Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Out of Africa - Farah, Britain's golden boy

Briton Mo Farah could become only the sixth man to achieve the Olympic 5,000-10,000m Olympic double this week, completing a remarkable journey which began in war-torn Somalia.

Whatever happens in the 5,000 metres, Farah, who came to England aged eight after being brought up in Djibouti, has already won his place among the greats of British athletics.

The engaging 28-year-old long distance runner ended African dominance in the 10,000 metres on Saturday's historic night for the hosts where they won three athletics gold medals in a day for the first time.

Farah, who became the first British male athlete to win a world distance title when he landed the 5,000m in Daegu last year, has made significant sacrifices to ensure he reaped a gold medal.

He has had to spend long spells away from his wife Tania, who despite being seven months pregnant with twins, stepped on to the track on Saturday to be hugged by Farah, who also embraced his step-daughter.

"I'm an Olympic champion today but it's been years and years of hard work," said Farah, who was so focussed on winning he opted not to observe Ramadan.

"That's what I was thinking when I crossed the line and saw my wife and daughter because only they know what I have been through to be here."

It is questionable whether Farah would have got this far but for two major influences on his life once he was in England -- his school sports teacher Alan Watkinson and British great Paula Radcliffe.

Understandably speaking little English on his arrival in England -- his family came because his English-born father lived and worked in the country -- Farah had a hard introduction on his first day at school.

He made the mistake of using one of the few phrases he knew, "C'mon then", to the toughest guy in his class.

"He twatted me," he told The Independent newspaper, using the slang phrase for being punched.

He was to come across Watkinson at his second school and the latter recognised he had an athlete of great potential on his hands, even if Farah professed a desire to go on and become a winger for soccer giants Arsenal.

"I remember seeing him in a cross-country race for the first time," said Watkinson.

"He didn't win because he didn't know the way. He kept turning round to see that the others had gone off in a different direction. But his running was so effortless."

Radcliffe, who had her fair share of Olympic disappointment in successive marathons in Athens and Beijing, also placed her faith in him and made it possible for Farah to get to training.

"She paid for me to take driving lessons," said Farah.

"I couldn't drive but I had to get out to Windsor to train, which was a difficult journey without a car. I look up to her a lot. She's made me believe that anything is possible."

Those days of driving to Windsor are long gone as he took the decision to move to Portland, Oregon, and train there in 2011 so he could spend more time with his coach, marathon legend Alberto Salazar.

Farah may have won gold for Britain, having trained in the USA and Kenya, but he has not forgotten his birthplace.

He retains happy memories of Somalia where he was born in a comfortable house, surrounded by family, some of whom remain there.

Proud of his roots, Farah and Tania set up the Mo Farah Foundation which aims to build 50 wells and to give a month's supply of food to at least 20,000 people and medical support to 40,000 by the end of the year.

He has also set aside the 250,000 pounds ($389,000) he won in a TV show earlier this year for the project.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/africa-farah-britains-golden-boy-132345498--oly.html

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Paddlefish's doubled genome may question theories on limb evolution

ScienceDaily (Aug. 6, 2012) ? The American paddlefish -- known for its bizarre, protruding snout and eggs harvested for caviar -- duplicated its entire genome about 42 million years ago, according to a new study published in the journal Genome Biology and Evolution. This finding may add a new twist to the way scientists study how fins evolved into limbs since the paddlefish is often used as a proxy for a more representative ancestor shared by humans and fishes.

"We found that paddlefish have had their own genome duplication," said Karen Crow, assistant professor of biology at San Francisco State University. "This creates extra genetic material that adds complexity to comparative studies. It may change the way we interpret studies on limb development."

In order to study how human limbs develop, scientists compare the limb-building genes found in mice with fin-building genes found in fishes. Previous research on paddlefish has suggested that fishes possessed the genetic toolkit required to grow limbs long before the evolution of the four-limbed creatures (tetrapods) that developed into reptiles, birds, amphibians and mammals.

In the last decade, paddlefish have become a useful benchmark in evolutionary studies because their position on the evolutionary tree makes them a reasonably good proxy for the ancestor of the bony fishes that evolved into tetrapods such as humans. However, the fact that paddlefish underwent a genome duplication could complicate what its genes tell us about the fin-to-limb transition, says Crow.

"Our findings suggest that the results of previous studies using paddlefish as a comparative species may need to be re-interpreted," Crow said.

Crow and colleagues sequenced chromosomal regions containing 19 Hox genes in the American paddlefish. Hox genes determine body shape and limb development, and have become prime candidates for detecting whole genome duplications.

Whole genome duplications are game-changing events in evolutionary history that give rise to new species or novel features within a species. They occur when a series of unlikely circumstances coincide, resulting in twin copies of every gene. When this happens, one scenario that could take place is that one gene in the pair keeps its designated function while the other is either lost or takes on a new purpose.

"This extra genetic material provides the canvas for evolution to paint with," said Crow, who studies the evolution of novelty and diversity.

Two milestone genome duplications are believed to have taken place before the evolution of jawed vertebrates. Additional whole genome duplications have also taken place further down the evolutionary tree, in specific lineages or branches, but it is a phenomenon more common in plants than animals.

"Our findings on the paddlefish suggest that whole duplication is not as uncommon in animals as previously thought," Crow said.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by San Francisco State University, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. K. D. Crow, C. D. Smith, J.-F. Cheng, G. P. Wagner, C. T. Amemiya. An independent genome duplication inferred from Hox paralogs in the American paddlefish-a representative basal ray-finned fish and important comparative reference. Genome Biology and Evolution, 2012; DOI: 10.1093/gbe/evs067

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/WlK8X1vapSw/120807101343.htm

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Monday, August 6, 2012

Fudge For Troops Promotion Beats Goal

The Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory stores in Duluth, MN are excited to announce that fudge donations for their third annual ?Fudge for Troops? promotion have surpassed the program goal.

According to store owner Debbie Bolen, ?We hoped to have commitments to donate 500 pounds of fudge. Thanks to our customers, we will be donating 750 pounds of fudge to our troops overseas. We will be working with the Lake Superior Chapter of Blue Star Mothers of America in November to pack up the fudge and send it overseas so our troops can have a holiday treat.?

Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory is a franchised gourmet chocolate store specializing in store made fudge, handmade chocolates, caramel apples, dipped strawberries and gift boxes of candy. There are two Duluth locations: 395 Lake Ave South in Canal Park and in the Miller Hill Mall.

The Blue Star Mothers of America, Inc., a non-profit service organization supporting our military children while promoting patriotism, will be taking care of shipping the fudge to our troops stationed overseas.. They are made up of the mothers who now have, or have had, children honorably serving in the military.

Source: http://twinports.wdio.com/news/business/51459-fudge-troops-promotion-beats-goal

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Executive Change: Natasha Labos to Delta Management Associates ...

insideARM.com August 6, 2012 http://www.insidearm.com/daily/debt-collection-news/debt-collection/executive-change-natasha-labos-to-delta-management-associates-as-vp-business-development/

Delta Management Associates, Inc. (Delta) is pleased to announce the addition of Natasha Labos as Vice President, Business Development to the sales and marketing team.

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Natasha brings more than a decade of higher education business development experience, including eight years with Sallie Mae where she served as vice president, business development. During her tenure at Sallie Mae, Natasha?s responsibilities included the growth of regional and national multi-product solutions and services for the southeast region and the national for-profit market. Most recently, Natasha served as vice president, business development at American Student Assistance (ASA), where her primary focus was business development for ASA?s debt management solutions suite of products and services within the southeastern region of the United States.

?Natasha?s immense experience in the student loan industry will be an asset to the business development team. Her ability to develop growth strategies across multiple products and work with higher education clients to develop tailored recovery solutions will ensure the success of Delta?s client partnerships,? said Executive Vice President, Business Development, Joseph J. Fazzini.

Natasha received her Bachelor of Arts from Florida Atlantic University and has attended and facilitated many professional sales training sessions throughout her business development career.

She reports to Joseph J. Fazzini, Executive Vice President of Business Development.

For more than 26 years, Delta has provided recovery solutions and default prevention to the higher education community. With the ability to operate in all 50 states, Delta meets the regulatory, financial, privacy and security requirements of the most influential and respected institutions in the nation. A leader in the industry, our reputation and client base have grown to reflect Delta as the collections expert against which all other firms are judged. Delta offers recovery solutions for Perkins Loans, health professions and nursing student loans, tuition, institutional loans, private credit and the Federal Family Education Loan Programs (FFELP), as well as Cohort management and default rate solutions.

Posted in Collection jobs, Debt Collection, Department of Education Collections, Student Loan Collections .

Source: http://www.insidearm.com/daily/debt-collection-news/debt-collection/executive-change-natasha-labos-to-delta-management-associates-as-vp-business-development/

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ERMAHGERD FERTBERLL! USF Football Kicks Off Fall Practice

It's finally time for football! We wanted to cover Skip's press conference live for you yesterday and let you chat with us, but unfortunately we didn't find out about the timing and the ability to watch it on BullsCast until the very last minute. (You can watch the archived opening of the press conference on the widget along the right-hand side of our homepage.) Instead let's hit the highlights in case you missed them:

  • There are some new walk-ons, and a few players won't be reporting to camp. The most notable departures or non-arrivals are probably Spencer Boyd, who transferred in from Notre Dame and had several off-the-field issues; Stephen Bravo-Brown, who emerged briefly early in the 2010 season when seemingly every receiver got hurt; and Jarvis McCall, the only casualty from the 2012 recruiting class (presumably because of academic issues). And really he's just a semi-casualty, because Skip suggested that Jarvis would enroll in January.
  • Also Jordan Duval, who is accused of stealing another student's iPhone, is still suspended from the team. Duval is a walk-on receiver.
  • Only Anthony Hill is expected to not be available when the games start as he recovers from his torn ACL in spring practice. Cory Grissom should be ready to go for Chattanooga after breaking his ankle. Everyone else is healthy.
  • Skip peeled off all the crazy offensive line names without a hitch, like Thor Jozwiak and Brynjar Gudmudsson, and then he almost called Demi Thompson "Demi Moore" again. Someone should ask him how many times he's watched "About Last Night..."
  • Listening to the entire 12 minutes before he started taking questions (that part isn't archived on BullsCast), the most obvious focal point for Holtz was overall depth. There are 15 returning starters, and not too many at key positions on the field. While this is an experienced team at the top of the depth chart, he was interested and at times concerned about the backups at some positions, especially at quarterback. He didn't feel like Matt Floyd or Bobby Eveld were playing well enough in spring that they would be OK if B.J. Daniels got hurt again. On the other hand, he seems to like his depth on the offensive line and at linebacker.
  • Still no word on a waiver for Aaron Lynch to play this season. Just a guess, but I figure he would have been given the green light by now if it was going to happen.
  • It sounds like there will be some scholarships to spare this season, so a few walk-ons may be promoted to scholarship players. Ernie Tabuteau is likely going to get one. Maybe Mattias Ciabatti if he wins the punting job?
  • Interesting note from Michael Manganello, who covered the presser for the Tribune. Holtz has delegated some of the special teams responsibilities to other assistant coaches. I don't know what the specifics of that might be, maybe technique or things like blocking kicks, but it won't all be on Vernon Hargreaves's shoulders this year. Skip specifically mentioned special teams as something they could make a big improvement on from last year.
  • This must have been a separate interview that Joey Johnston did with Skip because Joey was covering the Rays yesterday, but there were two things in here that interested me. First, I'm sorry to hear that Holtz is not a regular reader of this site. And second, the last thing he said, after talking about how the stress of last season got to him and his team:

    "Look, if we build it the right way and we graduate our players and we have good people and we do everything we can and we still don't win and I'm let go here, I can live with myself because we did it the right way. I believe we are doing it the right way. And I believe we're going to win."

I'm not going to go all national columnist here and get on my soapbox about Doing Things The Right Way, but it would be kind of sad if it didn't work out. Hopefully we don't have to consider that possibility.

Do you like this story?

Source: http://www.voodoofive.com/2012/8/6/3222646/usf-football-kicks-off-fall-practice-skip-holtz-press-conference

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Sunday, August 5, 2012

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    On the Scene: A lifetime of curiosity: An interview with JPL director Charles Elachi

    Charles Elachi is busy this Friday morning. It?s three days before the Curiosity rover is set to land on Mars, and the director of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory is cheerfully making tracks between a NASA social media event and his office on JPL?s campus.

    Elachi has been at JPL for 42 years: He came to Caltech in 1968 to earn his Ph.D. in electrical sciences and started working at the lab in 1970. He became director in 2001. ?I?m a lifer,? he says. ?It has been such a great career.?

    Elachi also has a master?s degree in business administration from the University of Southern California, training he sought after learning he?d be the principal investigator for a science experiment aboard the space shuttle. ?I thought I better know how to read a budget sheet,? he explains. And, after befriending some geologists, he sought a master?s degree in geology from UCLA.? ?I used to go with them on field trips,? he recalls. ?And we were talking about sedimentary rocks and igneous rocks, and I thought, ?Gee, it would be fun to learn this so at least I know what they?re talking about.??

    We sit down for a conversation in his office, which is decorated with mini replicas of JPL?s far-flung robotic explorers. The Spitzer Space Telescope, the Mars rovers Spirit and Opportunity, GRACE and GRAIL ? there are dozens. ?That?s Juno, on the way to Jupiter,? he says, pointing to a brownish, three-pronged miniature. ?There?s Odyssey ? that?s the key spacecraft for communicating with MSL,? he says, gesturing to the mini Mars orbiter that will relay information from the Curiosity rover, starting on Sunday evening.

    And there, already nestled in among the others, is a tiny Curiosity rover.

    Here are some highlights of our conversation about the latest Mars mission:

    JPL is going to try and land a giant rover on Mars. How are you feeling about that? Are you nervous?

    Well, yeah, to be honest. I asked that question to our lead person who?s doing the entry, descent and landing [Adam Steltzner] and he said, ?Intellectually I feel great because we have done every test. Emotionally, I?m frightened like hell.?

    And in a sense, I feel the same. Intellectually, we have done everything possible. This is probably the best tested, verified, analyzed lander we?ve ever done. But there is always a risk. You have 76 [pyrotechnic devices] which have to fire in the right sequence at the right time. You have a parachute which has been packaged a couple of years ago, which has to open and unfold and work perfectly. Everything has to work perfectly in order to have a successful landing. And there is no way we could have tested it exactly like we are flying it.

    We don?t have a Mars atmosphere and a Mars environment to do that. So we had to test things in pieces. We did test the sky crane, we did test hovering, we did test the radar on a jet airplane coming down at the same speed. But putting them all together and having them all work in seven minutes ? there?s no way you could test that.

    That?s why there is this nail biting time. We?re going to be sitting in the room watching every event that is happening. But I feel confident. We have a first-rate team, and that?s the best you can ask for.

    Where will you be watching from?

    I?ll be in the mission operation room, standing behind everybody there, nervously watching all the data coming down, listening to what?s happening. I?ll be listening to the same thing you?ll be listening to. We?ll be transmitting all the info in real-time and the commentary. It will be exciting. Probably we?ll be sharing it with tens of millions of people.

    It?s going to make great TV.

    That?s true, that?s true. They?re going to have it in real-time in Times Square, on the big screen, so I?m sure there will be lots of people watching that.

    Assuming the Rover comes down, and it?s working and completes its mission, what do you hope its legacy will be? What are some of the big questions it can answer?

    With Spirit and Opportunity and the orbiting assets, the community is pretty convinced that Mars did have an ocean a few billion years ago, which lasted for a significant period of time. A water ocean. So the immediate? next question is, if there was a liquid ocean ? and because it was liquid, that means the temperature was like here on Earth ? and it?s there at roughly the same time that life evolved on Earth, could life have evolved on Mars?

    If there were the right ingredients, the right temperature, the right liquid, the right organic material, then the next question is, did life evolve? How far did it evolve? And where is it now?

    Now, Curiosity is not looking specifically for life, but it?s going to look at the ingredients, the organic material, the composition of the rock. Of course, if we see any bugs or something that?ll be amazing. But that?s not the real purpose. We?re doing it like a scientist, step by step, learning about the basic ingredients.

    That?s the key objective, and hopefully ultimately that will prepare us for bringing samples back to Earth and doing much more detailed analyses with those samples.

    If for some reason it looks like Mars never was habitable, would we still be pushing for a Mars sample return mission?

    Yeah, I think we will. The life habitability is one factor, but so is really understanding the evolution of a planet. This is a planet which is very similar to us, in the big picture. It?s not much different from us, in terms of distance from the sun, it has the same geological processes on the surface. The same laws of physics, same laws of biology evolved on there. So if really we don?t find anything, that will be equally fascinating. Why did life only happen on this planet? And what are the differences which have led it to happen only on this planet? Bringing samples back and analyzing them in more detail to understand that will be equally exciting.

    It will be cool to bring samples back from anywhere.

    Oh yeah. And bringing samples back also has another engineering aspect to it. If you?re thinking of sending humans somewhere in the future, you need to learn how you go there, how you land, how you rove around, how you take off, how you come back. So in a sense, a sample return is a small step in a dry run, if you want ? even though the humans will be a big step beyond that. But it gives us a better understanding of all these steps that have to be taken for a human mission.

    Speaking of sending humans somewhere, at one point you said, ?It?s important to stay bold and keep pushing the limits.?

    Yeah, that?s true. Let me tell you a little anecdote that struck me here at JPL. A couple of years ago, I was talking with one of our new employees. I asked her, ?What excites you about JPL, why are you working here?? And she said, ?Well, what I like about this place ? in the morning, I sit down with my colleagues at breakfast and talk about what?s impossible, and then we go and do it.?

    And that?s the kind of thing we need. That?s how explorers function. And inventors. You really think about what?s the limit, and then you go and push it, and find out what?s on other side. The way people do inventions, is they don?t wake up in the morning and say, ?Today I?m going to invent something.?

    The way we? do inventions, in any field not only in space, is you take a very, very hard problem and you put good people on it and tell them go and do it. And to do that, they have to invent something. I think that?s how the human mind operates, by getting a challenge.

    Where do you think the limit is now? What are we pushing against? What?s next?

    Something that?s very high on my list is taking pictures of neighboring planets. We do have the capability to take what I call the family portrait of the neighboring few thousand planetary systems. In my mind, that would be one of the most exciting things. Even if it?s a pixel. But if we can get more than a pixel, that will be great. That would change completely our thinking of the world around us.

    The other one, which is equally exciting but in a different way, is going and visiting the different oceans around our solar system. Going to the ocean in Europa, the ocean in Enceladus, possibly the ocean on Titan ? at least some people now believe there might be an ocean below the surface of Titan. And really see how these oceans look. Could thing have evolved in them? It?s the same thing we talked about with Mars. We know there are water oceans. And then if they?re liquid, that mean you have the right temperature. And the question is, could life have evolved in that area?

    I?d say those are two of the most exciting things that probably will happen in the next 10 or 20 years.

    I?ve been asking various people on the MSL team, if you could go to Mars instead of the rover, would you go? And they all are saying no.

    Well, it?s pretty nice here. Mars is exciting scientifically, but still, our planet is amazingly nice.

    Do you think there?s life out there?

    Oh yeah. I see absolutely no reason why life is not across the universe. Here you have the same laws of physics, the same laws of chemistry, the same laws of biology, the same material everywhere. There is really no reason whatsoever that life only happened on our planet. I?m pretty sure life is there across the universe.

    But as a scientist, you have to prove it.

    We are trained, you don?t come in with a new theory unless you can prove it, and that?s one of the challenges that we are all working on. You do it in steps. Find all the ingredients, all the environments, and so on. The exciting thing will be if we find planets which are not very far away, which have all those ingredients, then to focus on them and see, can we get any signals? That will be another very interesting thing.

    What else do you think is important to tell Science News readers, or the public in general?

    A couple of points, particularly because of the budget environment. One key point I keep making to all the politicians and decision-makers is that investment in science and education is absolutely essential for our country. The reason our country is so strong economically, and we have the lifestyle we have, is because of the investments that have been made in the past in developing new capabilities, new technologies, educating young people.

    Who would have thought the Internet would change our life? It was an investment done by some of the DOD organizations to communicate, to have more resiliency in case of a catastrophe. So they came up with the Internet. Or you look at GPS, which we use all the time now, and that was also an investment the government did in terms of putting up a network of satellites. Or you could look at cell phones, which we cannot live without. Lots of that development was done in the space program, when they were developing low-power, high-efficiency electronics.

    I think particularly when things are challenging, like the economy we have now, this is the time to increase investment, not the time to reduce it.

    I hope that?s what the government will do. It?s going to require the public to say, ?Look we really need to increase our investment in science in general, or space, or medicine ? that?s what?s going to keep our economy strong.?

    Otherwise, we?re going to fall behind other countries.

    Education, scientific research, technology are probably the key areas that are going to help us. This is not only gaining knowledge, even though that?s very important, but it?s an investment which could strengthen our economy because of the inventions and the new technology and process of gaining knowledge.

    Would you put planetary science in that category of things that need funding?

    Oh yeah, absolutely. Almost all the science missions we do, even though the goal is to achieve more knowledge ? by working that process of gaining knowledge, you develop a lot of new technology, new approaches to do things. Inventions happen as we seek knowledge. I would put all of space science in that category.

    If I was in charge of the country, I would double the NASA budget overnight.


    Found in: Astronomy and Atom & Cosmos

    Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/342818/title/A_lifetime_of_curiosity_An_interview_with_JPL_director_Charles_Elachi

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    Source: Loughner would get life in shooting

    PHOENIX (AP) ? A possible plea deal in the deadly Tucson shootings that wounded then-U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords would send Jared Lee Loughner to prison for the rest of his life, a person familiar with the case said Saturday.

    A court-appointed psychiatrist will testify Tuesday that Loughner is competent to enter a plea in the shooting rampage that killed six people and injured 13, including Giffords, said the person, who was not authorized to discuss the case publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

    A status conference in the federal case had already been scheduled for Tuesday in Tucson.

    The person, speaking about upcoming events in the case, said the plan is for Loughner to enter a guilty plea in the murders and attempted murders. The plan is contingent on the judge in the case allowing Loughner to enter the plea.

    The Los Angeles Times reported earlier Saturday that Loughner was set to change his plea.

    Bill Solomon, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney's office, said he could not comment on Loughner's case and the possibility of a guilty plea.

    The Pima County attorney's office, which has said it could also pursue state prosecution of Loughner, declined to comment, said spokeswoman Isabel Burruel Smutzer.

    Loughner had pleaded not guilty to 49 federal charges stemming from the Jan. 8, 2011, shooting outside a Tucson supermarket where Giffords was holding a meet-and-greet with constituents.

    Authorities said he shot Giffords, opened fire on the crowd and was subdued by bystanders. Giffords was shot in the head and subsequently left Congress to devote her time to rehabilitation.

    Giffords and her husband were traveling in Europe, and spokeswoman Hayley Zachary said Saturday she had no information on developments in Loughner's case.

    U.S. Rep. Ron Barber, a Democrat who was elected in June to replace Giffords in Congress after she resigned, also was wounded in the shooting. A spokesman for Barber did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

    U.S. District Judge Larry Burns ruled previously that Loughner isn't psychologically fit to stand trial, but that he could eventually be made ready for trial after treatment.

    An Arizona college that Loughner attended released numerous emails about him that painted a picture of a struggling student with emotional problems who disturbed others with his strange behavior.

    Experts have concluded that Loughner suffers from schizophrenia, and prison officials in Missouri, where Loughner has been held, have forcibly medicated him with psychotropic drugs.

    Even though psychologists have said Loughner's condition is improving, his lawyers have vigorously fought the government's efforts to medicate him.

    At one point, a federal appeals court halted the forced medication, but resumed it once mental health experts at the prison concluded that Loughner's condition was deteriorating further.

    Loughner has demonstrated bizarre behavior since his arrest.

    He was removed from a May 25, 2011, court hearing when he lowered his head to within inches of the courtroom table, then lifted his head and began a loud and angry rant.

    His psychologist has said that since Loughner has been forcibly medicated, his condition has improved. He sat still and expressionless for seven hours at a hearing in September 2011.

    ___

    Pete Yost reported from Washington.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ap-source-loughner-life-shooting-022149900.html

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