Monday, February 4, 2008

Ad-Aware 7.0.2.6

With the ability to scan your RAM, Registry, hard drives, and external storage devices for known data-mining, advertising, and tracking components, Ad-Aware 2007 easily can clean your system, allowing you to maintain a higher degree of privacy while you surf the Web.

Ad-Aware 2007 includes a redesigned engine, improved code sequence identification, incremental definition updates, one-click Web-history cleanup, multiple browser support, and other new features. In version 7.0.2.6, the scanning engine improves the detection and removal of malware affecting LSP and NSP, the malware removal at Windows startup now removes folders, the licensing system has been redesigned and multilingual support has been added (currently limited to French language only).

Requirements: Windows 2000/XP/2003 Server/Vista(32-bit)
License:Free; paid upgrade available

Download

Kaspersky Anti-Virus Personal 8.0.0.219 Beta / 7.0.1.321 Final / 6.0.2.621

Kaspersky Antivirus Personal description
Kaspersky AV provides all types of anti-virus protection:anti-virus scanners, monitors, behavior blockers and integrity checkers
Kaspersky Anti-Virus (KAV) provides all types of anti-virus protection: antivirus scanners, monitors, behavior blockers and integrity checkers.

Kaspersky Anti-Virus supports all of the most popular operating systems, e-mail gateways and firewalls. KAV controls all possible virus entry points.Kaspersky Anti-Virus Personal is an antivirus software that protect you PC from viruses. Compatible with Windows Vista !

Kaspersky Lab's powerful and flexible local and network management tools for automation and centralized installation and control over antivirus protection provide maximum convenience and minimum time wasted when building your own structure of an antivirus defense.

Here are some key features of "Kaspersky Antivirus Personal":

· Protection from viruses, Trojans and worms
· Protection from spyware, adware and other potentially hostile programs
· Antivirus scanning for removable data storage media
· Scanning and disinfection of archived
files
· Protection from dangerous macros in Microsoft Office documents
· Rollback of changes made by malicious programs on your computer
· On-the-fly scanning of emails & Internet traffic
· Proactive defense against new malicious programs
· Optimized antivirus scanning
· Protection from rootkits
· Instant database updates
· Simplicity and ease of use

Requirements:

Microsoft Windows 98 (SE) / NT Workstation 4.0
· Microsoft Windows NT Workstation 4.0 with Service Pack 6a
· Microsoft Internet Explorer 5.5 or higher (for product & antivirus database updates via the Internet)
· CD-ROM (for product installation)
· Internet connection (for product activation)
· Intel Pentium 133 MHz or higher
· 32 MB RAM
· 50 MB available HDD space

Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional
· Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional with Service Pack 2 or higher
· Microsoft Internet Explorer 5.5 or higher (for product & antivirus database updates via the Internet)
· CD-ROM (for product installation)
· Internet connection (for product activation)
· Intel Pentium 133 MHz or higher
· 64 MB RAM
· 50 MB available HDD space

Microsoft Windows ME
· Microsoft Internet Explorer 5.5 or higher (for product & antivirus database updates via the Internet)
· CD-ROM (for product installation)
· Internet connection (for product activation)
· Intel Pentium 150 MHZ or higher
· 32 MB RAM
· 50 MB available HDD space

Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition / XP Professional
· Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition with Service Pack 1 or higher
· Microsoft Internet Explorer 5.5 or higher (for product & antivirus database updates via the Internet)
· CD-ROM (for product installation)
· Internet connection (for product activation)
· Intel Pentium 300 MHz or higher
· 128 MB RAM
· 50 MB available HDD space

Limitations:

· 30-day trial version

Download:
External Mirror 1 (US) - 8.0.0.219 Beta
External Mirror 2 (US) - 7.0.1.321 Final
External Mirror 3 - Stable

Panda Antivirus 2008 3.01 Final

Panda Antivirus Titanium description
Transparently updating Antivirus solution for Windows, that keeps your computer protected
Panda Antivirus is the latest generation of antivirus solution.

Its innovative technology and ease of use make it the most powerful antivirus on the market.

Panda Antivirus features a new UltraFast scan engine, 30% faster than its predecessors, Panda's exclusive SmartClean technology, which not only disinfects viruses but also restores system settings damaged by the latest trojan horse technologies, and its low use of system resources.

Coupled with a new best-of-breed truly automatic update system which takes advantage of your Internet connection to transparently update the virus signature files incrementally and its new innovative ease of use interface, Panda Antivirus Titanium is the first truly "install-and-forget" antivirus for the home user."

Here are some key features of "Panda Antivirus Titanium":

· Latest generation antivirus
Automatically detects and eliminates all types of viruses.
If content is missing from your hard disk, if you have problems starting your computer, or if some of your files are unusable, you can be sure you've been hit by a computer virus. You can be infected just by surfing the Net, downloading a file, or opening an email attachment.
There are also the dangers of worms and Trojans which now use new stealth techniques to evade detection.
With Panda Antivirus 2008 you can use the Internet and download or share files in the knowledge that you are fully protected against all types of viruses, worms and Trojans. Forget about infections!

· Powerful AntiSpyware
Keeps your PC free from spyware.
Computer slowdowns, annoying and aggressive pop-up ads, sudden changes to your system settings... these are just some of the effects that spyware can have on your PC. The real danger however is that these threats can steal information about your Internet activity and then use it without your knowledge.
Panda Antivirus 2008 detects and completely removes spyware and other annoying programs automatically. Safeguard your privacy!

· AntiPhishing
Protects against online fraud.
Certain emails are designed to trick you into revealing your confidential bank details. They may appear to have been sent from your bank, but they have not. Falling into the trap can be costly: it could give the phishers complete access to your accounts. Panda Antivirus 2008 can identify these fraudulent emails, and prevent you from revealing your bank details, account numbers or other confidential information.
Panda Antivirus 2008 will keep you safe from these dangerous scams. Bank and shop online with complete peace of mind!

· Protection against dangerous websites
Prevents access to websites harboring threats.
Many infections occur simply when you visit a certain web page. Panda Antivirus 2008 recognizes dangerous web pages and prevents you from opening them and becoming infected. This feature is particularly effective against certain types of spyware and online fraud. Surf the Internet safely!

· AntiRootkit
Detects threats that try to hide on your PC.
Rootkits can be used to hide threats and prevent them from being detected by security solutions. These threats can then act with impunity on your system. With Panda Antivirus 2008 you won't have any problem, as its reinforced protection system can detect threats that use this stealth technique. Protect yourself from hidden threats!


Requirements:

· Processor: Pentium 150 MHz or faster
· RAM: 64 MB
· Hard disk: 150 MB free space
· Internet Explorer 5.05
· CD-ROM drive


Limitations:

· 30-day trial

Download:
External Mirror 1 - 3.01 Final

CNET 2008 antivirus performance test scores

Once again Kaspersky Anti-Virus earns our Editors' Choice as the best standalone antivirus application we reviewed this year. But, as the performance charts below show, the competition is knocking at the door. In particular, we call out BitDefender Antivirus for making the most gains over the previous year. And while we think Norton Antivirus 2008 offers comparable antivirus protection, it weighs in at 300MB, six times the file size of either Kaspersky or BitDefender on your hard drive. Again, Trend Micro and McAfee hold their own this year, neither rising nor falling with respect to the competition. CA continues to struggle with its place in the consumer market, and Panda pulls up the rear.


iTunes 7 deep-scanning performance
In seconds (shorter bars indicate faster performance)
iTunes
Alwil Avast 4.7
270
BitDefender Antivirus 2008
270
Panda Antivirus 2008
270
Norton AntiVirus 2008
271
McAfee VirusScan Plus 2008
271
Trend Micro Antivirus plus Antispyware 2008
271
Kaspersky Anti-Virus 7
272
CA Antivirus plus CA Antispyware 2008
273


Microsoft Office peformance
In seconds (shorter bars indicate faster performance)
Microsoft Office
CA Antivirus plus CA Antispyware 2008
1191
Panda Antivirus 2008
1355
Trend Micro Antivirus plus Antispyware 2008
1393
Alwil Avast 4.7
1426
Norton AntiVirus 2008
1459
BitDefender Antivirus 2008
1502
Kaspersky Anti-Virus 7
1517
McAfee VirusScan Plus 2008
1519


Scan speed
In seconds (shorter bars indicate faster performance)
Panda Antivirus 2008
135
BitDefender Antivirus 2008
163
Norton AntiVirus 2008
173
CA Antivirus plus CA Antispyware 2008
187
Trend Micro Antivirus plus Antispyware 2008
271
McAfee VirusScan Plus 2008
446
Kaspersky Anti-Virus 7
521
Alwil Avast 4.7
678


Boot speed
In seconds (shorter bars indicate faster performance)
BitDefender Antivirus 2008
28
Kaspersky Anti-Virus 7
30
Alwil Avast 4.7
31
Trend Micro Antivirus plus Antispyware 2008
31
CA Antivirus plus CA Antispyware 2008
36
McAfee VirusScan Plus 2008
38
Panda Antivirus 2008
39
Norton AntiVirus 2008
40

IFPI Forces Danish ISP to Block The Pirate Bay

The battle between the IFPI and the Pirate Bay continues. A Danish court ruled in favor of the IFPI, and ordered the Danish ISP “Tele2″ (DMT2-Tele2) to block all access to the popular BitTorrent tracker. The Pirate Bay, currently ranked 28th in the list of most visited sites in Denmark, is working on countermeasures.

The court case was initiated by the IFPI - the infamous anti-piracy organization that represents the recording industry - and plans to force other ISPs to do the same. However, The Pirate Bay is determined to fight back, as usual.

The Pirate Bay team has already asked other BitTorrent admins to stand up against the IFPI lobby, and arranged a meeting with Tele2 to discuss the current events. Pirate Bay co-founder Brokep told TorrentFreak in a response: “I hope the torrent community understands what this will do to Danish people. It will also act as a very bad precedent for the European Union, and I hope everybody will fight this.”

At the moment, The Pirate Bay team is registering new (Danish) domains, to make sure people can still download .torrent files from the Bay when the ban is activated later today tomorrow. In addition the Pirate Bay will launch a campaign website, together with the Danish pro-piracy lobby “Piratgruppen”.

Sebastian Gjerding, spokesperson for Piratgruppen, a pro-piracy lobby whose goals are to reform current copyright law and protect consumers’ rights, is not pleased with the news. He told TorrentFreak: “The verdict is absurd. It will block access for danish users to the worlds largest distributor of culture and knowledge - copyrighted or not. It’s true that you can access copyrighted material through The Pirate Bay, as you can with Google or Rapidshare. Should they be blocked as well?”

“It’s very frightening that IFPI can get through the courts with something like this. In Turkey and China its the state that decides what information the people can access and what should be censored. In Denmark its apparently the record industry,” Sebastian adds.

This is not the first time a Danish ISP has been ordered to censor the Internet. In December 2006 A Danish court ruled against Tele2 in a similar case, and ordered the ISP to block all access to Allofmp3.com. According to the ruling, the ISP was willingly infringing copyright if their customers use AllofMP3 to download music.

IFPI has announced it will continue it’s battle against BitTorrent sites in Europe. Last month they tried to convince European lawmakers that ISPs should block access to websites such as The Pirate Bay, and block filesharing protocols, no matter what they’re being used for. Luckily, these proposals were rejected.

We will follow this campaign, and the response from Denmark closely.

iSkin Revo & Revo Clip for Apple iPhone

When we covered this year’s Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas this year, we were on the go 24/7 barely taking time out to eat and sleep. One of the companies that featured products for us on-the-go types was iSkin. iSkin has been protecting iPods and other electronic devices since 2002 and with the huge number of iPods and now, iPhones, the company is producing some really versatile products.

Today we look at one of iSkin’s most popular products, the iSkin Revo and Revo Clip which is specifically designed to protect your Apple iPhone. Of course there are a bunch of ways you can protect your favorite mobile device: The normal “soft cases” like the one that comes out of the box with your phone; a hard, clam-shell-type cover like the OtterBox, or even something more custom.

Like the name implies, iSkin is made up of silicone material that is very comfortable to touch and “grippy” to hold. It is designed to protect all vulnerable surfaces, prots, and controls on the iPhone without compromising the functionality of the device. Since the silicone material is very thin, the iSkin doesn’t really add that much more weight overall to the phone.

The iSkin Revo is available in 6 different colors to match your mood and your outfit. iSkin gives the colors some very hip names like: Rah, Zahra, Nighthawk, Mojave, and Diablo. The “Bluish” colored Revo that we field tested was called Blade. Blade...Nice!

Priced at $40, iSkin includes the silicon protector, a privacy film that is compatible with either the iPhone or iPod Touch, and a ViSOR – an ultra-clear polycarbonate scratch resistant screen guard. The Revo’s silicon protector even has an anti-microbial agent (Microban) that protects the iPhone and its user from bacteria that can congregate. I can certainly appreciate this as it is really disgusting to use a phone after someone has been sweating and breathing heavy on your device. Yuck.

New Decontamination System Kills Anthrax Rapidly Without Lingering Effects

In October 2001, letters containing anthrax spores were mailed to several news media offices and two U.S. senators, killing five people and infecting 17 others. Clearing the Senate office building of the spores with chlorine dioxide gas cost $27 million, according to the Government Accountability Office. Cleaning the Brentwood postal facility outside Washington cost $130 million and took 26 months.

Researchers at the Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI) in collaboration with Austin-based Stellar Micro Devices, Inc. (SMD) have developed prototypes of a rapid, non-disruptive and less expensive method that could be used to decontaminate bioterrorism hazards in the future.

Using flat panel modules that produce X-rays and ultraviolet-C (UV-C) light simultaneously, the researchers can kill anthrax spores in two to three hours without any lingering effects. The system also has the ability to kill anthrax spores hidden in places like computer keyboards without causing damage.

"This is certainly an improvement over previous techniques," said Brent Wagner, GTRI principal research scientist and director of its Phosphor Technology Center of Excellence (PTCOE). "The UV-C attacks spores on surfaces and the X-rays penetrate through materials and kill spores in cracks and crevices."

X-ray irradiation is used commercially to sterilize medical products and food by disrupting the ability of a microorganism to reproduce. UV-C also prevents replication, but both types of radiation can penetrate the outer structure of an anthrax spore to destroy the bacteria inside.

The current decontamination standard -- chlorine dioxide gas -- kills microorganisms by disrupting transport of nutrients across the cell wall, but cannot reach hidden spores. Hard surfaces must be cleaned independently with harsh liquid chlorine dioxide. In addition, people cannot re-enter a room fumigated with chlorine dioxide until the gas is neutralized with sodium bisulfite vapor and vented from the building.

The new decontamination system resembles a coat rack with radiation modules arranged on rings at various heights that face outward to broadcast radiation throughout a room. Since the X-rays and UV-C are lethal at the flux densities used, the system operates unattended and is turned on outside the affected space.

UV-C light in the modules is produced using the optical and electrical phenomenon of cathodoluminescence. Numerous electron beams are generated by arrays of cold cathodes, each acting like the electron gun in a cathode ray tube.

"When an electron beam hits a powder phosphor, it luminesces and emits visible and/or non-visible light," explained Hisham Menkara, a senior research scientist in GTRI's Electro-Optical Systems Laboratory.

GTRI became involved in SMD's project, which was funded by the Air Force Research Laboratory's Small Business Innovation Research program, because the PTCOE housed UV-C phosphors created and patented by Sarnoff Corporation in the mid-1970s.

"We knew that Georgia Tech had experts in powder phosphors with regard to flat panel displays and we approached them to develop new phosphors for our decontamination purpose," said Mark Eaton, president and CEO of SMD. "We were fortunate that they had UV-C phosphors available from decades earlier."

With the Sarnoff phosphors in hand, Wagner and Menkara set off to determine the best UV-C emitting phosphor and optimize its properties for use with X-rays in SMD's small flat panel display.

To find the best phosphor that emitted light in the UV-C region of the spectrum -- wavelengths below 280 nanometers -- the emission spectra of each phosphor was measured against the DNA absorption curve. This curve shows the optimal wavelengths to destroy an organism's DNA.

After investigating many different phosphors, the researchers chose lanthanum phosphate:praseodymium (LaPO4:Pr or LAP:Pr) as the most efficient phosphor, with a power efficiency near 10 percent. Since the UV emission didn't fall completely under the DNA absorption curve, the relative "killing efficiency" was approximately 50 percent.

In the laboratory, Menkara created the phosphor by mixing precursors lanthanum oxide, hydrogen phosphate and praseodymium fluoride (La2O3, H3PO4 and PrF3, respectively) in a glass beaker with methanol (CH3OH) and ammonium chloride (NH4Cl). Air drying the mixture in a fume hood caused the methanol to completely evaporate.

The resultant cake was crushed into a fine powder, heated in a furnace to a temperature as high as 1250 degrees Celsius for two hours and crushed again.

"To determine the best conditions for producing the highest efficiency phosphor, we tried different precursors and completed the firing under different atmospheric conditions and temperatures," explained Menkara.

Test results showed that higher temperatures were more efficient and a capped quartz tube was the best container to hold the powder inside the furnace. Wagner and Menkara also found that adding lithium fluoride (LiF) and reducing the praseodymium concentration increased the cathodoluminescent properties of the LAP:Pr phosphor.

With the improved phosphor, laboratory tests conducted by SMD showed that the combined X-ray and UV-C decontamination system could kill anthrax spores.

GTRI researchers hope to develop new UV-C phosphors that can achieve cathodoluminescent efficiency higher than 10 percent with an emission spectrum that provides increased coverage of the DNA absorption curve.

With increased efficiency, UV-C panels could be used for sterilizing medical equipment or purification applications.

"We may be able to use UV-C panels to clean wastewater, which would be better than the lamps currently used. In the environment where the lamps must operate, they are very difficult to clean, whereas flat panels could be cleaned with a squeegee," noted Eaton.

Another potential application is to kill viruses in buildings used to house chickens. Current methods involve removing the chickens and raising the temperature in the chicken houses for several days to deactivate the virus.

"With the combined UV-C/X-ray system, you could turn the system on for a few hours, kill the viruses and as soon as you turn it off, the chickens could come right back in," said Wagner.

Tiny gene differences make us who we are

Scientists have found more than 500 genes that account for variations across human populations including skin colour, height and vulnerability to disease, according to a new study.

By comparing millions of fragments of genetic code from individuals in four groups - from Nigeria, China, Japan and northwest Europe - researchers say that natural selection has played a key role in these differences.

The findings, which are published online ahead of print in the journal Nature Genetics, hold particular promise for understanding the genetic underpinning of certain diseases.

The researchers, led by Dr Lluis Quintana-Murci of France's National Centre for Scientific Research pinpoints, for example, the tiny genetic variation in the CR1 gene that has made 85% of Africans highly resistant to malaria.

Most other populations in the world do not share this variant and are thus more susceptible to the mosquito-borne disease.

Other identified genetic variations - called single nucleotide polymorphisms or SNPs and pronounced 'snips' - could help explain why rates of diabetes, obesity and hypertension differ from one region to another.

Once the specific bit of genetic code responsible for a predisposition to a certain illness or condition has been identified, scientists can then set about trying to find a drug to treat it.

Variation matters

SNPs occur when one of the four chemical building blocks of DNA varies in a particular segment of DNA when compared with other members of the same species.

Some of these genetic mutations have happened through positive selection; they provide an advantage in the struggle to survive.

Being resistant to malaria is more useful in sub-Saharan Africa than in Norway, for example.

Others are driven by negative selection, the process by which genetic traits are forced out of a species because they impede survival.

Hair and eye colour

The study, based on the international HapMap catalogue of genetic variants within and among populations around the world, found SNPs that also account for differences in eye and hair colour.

"These genes played a role in adapting to our environment, and their mutation gave rise to certain advantages," says Quintana-Murci.

"But the genes that explain the phenotypic differences between populations only represent a tiny part of our genome, confirming once again that the concept of 'race' from a genetic standpoint has been abolished," he adds.

Genotype is the genetic blueprint contained in DNA, while phenotype is the individual organism brought into being based on the instructions contained in that DNA.

The study identified 582 genes that mutated through natural selection, probably between 10,000 and 60,000 years ago.

Online justice a world first

Some court cases will soon be heard online in Australia, with judges receiving lawyers' arguments by email, a state minister says.

The system, known as JusticeLink, is the world's first computer system that links courts across jurisdictions, says New South Wales (NSW) state attorney general John Hatzistergos.

He says the system is to be rolled out in courts across Australia's largest state over the next 12 months.

Prosecutors and defence lawyers will log on to a bulletin board and type their arguments, which would then be sent to the judge by email.

The judge would make orders in real time.

Hatzistergos says the system will streamline the legal process, "saving millions of dollars in costs and countless hours spent in the courtroom".

The cost of the scheme is put at A$48 million (US$43 million).

Nine firms have tested the system and the state Supreme Court has used it, already holding 167 hearings on civil matters online.

The system will be rolled out on 11 February in the NSW District Court, which governs courts across the state, and is expected to be in operation in every criminal and civil court in the state by next year.

The system will not be used for committal proceedings and trials, which will still be conducted in person, but for more preliminary procedural hearings, including such matters as bail applications.

Spare jawbone grown in gut

Scientists say they have replaced a 65-year-old patient's upper jaw with a bone transplant cultivated from stem cells isolated from his own fatty tissue and grown inside his abdomen.

The Finnish researchers say this opens up new ways to treat severe tissue damage and makes the prospect of custom-made living spares parts a step closer.

"There have been a couple of similar sounding procedures before, but these didn't use the patient's own stem cells that were first cultured and expanded in laboratory and differentiated into bone tissue," says Professor Riitta Suuronen of the Regea Institute of Regenerative Medicine, part of the University of Tampere.

She says the patient is recovering more quickly than he would have if he had received a bone graft from his leg.

"From the outside nobody would be able to tell he has been through such a procedure," she says.

The team used no materials from animals, preventing the risk of transmitting viruses than can be hidden in an animal's DNA, and followed European Union guidelines, she says.

Stem cells are the body's master cells and they can be found throughout the blood and tissues.

Researchers have recently found that fat contains stem cells that can be directed to form a variety of different tissues.

Using a patient's own stem cells provides a tailor-made transplant that the body should not reject.

Suuronen and her colleagues at the Helsinki University Central Hospital isolated stem cells from the patient's fat and grew them for two weeks in a specially formulated nutritious soup that included the patient's own blood serum.

In this case they identified and pulled out cells called mesenchymal stem cells, immature cells than can give rise to bone, muscle or blood vessels.

When they had enough cells to work with, they attached them to a scaffold made out of a calcium phosphate biomaterial and then put it inside the patient's abdomen to grow for nine months.

The cells turned into a variety of tissues and even produced blood vessels, the researchers say.

The block was later transplanted into the patient's head and connected to the skull bone using screws and microsurgery to connect arteries and veins to the vessels of the neck.

The patient's upper jaw had previously been removed due to a benign tumour and he was unable to eat or speak without the use of a removable prosthesis.

Suuronen says her team has submitted a report on the procedure to a medical journal.

Biggest Space Rocket Ever Made Put on Display!

Saturn V, commonly known as the Moon Rocket, was the first rocket to carry a manned mission into space for a lunar landing. On 16th July 1969, it launched the Apollo 11 mission into the Earth's orbit and put the first man on the Moon.
Now, after more than 35 years of laying outside the neighboring U.S. Space & Rocket Center, NASA is putting the colossus on display for the large public.

It stands 110 meters tall, 10 meters in diameter, weighs 3 million kilograms and, when functional, its 5 Rocketdyne F-1 engines were able to output about 34 MN of thrust, but it was not the most powerful rocket ever made. Only the Russian rocket Energia was able to provide with more thrust, regardless of the fact that it only flew in two test missions. Saturn V was designed under the direction of German rocket builder Wernher von Braun, at the Marshall Space Flight Center.

The 23.4 million U.S. dollar project was started two and a half years ago so that the renovated rocket would be ready in time for the 50th anniversary of the launch of the first U.S. artificial satellite. To house the rocket, a 6335 square meter building had to be raised by the museum hired contractor, using money received from donations, federal grants, local funding and bond money. The shear size of the rocket disabled the possibility to move it into its new home in one piece, and now lies split up in sections for display.

Although it stood in the Alabama sun and was house for families of raccoons, birds, green algae and possums for the last three decades, Larry Capps, the CEO of the Museum, says the rocket didn't requires as much work as originally estimated. New paint and replacement of fragile metal made the Saturn V rocket look like in its days of glory. On the other hand, the capsule wasn't so fortunate, and due to the bad shape, it had to be scrapped and a substitute mockup had to be found. Capsule and escape tower have been provided by the Marshall Space Flight Center from its personal 'bone yard'.

"The construction of its new home, moving and restoration of the rocket cost the museum about 9.5 million dollars, the rest of the money being spent on the new visitor center", said Larry Capps. As putting the rocket in a upright position would have restricted much of the visitors from viewing the whole structure, thus the museum decide to lay it on its side, with the first of the two stages and the upper sections suspended on thin cables.

Also, the museum has in plan to move even more of Apollo mission artifacts to the newly erected building. Just outside, a replica of a Saturn V stands in a upright position. Similar rockets are being displayed at the Kennedy Space Centers in Florida and Huston, and at the Johnson Space Center, which completed its restoration only one year ago, at a cost of 5 million dollars.

Latino Women Are Genetically Predisposed to Preterm Pregnancy

We know that a 5-year-old Peruvian girl is the world's youngest mother and Latino women may not be very big. But a new study carried out at the Yale School of Medicine and presented at the Society for Maternal
Fetal Medicine Annual Meeting has discovered that the gene ENPP1 is connected to preterm birth and low birth weight in the case of the Hispanic women.

12 % of the American children are born prematurely (before 37 weeks of pregnancy). This is connected to health issues, especially in the case of children born before 28 weeks of pregnancy. It is unclear what causes the preterm births in most cases, but "both the genetic make-up of the mother and the genetic make-up of the baby play a role," said co-author Dr. Errol Norwitz, associate professor in the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology & Reproductive Sciences at Yale.

African-American women had already been found to have a genetic predisposition to preterm births, even when socioeconomic status, demographics, medical history and multiple pregnancies were taken into account.

"Multiple genes or a single particular genetic variant—single nucleotide polymorphism—may be involved," said Norwitz.

The research team compared DNA from Hispanic mothers who had had preterm birth and women who had had only full-term pregnancies. The DNA for 128 different gene alleles (variations) was screened in 77 candidate genes. Those alleles were known to cause various conditions, but now they have been investigated for the first time in the context of preterm birth.

4 alleles were connected to premature birth, and one allele of the ENPP1 gene proved to be the strongest on causing preterm birth. ENPP1 was associated with insulin resistance and glucose intolerance (both linked to high predisposition to type-2 diabetes), and even to hardening of the arteries and hypertension.

"In the context of prematurity, it is possible that the variant form of ENPP1 is associated with deranged energy metabolism," wrote the researchers.

"In our original study, 85 % of the population was Hispanic. It appears that there are genetic variations unique to each ethnic population. We are now in the process of validating our findings in African-American, Caucasian and Native-American populations," said Norwitz.

No. 1 'Hannah Montana' at the top of her game

Long before Sunday's kickoff, the 15-year-old pop-culture sensation Miley Cyrus was on her way to breaking the first records of Super Bowl weekend.

Walt Disney Pictures' 3-D movie "Hannah Montana & Miley Cyrus: Best of Both Worlds Concert Tour" scored the highest gross ever for the big-game weekend with an estimated $29 million in three days.

The studio said its weeklong run would be extended to a second week, through Valentine's Day, as many had expected. "Exhibitors are over the moon," said Mark Zoradi, president of Disney's motion picture group. "We've got a great-playing movie that can get repeat business."

Despite showing at only 683 theaters because of technological limitations, the G-rated "Hannah Montana" opened better than expected and was by far the weekend's No. 1 movie, thanks partly to the higher ticket prices that 3-D movies can fetch. Some theaters charged $15 or more for the special event, leading to a whopping average of $42,500 per location.

A distant No. 2 for the weekend was Lions Gate Films' "The Eye," a PG-13 thriller starring Jessica Alba, which opened to an estimated $13 million. Twentieth Century Fox's romantic comedy "27 Dresses," starring Katherine Heigl, continued to hold up well, placing third with $8.4 million.

Super Bowl weekend is typically sluggish for the movie business. But with "Hannah Montana," business in the U.S. and Canada rocketed 37% from the same weekend in 2007, according to data tracker Media by Numbers.

Box-office analysts have been cautious about the outlook for 2008, noting that fewer major sequels are on the schedule, but the early results have been robust. Overall revenue is up 15% and attendance has climbed 11%.

Zoradi was optimistic about the second-week prospects for "Hannah Montana," noting that moviegoers surveyed by CinemaScore rated it a solid "A." Its ultimate total will depend on how many repeat customers and moviegoers outside the core audience of teenage and younger girls end up attending, he said.

Sales soared more than 50% from Friday to Saturday, when schoolchildren and the parents who shuttle them around became more available.

"Hannah Montana" was produced for about $7 million and shot with seven of the specially designed digital 3-D cameras that director James Cameron is using for his upcoming science-fiction thriller "Avatar," one of several big-budget, live-action movies being made in the format.

"Hannah Montana" will be released later in overseas markets that have 3-D theaters available, Disney said.

Studios and theater owners are eyeing the performance of "Hannah Montana" as they invest heavily in 3-D feature production and scramble to convert auditoriums to show the movies more widely.

"The Eye," meanwhile, matched or fell slightly below most industry expectations on a weekend often dominated by thrillers. The movie, produced for about $22 million by Paula Wagner's C/W Productions, drew crowds estimated at 56% female, which is typical for the suspense genre.

And 75% of the audience was age 17 to 29, the demographic "sweet spot" being targeted, said Steve Rothenberg, Lions Gate's president of domestic distribution. "The Eye," a remake of a Chinese horror film, got a moderate "B-minus" grade from CinemaScore survey respondents.

But Rothenberg said he was encouraged by the film's 17% bump in business from Friday to Saturday. Usually, films in the genre see business rise by 5% to 10%, he said.

The weekend's other major release was the Eva Longoria Parker-Paul Rudd romantic comedy "Over Her Dead Body," produced by Gold Circle Films and distributed domestically by New Line Cinema, which grossed $4.6 million to open at the lower end of expectations and apparently just miss the top 10.

The previous record for a Super Bowl weekend opening was held by "When a Stranger Calls," which grossed $21.6 million in 2006. And the Super Bowl record for a movie at any stage of release had been held by the long-running epic "Titanic," which grossed $25.2 million in 1998 during its seventh weekend.

"Hannah Montana" also was shown at the smallest number of locations for any No. 1 movie, according to Disney.

That distinction previously belonged to the raunchy comedy "Borat," which grossed $26.5 million when it opened in November 2006, averaging $31,600 at 837 theaters.

'Welcome to the Captain'

I very much wanted to like "Welcome to the Captain" -- the notion of a show exploring the odd and lovely personalities that collide among L.A. renters is so darn appealing. I would imagine that most people who ever lived in a great old apartment building in Los Angeles (or New York or Chicago) have, after five or six beers, looked around at the fascinating characters moving in and out of the charming but slightly dilapidated lobby/courtyard and thought, "This would really make a great TV show."

And so it has, with names as various as "Melrose Place," "Hot L Baltimore" and "Friends."

"Welcome to the Captain," however, is a particularly local breed, taking place in one of those fabulous residential landmarks that rise or sprawl, depending on the architecture, in various L.A. neighborhoods. (The El Royale on Rossmore Avenue seems to have been the model for the exterior and location.) Not surprising, the inhabitants of El Capitan are of the eccentrainment variety -- offbeat survivors of the Biz. And that goes, in some cases, for casting as well as characters, which is very promising.

Yet setting a comedy in Los Angeles is both tempting and perilous. There is so much to skewer here, but it's far too easy to swing at the easy shots. And swing writer John Hamburg (who gave us "Meet the Parents") does, with occasionally amusing but more often predictable and mildly dopey results.

Jeffrey Tambor, who helped define eccentric in "Arrested Development" and "The Larry Sanders Show," is Uncle Saul, former writer for "a little show called 'Three's Company" or "T. Co." Acting as den mother/gossip switchboard, with doorman Jesus (pronounced biblically and played by Al Madrigal) as his faithful, funny-faced sidekick, Uncle Saul is there to anchor the laughs. The requisite ditsy aspiring actress goes by the name of Astrid (Valerie Azlynn) while the other ingénue -- you know, the smart one -- is Hope (Joanna Garcia), an acupuncture student. (Hey, it could have been worse; she could work at a smoothie bar.) And yes, that is Raquel Welch, playing aging actress/class cougar Charlene with a Mrs. Robinson robe-drop and hair imported from "Falcon Crest."

If that were not a large enough compendium of Hollywood stereotypes -- er, I mean local characters -- we also have Marty (Chris Klein), accountant to the (B-list) stars, and guess what? He's girl crazy.

Still, it's Marty who gets the narrative ball rolling by convincing his best friend, Josh (Fran Kranz), to take the apartment recently left vacant by the death of an aging movie star. Josh is, if you can believe it, a hot young screenwriter-filmmaker. Only maybe not as hot as he was when he won an Oscar for short film right out of the box. In fact, Josh isn't sure he should have ever moved to L.A. from New York because he can't seem to write here. Still, that Hope is pretty darn cute, so why not give the legendary Captain a chance to work its magic?

Why not, indeed. Well, there are many reasons. Tambor, God bless him, gives it his all, capturing the absurdity and pathos of a grown man still living in what is essentially a dorm. Welch looks fabulous, but the less said about the cliché she embodies the better. Perhaps in future episodes she will be allowed an actual character to play. Josh is so earnest and callow it almost hurts to look at him; it seems impossible he has ever survived a pitch meeting much less the red carpet. He's amiable enough, as is Hope, so a hookup seems inevitable, and perhaps interesting complexities will arise, but I don't see how. Josh may be a writer, but as far as demons go, I think we're in dust-bunny territory.

Meanwhile, the joke of Jesus' name was wearing thin 10 minutes into the first episode, and Marty, well, I guess he's supposed to be the Ari character here. But there is, for better or worse, only one Jeremy Piven, and this ain't him.

All of which is an attempt to explain why, though one may want to like "Welcome to the Captain," it isn't easy to actually do this. It's not a terrible show by any means. It earns a few laughs, has some clever moments and in the midst of this darn strike, is new anyway. But after watching two episodes, I was left with the thought with which I began: An iconic apartment building full of wacky characters would make a great TV show. Would, though. Not does.

Live: The Jonas Brothers

In their hit cover of the English pop-punk band Busted's "Year 3000," the Jonas Brothers sing about a visit to the future, where "this song had gone multiplatinum."

If they keep proceeding at their current pace, they won't have to wait quite that long: Thanks in part to their opening stint on last year's blockbuster Hannah Montana tour, the band's self-titled sophomore disc (which includes "Year 3000") is on track to hit the million-sold mark within weeks.

A squeaky-clean trio of New Jersey natives who overcame an initial bout of record-label mishandling (with help from the kingmakers at Radio Disney), the Jonases have become three of the brightest lights in the tween-pop firmament, and Saturday night at the Gibson Amphitheatre, during the second of three headlining shows the band played over the weekend, the brothers basked in their newfound glory.

Literally: Several times throughout their 90-minute set, 15-year-old Nick, 18-year-old Joe and 20-year-old Kevin simply stood onstage and gazed out at the audience of shrieking girls, soaking in the adoration like victorious candidates on election night.

The Jonas platform is a canny one: They marry the high-energy crunch of today's emo acts to the blue-eyed R&B that has motored countless groups of young white men to boy-band success. That makes the songs on "The Jonas Brothers" feel fresh and familiar at the same time.

In a similar way, the band's show Saturday intermingled the cutting edge and the tried-and-true.

The stage's tri-level set offered the Jonases multiple opportunities for light acrobatics; midway through a new tune from the band's third album, due later this year, Joe dropped through a hidden trapdoor, eliciting a round of oohs and aahs like a veteran Las Vegas showman.

Yet the simple tricks proved just as satisfying to the Jonases' fans, as demonstrated by the roar that approved Nick's tearing the sleeves off his shirt. Getting to see these guys in the flesh (the more the better) was the point, not their musical mastery.

Still, the Jonases are tremendously more polished performers than predecessors such as New Kids on the Block; even if they relied on their four-piece backing band for most of the music's muscle, the brothers' singing and playing reflected the degree of sophistication their media-savvy fan base now expects.

Only near the end of the show, when Nick led the group through a soggy piano ballad that made you wonder how you'd ended up at a Counting Crows gig, did the energy falter. Fortunately for the band, the guy running the video monitors on each side of the stage found the perfect device to keep the crowd engaged: a close-up of Nick's face.

Britney Spears Placed Under 14-Day Hold At Hospital: Report

Britney Spears's hospitalization has been extended to an additional 14-day hold, People.com reported Sunday (February 3). TMZ initially reported the news in more speculative terms on Saturday.

People.com reported that only the singer's psychiatrist would have had the authority to request the involuntary stay, noting that she could be released earlier if she legally demands to be released or her doctor deems her well enough for outpatient treatment.

Early Thursday morning, Spears was rushed to the hospital by ambulance for the second time in a month. According to reports in the Los Angeles Times, Spears, 26, was physically removed from her home by police and put into an ambulance at around 1 a.m. PT, then escorted to the UCLA Medical Center by a phalanx of more than a dozen motorcycle officers, two police cruisers and two police helicopters.

Spears was taken to the hospital to "get help," a Los Angeles police officer who spoke on condition of anonymity told The Associated Press.

On January 3, Spears was placed on a 72-hour mental-health evaluation hold when police were called to her house after she would not give up custody of her two children to a representative for ex-husband Kevin Federline, who had come to pick them up; she was released two days later. The troubled singer lost visitation rights of sons Sean Preston, 2 and Jayden James, 1, on January 4 after her hospitalization following her refusal to hand the children back to Federline.

On Friday, a Los Angeles judge decided that the hospitalized singer's father, who along with her mother called an emergency hearing in Los Angeles Superior Court, should have control over their daughter's affairs, at least temporarily.

Jamie and Lynne Spears asked the court to establish a conservatorship, where they would be co-conservators, along with a third independent party, so they can make decisions in regards to health care and finances for their adult daughter. Commissioner Reva Goetz decided that Jamie Spears would be the conservator of Britney's person, as well as her estate, along with attorney Andrew Wallat, who was appointed by the judge. The conservatorship lasts at least through Monday, at which point the issue will be addressed in depth at another hearing that afternoon. Spears' custody dispute with ex-husband Kevin Federline is due for a status hearing that morning.

Heath Ledger Remembered At Second Ceremony In Los Angeles

Friends and colleagues — including Tom Cruise, Sienna Miller, Ellen DeGeneres and director Todd Haynes — gathered at a private ceremony in Los Angeles to remember Heath Ledger on Saturday on Saturday (February 2), according to People.com. The actor died in New York on January 22.

The ceremony, which took place at the Sony lot, included industry figures and people connected to CAA (the agency that represented Ledger), including Cruise, the site reported.

Saturday's service reportedly began around noon on the lot, which is closed to the public. Attendees included Miller, who co-starred with Ledger in "Casanova," and speakers included Haynes, who directed him in last year's Bob Dylan film "I'm Not There."

Last Saturday, relatives and close friends — including Naomi Watts — paid tribute to the 28-year-old actor at a smaller service at a Los Angeles cemetery, and a memorial was also held in New York. People.com reported that a small group of black-dressed mourners, including Watts, was seen in the lobby of the Beverly Hills Hotel on Saturday evening; Australia's Channel 7 reported that a 30-minute service was also held at Westwood Village Memorial Park, during which Watts was "visibly upset."

Earlier that day, a message from the actor's father, Kim Ledger, was read by Australian Consul-General John Olsen to approximately 1,000 guests at an event in New York, according to Melbourne, Australia-based newspaper The Age.

"Heath did not become an actor for the fame or fortune. He loved his craft and he loved helping his friends. He loved chess and skateboarding too," said the letter, which was read at an event celebrating the end of the two-week G'Day USA/ Australia Week festival. "My image of Heath in New York is him with his skateboard, a canvas bag and his beanie. That was Heath to me.

"Heath is, and always will be, an Australian."

For more on Heath Ledger's tragic passing, read reactions from his peers and other admirers, as well as casting directors he worked with. Also, watch Ledger talk about his evolution as an actor in a 2005 interview with MTV News.

Michelle Williams Breaks Silence On Heath Ledger's Death: 'My Heart Is Broken'

Nine days after Heath Ledger was found dead at his New York apartment, Oscar-nominated actress Michelle Williams has issued her first public statement regarding the tragic death of her ex-fiance, pleading with fans and journalists to honor her need for privacy.

"Please respect our need to grieve privately," Williams said in a statement released Friday by her spokesperson, who also represented Ledger. "My heart is broken."

Williams and Ledger met and became romantically involved on the set of the 2005 film "Brokeback Mountain," where they played the Del Mars, a husband and wife separated by his relationship with Jack Twist, played by Jake Gyllenhaal. Soon after, Williams gave birth to the couple's only child, Matilda Rose, on October 28, 2005.

It is through the spirit of his daughter that Ledger lives on, Williams said.

"I am the mother of the most tender-hearted, high-spirited, beautiful little girl who is the spitting image of her father," Williams continued in the statement. "All that I can cling to is his presence inside her that reveals itself every day."

According to Williams, that spirit manifests itself in Matilda's burgeoning curiosity, her love for all creatures and her fearlessness in tackling new challenges.

"His family and I watch Matilda as she whispers to trees, hugs animals and takes steps two at a time, and we know that he is with us still," Williams said. ""She will be brought up with the best memories of him."

The filming of Williams' latest movie, "Blue Valentine," has been postponed to allow the actress time to mourn. It was set to begin filming February 25.

New Jay-Z Song Leaks -- Is Blueprint 3 In The Works?

Is Jay-Z pulling a Jay-Z and dropping another album just a few months after delivering his last LP? (Remember, he used to average a new album every eight or nine months.)

On Wednesday night, the Internet went crazy when a Timbaland-produced Jay song called "Ain't I" leaked.

The record had several drops from DJ Clue promoting it as a song from Blueprint 3 and saying that we can also find it on his mixtape I Am Legend Part 1. Needless to say, fans and music industry insiders alike started buzzing because talk of this album came out of nowhere. The song's leak is especially strange since it seems like Jay's current album, American Gangster, hasn't run its course yet. Only two songs have been released from that opus, and Def Jam recently sent out promo copies of the record "I Know," signaling that it's the next single.

Still, with lyrics on "Ain't I" that relate to Jay-Z's current state of affairs ("I took a pay cut to become a exec/ So the next mother----er can earn his paycheck/ And even though these n---as talk greasy 'bout me/ Ask these n---as how they gonna eat without me!"), people think that there's some validity to rumors about the impending release of Blueprint 3.

"I'm a hustler's hustler/ a gangster's gangster/ I'm a rapper's rapper/ Your favorite, ain't I?" Jay-Z spits. And the beat reminds you of the vibe from his back-in-day Timbaland collaboration "Lobster and Scrimp."

Well, MTV News contacted Jay-Z's rep Wednesday night. Jay's spokesperson said that, while the song may be new to the general public, it is an old recording that was previously unreleased. Jigga's rep also said he has made no announcement about a new LP, Blueprint 3 or otherwise.

Kobe scores 30, Gasol sits in Lakers win

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Driving and dunking and dropping in a 3-pointer, Kobe Bryant delivered a game's worth of highlights in the first quarter Sunday, outscoring the Washington Wizards all by himself.

Then he let his Los Angeles Lakers teammates join in all the fun.

Bryant put up 19 points in the opening period on his way to finishing with 30, and the Lakers ran their offense so well there was no need for the newly acquired Pau Gasol to don a uniform in a 103-91 victory over the Wizards.

"Just taking what they were going to give me," said Bryant, an efficient 10-for-15 on field goals.

Gasol, the 7-foot Spaniard who came over from the Memphis Grizzlies in a trade Friday, sat on the sideline in a pinstriped suit jacket, listening to tips on the Lakers' triangle offense from assistant coach Brian Shaw.

The 2002 NBA Rookie of the Year's new teammates put on quite a clinic, too, repeatedly making the extra pass to find wide-open looks. The Lakers compiled 27 assists on 41 field goals, with Vladimir Radmanovic scoring 15 points, Lamar Odom 14, and Ronny Turiaf 13.

Another measure of how well the visitors played: Nine Lakers scored in the second quarter.

"We've grown a lot together. And we understand how to play with one another," Bryant said. "That's the big thing -- the chemistry. Knowing where guys are."

Asked whether he'd like to see the Lakers make another move before the trade deadline, he said: "I'm letting (general manager) Mitch (Kupchak) handle that stuff. I gave up playing GM in the summer."

His every move greeted by a mix of boos and cheers -- even some "M-V-P!" chants -- from the sellout crowd of 20,173, Bryant gave the Wizards fits whenever he was on the floor.

Leave it to Wizards rookie Nick Young, who grew up in California as a Lakers and Bryant fan, to sum things up: "He's just better in person."

Young, a reserve, tried guarding Bryant some, and wound up with three fouls before halftime. That, at least, was better than the player chiefly assigned to guard Bryant, DeShawn Stevenson. He was sitting down, a black T-shirt over his jersey, with three fouls, only 61/2 minutes into the game.

"He's going to get calls," Stevenson said. "Two of them, I don't think that was a foul, but that's the way it is when you're guarding a guy like that."

Caron Butler -- back after missing three games with a hip injury -- also tried to defend Bryant, with similar results. On one sequence, Butler was spun around on Bryant's twisting baseline drive for a layup. On another, Bryant made a 3-pointer over the outstretched hand of his former teammate.

Add it up, and Bryant helped Los Angeles build a 30-15 lead after one quarter -- or, put another way: Kobe 19, Wizards 15.

Bryant had 25 points by halftime, when the Lakers were up 63-41 -- the most points allowed by Washington in a first half this season. Los Angeles made 66 percent of its shots in the half, while limiting Washington to only 36 percent.

"He took us out of the game," Stevenson said. "We were passive. We weren't trying to attack. That's not like us."

Wizards coach Eddie Jordan noticed that, too.

And he was critical of his team, which has lost three games in a row.

"We didn't play as a group as well as we need to play to beat a team like the Lakers. Or anybody. We don't win this game against anybody tonight," Jordan said. "We had bailouts, we had short cuts and not enough passion from everybody and not enough concentration from everybody."

Notes: Butler scored 15 points, while Washington's other All-Star selection, Antawn Jamison, led the team with 21 points and 11 rebounds. ... Gasol shot before the game but did not suit up. "We want him to practice first," Lakers coach Phil Jackson said. ... Butler's free-throw streak ended after an NBA season-best 73 consecutive makes; he missed one with 17.5 seconds left in the third quarter.

Rodriguez says WVU forced him to quit

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) -- Rich Rodriguez says opening the books of West Virginia's private fundraising arm is the only way to determine whether his abrupt resignation as football coach harmed the school financially.

That was a key demand in the formal response that Rodriguez filed Friday to WVU's lawsuit over the $4 million buyout clause in his contract. He also said it was the administration's actions -- not a better offer -- that forced him to resign in December and take the coaching job at Michigan.

WVU attorney Jeff Wakefield said Rodriguez's response "contains nothing new or unexpected."

"It will have no effect on the merits of the university's claims," he said. "We believe there is no basis in fact or law for their claims and defenses. We look forward to presenting our case before the court as soon as possible."

Largely, Rodriguez's answer to the lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Clarksburg restated many of the arguments his camp has made since Dec. 18, when his resignation sparked a feud with the school. His lawyers have ratcheted up the stakes by drawing the WVU Foundation into the matter.

The foundation, which had been run in part by WVU president Mike Garrison's chief of staff, Craig Walker, is not legally obligated to open its books to public scrutiny under ordinary circumstances. The foundation is a key part of keeping the WVU football program self-sufficient.

According to its annual report, the foundation ended fiscal 2007 with total assets of more than $1 billion and endowment investments of $474 million, a 24-percent increase over the previous year.

"The only way to tell whether or not West Virginia University has been damaged is to see if its donations to the foundation have decreased and/or if other expenses have increased," his lawyers said, noting WVU hired assistant coach Bill Stewart to replace Rodriguez at a significantly smaller salary.

Rodriguez asked the court to make the foundation a third party to the lawsuit, citing recent news releases that claimed gifts to the foundation "were at an all-time high." He wants the right to examine its books to find out if donations have dropped off since his departure.

Rodriguez also aimed to disprove Garrison's alleged assertion that "certain large donors" demanded the coach's contract include the $4 million buyout clause.

Rodriguez has repeatedly claimed that WVU broke the contract by failing to honor a variety of verbal promises, including one to reduce or eliminate his buyout.

WVU, which sued Dec. 27, denies such a promise was made.

The counterclaim also argued that WVU lacked the authority to file the lawsuit, which it said should have first been approved by a formal meeting of the Board of Governors.

But Chairman Steve Goodwin said the board, which is named as a plaintiff, "was intimately involved in the decision."

A meeting was not required because of long-standing practice established under former President David C. Hardesty Jr., he said. The president is permitted to act on the board's behalf in initiating or defending lawsuits.

"An actual vote on this was not necessary," Goodwin said.

Rodriguez admitted he didn't spell out his reasons for leaving in a one-sentence resignation letter in December, but pointed out that he did so in a second letter on Jan. 10 that essentially formed the foundation of his legal defense.

Earlier this week, Rodriguez filed a $1.5 million letter of credit with the court, arguing that's the most he could potentially owe under the contract in effect when he quit.

His legal team called that filing a gesture of good faith, not an offer to settle.

The gradual disintegration of the relationship between Rodriguez and the WVU Athletic Department was documented in a series of e-mails written over a five-month period. They showed that Rodriguez's relationship with the school was on a downhill slide months before he resigned, in part because of his failed attempts to gain total control over the football program.

Auburn-West Virginia reschedule game

AUBURN, Ala. (AP) -- Auburn's football game at West Virginia has been pushed back to Thursday, Oct. 23, and will be televised nationally on ESPN.

The game was initially set for Sept. 6.

"This move will give us a great opportunity to receive the national spotlight on ESPN on a Thursday night," coach Tommy Tuberville said. "We want to make our schedule as competitive as anybody, and playing an outstanding nonconference opponent like West Virginia will do just that."

Auburn moved a home game with Southern Miss from Oct. 18 to Sept. 6 to accommodate the change.

The Tigers will have an open date on Oct. 18. Five of their first seven games are at home.

Auburn is 6-1 all-time in games played on Thursday.

Tiger Wins Dubai in Dramatic Fashion

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (Feb. 3) - Tiger Woods birdied his last two holes Sunday to rally from a four-shot deficit and win the Dubai Desert Classic, starting his season with two victories that looked nothing alike.

One week after winning the Buick Invitational by eight shots, Woods had to birdie five of his last seven holes for a 7-under 65, then wait to see if Ernie Els could catch him.

Needing a birdie on the par-5 18th to force a playoff, Els hit his tee shot into the water and made bogey.

"To go 2-for-2, it's a pretty good start, isn't it?" Woods said.

This is the third time he has started a season with two straight victories, and it was another sign that the world's No. 1 player could be headed for a big year. Woods now has won his last four official tournaments, and six of his last seven dating to the Bridgestone Invitational in early August.

He also won his unofficial Target World Challenge by seven shots in December.

Woods birdied his last two holes for a 14-under 274 and a one-shot victory over Martin Kaymer. Woods had already finished when the German, who won the Abu Dhabi Golf Championship two weeks ago, closed with a birdie-birdie-eagle for a 66.

It was a devastating blow to Els.

The 38-year-old South African, who has finished runner-up to Woods more times (seven) than any other player, is in the middle of his three-year plan to become No. 1 in the world. He said recently he needed to start winning, and this was the perfect occasion.

Instead, the Big Easy closed with a 71 and tied for third at 276 with Louis Oosthuizen. It was the second time in three years that Els hit into the water on the 18th at Dubai and lost to Woods. In 2006, it happened during a sudden-death playoff.

"The second shot on the 18, it was right where I had it, but I could see the gust got it in the air and it didn't have much of a chance in the end there," Els said about his wayward shot.

Woods lost momentum with bogeys on the sixth and ninth holes, but he poured it on along the back nine with seven birdies to capture the Dubai Desert Classic for the second time.

"All of I sudden I was in the mix, (and then) out of the mix," Woods said. "I knew I had birdie three of the last four to win."

Woods said his chip-in birdie on the 12th was the turning point.

The shot "was a lot harder than people might think," Woods said. "I just happened to catch one of those lies, and I was just hoping it would come out soft. I hit it hard and hoping I would kill it and it came out as soft as can be."

Five holes later at the 359-yard, par-4 17th, Woods drove the ball just to the left of the green.

"I just wanted to make sure I hit it a little bit left and even if I was in the left rough, just wanted to have an angle at the flag," he said.

One hole later, Woods sent his second shot past the green on the edge of a bunker. He chipped the ball short and then made the birdie putt.

"I'm thinking, I could easily chip the ball in the water," Woods said. "You have to make your mistake short and if I leave it too short, (I'll) just chip up and try to make a par and probably not going to win the tournament, but see what happens."

At the Buick Invitational, Woods took the lead on the second day and never looked back. In Dubai, Woods went into Sunday's final in fifth - four shots behind Els. He had been in the lead after the first two rounds, but shot a 1-over 72 Saturday - driving wayward balls in sand near the gallery several times.

Part of the problem was his back-up driver. Woods said he cracked the face on the driver he used for more than a year in practice Wednesday. He said the new driver was supposed to be the same but put too much spin on the ball.

"I'm just happy to get a win out of this," said Woods, who won his 72nd career tournament.

But looking ahead, Woods said he hopes his next win is more like the Buick and less like Dubai.

"I like (winning) by seven or eight a lot," Woods said. "It's a lot less stressful."