Tamika Scott, Devante's mother, didn't plan to rely on government supported …

At least 18 killed as bus plunges into river in India

A bus veered off a road and plunged into a river in northeastern India on Sunday, killing at least 18 people and injuring one more, officials said.

Divers were searching for survivors in the river near the town of Sonapur, said government official Prateek Hazela.

Sonapur is about 25 kilometers (15 miles) east of Gauhati, the capital of India's Assam state.

One person, the driver's assistant, had been rescued and was taken to a local hospital, Hazela said, adding …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Blackhawks' turn to take hit Head into Game 4 without Odelein after suspension

The Blackhawks haven't scored in their last two playoff games andwere booed on their home ice. Monday, their problems got even worse.

Workhorse defenseman Lyle Odelein was suspended for what could bethe Hawks' last home game of the season. The NHL ruled him out oftonight's game against the St. Louis Blues for a cross-checkingincident late in the third period of a 4-0 loss Sunday.

The Hawks need a victory tonight to even the best-of-seven seriesat two games apiece. A loss would put them down 3-1, and the Bluescould finish them off Thursday night in St. Louis.

They'll be glad he's not playing," Hawks coach Brian Sutter said.He's been a big-time player for us, but …

Worker says he kept quiet on job hazards

A former machinist at Chicago Magnet Wire Corp., who claims hesuffered job-related injuries from plant chemicals, testifiedThursday he never complained to supervisors about working conditions.

Paulino Carmona said he did not speak out because he feared hisjob would be jeopardized at the Elk Grove Village wire coatingcompany.

The company and five current and former executives are on trialin Criminal Court for aggravated battery, reckless conduct andconspiracy for allegedly exposing its workers to …

Reid and Angle dodge each other and voters

LAS VEGAS (AP) — Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Republican rival Sharron Angle, both known for their verbal gaffes, are avoiding potentially unfriendly voters as much as each other.

In the nation's most prominent Senate battle, only one debate has been scheduled. Meanwhile, the candidates have made few public appearances at events where they might face tough questions.

Nevada isn't an Iowa or a New Hampshire. There's no tradition of candidates feasting on funnel cake at the county fair or having a pint with constituents at the corner pub.

Still, voters say they want more from the candidates, who have largely waged a bruising campaign through attack …

US says swine flu vaccine catching up to demand

A senior adviser to President Barack Obama says the government will catch up to the demand for swine flu vaccine within a week.

Obama adviser David Axelrod says the manufacturers of the vaccine were wrong when they advised the administration earlier this year that they would have 40 million doses ready near the end of October. Instead, only 28 million doses of vaccine were available.

Close Call: Shaq Wants to Play // Hill Says There's Outside Chance

Orlando Magic coach Brian Hill announced that Shaquille O'Nealwill not return to action until Friday.

Unless . . .

"If it's a close game on Wednesday night . . . we'll have tomake that decision on Wednesday," Hill said with a chuckle.

On Wednesday, the Magic makes its first visit of the season tothe United Center to face the Bulls (7 p.m., SportsChannel, 670-AM).

"We'll take it day by day," said Hill, who will have O'Neal inuniform when the Magic plays in New Jersey tonight. "If he gets alot of work in (Tuesday) up in New Jersey and more work Wednesday (inChicago), there's an outside chance he could appear in the gameWednesday. But as of …

Putin congratulates Blatter on re-election

MOSCOW (AP) — Russia's Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has sent a telegram of congratulations to FIFA President Sepp Blatter on his re-election to the post.

Putin and Blatter have cultivated close contacts since Russia's winning bid for the 2018 World Cup, when it saw off competition from England, Spain-Portugal and …

Czech vote leaves unclear who will form next govt

The left-wing Social Democrats eked out a slim victory in the Czech Republic's parliamentary election Saturday but center-right parties won more votes overall, creating uncertainty over who will form the next government.

Results reported by the country's election agency indicated that the Social Democrats will not be able to govern alone and may not even be able to successfully put together a new coalition. The party's leader, former Prime Minister Jiri Paroubek, resigned after the poor showing.

The Statistics Office said the Social Democrats won 22.1 percent of the vote, or 56 seats in Parliament's 200-seat lower house. Their major rival, the conservative …

Pac-Man suspended for incident at club

NASHVILLE, Tenn. - The Tennessee Titans suspended cornerback Adam"Pac-Man" Jones on Wednesday for one game as punishment for his longlist of off-field incidents. Jones won't play Sunday againstJacksonville

Coach Jeff Fisher said after practice that Jones, a former WVUstar, also will be fined what he called "significant financial ...considerations." The loss of one game check would be $49,558, andJones also faces potential punishment from the NFL for violating itspersonal conduct policy.

Fisher said Jones was very concerned and will make a statementlater this week.

"This is the defining moment in his career," Fisher said.

Fisher also told Jones what …

Lukoil's Q3 profit drops 20 pct to $2.2 billion

MOSCOW (AP) — Russia's second-largest oil producer Lukoil said Friday that its third-quarter profit dropped 20 percent because of higher taxes and a slump in the ruble.

The Moscow-based company said Friday that the $570 million decline to $2.2 billion had been caused by the depreciation of the Russian ruble. This includes $340 million it spent on tax on foreign currency translation gain.

The Russian ruble, battered by turmoil on European markets, lost about 15 percent of its value against the U.S. dollar between June 30 and September 30 at the MICEX stock exchange.

Lukoil said its net income was affected by writing down the costs of drilling exploratory wells.

The …

NOTE

Not everyone loved last week's cover of Boise Weekly. The Political World as seen from Boise, Idaho ruffled more than its share of feathers with satiric depictions of politicians and jabs at Boise's neighborhoods. Some readers criticized us for being insensitive to a historic moment in our country's history. Others took issue with what they saw as a number of insults. But for as many complaints as we fielded about the cover, we also took a fair number of compliments about it, too.

Regardless of who loved it, who hated it and why, our collective response when issues like this crop up is "bring it." An opinion is something to which each of you have a right to. We respect it, and we want to hear it. Generally, the BW attitude to reader response is: "At least we're producing some kind of reaction."

One of Chicago's alt weeklies found itself in a similar situation last week. After publishing an unpopular cover featuring a portrait of Barack Obama and a banner that read "Don't Screw This Up," the paper reminded its readers that "no matter how jubilant some of us may feel about [Obama's] election, the media's role isn't to cheerlead for elected officials."

And you can expect B W to keep that in mind next year, as President-elect Barack Obama takes office. Obama's election as president may be of historic significance, but that does not remove him from the same scrutiny his predecessors have faced.

But enough of the serious talk. This Wednesday, Nov. 12, join us at 5 p.m. for the annual Boise Weekly Cover Auction at the Idaho State Historical Museum as we auction off the last year's worth of B W covers. Proceeds fund BW's private arts grants for organizations with an arts-minded mission.

Also on the BW horizon are the deadlines for our annual Bad Cartoon and Fiction 101 contests. Deadlines are early this year, with entries for both contests due in our office Wednesday, Nov. 19. Bad Cartoon does not have an entry fee, but Fiction 101 is $10 per entry. Have questions? Call us at 208-344-2055.

- Rachael Daigle

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Jets sign Italian striker to 6-month deal

Australian A-League's Newcastle Jets have signed former Serie A Italian forward Fabio Vignaroli to a six-month deal.

The 32-year-old Vignaroli has played with several clubs in Italy's top flight, including Modena, Parma and Lazio.

"The greatest attribute that Fabio brings to our club is a tremendous amount of experience in one of the biggest and most competitive leagues in the world," Jets chief executive John Tsatsimas said Sunday.

After a successful stint with Salernitana in Serie B, Vignaroli moved to a series of clubs in Italy, Greece and Scotland with few goals.

The signing continues the Jets' attempts to strengthen their squad for the Asian Champions League this year. They have also recently signed Australians Sasho Petrovski, Ljubo Milicevic and Nikolai Topor-Stanley and Dutch striker Donny de Groot.

"We believe that our signings over this past week, Fabio very much included, will see us enter the Champions League with positive energy and forward momentum," Tsatsimas said.

Newcastle qualified for Asia by winning the A-League championship in the 2007-2008 season. The Jets finished in last place in the recently concluded domestic season.

Seeing Bath through fresh eyes

A day-long programme of activities to celebrate internationalWorld Heritage Day takes place later this month in Bath.

The events on Sunday, April 17 have been organised by Bath andNorth East Somerset Council and the Bath Preservation Trust.

One highlight will be an organised trail around the city centre,starting at noon at the Unesco World Heritage Site symbol in StallStreet.

There will be five stops along the trail route where people cantake part in an activity, learn about the area from a guide or justrelax and have refreshments.

Tony Crouch, the council's world heritage manager, said: "WorldHeritage Day encourages all of us to find out more about this veryspecial place and ensures future generations can understand thecultural value of the city's status. The council is really pleasedto join forces with Bath Preservation Trust to offer the trail."

Trust chief executive Caroline Kay added: "One of the joys ofBath as a World Heritage Site is that its glories are all aroundyou.

"We hope that the trail encourages locals to look with new eyesand visitors to see why the accolade of the status was given toBath."

The whole of Bath is an international heritage site - the onlyentire city to be given the designation in Britain.

For more information, go to www.bathnes.gov.uk/heritageevents.

Meanwhile, a new TV series, DVD and book will reveal more of thehistory of a 15th-century grade one listed house near Bath.

South Wraxall Manor, now owned by Duran Duran bassist JohnTaylor, is one of six properties featuring in historian DanCruickshank's The Country House Revealed.

The manor house is where Sir Walter Raleigh reputedly smoked thefirst pipe in an English house.

The BBC series starts on BBC2 next month, when the DVD will bereleased.

The book, published by Ebury, is already for sale.

British group alleges US used ships as prisons

A British human rights organization claimed Monday that the United States had used military ships to secretly detain and interrogate terrorism suspects. U.S. officials denied using ship as prisons.

The group Reprieve alleged that high-profile detainees including American-born Taliban soldier John Walker Lindh and Australian Taliban supporter David Hicks were imprisoned on the vessels. Reprieve claims that the United States has used ships stationed off the Somali coast and the Indian Ocean island of Diego Garcia to detain suspects.

"The U.S. administration chooses ships to try to keep their misconduct as far as possible from the prying eyes of the media and lawyers," Reprieve director Clive Stafford Smith said.

The U.S. Navy said that ships have been used to hold a small number of prisoners for short periods, but it denied that vessels were used as long-term floating prisons.

"We do not operate detention facilities on board Navy ships," said Navy Cmdr. Jeffrey Gordon, a Pentagon spokesman. "Department of Defense detention facilities are in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantanamo Bay."

Reprieve said it had based its assessment on evidence from the U.S. military and the Council of Europe, and testimony from a former detainee at the U.S. prison camp in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

It declined to publish details on its research Monday, saying it plans to issue a report on the use of prison ships later this year. Reprieve has been representing several prisoners at Guantanamo.

Stafford Smith claimed that the United States may have used as many as 17 ships as floating prisons. He said the organization believes about 26,000 people are being held by the U.S. in secret prisons _ a figure that includes land-based detention centers.

Reprieve identified the USS Ashland, USS Bataan and USS Peleliu as among ships that have been used as prisons. Gordon said Reprieve's claims were "inaccurate and misleading."

However, Gordon acknowledged that Lindh, who was captured in Afghanistan in November 2001 by U.S. forces, was held on board both the USS Bataan and the USS Peleliu until early 2002. He said there were fewer than 10 such detainees.

He said that Lindh _ who in 2002 pleaded guilty to offenses of supplying services to the now-defunct Taliban government _ and others had been detained there to allow U.S. officials secure access for interviews away from the battlefield.

Gordon did not say exactly how long they were detained aboard Navy ships, saying only that they were held for "weeks rather than months."

British lawmaker Andrew Tyrie said he has appealed to Britain's Information Commissioner to force the government to release minutes of military talks that could shed light on the allegations.

The Foreign Office has previously said that during a meeting with U.S officials, the Americans told the British they were not detaining prisoners on board ships off the coast of Diego Garcia, a remote British outpost that hosts a U.S. military base.

Businesses cautious about possible college closure

Several Carlisle-area businesses remember when the U.S. Army War College was threatened with closing in 1995. They're staying calm about the latest closure talk, but they acknowledge any relocation of the college would hurt the local economy and their bottom line.

"Those of us who have been here long enough know that this has happened before," said John Ulsh, manager of Mountz Jewelers in downtown Carlisle. (See "Impact ...," on page 18.)

Ulsh said War College students - and especially retired military personnel in the region - generate a significant amount of business for his store because they tend to have more disposable income.

"We're getting them at a later point in their military career. They have kids or grandchildren. From a buying standpoint, we're getting them at their peak. They're buying for big life events too, like major anniversaries or birthdays," Ulsh said.

Buz Wolfe, owner of Wolfe & Shearer Realtors, acknowledged it would have a negative long-term effect on area businesses. He rents six of his own properties to War College students and manages about 12 more for local clients.

"Am I terribly worried? No. But then, if you had asked me three years ago if the Dickinson Law School was going to leave, I would have said 'No' then. Now, it looks that it could leave," Wolfe said.

Such responses from the business community are not surprising, said Michelle Crowley, president of the Carlisle Area Chamber of Commerce.

"They probably don't have a way to gauge the impact on their business," said Crowley, who visited a Carlisle restaurant last week that had 23 War College visitors at one table. "Maybe a closure wouldn't seem like much on the surface, but long-term, it would really affect us."

Area hotels, restaurants and the housing market would take a direct financial hit if the barracks closed, Crowley said.

Cumberland County would lose about 10 percent of its local economy if the facilities closed, according to a Dickinson College economics professor.

Bill Bellinger, associate professor of economics, completed a study on the economic impact of the War College last year. He found it generated $117 million indirect and indirect spending in Carlisle and $174 million in Cumberland County in 2003.

The Barracks provides 656 military and 1,061 civilian and contractor jobs. That is nearly 8 percent of all jobs in the Carlisle area, the study concluded.

One possible scenario involves relocating the War College to a military base at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., or Washington, D.C., said John Connolly, chief clerk for Cumberland County Should that happen, local government officials would try to help the Army find a suitable tenant for its empty educational, facilities on the barracks, he said.

Connolly, a former War College student, said there could be a private-public partnership in which the academic building space could be used to house offices.

"People are talking about different ideas," Bellinger said, suggesting the military's academic facilities could also be used as some sort of technical campus. "That property will not lie vacant."

But local officials are a long way from resigning themselves to simply sitting back and waiting for the Department of Defense decision this spring. Municipal and state officials have been huddling for months and traveling to meet with Congressional leaders to plead their cases for keeping the War College in Carlisle.

"The time for action is now," Connolly said. "What you want to do is stay off the BRAC list. Once you're on that, it's like Mission Impossible to get off."

Lt. Col. Merideth Bucher, director of public affairs at the Carlisle Barracks, said any number of scenarios could happen with BRAC. Even if Carlisle Barracks ends up on the list, any changes would go through a final review with Congressional leaders.

"We're still planning for our future here," Bucher said.

Heather Kattouf

general manager of Comfort Suites, Carlisle

War College visitors make up a large portion of the downtown Carlisle hotel's business. Manager Heather Kattouf estimates about 25 percent of her customers are military personnel, contractors or visitors to the base.

"It would be pretty dramatic. We would survive, but we'd have to go to new areas to find new customers."

Kattour said she would try to entice more corporate and leisure customers to her 5-year-old hotel to make up the difference. Comfort Suites is on Hanover Street. Like other hotels in the area, it offers military personnel a per-diem rate.

"Retaining your customers is a lot easier than getting new customers."

About the college

The War College is part of the Carlisle Barracks. The barracks, founded in 1757, is the second-oldest active military post in the country. (West Point is the oldest). The U.S. Department of Defense is expected to announce in May whether the War College and barracks would be affected by the Base Realignment & Closure.

SOURCE: PUBLIC AFFAIRS DEPARTMENT, CARLISLE BARRACKS

Dr. King's son, others warn on his birthday: Don't be mystified by historic candidacies

WASHINGTON - As millions commemorate the 79th birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Jan. 21, orators and community leaders across the nation will point to the historic presidential campaigns of Sens. Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton as a sign that Dr. King's dream is becoming real.

But, his oldest son and others who marched with Dr. King this week cautioned observers against becoming so fixated on the candidates that they forget about the issues that would still cause Dr. King pain.

"This is a pivotal year for our nation because our nation is saying, 'We are willing to potentially elect an African American or a woman as our number one person as our nominee'," said Martin Luther King III.

"In a sense, the ground was tilled for all of that many years ago by my father and many others so that we could get to this point as it relates to this one issue. I say 'this one issue' because while Barack Obama is doing incredibly well around our nation, the masses of people of color are still being inflicted at certain levels of pain on issues around race."

He continues, "It's wonderful on the one hand because it says that America is perhaps a different nation. But, it still does not excuse the fact that there are many issues in relationship to civil and human rights that still must be addressed."

People who do not normally watch politics are suddenly following Democratic primaries like a sport as news of inequities and injustices such as the Jena Six case, noose intimidations, police misconduct, brutality, and police shootings around the nation still flourish.

Simultaneously, key progresses are occurring such as record numbers of Black elected officials, African Americans leading Fortune 500 Companies, Black Caucus members leading committees of Congress, and African Americans breaking historic barriers of all kinds around the nation.

"Who would have thought that a Black would one day be the head of American Express, or that a Black would be the head of Time-Warner or Merrill Lynch?" King III quizzes.

"That is very positive, just as if Barack Obama is able to garner the nomination and then become president. That would be phenomenal, but it does not mean the work is complete. That's the main point."

Others who marched with Dr. King echoed these sentiments in interviews with the NNPA News Service this week as they discussed current events in America that would cause the slain civil rights leader to applaud and other issues that he would lament.

"He would be the saddest to know that we're at war," says Dr. Dorothy Height, president emeritus of the National Council of Negro Women and a peer of Dr. King and the Big Six civil rights leaders. "In his last speech from Riverside church in New York at the time of the Vietnam War, he. said, 'Stop the bombing,' Height recalls. "But, I think that he would be equally sad to see that we have so many people in poverty."

The U. S. Census Bureau reports that the number of Americans living in poverty is around 36 million, with African Americans remaining nearly twice the national rate at around 25 percent.

The Rev. Dr. Willie T. Barrow, 82, a long-time board member of the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition and a behind-the-scenes organizer for King, said she thinks the health care crisis - often a result of poverty - would be foremost on his mind.

"He would be sad to see that [47 million] people don't have health care." At the same time, she said, he would be pleased to see that so many Black youth are actively involved in civil rights, such as the Jena Six marches, as well as involved in the Democratic campaigns for the presidency. "I think the Obama campaign is really showing that," she says.

Despite the excitement surrounding the candidacies, economic issues are foremost, says the Rev. Jesse Jackson, who marched alongside King and is considered one of bis lieutenants.

"I preached at Ebenezer today at his church here in Atlanta and I spent most of his last birthday with him at his church.

"His own last birthday was spent organizing the Poor People's campaign and preparing the march to Washington to engage in national civil disobedience," Jackson said in a Sunday evening interview.

"Forty years later, we've seen the most wholesale shift of resources ever with losses, taking our land, taking our houses through these mortgages foreclosures and the sub-prime scam."

Jackson, who has announced a Jan. 22 march on the Department of Housing and Urban Development at noon, says he is certain that Dr. King would be crying out on behalf of the victims of defaulted sub-prime loans.

"He would be fighting therefore to save people's homes, to restructure loans and to repossess homes. I'm sure he would. And he'd be fighting to not only end the war in Iraq, but to redirect the resources from the war in Iraq to build America's cities, bridges collapsing in Minnesota and levies collapsing in New Orleans, obviously the infrastructure is crumbling while we keep giving tax cuts to the rich and getting in deeper in debt with China."

Jackson said that on the other hand, King would be genuinely pleased with South Carolina, where the race between Obama and Clinton will next be spotlighted.

"I think he'd be proud of just the real competition. Forty years ago when he died, we'd just gotten the right to vote for two years. And now in South Carolina, that vote could very well determine the launching pad for the next president. So, the empowerment of the masses of us, just the real talent would impress him."

Still, King's hopes would be that the candidates would do something for the poor, says Height: "His last effort on earth was to march on Washington to force the government to respond to poor people." NNPA

Essex chiefs to decide over budget ; Cricket

IT'S big decision time for Essex County Cricket Club chiefs thisweek as they have to decide on next year's budget, but withoutknowing what finances they will receive because of the on-goingconfusion of the future set-up of the domestic Twenty20 competition.

Club officials are holding a committee meeting later this weekand they will have to make some crucial financial decisions,including on possible new players signing, but without knowing howmuch money they will have in the kitty.

Chief executive David East explains: "We were hoping to go to ourmeeting with a defined structure of the game, particularly inrelation to the Twenty20 competition, so we could realisticallyjudge how much money we could spend for next season.

"But we won't now know that until November 17 at the earliest sowe have to decide whether we defer until that time or we actuallytake a bit of a punt on it.

Punt "But with the kind of numbers involved with makingadjustments to our squad that's possibly a dangerous strategy.

"It's all very unsatisfactory but that's the situation we face."

Meanwhile, the club continues to have talks with all-rounder RaviBopara over a two year contract offered to him at the close of lastseason.

"I'm comfortable with the way discussions are going and I'mconfident of bringing the talks to a positive conclusion," Eastadded.

Bopara will play for the South African side KwaZulu-NatalDolphins this winter in a bid to keep his form up so he has a chanceof being picked for next summer's England World Cup squad.

Cell phone sets off: ; bomb scare

Dropped calls can be a problem, but on Thursday a dropped cellphone caused city streets to be shut down and two downtown buildingsto be evacuated.

The Kanawha County 911 Center received a report that a man hadjumped into a manhole at the intersection of Truslow and VirginiaStreets about 11:40 a.m., a dispatcher said. The witness claimed theman had exited the manhole and quickly set off down Virginia Streetheading east.

Police were immediately called in to investigate the incident,said Lt. Bryan Stover of the Kanawha County Sheriff's Department.Authorities shut down city streets near the W. Kent Carper PublicSafety Complex and began the investigation, Stover said.

The building was briefly evacuated, as was the federalcourthouse, the dispatcher said.

Bomb technicians with the Kanawha County Sheriff's Departmentwere sent down the manhole to look for any suspicious items, Stoversaid. None were found, he added.

About a half an hour after the initial call, police located thesubject behind the judicial building on Quarrier Street, Stoversaid.

"He told us that he had a hearing at the courthouse and that hehad dropped his cell phone into a storm drain when he got out of thecar," Stover said. "He opened the manhole cover, jumped in, got hiscell phone and then went to his hearing."

The subject was cooperative and answered all of the officers'questions, Stover said. Police confirmed the man's story, and he wasreleased without charges.

Although the incident turned out to be unfounded, Stover said hehad to "commend" the witness for calling in to report the suspiciousbehavior.

"It was clearly suspicious activity, and some people wouldn'thave taken the time to report it," he said. "The witness did theright thing."

He added that there are a number of buildings in that four orfive-block radius that serve essential government functions. Stoveralso said that the evacuation as well as the investigation ransmoothly.

The evacuation and investigation involved numerous agencies,including the Charleston Police Department and security at thefederal courthouse, he said. City streets were opened about 45minutes after the call was received and workers again were allowedto enter the buildings, Stover said.

Contact writer Paul Fallon at paul.fallon@dailymail.com or 304-348-4817.

10 reported hurt in French nursery school shooting

A gunman shot at people near a nursery school in the French city of Lyon on Friday, injuring 10 adults but no children, authorities said.

Police surrounded the area and were attempting to find out where the shots originated.

The shooting some 30 yards (meters) from the Harmony nursery and elementary school occurred just as parents were coming to collect their children late Friday morning. Some parents were among the injured, said Anne Le Scanff, spokeswoman for the Lyon school district.

She said a man fired a shotgun at passers-by but was not aiming at the school.

"The children were in class ... they weren't aware of what happened," Le Scanff said. "The situation is under control."

However, Le Scanff said police had not yet located the gunman and the school's afternoon session has been canceled.

Five of the 10 injured received light wounds, and the others suffered even less significant injuries, said Raphaelle Padovani, a spokeswoman for the regional prefecture.

She said the injured were being treated. There was no immediate information on the nature of the injuries.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Important Green Park drawings are now on show in the city

Railway enthusiasts and amateur historians are being invited toshare in the latest collection to arrive at Bath & North EastSomerset Council's Bath Record Office.

The council has received 80 drawings depicting a range of oldrailway buildings and equipment around Green Park Station goods yarddating from 1869 to 1934. The detailed architectural drawingsinclude an engine shed, turntable, oil lamp room, fish house, cabstand and stabling for horse-drawn taxi carriages.

The sketches were returned following an inventory check by theSomerset and Dorset Railway Trust which had borrowed them in 1982from Bath City Council, the predecessor to Bath & North EastSomerset Council.

Colin Johnston, the Council's Principal Archivist, said: "It wasa great surprise when they were returned to us after nearly 30years. "They were given to the old Bath City Council by British Railback in the 1980s. They all have the stamp of the 'British RailwaysEngineering Office, Paddington" and they've been well looked afterand carefully wrapped in tissue paper. It's a fascinatingcollection, and all in very good condition.

"They are mostly late 19th to early 20th century drawingsproduced by the railway company for buildings, alterations,extensions, rebuilds and changes on the site across the river fromthe main station, which used to be the railway goods yard. I believePinesway and the Homebase store are on that site now.

"We have virtually nothing in the way of railway drawings here soit's really pleasing for this to come in as 80 drawings can offer awealth of information on one topic. I'm sure it will be wonderfulsource material for railway enthusiasts."

Bath Record Office, in the Guildhall, collects and preserveshistorical records relating to Bath and makes them available forresearch to anyone who wishes to use them.

Councillor Cherry Beath (Lib-Dem, Combe Down), Cabinet Member forSustainable Development, said: "Bath & North East Somerset Councilis pleased to retain these interesting records of the city's railwayheritage for the appreciation of our residents and visitors. Thiscollection could be of particular interest to people whose relationsmay have worked on the line or at the station, as well as localrailway enthusiasts, who could come into the Bath Record Office andoffer any additional information from their own findings."

The Bath Record Office is open for research from Tuesday toFriday each week, except the third full week of the month.

Opening times are Tuesday to Thursday from 9am to 1pm and 2pm to5pm and on Friday from 9am to 1pm and 2pm to 4.30pm.

For more information, contact Bath & North East SomersetCouncil's Bath Record Office, Guildhall, High Street, Bath BA1 5AW,telephone 01225 477421 or email archives@bathnes.gov.uk.

Bush Trip Headed by Talks With Putin

PRAGUE, Czech Republic - Sharp differences between the United States and Russia over President Bush's plan to build a missile defense system on Moscow's doorstep are likely to dominate talk during Bush's European tour.

Bush, who arrived late Monday in Prague at the start of an eight-day trip to the G-8 summit of industrialized nations and half a dozen countries, will see President Vladimir Putin at the summit in Germany later this week. It likely will be a difficult talk; relations between Washington and Moscow are strained almost to the breaking point, and Putin has been harshly critical of U.S. foreign policy.

Bush's message in advance of the trip has been to calm down, reminding Russia that "the Cold War is over." As if to drive home that point, Bush was bookending his summit stay with calls on the Czech Republic and Poland, former Soviet satellites where he wants to base major parts of the new defense shield.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Monday that Putin's comments were "not helpful."

"It is just not an argument that is acceptable in a world in which the United States and Russia are not adversaries," Rice told reporters on her plane en route to an Organization of American States meeting in Panama City, Panama. "This isn't the Soviet Union and we need to drop the rhetoric that sounds like what the United States and the Soviet Union used to say about each other and realize it is the United States and Russia in a very different period."

Rice added: "It doesn't really help anybody to start threatening the Europeans. ... You cannot launch a threat at Europe that is separable from the United States."

Bush's strategic defense plan can hardly be seen as anything less than a poke in the eye to Putin, however.

"This is a distinctive message that is as easily understandable in Russian as it is in English," said Simon Serfaty, a senior adviser to the Europe program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. "The message is that we're going to do what we're going to do, and your concerns about the deployment of some marginal capabilities designed for defense purposes in Central Europe are not going to impress me."

Speaking to foreign reporters before he travels to Germany for the summit, Putin warned that Moscow could take "retaliatory steps" if Washington goes forward with the missile plan, including possibly aiming nuclear weapons at targets in Europe.

Putin said neither Iran nor North Korea have the rockets the American system is intended to shoot down, suggesting the system would be used instead against Russia.

Besides the Czech Republic, Germany and Poland, Bush also has Italy, Albania and Bulgaria on his travel itinerary. He has meetings planned with at least 15 foreign leaders, plus the Pope, and his schedule isn't final yet.

But the spat with Putin is front and center.

U.S. officials have insisted - publicly and to Putin personally - that the system planned for Eastern Europe is meant to protect NATO allies against a missile launch from Iran, which the West suspects of trying to develop nuclear weapons. Moscow isn't buying it, insisting the system must be aimed at Russia and accusing Washington of touching off a new arms race.

Saying it is now forced to strengthen its military potential, Russia test-fired new missiles and declared a moratorium on observing its obligations under a key Soviet-era arms control treaty. Putin assailed "imperialism" in global affairs, saying the shield would turn Europe into a "powder keg" and accusing the U.S. of "an almost uncontained hyper use of force."

Arguments about the missile defense plan came on top of Washington worries about backsliding on democracy under Putin's leadership - even as the U.S. courts Russia's assistance in curtailing Iran's and North Korea's nuclear programs. Putin, meanwhile, is increasingly riled over what he views as U.S. meddling in his backyard.

Talking to reporters aboard Air Force One en route to Prague said that on this trip Bush will "talk a little bit about the challenge of promoting democracy in countries, big countries in particular, where we have a complex relationship with a lot of interests, places like China and Russia."

Russia will be cited, he said, "because there are not exceptions to the freedom agenda."

To settle things down, Bush has invited the Russian leader for an unprecedented stay at his family's summer compound on the Maine coast in July. But he also is hosting Estonia's president at the White House the week before. Like the Czech and Polish stops, this meeting will not please the Russians, angry with Estonia for moving a memorial to Soviet soldiers killed during World War II.

This sort of strategic travel-planning isn't new for Bush.

The president agreed to attend Putin's Red Square celebration in May 2005 of the 60th anniversary of WWII's end. But he started that trip in Latvia and ended it in Georgia, both ex-Soviet republics that the president used as backdrops for rhetoric on the power of democracy.

Later that year, Bush made a state visit to communist China. But first he delivered a pointed speech in Japan that amounted to a lecture for Beijing to increase political and economic freedoms. And he flew directly from China to Mongolia, the first Asian nation to discard communism in favor of democracy.

Loan participation guidence issued by federal regulators

Guidance on sales of 100% loan participations has been issued by federal banking regulators.

"If not appropriately structured, these 100% loan participation programs can present unwarranted risks to the originating institution, including legal, reputation and compliance risks," said the regulators. According to the guidance statement, policies for a 100% loan participation should meet the following criteria:

1. The motivations of the parties involved should be commercial in nature.

2. Participants should be limited to sophisticated financial and commercial entities and individuals with experience in dealing with loan participations. The originating institution should also have a distribution plan that ensures that the general public does not become the target of marketing efforts for resales by loan participants.

3. Only borrowers who meet the originating institution's credit requirements should be placed in these programs.

4. The originating institution should allow potential loan participants to obtain and review appropriate credit and other information on the borrower to enable the participants to make an informed credit decision. Promotional materials should clearly state that the participants and not the originating depository institution are responsible for making the ultimate credit decision based on each participant's own review of information pertaining to the borrower.

The guidelines note that the originating institution should establish procedures for ensuring compliance with applicable regulations and consistency with the institution's policies and procedures. The originating institution also should have written participation agreements that set forth the rights and obligations of the parties participating in the program.

Regulators indicated that the guidance statement applies only to a small number of mostly very large insured depository institutions.

Red star praise for trotters

Bolton's hopes of progressing in the UEFA Cup may be out of theirhands but they found an ally in Aleksandar Jankovic.

The Red Star coach took time out after seeing his side go down 1-0 to applaud the Trotters, who had Gavin McCann to thank for theirwinner.

Jankovic said: "Bolton have a good chance of doing well in thiscompetition. They are a fine team and are very well organised."

Bolton are top of Group F on six points aftertheir final match,but they could be joined on six points by Bayern Munich, Bragaand Aris who all play their final games next week.

Mexico regime loses key seat // But PRI wins other governor races

AGUASCALIENTES, Mexico In what would be a crucial victory aheadof the 2000 presidential elections, the opposition National ActionParty captured the governor's seat in the central state ofAguascalientes, according to television exit polls.

The polls by Televisa and Television Azteca also showed thegoverning Institutional Revolutionary Party, as expected, keepingits governors seats in the gulf coast state of Veracruz and thesoutheastern state of Oaxaca.

Official preliminary results were to be released later.

The vote in Aguascalientes came a month after National Action,known by its Spanish initials PAN, lost one of its six governorseats. It was defeated by the governing party, known as the PRI, inChihuahua. Aguascalientes was seen as the PAN's best opportunity tocompensate for the loss.

According to Televisa's poll, PAN candidate Felipe GonzalezGonzalez captured 50 percent of the vote. The PRI's candidate,Hector Hugo Olivares Ventura, had 41 percent, and Alfonso BernalSahagun of the center-left Democratic Revolution Party had 6 percent.It did not give the margin of error in its poll.

The business-oriented National Action has gained strength inAguascalientes as the small, relatively prosperous state has becomemore urban and middle class.

Martin Diaz de la Vega, 32, said he voted for the PAN for thefirst time because he believes the PRI is corrupt.

"We need a change. Even if it's bad, I don't think it can beany worse," he said.

Turnout figures among Aguascalientes' 500,000 registered voterswere not available, but the state electoral council reported earlierin the day that turnout was strong and there were no major problems.

In Veracruz, Miguel Aleman, a wealthy businessman and the son ofa former president, won with 52 percent of the vote, according toTelevisa. Luis Pazos of the PAN was second with 28 percent.

Veracruz, a party stronghold, was seen as essential for the PRI.With its 4 million voters, Veracruz has the nation's third-largestelectorate and could be crucial in the presidential election.

If the final results reflect the showing of the exit poll, thewin could make Aleman a top contender for the PRI's presidentialnomination.

The PRI, which long maintained its power through a mix ofpatronage, strong-arm tactics and cheating at the ballot box, hasseen devastating electoral losses in recent years following reformsaimed at cleaning up the vote and making elections more competitive.

The PRI suffered its worst setbacks last year when it lostcontrol of the lower house of Congress and was defeated in the MexicoCity mayoral race. But it won two of three elections last month,including the defeat of the PAN in Chihuahua.

In Oaxaca, PRI candidate Jose Nelson Murat Casab won with 51percent of the vote, according to the exit poll. The DemocraticRevolution candidate, Hector Sanchez, finished second with 34percent.

Optical Measurement of Surface Tension in a Miniaturized Air-Liquid Interface and its Application in Lung Physiology

ABSTRACT

We have previously shown that lamellar body-like particles, the form in which pulmonary surfactant is secreted, spontaneously disintegrate when they contact an air-liquid interface, eventually creating an interfacial film. Here, we combined these studies with a new technique enabling the simultaneous and non-invasive measurement of surface tension (γ). This method is a refinement of the pendant-drop principle. A sapphire cone with a 300-�m aperture keeps the experimental fluid by virtue of surface coherence in a fixed and nearly planar position above the objective of an inverted microscope. The radius of curvature of the fluid meniscus is related to γ and determines the pattern of light back-reflection upon epi-illumination. This method, which we name "inverted interface", has several novel aspects, in particular its microscopic dimensions. When using lamellar body-like particles freshly released by alveolar type II cells, we found that their conversion at the interface resulted in γ-reduction close to 30 mN/m. After a fast initial decay, γ-decrease proceeded slowly and in proportion to single particle conversions. These conversions ceased with time whereas γ decreased further, probably due to reorganization of the already deposited material. The present investigation indicates that surface film formation by adsorption of large surfactant aggregates is an important mechanism by which γ is reduced in the lung.

INTRODUCTION

Pulmonary surfactant is a mixture of phospholipids and proteins that covers the air-liquid interface in the lung. The importance of this surface coat is best demonstrated in the premature infant lung, where deficiency of this material causes alveolar collapse with life-threatening consequences unless cured by surfactant administration strategies (1,2). In mature lungs, surfactant is released by alveolar type II cells as �m-sized, globular complexes (lamellar bodylike particles; LBPs), which undergo a transformation process to finally create a surface film that lowers γ close to 0 mN/m at end-expiratory lung volumes (3-5). However, the mechanisms promoting transformation of these compact particles into surface-active components is still poorly understood (6).

Previously, we demonstrated that freshly released LBPs are stable particles but transform spontaneously and rapidly (<1 s) when they contact the air-liquid interface (7). These transformations stopped when the surface was already occupied by previously deposited material or when γ of the experimental fluid was low. From these observations, we concluded that γ is the force that drives LBP-disintegration, and that LBPs are able by themselves to reduce γ to a certain extent. However, these conclusions were indirect, as we were not able to measure LBP transformation and γ simultaneously.

In this article, we present a sensitive and noninvasive method to measure γ of a miniaturized inverted air-liquid interface in combination with fluorescence imaging microscopy. It is based on the analysis of light reflection at a fluid meniscus whose radius of curvature is related to its surface tension. This method is highly suited to studying dynamic surface phenomena at yam-scaled dimensions, e.g., transformation and adsoiption of single LBPs that reach the interface spontaneously by sedimentation. To our knowledge, this method of γ-measurement is one of the most sensitive reported as the required quantity of LBPs is extremely low.

Our results showed that LBPs, released by rat alveolar type II cells, dispersed when reaching a clean air-liquid interface, and that this process entailed a reduction of γ in relation to the number of transformed LBPs. These transformation events gradually ceased with time, supporting a self-regulated process driven and controlled by surface forces. We conclude that ~35 mN/m is close to the γ-equilibrium of spontaneously adsorbing LBPs, and that further reduction of γ < 30 mN/m may be caused by the slow rearrangement of the surface-associated material. However, additional mechanisms may be required to attain the low γ-values that have been found in the lung. The inverted interface should be a suitable approach to study, in more detail, the adsorption of particulate surfactant in relation to surface film formation.

METHODS AND RESULTS

Design of the inverted interface

The chamber confining the interface has been improved further as compared to its initial introduction (7). It is made of polished stainless steel in its upper part, and synthetic sapphire in its lower part (Fig. 1, a-c). Sapphire was used because it meets all quality criteria comparable to those for glass. In addition, it has an extremely smooth surface finish over all its parts, which is difficult to realize in glass due to grinding or etching procedures. Furthermore, these cones are readily available in various sizes with sharply edged and perfect circular apertures (� � 0.1%; Comadur. Switzerland). Perfect aperture circularity is necessary to obtain an axisymmetric liquid curvature. Likewise, contact angle problems are minimized when the edge of the aperture is close to 90�. Furthermore, the hydrophobic character of this material (8) is useful as the fluids are stably kept within the aperture plane. Since a minimally domed surface is necessary for γ-measurements as described below, a force is required to counteract γ. This is best achieved by a constant hydrostatic pressure exerted by the fluid itself. To accommodate the fluid (~0.5-5 ml), we designed the embodiment of the aperture with a conical shape that served several additional purposes: First, contact angle problems and capillary effects on the upper fluid surface are reduced, or abolished, when it is flat over an extended region perpendicular to the lower aperture. Second, small volume changes are tolerable as they change fluid height to a minimal extent only. Third, the cone might help to concentrate sedimenting LBPs onto the small interface. Fourth, inspection of the interface by transmission illumination, phase contrast imaging, or the introduction of patch pipettes or other manipulating devices as well as substitution of fluid components (e.g., by superfusion of the interface), are substantially facilitated. Before all experiments, the chamber was cleaned with water and acetone in an ultrasonic cleaner, flushed with distilled water, and dried with sterile air.

Design of the setup

The inverted interface is mounted on the stage of an inverted microscope (Zeiss 100, Carl Zeiss, Oberkochen, Germany) (Fig. 1 d). At the lower aperture, liquid in the chamber formed an interlace with the air below, inspectable by air objectives. We used a 20� Plan-Neofluar, N.A. 0.5, throughout all experiments to image the aperture on the CCD completely, or a 40� LD-Achroplan, N.A. 0.6 (both Zeiss), for higher resolution visual inspections. Light from a polychromatic source (Xenon arc lamp) is reflected by a diffraction grating (Jobin-Yvon, Longjumeau, France) into the rear port of the microscope. The grating is mounted on a precision scanner to allow selection of desired wavelengths. After passing a condenser, light was focused on a field stop, and directed by a second condenser to a dichroic beam splitter (515 nm) into the objective and the interface. The scanner allowed us to quickly change between 470 and 550 nm-the wavelengths used to monitor FM 1-43 fluorescence and reflected light, respectively. The field stop reduced the amount of light passing peripheral sections of the transparent sapphire, thus minimizing the amount of scattered light and undesired reflections at the inner walls of the cone. In addition, the field stop was useful, since it allowed us to focus on a structureless surface (e.g., when using high magnifications in combination with large interface apertures), and to align the inverted interface to the optical path. A second diaphragm (0 5 mm), inserted into the rear aperture of the objective, reduced the spatial angle of the outgoing light cone, and thus increased the sensitivity with respect to curvature discrimination while reducing out-of-focus distortions. Reflected or fluorescent light was collected, after passing a longpass filter (535 nm), by a cooled CCD camera (Imago-SVGA, Till Photonics, Germany). It was operated at an image acquisition rate of 1 Hz with a symmetrical binning factor of 2. Control of illumination and image analysis was performed by Tillvision (Till Photonics). The microscope setup was placed in a dark and temperature-stabilized room (25 � 1�C). It was shielded by various means to minimize air turbulences and contamination by air-borne material.

Inspection of the inverted interface

Image analysis

All image analyses were performed as follows. Four line scans, displaced at 0�, 45�, 90�, and 135� and crossing each other at the center of shading corrected images, were constructed (Fig. 4 a). They yielded a mean β-value, intended to further minimize imperfect alignments and spatial deviations from axisymmetry. As shown, measurements were restricted to a portion of � 138 �m from the apex. Within that region, the fluid meniscus should be least affected by incomplete wetting of the aperture plane, evidenced by a peripheral rim of dark spots in this contrast-enhanced picture. This potential problem most likely arises from small surface imperfections of the cone material and could not be avoided.

As further shown in Fig. 4. surface curvature can also be characterized by a simple center/periphery intensity ratio calculation. This method, using two rectangular regions of interest, is convenient when a continuous on-line registration of a rapidly changing surface curvature is required. For example, when we applied a small amount of sodium dodecyl sulfate (an anionic surfactant), on top of the fluid-filled cone at the indicated time, the change in the on-line acquired center/periphery ratio compared well with that of the off-line calculated β-coefficient (Fig. 4 ft). Although this alternative method was not used for quantitative measurements, it should demonstrate the principal feasibility to obtain fast and time-dependent estimations of γ-changes.

Combined surface tension and fluorescence measurements

Combined γ- and fluorescence measurements were made by alternately switching between 470- and 550-nm light exposures. Our protocol (Tillvision) was set to obtain fluorescent (470 nm) images every second and reflected (550 nm) light every 30 s. In addition, to obtain a maximum of fluorescence information, we focused on the interface directly when using 470 nm, and refocused to the aperture plane for reflected light. This was done by a fixed focus stop, allowing us to perform this adjustment within 1 s. To visualize LBPs, we used the styryl dye FM 1-43 (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) as described (12). Before the experiments, we tested whether it interferes with γ-measurements. At high concentrations, FM 1-43 has a considerable surface activity itself. Thus, we used this dye at 0.2 �M, and no effect was detectable when measured by the inverted interface or by the vertical pull method (γ = 71.8 � 0.14 mN/m; n = 3; see Ref. 7). However, at this low concentration, labeling of LBPs was reduced as well.

Analysis of LBP transformations

Freshly released LBPs were harvested from filtered AT II cell supernatants as described in detail in our previous publication (7). These supernatants contained 150 mM NaCl, 5 mM KCl, 1 mM MgCl^sub 2^, 2 mM CaCl^sub 2^, 0.05 mM NaH^sub 2^PO^sub 4^, and 5 mM glucose, supplemented with 0.1 mg/ml streptomycin, 100 U/ml penicillin, and the secretagogues MgATP (100 �M) and phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (100 nM), pH 7.4 at 25�C. The experiments with LBPs were started by replacing 0.5 ml of a total 3-ml experimental solution (150 mM NaCl, 5 mM KCl, 1 mM MgCl^sub 2^, 2 mM CaCl^sub 2^, 0.05 mM NaH^sub 2^PO^sub 4^, and 0.2 �M FM 1-43; pH 7.4 at 25�C) with that of LBP suspension on top of the fluid-filled cone. LBP-interface interactions were analyzed off-line using the stored image sequences comprising 900 single high-resolution images per experiment. By repeated backward and forward scrolling of image sequences, the amount of stably incorporating and transforming LBPs could be counted. Transforming LBPs were judged as a sudden (<1 s) disappearance of fluorescent spots, as exemplified in Fig. 5 a and outlined in more detail previously (7).

LBP transformations and surface tension

Added LBPs approached the focal plane, i.e., the air-liquid interface, due to ongoing sedimentation (which is equal to the sedimentable fraction of the added LBP-suspension). After surface contact, they rapidly transformed by spreading into expanded structures, indicating an immediate adsorption process and insertion of particle components into the interface (Fig. 5 a). However, the incidence of LBP transformations progressively declined despite ongoing LBP sedimentation. These accumulating LBPs maintained a compact appearance and became surface-associated, but did not spread (Fig. 5, b and c). Thus, the sedimentable amount of LBPs comprises two populations-those that stably incorporate into the interface and those that rapidly disorganize. Appearance and transformation of LBPs was accompanied by a decrease in γ which seemed to level off during 15 min of observation (Fig. 5 c). The similarity in the time course of γ-decrease and LBP-transformations suggest that both processes are interrelated. Thus, we analyzed the time-dependent rale of γ-decrease in relation to both the total sedimentable and the transforming LBPs (Fig. 5 d). As shown, the kinetics of γ-decay relate with a logarithmic function to the cumulative amount of transformation events (i.e., particle adsorption). However, there was still an obvious, though much less pronounced, dependency of γ-decay on the amount of total sedimentable LBPs. This is certainly due to the fact that transformed LBPs are included here. In addition, it might be explained by the presence of a soluble, surface-active material other than that of an LBP. We cannot exclude the contribution of any such material, which inevitably will form out of LBPs during our sample preparations.

To estimate such contribution, we analyzed the decrease in y with respect to the amount of transformed LBPs in all experiments separately. Furthermore, the sedimentable fraction was intended to be different between each preparation. As shown (Fig. 5 e), transformation of the first ~20 LBPs did not reveal any common characteristic between the single measurements. The initial drop in γ, therefore, seems to have no quantitative relation to single particle conversions, and most likely is caused by a rapidly adsorbing soluble material. However, despite the considerable difference in their total number, ~20 LBPs reduce y in all three experiments to the same extent (45-40 mN/m). Furthermore, after passing this surface tension value, and/or exceeding that amount of LBPs, γ-decrease followed in proportion to the transformation of single LBPs. This analysis reveals different behaviors of LBP-transformations if the interface is clean or occupied by previously transformed surface active material.

The above results suggest that γ-decrease is not complete. Therefore, we prolonged our measurements over time (Fig. 5 f). They show that y fell continuously, reaching values <30 mN/m after 60 min. Interestingly, these low γ-values would not have been measurable in our setup with pure fluids for the reasons described above. It indicates that LBPs already formed a surface coat with adherence and/or viscous properties different than those of other fluids. In addition, γ-decrease approached to, but probably did not fully reach, a final value. Thus, we speculate that γ-equilibrium of spontaneously transforming LBPs is <30 mN/m, corresponding with the results obtained with a comparable source of native surfactant (13). Finally, all measurements converged at ~30 mN/m (29.9, mean � 1.02 SE), despite the considerable difference in the sedimentable fraction. We speculate that a slow reorganization of already surface-deposited material is taking place, resulting in a low y independent on the initial rate of LBP-transformations. Indeed, between ~20 and 60 min, the interface becomes increasingly covered by amorphous material interspersed with distinct structures. These in fact originated from aggregated LBPs, and were observed by fluorescence and reflection mode likewise (Fig. 5f, inset). However, the development of these structures made single-particle counting difficult, so we restricted their measurements to within 0-15 min.

DISCUSSION

There is an abundance of methods measuring the γ of liquid-gas interfaces. However, in pulmonary physiology, the Wilhelmy surface balance (14), the pulsating bubble surfactometer (15), and the captive bubble technique (16,17) are among the most widely used, and contributed enormously to our present understanding of surfactant functions (18). In this article, we introduce a new implementation of the pendantdrop principle, which we call the inverted interface, and emphasize its use in specific areas of surfactant research and related fields. It is a sensitive, contactless, and noninvasive technique that operates at microscopic dimensions. The airliquid interface is in a stationary equilibrium and remains within the microscopic field during the experimental protocols. This allows extended high-resolution imaging of the interfacial processes, which is not always feasible in systems using macroscopic surface areas, e.g., modified Langmuir troughs (19). Of particular importance is that LBPs reach the interface directly and rapidly by sedimentation. Thus, stirring is not a prerequisite as in other systems to minimize the mass transfer resistance in the case of random particle migrations. Finally, the LBP requirement to perform γ-measurements is actually, by orders-of-magnitude, lower than that of other systems.

Except for contact-angle measurements, only a few optically based methods were used to determine the curvature of a fluid meniscus directly, either from pendant drops (seldomly used in pulmonary surfactant research, e.g., by Park et al., Ref. 20), from fluids within a micropipette (21), by measuring the different angles at which two spaced light beams are reflected (patent GB 1447262), or by measuring the intensity of transmitted or reflected light in microtiter plates (22). These methods, however, are not suited to analyze structural dynamics at an air-liquid interface. An implementation of microscopy on very small air-liquid interfaces was reported earlier (23). When combined with atomic force microscopy (24), such a system could allow us to simultaneously determine surface tensions. However, this method is not yet established. In comparison, the method described here measures the configuration of a liquid surface upon epi-illumination, assessing the overall intensity of the back-reflected light by simple microscopy. The air-liquid interface is stably formed within a small (300-�m �) aperture at the bottom of a cone, exposing an area of only 0.07 mm^sup 2^ to direct optical measurements by any kind of inverted microscope. At a given fluid volume within the cone, the radius of curvature of the fluid meniscus is related to its γ. Assuming perfect aperture circularity and aperture wetting, interfacial physics predict a nearly spherical and minimally domed surface area at a high liquid surface tension, with decreasing radius of curvature when γ is reduced. In search for a least slow and invasive method to determine this, we analyzed the light reflection at the liquid interface. Applications of fluids with defined γ revealed a nonlinear dependency of apparent surface curvature on γ, which, however, is predicted by our physical model and could be used as a calibration curve.

However, our system has limitations:

1. It does not allow us to dynamically compress and expand the surface as have others (25), and experiments are confined to determine a static surface tension only (= γ-adsorption; see Ref. 11).

2. At very low surface tensions (~35 mN/m), pure liquids are not retained in the aperture but leak through. In principle, measurements in a low γ-range would require smaller apertures than we used here. However, 300-�m 0 was still very suited for our purposes, in particular because surfactant-containing fluids behave differently and were kept in place despite a γ < 30 mN/m (Fig. 3 g).

3. In a high γ-range (>70 mN/m), the system is still precise (Fig. 3, f and g), but we faced an increasing loss in accuracy. Solutions with different composition (e.g., salt-containing solutions) but almost the same tension, showed different characteristics with respect to capillary effects and/or contact angles. The resulting imperfect wetting of the aperture plane (tested directly by analyzing the projection of grids onto the liquid surface; not shown) interfered with the radius-dependent light back-reflection and lead to miscalculation of our fitting parameters. It is clear that perfect wetting of the aperture plane is critical, but cannot be forced by direct manipulation. Therefore, we had to accept that our system is not suitable to give reliable values above that of water, which was out of interest in any case for the present investigation.

4. We noted that pure solutions, e.g., methanol (Fig. 3f), or Triton X-100 (not shown), may not stabilize immediately. The time required for that stabilization has to be taken into account when fast dynamic processes have to be investigated.

5. Since visualization of surface curvature is critically depending on the specificity of the optical instruments used, an empirical calibration will always be necessary.

6. Surface structures can disturb the images obtained in the reflection mode and interfere with line-scan analysis (Fig. 5f).

When the system was tested with isolated LBPs, we found that their incorporation at the interface is paralleled by a decrease in γ, reaching values close to ~35 mN/m after a 15-min protocol, and declined further to <30mN/m after 1 h. These values are in the range of other studies using a comparable source of pulmonary surfactant (isolated lamellar bodies; see Ref. 13), as well as common surfactant preparations studied under static conditions (25). Therefore, we conclude that LBPs released by stimulated cells contain surface-active material able to decrease γ to within a physiological range. We further conclude that our method yields appropriate results with respect to surface tension determinations. For this reason, we dispensed with verifying the obtained γ-values by established methods. These measurements would have imposed a considerable manipulation (e.g., expansion and compression) of the spontaneously created interface without the possibility for us to relate γ to the number of transformed LBPs. We also assume that, in our system, γ could change on the upper and lower surfaces independently, since the LBPs sediment in one direction only. Finally, and importantly, we do not know a method sensitive enough to measure the interfacial effects of the small amounts of LBPs released by cultured cells.

The minimum equilibrium surface tension of fluid phospholipid monolayers is ~25 mN/m (26), and this value is generally considered as the minimum γ-equilibrium of a well-functioning pulmonary surfactant in the absence of area compression (27). Important determinants thereof are the chemical composition, temperature, the amount of surface-active material, and probably its structural organization at and beneath the air-liquid interface. The slightly higher value (~30 mN/m) as found by our investigation cannot be fully explained on the basis of the present data because it likely reflects a combination of more than one of these parameters: An experimental temperature (25�C) lower than used elsewhere; an extremely low and probably limiting amount of phospholipids and surfactant-associated proteins; and a slow decline in γ, which may reflect an ongoing adsorption/reorganization process that is not finally terminated after completion of our measurements. Further investigations will certainly be necessary to address these questions in more detail.

The fraction of transforming LBPs with respect to all LBPs reaching the interface decreased with time and almost ceased when γ approached ~35 mN/m (Fig. 5 c). This denotes that LBPs arriving at reduced γ preferably accumulate at the interface without apparent structural change. This is in agreement with previous findings that LBPs do not transform when γ was kept <40 mN/m (7). It has been suggested that a high γ is the direct force causing LBP disintegration, which comes to a final halt when cohesive and tensile forces acting on these particles come to equilibrium. In line with this assumption, the present data (Fig. 5 c) show that LBP transformations commenced and leveled off with a similar time course than the change in γ. However, it is not readily intelligible why this process should be progressive (decreasing rates) instead of abrupt (complete transformation of all particles until γ is reduced). In addition, the different behavior of LBPs might also be due to differences in their phospholipid/ protein compositions and/or to variation in their internal structure, as well as to their orientation when they contact the air-liquid interface. In light of their known pleomorphic nature (28), this is a likely explanation. Alternatively, the composition of a surface coat is inhomogeneous. In that case, LBPs could either transform or stably associate, depending on the particular phase condition prevailing at the specific site of contact. To this end, structure/function relations of LBPs, though highly desired, are still far from being understood.

The kinetics of surface tension decay was related to the cumulative amount of transformed LBPs (Fig. 5 d). This is consistent with the view that the process of LBP transformation finally delivers surface-active components which adsorb into the air-liquid interface. The logarithmic dependency of Δγ/Δt on adsorption is in accordance with reports using surfactant preparations of different origin (29). In our experiments, it also shows that late arriving and adsorbing LBPs contribute, to a lesser extent, to γ-reduction than LBPs contacting a still clean interface (Fig. 5, d and e). Three reasons appear plausible to explain this observation:

1. Heavier LBPs, approaching the interface earlier, could have higher γ-reducing abilities than lighter particles contacting the interface later. This is in agreement with earlier findings that LBPs have different sedimentation properties and surface activities (30).

2. Earlier transforming LBPs could modify the interface and thereby decrease the ability of late LBPs to reduce γ despite their transformation.

3. A soluble surface-seeking material other than LBPs is present in our samples. This is not unlikely, since, according to our findings, LBPs disintegrate whenever an interface (or solid surface) is present (7), probably releasing fluid-phase components during sampling and preparation.

This obvious contribution is seen by a lack of clear correlation to γ-reduction among the three experiments within the first ~2 min of measurements (corresponding to ~20 LBP transformations, or γ-decrease to ~45 mN/m; Fig. 5 e). However, after that initial phase, the relation between LBP transformation and γ became linear, indicating that γ-reduction is most likely a direct consequence of regulated LBP transformation and/or conversion into other surface structures.

The present investigation is the first to demonstrate that γ-reduction is related to the conversion of single freshly released LBPs at an air-water interface. Simultaneous measurements of γ and LBP conversion were possible with a newly developed inverted interface, allowing the direct visual analysis of both parameters in a noninvasive way. An intriguing outcome of this study is that a fraction of LBPs adsorb immediately, whereas another fraction remain surfaceassociated. It remains to be determined which mechanisms are responsible for further degradation and/or reorganization of LBPs into other functional units.

Parts of this work were presented at the FASEB Summer Research Conference (Saxtons River, VT, in 2004), the 19th International Workshop on Surfactant Replacement (Vienna, Austria, in 2004), and the 84th German Physiological Society Meeting (Gottingen, Germany, in 2005).

This work was supported by grants Nos. P15742, P15743, and P17501 from the Austrian Science Foundation.

[Sidebar]

doi: 10.1529/biophysj.104.053132

[Reference]

REFERENCES

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[Author Affiliation]

C. Bertocchi,* A. Ravasio,* S. Bernet,* G. Putz,[dagger] P. Dietl,[double dagger] and T. Haller*

*Department of Physiology and Medical Physics, and [dagger] Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Medical University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck, Austria; and [double dagger] Department of General Physiology, University of Ulm, Ulm, Germany

[Author Affiliation]

Submitted September 26, 2004, and accepted for publication May 26, 2005.

Address reprint requests to Dr. Thomas Haller, Dept. of Physiology, MUI Medical University of Innsbruck, Fritz-Pregl-Str. 3, A-6020 Innsbruck, Austria. Tel.: 43-512-507-3770; Fax: 43-512-507-2853: E-mail: thomas. haller@uibk.ac.at.

� 2005 by the Biophysical Society

0006-3495/05/08/1353/09 $2.00

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

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