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Forum Messages Posted by Roswitha

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Thread: what caught my eye today

1691.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 09 Apr 2008 Wed 03:47 pm

Diesel Fumes Help Clog Arteries
Researchers track the way particles trigger inflammation
By Ed Edelson
Posted 7/26/07
THURSDAY, July 26 (HealthDay News) -- Scientists say they've spotted the biochemical process that makes diesel exhaust so dangerous to human arteries.

An interaction between the fine particles found in diesel exhaust and the fatty acids in LDL ("bad") cholesterol activates genes that then cause inflammation in blood vessels, a team from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) report.

This process accelerates atherosclerosis -- a buildup of fatty deposits that can eventually lead to complete vessel blockage, according to the study in the July 26 online issue of Genome Biology.

The mechanism is one key way that "chemicals in diesel exhaust impact the cardiovascular system," said Dr. Andre Nel, chief of nanomedicine at the UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine. "We have done an analysis of genes that respond to those chemicals in synergy with the components of bad cholesterol."

LDL cholesterol is usually described as the bad kind because it is involved in blood vessel damage, in contrast to "good" HDL cholesterol, which works to prevent such damage.

In a series of studies, the UCLA scientists combined particulate diesel pollutants with fatty acids found in LDL cholesterol, studying their interactions with free radicals -- highly reactive molecules that can damage cells. They exposed cells to this mixture and then extracted genetic material from those cells.

Genes that promote cellular inflammation were found to be highly activated in those cells. Inflammation is well known as a contributor to atherosclerosis, Nel said.

"The primary implication of our finding is that for people who have cardiovascular risk factors such as high blood cholesterol, simultaneous exposure to diesel air pollution can enhance damage by enhancing inflammation in the cardiovascular system," Nel said.

The UCLA research team now is working to develop a test, such as measurement of a protein produced in response to air pollution, that could be used to assess the safety of people working or living in areas with different levels of pollution, he said.

Nel's work is an important part of ongoing research on the damaging molecular effects of air pollution from diesel and other sources, said Dr. John Balbus, chief of health sciences of Environmental Defense, a watchdog group.

"There have been lots of studies of inflammation," Balbus said. "This one goes down to the genetic level, and finds a pattern of gene expression that is particularly associated with diesel exhaust."

While such laboratory work has been going over for the past five to 10 years, epidemiological studies have also tightened the link between cardiovascular risk and exposure to pollutants, Balbus said. He cited a recent German study that found that living near a major source of pollution, such as a highway, was associated with a higher incidence of atherosclerosis.

"That was observational data in real people," he said. "When you put that together with the laboratory work, you have a very convincing picture."

"This study is more evidence of why we need to become more aggressive in cleaning up existing diesel engines," said Frank O'Donnell, director of Clean Air Watch, a private organization.

Chances that diesel engines will be used as commonly in the United States as in Europe, where they are found in many cars, are slim, because U.S. pollution standards are tougher, O'Donnell said.

"The real big problem remains the many thousands of diesel engines in construction equipment, old trucks and buses," he said. "The biggest bang for the buck would come from cleaning up existing diesel engines."



Thread: Beautiful Melancholic Turkish Voice, with Erkan Ogur

1692.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 09 Apr 2008 Wed 02:46 am

Mükemmel - Erkan OĞUR pencereden kar geliyor

Who would be kind enough and tell me what the song is about? Thanks.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=exKLbNtwwr4&feature=related



Thread: Kurdish woman spinning with traditional drop spindle.

1693.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 08 Apr 2008 Tue 11:25 pm

AZERI CARPET



Thread: what caught my eye today

1694.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 08 Apr 2008 Tue 05:38 pm





Thread: Kurdish woman spinning with traditional drop spindle.

1695.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 08 Apr 2008 Tue 04:43 pm

RUG FARMING IN ANATOLIA
Turkey resonates with rug weaving. Whatever it means, it is a rug-weaving culture. It resuscitates the anemic term, authentic. The conditions are right, both economically and culturally, for a revival of weaving the likes of which the 20th century has not seen. It is a revival of good craft, founded on the informal partnership of many parties, from the village girls to the repairman-turned-entrepreneur, and from the fragment dealer to the rug farmer. Taken individually, its projects are on a small scale. Seen as a whole, it represents the single most important contribution to Oriental rug weaving in decades. It may be that I am talking about a small fraction of total production, but that may be enough. The partnership I speak of is like the conversation that swings between the possible and the impossible faster than one's mood can change, with the grey area in between left to God's will. It has nothing to do with one's faith in God. It has to do with habit, the habit of making difficult things impossible because experience taught us so. In this sense, revival means the rejection of rejections.

Rug farming in eastern Turkey has been an orchestrated effort, combining the skills of natural dyeing with the flexibility of young women who weave commercially. As if turning back time, we have devised a system to spin large amounts of wool by hand, employing hundreds of women in work that can be done at home. I call these carpets Azeri, after the Turks of Azerbaijan. It is a whimsical name, meant to recall the beautiful patterns of rugs vaguely called "north west Persian." As an idea, Azeri carpets are about the art of girls making pictures, using drawings and samples merely as a guide in their weaving. The room for interpretation could easily be mistaken as primitive, but nothing could be further from the truth. Rather, an organization has been fashioned around the notion that several weavers sitting on a bench, in a room with many other large looms, can use a hard, lustrous yarn to produce rugs that are as much an individual statement as they are a statement about decoration.



http://www.rugreview.com/84a.htm



Thread: nazım hikmet yaşamaya dair

1696.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 08 Apr 2008 Tue 06:00 am

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXQkuxQBsPA



Thread: The Gates of Istanbul - Loreena McKennitt

1697.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 08 Apr 2008 Tue 05:47 am

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dQNzICylbTE



Thread: censorship by admins!

1698.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 08 Apr 2008 Tue 02:01 am

Alemada, thank you for your excellent insights!! (The term Turk was used in Italy for any Muslim, regardless of ethnicity. I knew some people from Sicily, Malta who considered anyone Muslim to be a Turk.)



Thread: Foreigners eye 5-star retirement

1699.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 08 Apr 2008 Tue 01:57 am

thanks so much, dear!



Thread: Foreigners eye 5-star retirement

1700.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 08 Apr 2008 Tue 12:39 am

Some private rest homes in Turkey for the elderly resemble five-star hotels with their saunas and cinema halls. While the number of such homes has increased eight-fold within the last five years, foreign investors have begun conducting market research in Turkey.
With Turkey's elderly population gradually beginning to increase, investments in luxury rest homes are becoming a profitable venture and have also attracted the attention of foreign investors.

A semi-feudal lord, or ağa, from the southeastern Anatolian region of Turkey enters, by chance, a rest home for the elderly while escaping from a hospital in Istanbul. Finding himself amid some elderly people left alone by their families, the old ağa, later goes on a journey to his hometown together with the elderly people he met at the rest home.

His aim is to show the genuine appreciation and love for the elderly to those people left to their destiny. The movie “Beyaz Melek” (White Angel), which tells the story of elderly people living in rest homes, did not bring a plethora of awards for its director Mahsun Kırmızıgül but with the box office record it broke it caused many to grasp the sensitivity of its theme.

Increasing in number daily, the number of private rest homes seems to erase the bad rest home scenes that mostly become the subject of movies and news programs. In fact, the last five years have witnessed an eight-fold increase in the number of private rest homes, which, with their saunas, cinema halls and physical therapy clinics, almost resemble five-star hotels. Competing to present the best familial comfort and warmth, these private rest homes for the elderly have also attracted the attention of foreign investors. While investors from Australia and Germany are currently focusing on Turkey, the De Wever Foundation, providing care for about 2,000 elderly people in a total of 17 rest homes in the Netherlands has been in contact for some time with Istanbul's Darülaceze (Almshouse) Foundation to take over the management of a 300-bed rest home in Yakacık district that it established through a YTL 8 million investment.

http://www.turkishdailynews.com.tr/article.php?enewsid=101084

This movie has some violent themes, too bad I am unable to follow the Turkish dialogue here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXi4mQLS3yw



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