NIH dengue vaccine protects all recipients in virus challenge studym...

A clinical trial in which volunteers were infected with dengue virus six months after receiving either an experimental dengue vaccine developed by scientists from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) or a placebo injection yielded starkly contrasting results. All 21 volunteers who received the vaccine, TV003, were protected from infection, while all 20 placebo recipients developed infection. The study, published in Science Translational Medicine, underscores the importance of human challenge studies, in which volunteers are exposed to disease-causing pathogens under carefully controlled conditio
“The findings from this trial are very encouraging to those of us who have spent many years working on vaccine candidates to protect against dengue, a disease that is a significant burden in much of the world and is now endemic in Puerto Rico,” said Stephen Whitehead, Ph.D., of NIH’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID). “In fact, these results informed the recent decision by officials at Brazil’s Butantan Institute to advance the TV003 vaccine into a large phase 3 efficacy trial.”
Dengue fever, prevalent throughout the tropics and subtropics, is caused by any of four related dengue viruses—called serotypes—that are spread by Aedes mosquitoes, the same mosquitoes that spread Zika virus. Most of the estimated 390 million people who are infected with dengue virus each year develop either no symptoms or a mild illness. However, some people develop serious or life-threatening illness and large outbreaks lead millions to seek care, severely straining health care infrastructure in endemic countries.
The high prevalence of natural dengue infections in endemic areas means that many people have experienced infection at some point in the past and therefore may have immunity to the infecting serotype. A high degree of partial immunity in a population can make it difficult to assess the efficacy of any candidate dengue vaccine. A model of dengue infection in humans is one way to overcome the absence of animal models and the challenge of high background immunity in endemic areas. It is important to note that human challenge studies are conducted according to strict criteria designed to provide meticulous attention to volunteer safety and challenge studies would never be used for certain deadly pathogens, such as Ebola.
The experimental vaccine was developed primarily by Dr. Whitehead and his colleagues at NIAID’s Laboratory of Infectious Diseases. Scientists from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research also contributed to the vaccine’s development. The candidate vaccine is made from a mixture of four live, weakened (attenuated) viruses targeted to each of the four serotypes. A total of 48 healthy adult volunteers enrolled at two trial sites, the University of Vermont College of Medicine, Burlington, and Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, and were randomly assigned to receive either vaccine or placebo injection.
Six months later, 41 people returned for the challenge with dengue virus. Dr. Whitehead and colleagues also developed the challenge virus used in the trial, which is a genetically modified version of a dengue-2 serotype virus isolated in the Kingdom of Tonga in 1974. The original virus was notable for causing only mild illness. In previous human challenge trials with this modified virus, Dr. Whitehead and his coinvestigators established the virus dose that would cause all recipients to develop viremia — the presence of virus in the blood — and most to develop a mild rash.
“This modified dengue virus is very attractive for use as a challenge virus because we can use it to reliably induce dengue infection in a very high percentage of inoculated volunteers without causing serious illness,” said Dr. Whitehead. By inducing only rash (without fever) in the majority of recipients, the challenge virus mimics natural dengue virus infection, which often features such a rash, he noted.
A human challenge model of dengue infection — rather than illness — is an important characteristic, explained Anna Durbin, M.D., who led the clinical trial at Johns Hopkins.
“Because there are no specific therapies for dengue fever, it is desirable to have a challenge virus that causes infection, but does not result in significant symptoms of disease,” she said. The reliably high percentage of those who develop viremia following exposure to this challenge virus is another advantage—when most or all volunteers develop viremia or other signs of infection, clinical trials can enroll relatively small numbers of people but still achieve answers to such questions as whether a candidate vaccine protects against infection, she noted.
In this study, all 20 placebo recipients developed viremia, 16 (80 percent) developed mild rash and 4 (20 percent) had a temporary drop in white blood cell count following challenge with the virus. None of the 21 TV003 vaccine recipients developed viremia or any other sign of infection after challenge.
“We were pleasantly surprised to see that this candidate vaccine provided complete protection in everyone who received it,” said Dr. Durbin. “The dengue-2 serotype is considered the relatively weaker component in this, and other, candidate dengue vaccines, so its ability to confer protection from a challenge with dengue-2 virus was encouraging.”
Dr. Whitehead is currently developing a human challenge model using a modified dengue serotype-3 virus. This challenge virus could be used in future clinical trials to test the efficacy of candidate dengue vaccines or therapies.
Dengue virus is in the same virus family as Zika virus, and the NIAID team is now leveraging their experience with the live-attenuated dengue vaccine in efforts to develop a Zika vaccine, Dr. Whitehead noted.

Samsung Galaxy S7, S7 Edge Phones: xzImproved but With a Few Drawbacks..

REVIEW: The new flagship Galaxy phones from Samsung are better than previous models and offer welcome features that returned from the Galaxy S5.


Samsung's newest flagship Galaxy S7 and S7 Edge smartphones arrived in my home office this past week for reviews, and I must admit that initially I wasn't too excited.
The reason for my first reaction was that I'm still using a 3-year-old Samsung Galaxy S4 phone as my main mobile device, and its grossly underwhelming performance apparently has desensitized me to Samsung phones.
Well, that's the way I used to feel, at least, because the new Galaxy S7 and S7 Edge are both giant improvements over my three-generation-old S4 handset. In between, I checked out the former S5 and S6 Galaxy devices in the last 18 months at various press events, but I didn't do full reviews so I had no real idea how far the company's smartphones had come since my S4 model was new.
Wow, what a difference three generations of technology improvements and refinements can make.
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After using both the Galaxy S7 and S7 Edge models this past week, my impressions are mostly positive about their bright and fast displays; spectacular cameras, particularly in low-light situations; adequate battery life and good all-around performance.
Two huge features that returned to the Galaxy S7 line from the former S5 model are removable microSD storage cards and water-resistance—and both are very much appreciated. Removable storage should be mandatory in smartphones so that users can add whatever storage they need to the phones they are using. The lack of removable storage was a key reason for my decision to replace my old Apple iPhone S4 two years ago. And while I have never ruined a smartphone by getting it wet, the idea of not having to worry about accidental splashes destroying the phone is very nice and will be welcome to many users who have had bad experiences with water exposure with their phones.
My daughter dropped her iPhone in a sink not too long ago, and her device was ruined. It's a costly accident that needn't happen if all smartphones were water resistant in the first place.
The best feature in both the S7 and the S7 Edge is their amazing cameras. The main 12-megapixel rear cameras are shared by both models and include Samsung's first dual-pixel technology that delivers great images even in very low light. This past weekend I took photos using the S7 Edge inside a dark old train caboose inside the huge Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania in Strasburg, Pa., and I was able to capture incredible, bright and finely focused images without any flash. The images look as clear as if I had been taking photos outside in full daylight.
I've also recently been using an LG V10 smartphone and thought that its main camera was amazing as well, but the main cameras in the S7 and S7 Edge definitely eclipse the V10's hardware. The performance of the newest Samsung cameras is truly that impressive.
I also really like the new "always-on" displays featured on both models, which provide important information to users at a glance, without having to activate a button to view the main displays. The Galaxy S7 features a 5.1-inch quad-HD Super AMOLED display (2,560 by 1,440), while the Galaxy S7 Edge features a 5.5-inch quad-HD Super AMOLED display (2,560 by 1,440).
Comparing the two Galaxy S7 handsets, I personally prefer the S7 Edge for its larger display and its better "feel" in one's hand. I also prefer the Edge's curved screen edges, which to me seem to offer more grip.
In fact, grip is definitely an issue with these handsets, and it's where my most unfavorable comments come into play.
Why, oh why, do Samsung and other smartphone makers—including Apple and its iPhones—insist on designing and selling expensive, delicate smartphones that have super slippery backs that make it easy to lose one's grip and drop the things? You can't place the S7 or S7 Edge on an incline on any surface without it sliding off, whether it’s a sofa, a car seat, a chair or even your pant leg. Not a good situation in the real world, I am afraid

Denmark again takes top spot in ddU.N.’s world happiness report.............

COPENHAGEN, Denmark — Denmark, perhaps better known for its fictional, suicide-agonizing prince Hamlet and fierce marauding Vikings than being a nation of the happiest people, has just won that very accolade. Again.
Even U.S. Democratic presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders have singled out the small Scandinavian country as an example of a happy, well-oiled society. On Wednesday, the United Nations made it official: It found Danes to be the happiest people on Earth in a study of 156 countries.
Knud Christensen, a 39-year-old social worker, knows one reason why his compatriots are laid-back – they feel secure in a country with few natural disasters, little corruption and a near absence of drastic events.
“We have no worries,” Christensen said, smiling as he stood on a Copenhagen street. “And if we do worry, it’s about the weather.”
The Scandinavian nation of 5.6 million has held the happy title twice before since the world body started measuring happiness around the world in 2012. The accolade is based on: People’s health and access to medical care, family relations, job security and social factors, including political freedom and level of government corruption.
The next happiest nations last year were Switzerland, Iceland and Norway. The United States was in 13th place.

Hunt on for 2 in Belgian raid linked to xz Paris attacks..............

BRUSSELS (AP) — Belgian investigators were hunting Wednesday for two suspects who fled an apartment linked to the Nov. 13 attacks in Paris, one day after a police sniper killed a gunman holed up inside and authorities found a stock of ammunition and an Islamic State flag, officials said.
Four officers were wounded in Tuesday's joint French-Belgian raid in a Brussels neighborhood after unexpectedly coming under fire in an apartment they believed was empty.
Prosecutors on Wednesday released without charges two men they held in the wake of the raid, leaving the hunt on for two suspects who have not been identified.
The dead man was identified as an Algerian man living illegally in Belgium, Mohamed Belkaid, whose only contact with authorities appeared to be a two-year-old theft charge, said Thierry Werts, a Belgian prosecutor.
Belkaid, 35, was shot to death by a police sniper as he prepared to fire on police from a window, Werts said. A Kalashnikov was found by his body, as well as a book on Salafism, an ultraconservative strain of Islam.
Inside the apartment in the Forest neighborhood of Brussels, police found the banner of the Islamic State extremist group as well as 11 Kalashnikov loaders and a large quantity of ammunition, the prosecutor said.
"We were not expecting a violent armed reaction," Prime Minister Charles Michel told Belgium's RTL radio.
The anti-terror raid was linked to the Nov. 13 gun-and-bombing attacks in Paris that left 130 people dead. The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for the attacks, in which Belgian citizens played key roles.
Among the fugitives is Belgian Salah Abdeslam, who fled the Paris attacks that night, slipped through a dragnet into Brussels and has not been seen since.
On Tuesday, four Belgian and two French police officers unexpectedly came under fire by at least two people armed with a Kalashnikov and a riot gun as soon as they opened the door to the Forest apartment, according to a statement from the Belgian prosecutors.
Four officers, including a French policewoman, were slightly wounded.
The search of another Forest residence Tuesday evening turned up another Kalashnikov as well as two loaded magazines, Belgian officials said.
Since the Paris attacks, the officials said 58 people have been detained in Belgian searches directly linked to the Paris attacks investigation and another 23 arrested in related probes.
Both countries remain on edge.
In France, four people were arrested at dawn on Wednesday amid fears of a separate planned attack. Those arrests were not linked to the Belgian investigation.
One of the four, a former inmate under house arrest, was suspected of being in contact with Islamic State extremists in Syria, French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said. All three were born in France and were between 21 and 30 years old, according to a judicial official who requested anonymity to discuss the case.

Nike gets 'Back to the Future' with self-tying sneakersbb

Unveiled to much hoopla at a New York event Wednesday, Nike HyperAdapt 1.0 has power-operated laces. As soon as you step into a pair — as if they were slip ons —and press a "+" button, the laces tighten. The shoe even lights up.

The new shoe was unveiled by Nike CEO Mark Parker, along with a raft of other technologies. They're expected out by the holiday season, but Nike hasn't announced pricing yet.

Nike says the new shoe is "powered by an underfoot-lacing mechanism" — think tiny motor — and it "proposes a groundbreaking solution to individual idiosyncrasies in lacing."

In other words, if your shoe laces frequently come untied, these have you covered.

Nike has been talking about its self-tying shoes for over two years (and actually working on this technology for ten years). Movie-goers have been anticipating them for even longer: Marty McFly, the time-warped teenager played by Michael J. Fox in Back to the Future Part II, famously had self-tying shoes.

Nike expects the shoe to come in various sizes and for multi-purposes. The size 10 shoes I got to wear briefly at the event indeed felt snug once I pushed the + button. When I was ready to pull them off, I pressed a "--" (minus) button and the fit relaxed making them easy to pull off.

The shoes are battery operated and use an inductive charge system and magnetic cup. It takes about three hours for a full charge. Nike says with average use you'll have to charge the battery every couple of weeks. A lighting system lets you know when you'll need to charge it.

Which raised the question, what if the battery dies when you are ready to pull them off?  Nike says you can easily pull them off as a low top shoe.

At the event, Nike also unveiled a new version of the Nike + app, slated to launch in June, aimed at combining its Nike Training Club, Nike Running Club and retail apps into one, more personalized experience. Users will be able to shop, be notified of local Nike events and have access to personalized training programs and "on-demand coaching." The app experience differs based on a user's location, clothing and shoe sizes, and sport and lifestyle preferences, which they are prompted to enter when first setting up the app.

"Athletes want more than a dashboard," Parker said at the event. "They want a relationship.

EU leaders meet to offer migranthh deal to Turkey...........

Leaders of the European Union meet in Brussels on Thursday to agree on a deal to offer Turkey the following day that would secure Ankara's commitment to a scheme intended to halt migrant flows to the Greek islands.

A year into a crisis in which more than a million people have arrived in chaotic misery, many of them Syrian war refugees and most of whom come from Turkey via Greece to Germany via dangerous sea crossings and long treks, hopes have risen around the summit table that they may have found a way to at least slow the movement.

But leaders acknowledge there is no silver bullet and face many obstacles over the next two days, from howls of outrage that they plan mass expulsions of vulnerable people to a country with a patchy and worsening human rights record, to a lingering feud between Ankara and small but vocal EU member Cyprus.

"Work is progressing but there is still a lot to do," European Council President Donald Tusk wrote to leaders inviting them to the summit he will chair. After discussing the economy, the 28 EU national leaders will discuss the migration issue over dinner, starting around 8 p.m. (1900 GMT).

A breakfast is set for Friday with Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, where Tusk hopes to finalise a deal which the Turkish premier first sprang on the EU, with backing from German Chancellor Angela Merkel, at a special summit 10 days ago.

Under the deal, which was set out in fuller fashion by Tusk in a draft for EU leaders on Wednesday, Turkey will, in addition to a previous agreement to try and prevent the smuggling of migrants via rafts, take back all those, including Syrian refugees, who do make it to Greek islands off Turkey's coast.

The draft, which was seen by Reuters, says the plan is "to break the business model of the smugglers and to offer migrants an alternative to putting their lives at risk". It stresses the plan is "a temporary and extraordinary measure which is necessary to end the human suffering and restore public order".

CYPRUS QUESTION

Potentially the most explosive topic, which diplomats say risks derailing the whole deal, will be how Davutoglu responds to a vague offer to open new "chapters" of Turkey's snail-like negotiations to join the EU at some distant future date.

Several of these have been blocked by Cyprus over Turkey's refusal to give it the same rights as other EU states in access to Turkish ports and airports - a result of the 42-year dispute since the violent partition of the island into a Greek-speaking state and a Turkish-speaking north recognised only by Turkey.

Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades has made clear he will lift his veto on Turkish accession chapters only if Ankara ends its refusal to recognise Cyprus. Turkey wants concessions for its northern Cypriot allies in return. The EU and world powers are keen not to derail U.N. talks that could reunite the island.

Tusk's draft says the EU would work with Turkey to "prepare for a decision" on opening new accession chapters "as soon as possible" - a hazy prospect Davutoglu may not appreciate.

But in his invitation letter, Tusk stressed that only if the migrant deal could help advance the broader talks on ending the long confrontation with Cyprus, could it hope to succeed.

To satisfy EU and international law, Greece and Turkey will have to modify domestic legislation so that Turkey is regarded as protecting asylum seekers in line with the Geneva Convention, even though Ankara limits its formal commitments to that treaty.

EU officials argue that the alternative to holding people back in Turkey is to see a further build-up of migrants stranded in deteriorating conditions in Greece, whose European neighbours have closed their borders. Already over 40,000 are marooned.

Legal gymnastics, and the scorn of U.N. and other rights bodies, aside, the deal foresees all those arriving having a right to state their case for asylum and to appeal.

However, EU officials stress that the intention is quickly to deter most people from even trying to make the crossing, so the arrival of thousands a day as occurred last year is unlikely. If such numbers keep coming, the plan will have failed, they say.

For each Syrian refugee who eludes efforts to stop illegal migration whom Turkey agrees to take back, Turkey will see a Syrian refugee resettled directly to Europe. The draft makes clear the total number is likely to be limited to about 72,000 out of nearly 3 million Syrians in Turkey.

That figure represents what the deeply divided EU states agreed last year to take in under two different schemes for sharing responsibilities. Leaders may talk more about who takes how many. Tusk's draft spoke of the process being "voluntary" in a nod to eastern EU states which oppose a series of refugees quotas Brussels imposed last year.

Longer-term, the EU leadership and the likes of Merkel are pushing hard for a system of resettling much larger numbers of refugees from the Middle East in Europe. That is opposed by others who say it would fuel xenophobic nationalism which has already surged, as seen in elections on Sunday in Germany.

Diplomats said there was also likely to be discussion of how quickly a second 3-billion-euro tranche of aid for Syrians in Turkey should be on the table for Davutoglu and of the precise details of an offer to provide visa-free travel to Europe for Turks by late June, if Ankara meets numerous conditions in time.

(Writing by Alastair Macdonald; 

Missouri Couple 'Shocked' After Trash Companyv Finds Lost $400,000 Wedding Ring..

A Missouri couple was relieved beyond belief on Monday when sanitation workers tracked down their missing 12.5 carat wedding ring, worth $400,000, after it was accidentally tossed in the trash.

"My wife was in shock," Bernie Squitieri of St. Louis said. "It was a miracle."

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Squitieri, 54, told ABC News that his wife Carla had left her wedding ring and anniversary band in paper towels on the kitchen counter on the evening of March 13.

The next morning, Squitieri noticed the paper towels and threw them in the trash--even going as far to bring the garbage bag out to the sanitation workers as they arrived for pickup, he said.

"I said here, 'Don't forget this one' and he went with it," Squitieri said. "That was at 7 o'clock in the morning."

Later, Squitieri said Carla returned home from dropping their daughter off at school and began "panicking" as she searched for her rings.

After their nephew had reported seeing the jewelry in the kitchen the night before, Squitieri put two-and-two together.

"She said, 'Have you seen my rings?' and I said, 'I threw them in the trash,'" he recalled. "She started going berserk...she started crying."

PHOTO: Bernie, 54, of St. Louis, Missouri, said he accidentally threw away his wife Carlas 12.5 carat wedding ring, worth $400,000, in the trash on March 13. Bernie Squitieri
Bernie, 54, of St. Louis, Missouri, said he accidentally threw away his wife Carla's 12.5 carat wedding ring, worth $400,000, in the trash on March 13. more +
The Squitieris called Meridian Waste Services in Bridgeton, Missouri, who told the couple that the truck was on its way to a radioactive landfill.

Once dumped into a landfill, Meridian said, the ring would never be found.

Squitieri said he was able to convince the trash company to move the truck to the City of O’Fallon transfer station, where he, Carla and three Meridian managers attempted to dig through waste to find the rings.

"On our way up there, [the manager] said, 'You realize it's going to be pretty rotten, stinking area?'" Squitieri said, adding that the man stressed finding the ring would be a "slim to none chance."

After Carla insisted they give it a shot, Squitieri said everyone grabbed a bag and began sifting through about 10 tons of garbage.

He added: "It was probably 30 feet by 100 feet long and 25 minutes later, [the manager] pulled [the ring] out and said, 'Here it is.' It was crazy. I thought we were going to be there for two : Bernie and Carla Squitieri have been married for 26 years. Bernie Squitieri
Bernie and Carla Squitieri have been married for 26 years.
Joe Evans, operations manager for Meridian Waste Services, said he was surprised that he was the one to locate the rings and they were found at all.

"Ten times out of 10, we don't find something like that," Evans told ABC News. "It was the best feeling in the world to find that ring and give it back. I was raised a certain way and I knew it'd have more meaning to them than it would have for me."

While his wife's rings were insured, Squitieri said the simple act of kindness overpowered their value.

"It's not so much that we found the ring, but [Evans] was such an honest guy and I wanted to give him some recognition," Squitieri said. "He could've put the ring in his pocket and nobody would've ever noticed. It gave my wife a really good feeling and it's nice to know that there's still good people out ther

How likely are birth defects from Zika virus?zzz New study finds clues.

Scientists say there's more evidence supporting a link between the Zika virus and a serious birth defect.

Researchers report that one in every 100 pregnant women infected with the virus during the first trimester will give birth to a baby with microcephaly -- an abnormally small head and the potential for neurological issues.

The new risk analysis did have one important caveat, however.

"The findings are from the 2013-14 outbreak [of Zika] in French Polynesia, and it remains to be seen whether our findings apply to other countries in the same way," study co-author Dr. Simon Cauchemez said in a news release from The Lancet. The findings were published in the journal on March 15.

Zika virus takes heartbreaking toll
The analysis was based on data from an outbreak of Zika infections in French Polynesia, a group of islands in the South Pacific. Cauchemez and colleagues said over 31,000 cases of infection were reported during the 2013-2014 outbreak, and eight cases of microcephaly were confirmed.

"Data from French Polynesia are particularly important since the outbreak is already over," said study co-author Arnaud Fontanet, a colleague of Cauchemez at the Institut Pasteur in France.

"This provides us with a small -- yet much more complete -- dataset than data gathered from an ongoing outbreak," Fontanet added.

The researchers believe that the findings strengthen the notion that maternal infection during the first trimester of pregnancy may be especially linked to microcephaly in babies.

Dr. Richard Temes directs neurocritical care at North Shore University Hospital in Manhasset, N.Y. He called the emergence of the Zika-microcephaly link "a global public health dilemma."

"Although the risk of transmission is low in comparison to other viral infections, such as congenital rubella [German measles], the authors rightly conclude that the risk to the population is much greater given the higher incidence of Zika virus during outbreaks," Temes said.
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In other related news, U.S. health officials on Friday gave tentative approval to a field test in the Florida Keys of mosquitoes genetically tweaked to help curb the spread of the Zika virus.

Officials at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said they made the preliminary determination that the test of the genetically engineered insects poses little harm to people, animals or the environment, The New York Times reported.

But, final approval for the trial won't come until the FDA considers comments from the public, which is likely to take months, the newspaper said.

And last Thursday, U.S. health officials said they were learning much about the virus. However, the more they learn, the more they realize how much they don't know, Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said during a media briefing.

"Unfortunately, the more we learn, the worse things seem to get," Fauci said.

The Zika virus is suspected of causing an epidemic that started last spring in Brazil, where there have been more than 5,600 suspected or confirmed cases of microcephaly.

Zika has also been linked to Guillain-Barre syndrome, an immune system disorder that can occasionally lead to a fatal form of paralysis.

Dr. Tom Frieden, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said: "We are learning more about Zika every day. The link with microcephaly and other possibly serious birth defects is growing stronger every day. The link to Guillain-Barre syndrome is likely to be proven in the near future, and the documentation that sexual transmission is possible is now proven."


Brazilian town fighting Zika virus with more mosquitoes
First discovered in Uganda in 1947, the Zika virus wasn't thought to pose major health risks until last year, when it became clear that it posed potentially devastating threats to pregnant women.

But, for most other people the virus offers little threat -- approximately 80 percent of people who become infected never experience symptoms.

Meanwhile, the virus continues to spread in Latin America and the Caribbean.

It is not expected to pose a significant threat to the United States mainland, federal health officials have said in the past.

In Puerto Rico, however, the situation is "of great concern," Frieden said.

"Puerto Rico is on the frontline of the battle against Zika," said Frieden, who had just returned from the island. "And it's an uphill battle."

By next year, Frieden said, there could be hundreds of thousands of cases of Zika in the territory, and "thousands of infected pregnant women."

Last month, President Barack Obama asked Congress for $1.9 billion to fight the Zika virus. To date, Congress has not approved the funding and both Frieden and Fauci expressed concern that efforts to fight Zika are in jeopardy if the funds aren't forthcoming.

One goal is to create a vaccine that can be given to children before they reach puberty to prevent Zika infection, Fauci said. "We cannot do what needs to be done in a sustained way without those resources," he said.

The CDC currently has this advice for pregnant women:

Consider postponing travel to any area where Zika virus transmission is ongoing.
If you must travel to or live in one of these areas, talk to your health-care provider first and strictly follow steps to prevent mosquito bites.
If you have a male partner who lives in or has traveled to an area where Zika transmission is ongoing, either use condoms the right way every time, or do not have sex during your pregnancy.
The Zika virus has now spread to over 33 countries and territories in Latin America and the Caribbean. The World Health Organization estimates there could be up to 4 million cases of Zika in the Americas in the next year.

Budget 2016: Spotlight on Osborne over deficit targetbg


Media captionThe chancellor opened his 2016 Budget with comments about the UK economy
Experts are due to give their verdict on George Osborne's ability to hit his fiscal targets after the chancellor unveiled a Budget featuring a sugar tax and gloomy economic forecasts.
The influential Institute for Fiscal Studies will scrutinise the chances of the deficit being cleared by 2019-20.
Mr Osborne said his Budget "puts the next generation first".
But Labour attacked the decision to save billions by 2020 with cuts to disability payments.
The Opposition did give a cautious welcome to the the chancellor's headline-grabbing announcement, raising £530m with a tax on the sugar content of soft drinks.
Other key Budget measures included:
Growth forecasts cut for the next five years and £3.5bn in extra public spending cuts by 2020
Mr Osborne missed his target of cutting debt as a share of GDP
A 2% increase in tax on cigarettes and 3% on rolling tobacco from 18:00 GMT, but beer and cider duty will be frozen as will the levy on whisky and other spirits
Plans for a longer school day in England
The rate at which workers start paying the top rate tax is to be raised from £42,385 to £45,000, with the tax-free personal allowance raised to £11,500 and corporation tax to be cut to 17% by April 2020
On savings, the ISA limit will be increased to £20,000 a year for all savers, and lifetime ISAs with a 25% bonus will be introduced for young people
An extra £700m for flood defences - to be paid with a 0.5 percentage point increase on the tax on insurance premiums
The higher rate of Capital Gains Tax is being cut from 28% to 20%
Despite warning of a "dangerous cocktail" of global risks, Mr Osborne told MPs he was still on course to eliminate the deficit by 2020, by making extra spending cuts.
But BBC political correspondent Alex Forsyth said independent analysts were warning this could be "very difficult" and saying the chancellor was "shuffling money around" to meet his self-imposed rules.
BBC experts analyse the Budget
Laura Kuenssberg and Kamal Ahmed
Political editor Laura Kuenssberg: Can Osborne defy political history?
Economics editor Kamal Ahmed: Osborne stakes reputation on 2020 surplus
Business editor Simon Jack: Small businesses are the winners
Political correspondent Iain Watson: Corbyn gets mixed reviews
Mr Osborne is also facing a rebellion on the "tampon tax" from MPs across the House of Commons.
Currently VAT is charged at 5% on sanitary items, the lowest rate allowable under EU law.
But over 300,000 people have signed a petition calling for sanitary items to be exempted from tax altogeth

Wild card for Trump: Who gets to be a conbvvention delegate?....


With the increasingly loud talk of a contested Republican convention, the obscure process of picking who actually gets to be a delegate is about to get underway in states across the country — with an urgency that has not been felt in decades.

These are the 2,472 people who will be filling Cleveland’s Quicken Loans Arena in July, many wearing silly hats and waving placards. Normally little more than props in a week-long infomercial, delegates could instead be the power brokers who determine the nominee at the GOP convention this time around.

Nearly all will be required to vote for a specific candidate on the first ballot, based on the results of the primaries and caucuses in their states. But if no candidate wins enough delegates to clinch the nomination, there will be subsequent rounds of voting. In that scenario, the vast majority of delegates would be free to vote as they please

UPDATE 1-Obama slaps new sanctvvions on North Korea after tests.vv

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un gives instruction during a simulated test of atmospheric re-entry of a ballistic missile, at an unidentified location in this undated photo released by North Korea's Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) in Pyongyang on March 15, 2016.
REUTERS/KCNA
President Barack Obama imposed sweeping new sanctions on North Korea on Wednesday intended to further isolate the country's leadership after recent actions by Pyongyang that have been seen by Washington and its allies as provocative.

The executive order freezes any property of the North Korean government in the United States and prohibits exportation of goods from the United States to North Korea.

It also allows the U.S. government to blacklist any individuals, whether or not they are U.S. citizens, who deal with major sectors of North Korea's economy. Experts said the measures vastly expanded the U.S. blockade against Pyongyang.

North Korea conducted a nuclear test on Jan. 6, and a Feb. 7 rocket launch that the United States and its allies said employed banned ballistic missile technology. Pyongyang said it was a peaceful satellite launch.

"The U.S. and the global community will not tolerate North Korea's illicit nuclear and ballistic missile activities, and we will continue to impose costs on North Korea until it comes into compliance with its international obligations," White House spokesman Josh Earnest said.

Despite decades of tensions, the United States has not had a comprehensive trade ban against North Korea of the kind enacted against Myanmar and Iran. Americans were allowed to make limited sales to North Korea, although in practice such trade was tiny.

U.S. officials had believed a blanket trade ban would be ineffective without a stronger commitment from China, North Korea's largest trading partner. But with China signing on to new U.N. sanctions earlier this month, that obstacle has been removed, experts said.

"North Korean sanctions are finally getting serious," said Peter Harrell, a former senior State Department official who worked on sanctions.

The new sanctions threaten to ban from the global financial system anyone, even Europeans and Asians, who does business with broad swaths of Pyongyang's economy, including its financial, mining and transportation sectors.

The so-called secondary sanctions will compel banks to freeze the assets of anyone who breaks the blockade, potentially squeezing out North Korea's business ties in China and Myanmar.

"It's going to be very hard for North Korea to move money anywhere in the world," said Harrell, now with the Center for a New American Security.

(Additional reporting by Jeff Mason; Editing by James Dalgleish and Peter Cooney)

Merrick Garland’s Path to Nomination Marked by Deferccence, With Limits..

WASHINGTON — Merrick B. Garland, a Harvard-educated lawyer and classic overachiever, was working in lucrative private practice at Arnold & Porter in the nation’s capital when, in 1989, he was offered a position as a federal prosecutor handling criminal cases here. It meant a 50 percent cut in pay and trading a sumptuous office for one that smelled of stale cigarettes.

He jumped at it.

“I don’t know whether he thought it would be good if he were ever going to become attorney general or a judge,” said Earl Steinberg, a lifelong friend who has known Judge Garland since kindergarten and roomed with him at Harvard. “But he viewed it as an experience he ought to get.”

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It was one of a series of carefully considered steps that positioned Judge Garland, now the chief judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, to stand in the Rose Garden on Wednesday beside President Obama, who nominated him for a job that friends say he has dreamed of for years: a seat on the United States Supreme Court.

On the bench, Judge Garland has a reputation as a moderate, admired by both Democrats and Republicans, who has come down on the government’s side in a number of cases. He has not objected to the death penalty — he said it was “settled law” in a 1995 confirmation hearing — and he deferred to the Bush administration on the rights of detainees at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. He has been notably deferential to executive agencies and is seen as reluctant to second-guess experts.

But Judge Garland’s deference has limits. In 2004, he wrote an opinion that ruled for the Sierra Club in a case concerning the Environmental Protection Agency’s approval of ozone control plans under the Clean Air Act. “We agree with Sierra Club’s principal contention that E.P.A. was not authorized to grant conditional approval to plans that did nothing more than promise to do tomorrow what the act requires today,” he wrote.

For Judge Garland, 63, who spoke with tears in his eyes of his roots as a grandson of Jewish immigrants, the nomination was also a moment of deep uncertainty. He had long been on the president’s short list for a Supreme Court nomination, and was passed over when Mr. Obama chose Sonia Sotomayor and then Elena Kagan. But now that his turn has finally come, Republicans are vowing to block his appointment.

“This was, as a practical matter, his very last opportunity,” said Jamie Gorelick, who has known Judge Garland since their days as Harvard undergraduates and worked closely with him in the Justice Department under President Bill Clinton.

A native of Illinois and father of two grown daughters, Judge Garland has the kind of impeccable credentials that will make it difficult for Republicans to object to his qualifications — one reason that Mr. Obama picked him.

“Well, I’ll put it this way: I don’t dislike him,” Senator James M. Inhofe, Republican of Oklahoma, told Chuck Todd of NBC. Mr. Inhofe voted to confirm Judge Garland in 1997, but vowed to block his nomination now.

http://shekhanews.blogspot.com/2016/03/obamatyty-nominates-asjudge-merrick-garland.html.

Driverless lorries and cars will be trialled in the UK, the government has confirmed in its Budget.
Earlier in March, The Times suggested trials would take place on a "quiet stretch" of the M6 motorway in Cumbria in 2016.
The government has now confirmed "lorry platooning" trials, in which vehicles form a convoy headed by a driver in the leading lorry, will go ahead.
It also announced that driverless cars will be trialled on UK roads by 2017.
In the Budget, published on Wednesday, the government said it wanted the UK to be "a global centre for excellence in connected and autonomous vehicles".


Chancellor George OsborneImage copyrightAFP
Image captionThe driverless lorry plan was outlined in the Chancellor's full Budget posted online

Companies such as Ford and Google have been testing autonomous cars for months, but trials typically take place in California.
Edmund King, president of roadside recovery firm AA, has questioned the feasibility of a lorry platooning scheme in the UK.
"The problem with the UK motorway network is that we have more entrances and exits of our motorways than any other motorways in Europe or indeed the world," he said earlier in March.
"Therefore it's very difficult to have a 44 tonne 10-lorry platoon, because other vehicles need to get past the platoon to enter or exit the road."
Other technology-related points in the Budget included:
  • plans for a £15m "connected corridor" between Dover and London with infrastructure that could communicate directly with vehicles
  • trials of comparative fuel signage on the M5 motorway between Bristol and Exeter, letting drivers see the best deals
  • development of a "5G" strategy in 2017, preparing the UK for next-generation wireless communications
  • a £1,000 tax-free allowance for "micro-entrepreneurs" who sell products online, and a second £1,000 allowance for people who rent out their home onlin

Obama nominates asJudge Merrick Garland to the Supreme..l

resident Obama announced Wednesday morning that he is nominating U.S. Circuit Court Judge Merrick B. Garland for the Supreme Court seat once occupied by the late Justice Antonin Scalia.

"Today, I am nominating Chief Judge Merrick Brian Garland to join the Supreme Court," Mr. Obama said from the White House Rose Garden with Garland and Vice President Joe Biden standing alongside him.

After seeking the advice of Republicans and Democrats in Congress, constitutional scholars and advocacy groups, the president said he selected a nominee who is "not only one of America's sharpest legal minds," but someone who has "a spirit of decency, modesty, integrity, even-handedness and excellence."


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Special Report: President Obama to nominate Merrick Garland to U.S. Supreme Court
Garland, 63, has served as the chief judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia for the last three years. He has served on the D.C. appellate court since 1997, when he was nominated to the bench by former President Bill Clinton. He was confirmed by the Senate in a 76-23 vote.

Over that 19-year period on the D.C. circuit, the president said Garland "has earned a track-record of building consensus as a thoughtful, fair-minded judge who follows the law."

Mr. Obama argued that is it "rare" to find someone who is liked by members of both political parties and alluded to comments from Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, and Chief Justice John Roberts in which they praised Garland.

"Chief Justice John Roberts once said, 'Anytime Judge Garland disagrees, you know you're in a difficult area,'" Mr. Obama said.

Garland, who the president said will travel to Capitol Hill to meet "one-on-one" with senators on Thursday, spoke briefly about his nomination.

"This is the greatest honor of my life," other than his wife agreeing to marry him, Garland said as he choked up. "I am grateful beyond words for the honor you have bestowed upon me."

A number of Democrats watched the announcement from the Rose Garden including Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nevada, and Senate Judiciary Committee Ranking Member Patrick Leahy, D-Vermont.

The president said Garland has spent years "protecting the rights of others." As valedictorian of his high school class, a student speaker who first delivered a fiery critique of the Vietnam War was silenced by parents attending their graduation. The president said Garland "tossed aside his prepared remarks and delivered a passionate, impromptu defense of our First Amendment rights."

2016-03-16t160451z1958987532tb3ec3g18nr3srtrmadp3usa-court-garland.jpg
U.S. President Barack Obama stands next to Judge Merrick Garland (C) of the United States Court of Appeals as his nominee for the U.S. Supreme Court as Vice President Joe Biden (L) joins in at the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington March 16, 2016. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst REUTERS
This is not the first time Garland, who hails from President Obama's home in Chicago, has been considered for a Supreme Court seat. Following the 2010 retirement of Justice John Paul Stevens from the Supreme Court, Garland's name was also floated for the nomination. The seat was eventually filled by Associate Justice Elena Kagan, then the Solicitor General.

Before his career as a judge, Garland held several positions in the public and private sectors. Garland worked as a prosecutor in the Department of Justice's criminal division. While at the DOJ, he served as principal associate deputy attorney general, where he supervised investigations into the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing and Unabomber Ted Kaczynski. From 1985 to 1989, and then again from 1992 to 1993, Garland served as a partner in the law firm of Arnold and Porter in Washington, D.C. Garland served as a clerk for Supreme Court Justice William Brennan from 1978 to 1979.

Garland's appointment is a bipartisan appeal for President Obama, considering the judge's moderate history and support from senators across the aisle. In 1997, Sen. Hatch assisted in securing Garland's confirmation to the appeals court. The White House pointed out in a background memo that in 2010, Hatch viewed Garland as "a consensus nominee" for the court before Mr. Obama selected Elena Kagan.

"I have no doubts that Garland would get a lot of [Senate] votes," Hatch said at the time. "And I will do my best to help him get them."

But Hatch, in a phone interview with CBSN Wednesday morning before the president's announcement, said that even if Garland was the president's choice, the Senate is "not going to move or even discuss the qualifications of any nominee until after the presidential election."

Of his previous support of Garland, Hatch said, "Being on the circuit Court of Appeals is quite a bit different from being on the Supreme Court. It's not about the person, it's not about the president. It's about protecting the integrity of the court."

Seven sitting Republican senators voted to confirm Garland when he was nominated to the appellate court in 1997: Sen. Dan Coats, R-Indiana; Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine; Sen. Thad Cochran, R-Mississippi; Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-Oklahoma; Sen. John McCain, R-Arizona; Sen. Pat Roberts, R-Kansas; and Hatch.

Five of the "no" votes from 1997 are also still in the Senate: Sen. Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky; Sen. Mike Enzi, R-Wyoming; Sens. Richard Shelby and Jeff Sessions, R-Alabama; and the current chairman of the Sen. Judiciary Committee, Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa.

Garland graduated magna cum laude from Harvard Law School in 1977. Before that, he earned his undergraduate degree, graduating summa cum laude, from Harvard in 1974. Garland has also taught antitrust law at the university and once served as the school's Board of Overseers president.

He faces an uphill battle in Congress. The Senate must confirm his nomination, but the Republican majority has already ruled out considering it. They have said they will refuse to hold confirmation hearings or votes until the next president is sworn in next January.


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Sen. Orrin Hatch: I wouldn't hold hearing for Merrick Garland
Mr. Obama has called on Senate Republicans to fulfill their constitutional responsibility to confirm his nominee and ensure that the court is complete with nine members. But GOP leaders have offered little to no wiggle room as they wish to make the 2016 presidential election a referendum on the future of the Supreme Court.

"I have fulfilled my constitutional duty," the president said Wednesday. "Presidents don't stop working in their final year; neither should a senator."

Meanwhile, critical cases that the high court will hear this cycle hang in the balance. And if rulings result in a 4-4 decision, the lower court's ruling would stand.

Garland's appointment comes just over a month after Scalia's sudden death at a resort in Texas at the age of 79. Nominated by President Ronald Reagan, he was the longest-serving member on the Supreme Court.

CBS News' Jan Crawford, Margaret Brennan and Grace Lamb Atkinson contributed to this report.

Sony PlayStation VR headset launched yyytat $399, will go on sale in October............m

Sony PlayStation VR headset has been announced by the company at the annual Game Developers Conference. Sony has priced its VR headset at $399, and it will go on sale in October 2016.
The Sony PlayStation VR headset has a 5.7-inch full HD OLED display, a refresh rate of 120 Hz, 360 degrees sensor tracking, 9 LEDs, 100 degree field of view and a latency rate of less than 18ms.
Sony PlayStation VR headset will work with the PlayStation 4, and the controllers compatible are: Dual Shock PS4 controller and PS Move.
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Sony says that the PlayStation VR headset will have 50 games available from launch, and that the company is working with more than 230 developers to create content for PlayStation VR.
Sony’s blog announcement for the VR headset reads, “We expect to have more than 50 games available from launch in October 2016 until the end of the year. Of course, the full promise of PlayStation VR will continue to grow over time as talented developers create new experiences and new genres that wouldn’t be possible outside of VR. The future looks bright indeed.”
The Playroom VR will be available as a free download from PlayStation Store for all PS VR owners at launch. The Playroom VR will include six games.

Live Cricket Score, Pakistan vs Bangladesh, World T20 2016: Pakistan strike early against Bangladesh.......211

Pakistan will play their first game of the World T20 against Bangladesh, a side which had defeated them in the Asia Cup. At the Eden Gardens, where Bangladesh last played in 1990 and were minnows of international cricket, Pakistan will be hoping to come out good as they have a better win-loss record at the ground. But Bangladesh made giant strides. The record is that Pakistan have won all four of their encounters over Bangladesh in World T20s. Catch live cricket score and live cricket updates of the Pakistan vs Bangladesh match here.
(Full Coverage|| Fixtures||Photos)
Live Cricket Score: Pakistan vs Bangladesh (CLICK HERE )
LIVE UPDATES:
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US student Otto Warmbier given hard labour in North Korea vxx

US student Otto Warmbier has been given 15 years hard labour in North Korea for crimes against the state.
Warmbier, 21, was arrested for trying to steal a propaganda sign from a hotel while visiting North Korea in January.
He later appeared on state TV apparently confessing and saying a church group had asked him to bring back a "trophy" from his trip.
North Korea sometimes uses the detention of foreigners as a means of exerting pressure on its adversaries.
The BBC's Stephen Evans in South Korea says the 15-year sentence is high compared to those given to foreigners in the past.
This could be due to the particularly high tensions at the moment between North Korea and the US, he says.
'Worst mistake'
North Korean state news agency KCNA said Warmbier was convicted under an article of the criminal code relating to subversion. The verdict was handed down by the Supreme Court.

nnnnn Syria and the Arab Spring: My life then and now

It is five years since peaceful protests against Syria's President Bashar al-Assad started in Damascus.
The uprising quickly escalated into a civil war between the Syrian government and various rebel factions, killing at least 250,000 and displacing many more.
Similar movements in the region, later called the Arab Spring, led to the ousting of Hosni Mubarak in Egypt, Muammar Gaddafi in Libya and Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali in Tunisia.
Five years on, people across the region have told the BBC how the uprising and the political divisions and economic turmoil that followed have affected their lives.

Syria's civil war


Image copyrightReuters

"I had to leave my pregnant wife behind. It was too dangerous for me to stay," saysMajdy Al-Kassem, who fled Syria in early 2015 and now lives in the UK.
Majdy studied English literature in his hometown Idlib in north-western Syria when peaceful anti-government protests erupted in 2011. He and fellow students joined the demonstrations.
"In the first six months protesters were not armed, but the security forces started to shoot at people and come to their houses to arrest them," he says.
Some of the protests turned into armed insurgency and following violent clashes abrutal and complex civil war broke out across most of the country.
"One of my teachers was killed by a sniper and in the following years a lot of my friends died in prison. I was afraid that somebody who saw me at the demonstration would frame me," he says.


A month after Majdy fled, a coalition of Islamist rebel forces, supported by Turkey and Saudi Arabia, seized Idlib from the Syrian government.
"It's a little bit safer now because there is no fighting in the city itself, but your house can always be hit by Russian or Syrian government air strikes. Many houses in our neighbourhood were destroyed.
"My family is in a very bad situation now. They often don't have the most basic things like water, electricity and petrol."

Budget to set out plans for longer to school days in England.................

Chancellor George Osborne will use his Budget speech to call for an extension to school days in England.
Schools will be able to bid for funding for extra activities like sport and art, with at least 25% of secondary schools covered, he has said.
Mr Osborne's eighth Budget will include £4bn in extra spending cuts, and transport investment announcements.
He will also pledge that every school in England will be removed from local authority control.
Schools will either have to have converted by 2020 or have an academy order in place by then, so that they are committed to converting by 2022.
For any school that fails to have a plan in place, the government will take on radical new powers to intervene and ensure academy conversion takes place.
Academy status, introduced by a Labour government, was originally reserved for schools in urgent need of improvement, but since 2010 schools have been encouraged to convert and have been given extra funding for doing so.
Currently, 2,075 out of 3,381 secondary schools are academies, while 2,440 of 16,766 primary schools have academy status.
The plans will not apply to Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, where education policy is devolved.
After-hours activity
Malcolm Trobe, interim general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, said there were a number of issues around the idea of a longer school day that made it "complicated".
Classroom
Image caption
Heads say schools already offer more than standard academic lessons
"Lots of schools do a lot of high quality after-hours activity, including revision classes sometimes in the school holidays," he said.
"It's going to be quite complex to define the difference between those activities that schools are already laying on for pupils and any additional activities which come out of the Chancellor's Budget statement.
"We also believe it's highly divisive to have these funded activities available in 25% of schools - potentially youngsters in some schools would be in an advantageous position over others."
Head teachers said schools already offered a wide range of after-school, and holiday, provision.
Russell Hobby, general secretary of the National Association of Head Teachers, said any extra funding would be welcomed.
"The idea that most schools shut at 3.30 in the afternoon is itself pretty outdated, but we have no problem with extra money to help them in the activities they offer.
"Any expansion of hours must be properly funded, as school budgets are extremely tight. There's not a lot of evidence internationally linking a longer academic day to higher standards, but extracurricular activity is usually valuable.
"As long as this remains at the discretion of schools to meet the needs of their pupils, then it seems positive."
'Best start'
But Mr Osborne said Wednesday's Budget would "put the next generation first", with a "bold plan to make sure that every child gets the best start in life".
George Osborne
Image caption
Mr Osborne says he wants to "help the next generation"
"It is simply unacceptable that Britain continues to sit too low down the global league tables for education," he said.
"So I'm going to get on with finishing the job we started five years ago, to drive up standards and set schools free from the shackles of local bureaucracy.
"I also want to support secondary schools that want to offer their pupils longer school days with more extracurricular activities like sport and art. So we'll fund longer school days for at least 25% of all secondary schools.
"Now is the time us to make the bold decisions and the big investments that will help the next generation, and that is what my Budget will do."
Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland - where education is a devolved matter - each have their own systems.
In Wales, school governing bodies set their own start and finish times - although local authorities can override them.
In Northern Ireland, the law states that the school day must be at least three hours for pupils under eight, and four and a half hours for pupils over eights.
In Scotland, education authorities set hours, but the school week is commonly 25 hours for primary schools and 27.5 hours for secondary schools. Scottish councils were banned from cutting the length of the school day to save money in December.