Monday, October 31, 2011

PFT: Fox sticking with Tebow ... for now

File photo of Minnesota Vikings head coach Brad Childress during the second half of the Vikings' National League preseason football game against the Seahawks in MinneapolisReuters

With plenty of football developments from Sunday to be updated and summarized and dissected, there?s a news item from Sunday morning that merits a brief mention, and a slightly less brief comment.

Dan Pompei suggests that, in the coming wave of NFL head-coaching vacancies, former Vikings coach Brad Childress could get a second chance.? ?It will be an upset if Childress isn?t a candidate for a head coaching job or two in the offseason,? Pompei writes, explaining that front offices are taking a ?harder look? at Childress? efforts given the Vikings? performances following his departure.

Front offices should look a lot harder.

The Vikings are struggling now in large part because of Childress.? His inability to develop Tarvaris Jackson (or, alternatively, the failed decision to trade up in round two to draft Jackson in 2006) eventually forced the Vikings to bend a knee twice for Brett Favre.? Without Favre, Childress was a .500 coach who couldn?t win a playoff game.? With Favre, Childress was just good enough to send 12 men onto the field after a time out to blow a golden opportunity to steal a Super Bowl berth from the Saints.

Though this isn?t intended to be an exhaustive and comprehensive list of Chilly?s failures, he simply doesn?t have the total skill set or temperament to be an effective NFL head coach.? He?s too thin-skinned, as demonstrated by a pissy email I received earlier this year after mentioning that Percy Harvin?s migraines cleared up completely after Childress left town.? Indeed, his people skills leave much to be desired.? At press conferences, he comes off at times as mean-spirited (like when he suggested that Jeff George should go to a fantasy camp if he wants to play quarterback) and out of touch (like when Childress used the laughably goofy phrase ?programmatic non-fit? to explain the decision to fire Randy Moss).

Regarding Moss, Childress committed the cardinal coaching sin by using his final authority over the roster without giving the guy who signs the checks the courtesy of a head?s up and/or a chance to try to talk Childress out of it.? He sparred verbally, and unnecessarily, with guys like Daunte Culpepper over his rehab and Troy Williamson over time off for his grandmother?s death.

Childress proved the Peter Principle at the NFL level, rising through the ranks to a level that ultimately was above his head.? Childress is less deserving of another shot than Super Bowl-winner Brian Billick, two-time NFC finalist Dennis Green, or even NFC champion Jim Fassel.? At most, Childress should get another opportunity to be an offensive coordinator, and if he does well then maybe he should be considered eventually for a head-coaching job.? But to suggest that the Vikings? current predicament should make Childress look good by comparison is to ignore Chilly?s role in running the ship aground.

That said, plenty of Vikings fans would support his candidacy for another job.? Especially if the Bears fire Lovie Smith.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/10/31/fox-will-stick-with-tebow-for-now/related/

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Herman Cain Gets The Bad Lip Reading Treatment (VIDEO)

First Rick Perry. Then Michele Bachmann. Then Mitt Romney. It's only natural that Herman Cain be the next GOP frontrunner to get the Bad Lip Reading treatment.

See, Herman Cain's a different kind of Republican candidate. One who wants to protect us from spiders and big potato moths. He's got swag, he's hungry for a McDonald's special and he'll even leave you dime to go eat at White Castle.

If only his political ads were as funny as this. Oh wait, they are!

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/10/29/herman-cain-bad-lip-reading-video_n_1065459.html

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Records shows Boy Scout officials failed to report leader who molested children in California

LOS ANGELES - Boy Scout officials in the U.S. and Canada not only failed to stop an admitted child molester in their ranks, but sometimes helped cover his tracks, according to confidential records, court files and interviews with victims and their families.

A Los Angeles Times and Canadian Broadcasting Corp. investigation ( http://lat.ms/tYtWBX) published Saturday finds scout leader Rick Turley molested at least 15 children over nearly two decades, most of whom he met through American and Canadian Scouting beginning in the 1970s.

Boy Scouts of America officials didn't call police in 1979 after Turley acknowledged molesting three Orange County boys, records show.

"You do not want to broadcast to the entire population that these things happen," A. Buford Hill Jr., a former Orange County Scouting executive, said of officials' decision not to contact authorities. "You take care of it quietly and make sure it never happens again."

It happened again. Turley returned to his native Canada, where he signed on with Scouts Canada, and continued his abuses for at least a decade.

Now 58 and working at an Alberta truck-stop motel, Turley says he is surprised by how often he got away with it.

"It was easy," he said in an interview with the CBC, adding that he has learned to control his impulses.

Turley was sentenced to five years in prison after being convicted in 1996 of five counts of molesting children. Paroled in 2000, he was later caught trying to draw two pre-teen boys into a relationship and sent back to prison. He was released two years later.

Turley is one of more than 5,000 suspected child molesters named in confidential documents kept by the Boy Scouts of America. The records ? called the "perversion files" by the Scouts ? include admissions of guilt as well as unproven allegations.

Those files have come to light in recent years in lawsuits by former Scouts, accusing the group of failing to detect abuses, exclude known pedophiles, or turn in offenders to authorities.

The Oregon Supreme Court is now weighing a request by newspapers, a wire service and broadcasters to open about 1,200 more files in the wake of a nearly $20-million judgment in a Portland sex abuse case last year.

The Scouts' handling of sex-abuse allegations is similar to that of the Catholic Church in the face of accusations against its priests, some attorneys told the Times and the CBC.

"It's the same institutional reaction: scandal prevention," said Seattle attorney Timothy Kosnoff, who has filed seven suits in the last year by former Scouts.

Current Boy Scouts of America officials declined to be interviewed and would not say how many files exist or what is in them. Their lawyers have said the records are confidential, to protect victims and because some of the files are based on unsubstantiated tips.

"The BSA has continued to enhance its youth protection efforts as society has increased its understanding of the dangers children face," the Scouts said in a statement.

___

Information from: Los Angeles Times, http://www.latimes.com

Source: http://www.startribune.com/nation/132852703.html

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Legal hurdles ahead for Calif. cap-and-trade? | JunkScience.com

Will that pesky U.S. Constitution get in the way?

According to the Clean Energy Report,

A large number of potential lawsuits challenging California?s newly approved greenhouse gas (GHG) cap-and-trade regulations are likely to involve out-of-state energy suppliers claiming that the rules violate either the Interstate Commerce clause of the U.S. Constitution, federal sovereignty statutes or international trade agreements, according to lawyers and others who have gauged the possible threats the program faces as it moves into the implementation phase.

Click here for Peabody Energy?s December 2010 comments on the legal shortcomings of California?s quixotic quest to quash its greenhouse gas emissions.

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Source: http://junkscience.com/2011/10/28/legal-hurdles-ahead-for-calif-cap-and-trade/

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Sunday, October 30, 2011

Boy's rescue five days after Turkish quake lifts spirits (Reuters)

ERCIS, Turkey (Reuters) ? Rescue workers pulled a 13-year-old boy alive out of the rubble of an apartment block on Friday, five days after a powerful earthquake that killed at least 570 people in eastern Turkey.

"It is a great miracle," Neriman, the boy's 34-year-old mother told Reuters. "He told me he prayed and when he said all his prayers and there were no more left he recited the national anthem."

The rescue lifted Turkish spirits as thousands of quake survivors endured a fifth freezing and wet night without a roof over their heads, and recriminations flew over the pace of relief and the shoddy construction that led to so much damage.

The boy, Ferhat Tokay, was put in a neck brace and taken on a stretcher to a waiting ambulance after being rescued in Ercis, the town hardest hit by Sunday's 7.2 magnitude quake, television images showed.

"We started digging and at first we saw his hand. And then we started speaking to him. He said 'I am hungry and thirsty'," an exhausted but elated medic, Baris Dogan, told Reuters.

"It was like taking my own son out."

Doctors at the hospital in Van, where he was taken, said the boy's condition was relatively good. A few steps away in the intensive care unit, relatives of other quake victims broke down in tears as doctors gave them bad news about their loved ones.

Tokay was rescued from the first floor of a collapsed seven-storey block of flats where he lived with his family on the main street in Ercis, opposite a mosque whose minarets had collapsed.

Around 50 people dug on through the rubble in the hope of finding more people alive. As many as 10 were still missing from the building but there were no immediate signs of life.

Tokay was rescued hours after an 18-year-old man was brought out late on Thursday to cheers among grief-stricken quake survivors.

"SHODDY BUILDINGS"

People left homeless by the quake in the predominantly Kurdish eastern province of Van have complained bitterly over the slow delivery of relief items like tents.

Drenched by pouring rain, more and more are falling sick, and with the first winter snows expected in November there is an urgent need to get people under cover fast.

Although search operations are beginning to wind down, 187 people have been found alive under collapsed buildings since the quake struck on Sunday afternoon, according to an official count.

The Disaster and Emergency Administration said on Friday the death toll had risen to 570, with 2,555 people hurt in Turkey's biggest quake in more than a decade.

No official figures were available for the homeless.

The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies put the number of "affected people" at 50,000.

In Ercis alone, a town of around 100,000 people, hardly anyone was going back to their homes even if they were still standing.

President Abudullah Gul announced that parades and receptions for Republic Day on Saturday were cancelled, and went on to bemoan poor construction and lack of inspections in Turkey that led to a "problem of shoddy buildings".

"While the Van earthquake has reminded us of the reality that ours is a country prone to earthquakes, it has also shown the destruction caused by neglect and irresponsibility," he said.

TENT CITIES

Two or three tent cities have sprouted on the outskirts of Ercis, but thousands of men, having settled children and women as best they can, wander at night looking for shelter.

With nowhere to go, they lean against walls to protect themselves from the rain.

Some survivors, who had stood in long queues only to be told there were no tents left, accused officials of handing aid to supporters of the ruling AK party. Others said profiteers were hoarding tents and reselling them.

Scuffles broke out in one long line to a distribution centre, before police stepped in to calm tempers.

Any accusations of neglect or ineptitude can be politically sensitive.

Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan visited the area hours after the quake and wants to build bridges with Turkey's minority Kurds and is expected to go again at the weekend.

More than 40,000 people have been killed in a Kurdish separatist insurgency in the region that has lasted three decades. Last week militants killed 24 troops in neighbouring Hakkari province.

FOREIGN AID

A government that had thought it could manage the relief effort alone is now gratefully accepting foreign help in the shape of tents, prefabricated housing and containers.

The first foreign planeloads of tents arrived on Thursday.

In total 35,000 tents have been sent to the region.

Unable to meet demand, relief authorities in the provincial capital Van decided to hand out tents to people only after verifying their homes were too unsafe to return to.

The disaster administration said that out of some 10,000 damaged buildings assessed so far, half were uninhabitable.

People fear their homes have become deathtraps, as 1,139 aftershocks have rattled the area since the quake.

Vainly trying to dry linen and blankets after the rain, one mother was ready to be persuaded to quit her tent and go home out of a mixture of desperation and resignation.

"Last night, it rained and all our belongings are still wet. I don't know how many more days we can stay in a tent like this," the woman, who gave her name as Nimet, told Reuters, pointing at the block where she lived near the centre of Van.

(Additional reporting by Seda Sezer and Kumeyra Pamuk in Van; Writing by Simon Cameron-Moore and Daren Butler; Editing by Richard Meares)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/india/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111028/india_nm/india601749

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Probiotic Yogurt May Aid Digestion of Carbs (LiveScience.com)

Eating probiotic yogurt might change the way the bacteria in your gut break down the carbs you eat, a new study suggests.

Researchers found that eating yogurt daily did not alter the species of microbes in the intestines of people, or mice transplanted with human gut microbes.

However, when the researchers looked at the activity of bacterial enzymes in the mice's guts, they discovered significant changes in some of the enzymes ? particularly those involved in metabolizing carbohydrates.

Essentially, the live bacteria in the yogurt allowed the mice to break down certain classes of carbohydrates more efficiently, the study showed, and many of these changes also occurred in the study's 14 human participants.

"It's interesting that just by virtue of introducing species, you can get quite dramatic changes in the expression of genes in the gut microbes," said Susan Lynch, an associate professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, who was not involved in the research.

But she says that larger studies are needed to really understand how the probiotics, or "good bacteria," affect the bacterial communities in people's intestines.

The effects of probiotics

Our guts are home to swarms of bacteria, known collectively as the microbiome. These communities help us in a variety of ways, such as harvesting energy from the food we eat, preventing the growth of harmful bacteria and producing nutrients such as vitamins K and H.

Studies have shown that probiotics, such as those found in yogurt, can help with certain intestinal issues, such as irritable bowel syndrome. Recent research suggests that ingesting probiotics may even affect our behavior and could someday treat depression.

But despite the purported health benefits of probiotics, it's unclear how exactly they affect our gut microbiomes, and influence our overall health.

In the new study, researchers recruited seven pairs of identical female twins and gave them two servings of yogurt a day for seven weeks. The yogurt had five strains of live bacteria.

"The idea of using twins is a nice one," Lynch said. "To some extent, it can standardize genetic and environmental factors that could have an affect on the results."

The researchers analyzed stool samples from the women throughout the study, and found yogurt didn't change the species or genes of the bacterial communities in the women's intestines.

In other words, the bacteria in the yogurt did not appear to colonize the participants' guts. In fact, two weeks after the women stopped eating yogurt, the researchers could not detect any live yogurt bacteria in the stool samples of the majority of the participants.

But the researchers then carried out a similar experiment with mice, and found significant changes in the way the mice metabolized carbohydrates.

A new model

Jun Sun, an assistant professor of medicine at the University of Rochester in New York, said the researcher's method of using mice with humanized microbiomes could be useful for future studies, particularly those that test the health benefits of yogurts and other fermented milk products.

The research provides a nice model to test how the introduction of different probiotics affects our gut microbial communities, Sun said. [Are Probiotics Safe?]

Lynch said studies like this "are fundamental to understanding the possible benefits of microbial supplementation approaches."

The study was published today (Oct. 26) in the journal Science Translational Medicine.

Pass it on: Some types of yogurt may alter the way you break down carbs, but more research is needed to really understand the effects of probiotics.

This story was provided by MyHealthNewsDaily, a sister site to LiveScience. Follow MyHealthNewsDaily on Twitter @Facebook.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/science/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20111027/sc_livescience/probioticyogurtmayaiddigestionofcarbs

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

j2 Global Communications (JCOM)

We are upgrading our recommendation on j2 Global Communications (JCOM - Analyst Report) to Outperform based on its excellent financial results for the second quarter of 2011, which significantly beat the Zacks Consensus Estimates. We believe the company's strong financial position and diversified product pipeline, coupled with the long-term growth prospects of outsourced value-added messaging services, will drive its earnings higher in the near future.

Subscriber Usage revenue continues to beat market expectations. This is an important parameter as credit-sensitive customers constitute a majority of j2 Global's sales. Exploration of new opportunities for both digital facsimile and voice services, through new acquisitions, facilitated the company to solidify its market position.

Ongoing macro-economic headwinds may actually help j2 Global since business enterprises are more inclined to use digital facsimile in order to reduce cost structure. Our target price of $36 is based on a 15.3x our fiscal 2011 earnings estimate, approaching the industry average. This is in-line with our Outperform recommendation.

j2 Global Communications (JCOM) : FULL ANALYST REPORT

Bull of the Day
Every day we feature one stock with a Zacks Recommendation of Buy that is set to outperform over the next 6+ months. We also provide you with free access to the in-depth research report on the stock. If you would like to see all our Buy rated stocks and in-depth research reports, then check out ?Zacks Premium.

Read the full analyst report on JCOM

Source: http://www.zacks.com/commentary/19241/j2+Global+Communications+(JCOM)

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Michael D. Higgins favored to win Irish presidency (AP)

DUBLIN ? Human rights activist and poet Michael D. Higgins looked on course Friday to be elected Ireland's president after his main rival suffered a last-minute collapse in support, according to senior politicians, electoral officials and an opinion poll.

"Michael D. Higgins looks pretty certain to be elected. ... I'm really delighted that he succeeded," said Deputy Prime Minister Eamon Gilmore of the governing Labour Party. Higgins is Labour's candidate.

And former Foreign Minister Micheal Martin, whose Fianna Fail party was ejected from office by angry voters earlier this year and didn't run a presidential candidate, said Higgins was guaranteed to win when full results are announced Saturday.

Martin said Higgins "will make an excellent president and ambassador for Ireland." He praised Higgins' "command of global issues and commitment to human rights."

Ballot-counters estimated that Higgins was leading with around 40 percent of first-preference votes, nearly double his main challenger, businessman and reality TV celebrity Sean Gallagher.

Pressing Gallagher for second place was former Irish Republican Army commander Martin McGuinness, who temporarily stepped down as deputy leader of the Northern Ireland government to make his first foray into southern Irish politics. McGuinness, who wasn't eligible to vote because he's a Northern Ireland resident, was expected to resume his government post in Belfast.

Four other candidates to be Ireland's ceremonial head of state trailed far behind. One of them, Dublin gay rights activist David Norris, conceded defeat and praised Higgins.

"I'm very happy to be an Irishman under the presidency of Michael D. Higgins," said Norris, who lauded his rival as a political maverick and social liberal who would "speak out on behalf of the marginalized."

Higgins, 70, is best known in Ireland as "Michael D," befitting his status as one of the country's most liked and instantly recognized politicians. He stands just 5 foot 4, his elfin features complemented with a much-parodied high voice infused with his rural County Clare roots.

Higgins, a former University College Galway lecturer in sociology and politics, is credited as an intellectual heavyweight of Irish politics with three published collections of poetry to his credit and a four-decade record of promoting home-grown arts, literature, film and the native Gaelic language. Unlike other English-only candidates and most of the nation, Higgins spoke the native Irish tongue fluently on the campaign trail.

He also has traveled the world defending left-wing human rights cases. He is one of Ireland's most ardent critics of U.S. foreign policy, particularly in Central America, Iraq and Afghanistan, and of Israel's policies versus the Palestinians.

His socialism came to the fore on the campaign trail as he condemned the get-rich-quick excesses of Ireland's lost Celtic Tiger boom economy, arguing its narcissism and greed left the country mired in debt and unemployment.

Analysts say Higgins is too far ahead for Gallagher to catch up as the counting runs into Saturday. Ireland's complex voting system permits voters to rate candidates in order of preference, which requires several rounds of ballot-counting.

Gallagher, an entrepreneur and the star judge on a business-talent TV competition called "Dragon's Den," had a 15-point lead in opinion polls versus Higgins until Monday ? when his image imploded during the campaign's last live TV debate.

McGuinness presented evidence that Gallagher had served as a "bagman," a collector of undocumented cash donations, from businessmen to Ireland's long-dominant Fianna Fail party. Voters threw Fianna Fail out of power in February after it was blamed for leading Ireland to the brink of bankruptcy and an international bailout.

Gallagher, who ran as an independent and downplayed his Fianna Fail background, stumbled as he tried to explain the circumstances of one donation he allegedly collected from a border fuel smuggler. Analysts said that admission linked Gallagher fatally in voters' minds to Fianna Fail's poor ethical record.

Higgins' campaign team seized on their candidate's own reputation for honesty and integrity as a point of contrast. Full-page newspaper ads on election day claimed that the "D" in Higgins' name stood for democracy and decency. It actually stands for Daniel.

A survey published Friday by Irish pollsters RedC said it telephoned 1,100 citizens Thursday after they had cast their ballots and detected a massive flight from Gallagher in the campaign's dying days.

About 38 percent said they had decided whom to support only following that TV debate. Some 28 percent said they had switched support in the past week ? and 58 percent of those said they had dumped Gallagher.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111028/ap_on_re_eu/eu_ireland_presidential_election

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New Harbinger: What Mindfulness and Acceptance Can Do for Your Self-Esteem

By Sheri Van Dijk, MSW, author of "The Dialectical Behavior Therapy Skills Workbook for Bipolar Disorder" and "Don't Let Your Emotions Run Your Life for Teens"

Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT), created in the early 1990s by psychologist Marsha Linehan, is one of the newer psychotherapies being used to treat a variety of emotional problems. Similar to Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT), which has been used successfully for many years to treat emotional problems including self-esteem issues, DBT adds to this the concepts of mindfulness and acceptance.

Mindfulness is a way of living your life so that you are in the present moment more often, with awareness, and with acceptance. Acceptance in this context doesn't mean that you approve of your experience, but that you simply acknowledge your present experience without judging it.

So what does this have to do with self-esteem? Everything! Just stop for a moment and think about this: How often do you really think about what you're thinking about? Have you ever had someone ask you what you were thinking about, and you had no idea? We're often completely oblivious to what we're thinking and feeling; and when we are aware of these things, we're often judging these internal experiences. Self-talk has a big impact on how you feel, and when you judge yourself or beat yourself up, it triggers painful emotions like anger, anxiety, disappointment and sadness; and it lowers your self-esteem.

Consider these questions to help you think about how you talk to yourself:

  • When you make a mistake, do you tend to judge yourself for it (e.g. "That was stupid," "I'm such an idiot")?
  • Do you think you are "your own worst critic," as the saying goes?
  • Does it sometimes feel like you have a tape-recorder running in your head, playing the same messages over and over again? For example: "I'm worthless," "I'm stupid," "How could anyone ever love me?"
  • When considering a new challenge, do you find yourself filled with self-doubt? For example: "I'll never be able to do this," "I'm not good enough," "Who am I kidding?"

Many people experience these kinds of thoughts so automatically that it's difficult for them to be aware of when these thoughts are present. In fact, in CBT these thoughts are actually referred to as "automatic thoughts." In spite of this lack of awareness of your thoughts, though, they still trigger painful emotions for you, making you feel bad about yourself and reducing your self-esteem.

This is where the DBT skills of mindfulness and acceptance come in: first, through mindfulness, you increase your awareness of these judgmental thoughts and the resulting emotions. Then you work on bringing acceptance to your experience -- accepting the thoughts as just thoughts; accepting the emotions they trigger; and gradually, accepting yourself as you are.

There are other DBT skills that help build self-esteem as well, such as:

  • Self-soothing skills help you improve your ability to take care of yourself through activities that help you to relax and feel calmer,
  • Building mastery helps you increase things you do that help you to feel productive and good about yourself for what you've accomplished, and
  • Interpersonal effectiveness skills help you learn to be more effective in relationships, including how to communicate more assertively, which helps you to feel better about yourself.

Of course, learning these skills and practicing them on your own isn't easy. Some people are able to do this with self-help books, but others need to work with a psychotherapist. Either way, the DBT skills are flexible and can be used to help with self-esteem issues, other emotional problems and simply to help you live a healthier, happier life.

Sheri Van Dijk, MSW is a mental health therapist in private practice and at Southlake Regional Health Centre in Newmarket, Ontario, Canada. She is author of "The Dialectical Behavior Therapy Skills Workbook for Bipolar Disorder: Using DBT to Regain Control of Your Emotions and Your Life," "Don't Let Your Emotions Run Your Life for Teens: Dialectical Behavior Therapy Skills for Helping You Manage Mood Swings, Control Angry Outbursts, and Get Along with Others" and co-author of "The Bipolar Workbook for Teens: DBT Skills to Help You Control Mood Swings."

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Follow New Harbinger on Twitter: www.twitter.com/newharbinger

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/new-harbinger-publications-inc/building-self-esteem_b_1029454.html

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Uruguay lawmakers revoke Dirty War amnesty (AP)

MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay ? Uruguay's Congress has approved a measure revoking amnesty for officials charged with human rights abuses during a period of military dictatorship.

Thursday's pre-dawn vote meets a demand by human rights groups that people who kidnapped, tortured and killed in the name of the state should be punished.

Opponents say it violates the constitution and overturns a popular vote in favor of the amnesty. Some military leaders vow to push for prosecution of crimes committed by former guerrillas if their own colleagues are brought to court.

Dozens of suspected leftists were kidnapped and killed during the dictatorship of 1973 to 1985.

Uruguay's Supreme Court will decide whether lifting the amnesty is constitutional.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111027/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_argentina_uruguay_dirty_wars

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Friday, October 28, 2011

ANA's Boeing 787 Dreamliner touches down after first international flight (video)

All Nippon Airways' Boeing 787 Dreamliner marked the end of its first international flight today, touching down in Hong Kong. The dreamy flying machine took off from Tokyo and arrived to what looks like quite the crowd, including some folks from Engadget Chinese, who were on-hand at Hong Kong International Airport to snap the 787 from every angle and grab some video of the pilots discussing the aircraft. Check that out after the break.

Continue reading ANA's Boeing 787 Dreamliner touches down after first international flight (video)

ANA's Boeing 787 Dreamliner touches down after first international flight (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Oct 2011 09:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/10/26/anas-boeing-787-dreamliner-touches-down-after-first-internation/

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Fewer hedge funds now subject to reporting rule (AP)

WASHINGTON ? The largest hedge funds and private equity firms must report financial information to the government under a rule adopted Wednesday. But the Securities and Exchange Commission backed off broader reporting requirements for the funds after it drew heavy objections from the industry.

The final rule applies to hedge funds with $1.5 billion or more in assets and private equity firms with $2 billion or more and requires only annual reporting by private equity firms. In January, the SEC proposed reporting for firms with $1 billion or more in assets and would have made the reports quarterly for both large hedge funds and private equity funds.

The new reporting is mandated by the financial overhaul law passed last year. Federal regulators will use the data ? which will not be made public ? to monitor the funds' risks to the financial system.

Hedge funds are investment pools that use complex trades to seek big returns. They command trillions of dollars in assets and account for about 20 percent of all stock trading.

Private equity funds focus on buying and reselling companies. During the 2008 financial crisis, some hedge funds suffered huge losses and that contributed to the strain on financial markets, regulators said.

In final form, the rule also gives funds more time to file the reports than SEC initially proposed.

Hedge funds must make the reports within 60 days of the end of each quarter, and private equity funds must report within 120 days of the end of each fiscal year.

SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro said the changes made in the final rule "address issues" raised by those who submitted comment letters objecting to the proposal, while preserving the data's utility.

Schapiro said fund leaders objected most strenuously to the frequency and deadlines for the reports.

"We want the information that will be reported to regulators ... to be useful," she said before the vote. "It will not be useful if it is rushed or incomplete."

Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, told Schapiro in a letter last month that he was concerned the requirements in the proposed rule "will impose a heavy compliance burden (on the funds) that will harm economic growth, reduce investment opportunities" and crimp the flow of money through the financial markets.

The funds will submit the reports to the SEC and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which is expected to adopt the rule in a week or so.

The information will be used by the Financial Stability Oversight Council, a body of regulators created by the 2010 overhaul law to keep watch over the financial system.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111026/ap_on_bi_ge/us_sec_hedge_funds

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

NeuroLogica Blog ? Cell Phones and Cancer ? Update

Research continues into the question of whether or not cell phone use is associated with an increased risk of brain cancer. The latest epidemiological study, a Danish study of 358 thousand cell phone subscribers, reassuringly shows no correlation.

Researchers compared subscribers to non-subscribers for the incidence of central nervous system (CNS) tumors, such as glioma or meningioma. They found no difference in the incidence of any such tumor relating to use of cell phones. There was also no correlation to duration of use ? i.e. no dose-response. And there was no correlation with location of tumor ? users were no more likely to have a tumor in the part of the brain next to where a cell phone is typically held.

The study, in other words, was completely negative. This study was an extension of previous studies using the same databases, but extending the time of follow up. Of course, we can only study a duration of exposure that is less than the time cell phones have been in widespread use. Researchers will therefore have to continue to monitor this data to see if long term exposure is beginning to increase the risk of CNS tumors.

So far health organizations around the world have taken a cautious approach to this question. On the whole they have concluded that the current evidence neither demonstrates or rules out a connection between cell phone use and cancer. They therefore recommend avoiding excessive use of cell phones, holding the phone away from the head when possible, and that children under age 16 either do not use a cell phone or only very briefly. These are reasonable recommendations given the uncertainty.

There always will be a certain amount of uncertainty, because we can only use observational data to answer this question. We cannot do a controlled experiment ? randomize people to either use or not use a cell phone, or have a control group that is blinded to using a sham cell phone. So we have to make do with observational studies, like the one described here. This always allows for the interference of confounding factors ? factors that are not controlled for or measured that affect the outcome in some way.

Given that cell phone use is so common, and increasingly so, there are a few facts that are reassuring. The first is that epidemiological studies have not found any clear correlation, and this study adds greatly to that conclusion. Some studies have shown a correlation, and overall the results have been mixed. But there has been no clear signal in the data of a correlation, so either there isn?t one, or if there is, it must be very small and inconsistent.

Further,while there has been an increase in the overall incidence of CNS tumors over the last 20 years, the increase is small and similar to other cancers. This increase is likely explained by increased use of MRI scans and other technologies that are catching benign tumors, like meningiomas, in the population. If cell phone use caused brain cancer, we would expect a more significant increase, greater than can be explained by improved diagnosis.

Finally, the biological plausibility of a causal relationship between cell phones and cancer is small (if non-zero). Cell phone use non-ionizing radiation, which is therefore not energetic enough to break chemical bonds and cause mutations in DNA or damage to proteins. There can still be a biological mechanism, but the likelihood is low.

This latest study is reassuring. It is a large data set followed for a long time and is completely negative. This kind of data cannot completely rule out a causal connection between cell phone use and cancer, but it does set limits on how strong the connection can be. At this point we can say that for cell phone use up to about 16 years there is either a very small or no causal connection to CNS tumors.

Source: http://theness.com/neurologicablog/index.php/cell-phones-and-cancer-update/

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Paul Ryan to Slam President Obama for ?Politics of Division? (ABC News)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/153573120?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Performance artist gives birth in NYC art gallery

Brooklyn-based performance artist Marni Kotak, who plans to give birth to her first child in front of a public audience at the Microscope Gallery in the Bushwick section of Brooklyn, is shown at the gallery, which has been converted into a birthing room in New York, Monday, Oct. 17, 2011, The birth will be assisted by a midwife. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

Brooklyn-based performance artist Marni Kotak, who plans to give birth to her first child in front of a public audience at the Microscope Gallery in the Bushwick section of Brooklyn, is shown at the gallery, which has been converted into a birthing room in New York, Monday, Oct. 17, 2011, The birth will be assisted by a midwife. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

Brooklyn-based performance artist Marni Kotak, who plans to give birth to her first child in front of a public audience at the Microscope Gallery in the Bushwick section of Brooklyn, is shown leaning on a birthing pool at the gallery, which has been converted into a birthing room, in New York, Monday, Oct. 17, 2011. The birth will be assisted by a midwife. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

NEW YORK (AP) ? A performance artist who said giving birth is the "highest form of art" has delivered a baby boy ? inside a New York City art gallery

Marni Kotak gave birth at 10:17 a.m. on Tuesday, the Microscope Gallery in Brooklyn said in a brief statement, adding that everyone was recuperating on Wednesday. It said the baby was 21 inches long and weighed 9 pounds, 2 ounces.

The gallery did not say how many people attended the birth or offer other details. A video of the birth will be added to the gallery's upcoming exhibition.

The 36-year-old artist had set up a home-birth center at the gallery, turning the space into a brightly decorated bedroom with ocean blue walls and photo-imprinted pillows.

During "The Birth of Baby X" durational piece, which began Oct. 8, Kotak spent as much time at the gallery as possible talking to visitors about motherhood, art and other issues. She said those who left their contact information would be notified when she went into labor.

She expected about 15 people to attend.

Kotak, who was born in Norwood, Mass., said all her performances focus on everyday life experiences. She has been re-enacting events from her life for more than 10 years, including her own birth, losing her virginity in "a sunny blue Plymouth" and her grandfather's funeral.

In combining the birth of her child with artistic expression, Kotak said she wanted to show "this amazing life performance that ... is essentially hidden from public view" and that addresses social taboos regarding the human body.

"She's in the tradition of using your life as your authentic material and shaping and forming it" ? a tradition that goes back to 1959 when filmmaker Stan Brakhage recorded the birth of his first child as a work of art, said feminist artist Carolee Schneemann, whose own works deal with taboo themes of sexuality.

"She's vulnerable, she's exposed," she said of Kotak. "It's the most basic visceral experience that also has the most taboos."

The entire gallery was given over to the installation. The artist even carved out space for a fully-stocked refrigerator and a portable shower with curtain pockets filled with photos from her three baby showers.

___

Online: www.microscopegallery.com

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/aa9398e6757a46fa93ed5dea7bd3729e/Article_2011-10-26-Birth%20As%20Art/id-d03d861370e34a21a77837672defa265

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Schools brace for more budget cuts (AP)

LANCASTER, Pa. ? Educators are bracing for a tough reality: As difficult as budget cuts have been on schools, more tough times are likely ahead.

Even in a best-case scenario that assumes strong economic growth next year, it won't be until 2013 or later when districts see budget levels return to pre-recession levels, said Daniel Domenech, executive director of the American Association of School Administrators in Arlington, Va. That means more cuts and layoffs are likely ahead.

"The worst part is that it's not over," Domenech said.

Already, an estimated 294,000 jobs in the education sector have been lost since 2008, including those in higher education.

The cuts are felt from Keller, Texas, where the district moved to a pay-for-ride transportation system rather than cut busing altogether, to Georgia, where 20 days were shaved off the calendar for pre-kindergarten classes. In California, a survey found that nearly half of all districts last year cut or reduced art, drama and music programs. Nationally, 120 districts ? primarily in rural areas ? have gone to a four-day school week to save on transportation and utility costs, according to the National Conference of State Legislators. Others are implementing fees to play sports, cutting field trips and ending after-school programs.

Districts have little choice but to put off buying textbooks and technology and training teachers, said Rob Monson, a principal in Parkston, S.D., who is president of the National Association of Elementary School Principals.

On a recent day at Abraham Lincoln Middle School in Lancaster, teenage girls in ponytails and boys in long athletic shorts dashed across the gym, pausing their game of indoor tennis to motion "Y-M-C-A" with their arms as the Village People's song blares from the loudspeaker. It's a scene happening less frequently these days. Budget cuts and teacher layoffs have forced the school to cut some P.E. classes, reduce library hours and eliminate small literacy classes for struggling readers and Spanish for sixth- and seventh-graders.

Principal Josh Keene says he's worried ? not just about offering electives next year, but whether class sizes in core subjects will jump from around 25 to 35 or 40. His district received $6 million less from the state this year, which meant six staff positions in his school were cut. Even if state funding remains the same next year, the district expects to have from $5 million to $7 million less because of increased pension obligations and other expenses.

"I'm scared to death. As we continue to look at fewer and fewer non-classroom positions that are there, at some point it's going to impact core classroom positions and that's a very, very scary thing," said Keene.

Recognizing the reality districts face, President Barack Obama included $30 billion in his $447 billion jobs creation package to save teachers' jobs. The Senate rejected the jobs package as well as a separate measure focused on saving the jobs of teachers and emergency responders. Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell has said the plan resembles "bailouts" that haven't proven to work and only perpetuate economic problems.

Not everyone sees all doom and gloom in schools' budget woes. Some say many districts haven't wisely spent tax dollars or didn't adequately prepare for the end of the $100 billion in federal stimulus dollars for schools. And that while the number of students per teacher in America dropped from 22.3 in 1970 to 15.3 in 2008, according to the National Center For Education Statistics, they say the reduction hasn't made a noticeable difference.

Karen Hawley Miles, executive director of Education Resource Strategies, a nonprofit based in Watertown, Mass., that helps urban districts develop ways to more effectively use resources, encourages districts to use this time to make changes they have been reluctant to do. They include strategically raising class sizes to refocus on teacher quality and changing teacher compensation to be more tied to performance, she said.

"In tough days when it's incredibly urgent, sometimes these conversations can take place in a different frame. We see districts really thinking about how they can really do things differently and really focus in on their priorities," she said.

In Pennsylvania, at the urging of Gov. Tom Corbett, the legislature slashed public-education spending by roughly $900 million, or more than 10 percent, to avoid a state budget deficit for the year that began July 1 without raising taxes.

Seemingly overnight, thousands of education jobs in the state were lost. A survey of school districts by the Pennsylvania Association of School Administrators and the Pennsylvania Association of School Business Officials found that leading into this school year, 44 percent reduced elective course offerings and 70 percent increased class sizes. More than 30 districts said they either reduced or eliminated full-day kindergarten or pre-K programs.

The cuts hit many of the poorer districts harder because they are more reliant on state dollars.

In York, Pa., about a 30-minute drive from Lancaster, full-day kindergarten was saved when administrators and teachers agreed to a pay freeze. But art, music, and physical education teachers in elementary schools were eliminated, forcing classroom teachers to incorporate the electives in their classroom teaching, said Kim Schwarz, 45, a teacher and president of the York City Education Association. High school class sizes now are in the upper 30s, she said.

Schwarz said the changes are tough for kids who really shine in art or physical education and it's been hard on the morale of teachers.

"The district has scrimped and pulled and did everything they could to find additional funds ... and I think the teachers are doing an absolutely phenomenal job of educating the students and giving them the attention that they need given the circumstances, which just adds more to the stress and the level of exhaustion that we're all feeling," Schwarz said.

At Keene's school in Lancaster, about 60 percent of the students are Latino and 80 percent are considered low income. Many are sent home on Friday nights with donated groceries and recipes for cooking them. Among the staff members cut was someone who did home visits to follow up on children who weren't attending class. The school was able to continue an after-school program only after a non-profit agreed to run it.

Keene said he wants his children to have a full life, and he thinks music, art and physical education are part of that. He just hopes those classes will be offered in the future.

"You know the old adage sometimes you need to work smarter, not harder? We're frankly at a point where we just need to work harder and more hours, and with the reductions in staff, that's what needs to happen because otherwise, kids are going to suffer, and that's unacceptable," Keene said.

_____

Online:

American Association of School Administrators: http://www.aasa.org

Compass Mark: http://www.compassmark.org/

Education Resource Strategies: http://erstrategies.org/

National Association of Elementary School Principals: http://www.naesp.org/

Pennsylvania Association of School Administrators: http://www.pasa-net.org/

York City Education Association: http://ycea.psealocals.org/

School District of Lancaster: http://www.lancaster.k12.pa.us/

_____

Kimberly Hefling can be followed at http://twitter.com/khefling

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111024/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/us_education_budget_cuts

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

PFT: Colts put Collins on injured reserve

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On November 1, 2001, I busted a bottle of Boone?s Farm against my Commodore 64, and Profootballtalk.com was born.

There was no mission statement, no business plan, no bucket list.? I had done nine months of unpaid freelance work for the long-defunct NFLtalk.com, which was purchased along with the other Sportstalk.com sites in early 2001 after the tech bubble burst.? I then spent six months working from home for ESPN.com?s subscription-based Insider service, while also practicing law full time.

In October 2001, I was offered a one-year deal with ESPN.com, effective November 1.? (I still have the contract.)? I decided, for a variety of reasons that I won?t bore you with now (but might bore you with later), to launch an independent site (the word blog hadn?t been coined yet, and I have always despised it) that covered the NFL a bit more loosely, with entertainment being as important as information.

PFT launched November 1 of that year, we generated little or no revenue for at least three years, and then the snowball started to roll down the hill, a bit.? The watershed moment came in early 2006, when Ted Moon of Sprint reached out with a desire to explore an advertising relationship.? One thing led to another, we struck a deal, real money was flowing, and I knew at that point that, eventually, I wouldn?t be practicing law at all.

On July 1, 2009, it finally happened, and the two-plus years since then have been an exciting, fulfilling, challenging, and almost entirely enjoyable blur.

I?m not sure what we?ll do to commemorate the 10-year anniversary.? It would be nice if all of PFT Planet shows up next Tuesday and check in, if only to see if the hamsters powering the NBC servers will explode.? Maybe we?ll do something special for PFT Live.? Beyond that, I?m not looking for the day to be ensconced in self-congratulation.? It?s more about reflection and gratitude ? primarily to each of you ? and given the content of this post, the reflection already has started.

Actually, the reflection happens pretty much continuously.? I don?t know how or why this thing has grown, I don?t know how or why 90 percent of the people connected to the NFL read the site (the other 10 percent are lying), and I don?t know where this thing is going and how it will get there.? I?ve been enjoying the ride since Day One, and I?ll keep doing it as long as I can say that.

Hopefully, you?ve enjoyed it, too.? Hopefully, you?ll continue to do that.

If you have any suggestions on how we best should celebrate an unlikely 10-year anniversary, feel free to add them to the comments.? And be sure to check back next Tuesday to see what we do.? And every day between now and then.? And every day after that.? Until I either drop dead or decide to move on, or move out.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/10/25/colts-send-kerry-collins-to-injured-reserve/related/

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Automotive Equipment & Tools For The Automotive Industry ...

Automotive Equipment & Tools For The Automotive Industry

The automotive equipment industry deals with the production of every kind of tool and machinery that is needed for the manufacture, maintenance and repair of vehicles including cars and car parts.? As such, the industry produces several different varieties of equipment starting from basic hand tools to more complex machinery.

Different Kinds of Automotive Equipment

Automotive workshops and garages will be unable to function without automotive equipment. Shop furniture, lifts, exhaust hoses, air compressors, lubrication equipment, electric and light reels, jacks, vehicle servicing equipment, fluid storage tanks and trans-air piping are some of the many different types of automotive equipment that are used by automotive manufacturing and automotive repair businesses.

Common Types Of Automotive Equipment

* Hand Tools: Automotive repair shops use several different types of hand tools for their repair and maintenance projects. Some of the commonest items include ratchet sets and wrench sets, crowbars (also known as pry bars), socket sets, screwdrivers, star and clutch-head drivers, hammers, pliers and wire cutters, electric drills, hacksaws and torque wrenches.

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* Pneumatic Tools: Most automotive workshops now use pneumatic tools as an alternative to electricity powered motors because the latter is more prone to fire hazards. Such tools are powered by compressed air and are high powered versions of the more traditional hand tools. Common examples of pneumatic automotive equipment include air compressors that can be used to power a variety of tools including hammers, drills, ratchets and spraying tools.

* Availability of pneumatic equipment makes it easier for mechanics and technicians to undertake repair and maintenance work because they are powerful and easy to use. For example, a set of pneumatic shears can cut through sheet metal at a faster rate and leave behind a smoother edge when compared to traditional tin snips. Similarly, air hammers outfitted with chisel or punch bits have multiple uses. They can they be used for straightening dents. The chisel feature can be used to break rusted parts loose and the punch bits can be used? to remove old rivets and bolts that are too difficult to take out by hand.

* Lifts: several different kinds of lifting equipment are used to lift and secure cars so that mechanics and repair persons can easily work under the vehicle. These lifting tools include both low-tech tools such as basic floor jacks, car ramps and jack stands as well as hydraulic lifts and floor jacks for better efficiency and performance.

* Vehicle Exhaust Removal Systems: vehicle exhaust removal systems are used to capture and remove harmful exhaust fumes to insure optimal air quality in automotive maintenance and repair facilities. These are mandatory equipment as per OSHA Standards in order to limit exposure to harmful vehicular emissions. Common vehicle exhaust removal systems include hose drops as well as reels.

* Lubrication Systems: Automotive lubrication systems include several different types of oil meters, ATF meters, gear lube meters, dispense valves and grease dispenses valves.

The Automotive equipment business is a very large and competitive business. Automotive repair businesses must buy equipment from reputable dealers for the best deals and performance levels.

StandardUS.com is your one-stop shop for auto lift repair parts of the highest standards and is proud to be the Leader in Chicago Metropolitan area and one of the largest in the USA for Automotive Equipment.

Source: ArticlesBase.com

Tags: Automotive, Equipment, industry, Tools

Source: http://www.wa2dci.com/243/automotive-equipment-tools-for-the-automotive-industry

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Nation of Islam leader slams Gadhafi's death (AP)

CHICAGO ? Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan said Tuesday that those rejoicing in the death of ousted Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi will come to sorrow and predicted that the U.S. was unprepared for the looming backlash from his overthrow.

Farrakhan told a Chicago radio station that Gadhafi's death was "an assassination" and laid it at the feet of the U.S., Great Britain and France. Gadhafi was killed last week, two months after being ousted as Libya's leader. His 42-year reign turned the oil-rich country into an international pariah and his own personal fiefdom.

Farrakhan, who considered Gadhafi a friend, said those nations' establishment of a no-fly zone to stop Gadhafi's planes and offers of humanitarian relief to the Libyan people were intended to help oust Gadhafi from power and gain access to Libya's oil wealth.

"They succeeded in being the authors of the successful assassination of a sitting president," Farrakhan told WVON-AM in Chicago, adding that it placed America's interests in danger. "No one can trust the United Nations because it is a pawn of the Western world. No nation will give up their weapons of mass destruction like Gadhafi did, because it is the only protection they have against the wicked witches of the West."

Farrakhan also noted that the people now claiming leadership of Libya are advocating Islamic Sharia law, something that he contends the U.S. has opposed.

Farrakhan said he became acquainted with Gadhafi in the 1970s and 1980s, and noted that Gadhafi loaned his organization $5 million over the years. Farrakhan said Gadhafi had also lent Elijah Muhammad, his predecessor as head of the Nation of Islam, $3 million to convert a Greek Orthodox Church in Chicago into the Mosque Maryam.

"It wasn't the money, but the principles that made me his brother," Farrakhan said.

Farrakhan said Libyan oil revenue was used to build schools and universities that increased literacy, and he credited Gadhafi with establishing a health care system that he said was the best in the Third World.

Gadhafi, 69, was buried Tuesday along with his son, Muatassim, and former Defense Minister Abu Bakr Younis after the military council in the city of Misrata ordered a reluctant Muslim cleric to say the required prayers. The National Transitional Council is under international pressure to investigate the circumstances of Gadhafi's death.

Farrakhan said America "doesn't know what it's gotten itself" into with the Gadhafi overthrow. He said he didn't believe Gadhafi when he said al-Qaida was involved in efforts to oust him, but now Farrakhan believes that was true.

The Chicago-based Nation of Islam has espoused black nationalism and self-reliance since it was founded in the 1930s, though in recent years has made efforts to recruit other ethnic groups.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111026/ap_on_re_us/us_libya_farrakhan

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UK lawmakers say they'll defy gov't over Europe (AP)

LONDON ? Prime Minister David Cameron pleaded with Conservative Party lawmakers on Monday to drop their support for a national referendum on Britain leaving the European Union, comparing the bloc and its economic crisis to a house on fire that needs everyone's help.

Some 60 legislators in Cameron's Conservative Party have signed a motion calling for a referendum on whether Britain should remain in the EU, leave it, or renegotiate membership, but the government has ordered its lawmakers to vote against it or face disciplinary action.

Cameron urged his party's lawmakers not to vote for a referendum, saying the "timing is wrong," given the economic crisis in the euro zone.

"When your neighbor's house is on fire, your first impulse should be to help them to put out the flames ? not least to stop the flames reaching your own house," Cameron told the House of Commons. "This is not the time to argue about walking away, not just for their sakes, but for ours."

Underscoring the emotion of the issue, after several hours of debate in the House of Commons, Conservative lawmaker Adam Holloway resigned his unpaid post as an aide to Europe minister David Lidington so he could vote for a referendum.

Monday's vote, which was triggered by a 100,000-signature public petition on the prime minister's website, is nonbinding. It will fail anyway because the other main parties oppose it, but any rebellion would be an embarrassment for Cameron.

The issue of Europe has long divided his Conservative Party, and also split Britain's governing coalition. Its junior partners, the Liberal Democrats, are strongly pro-Europe.

Britain is a member of the 27-nation EU, but is not among the 17 countries that use the euro single currency, and are struggling to hammer out a bailout for indebted member Greece.

Conservative lawmaker Bernard Jenkin, one of those backing a referendum, said most British people want a vote on EU membership.

"David Cameron is not just taking on the Conservative Party, he's taking on the whole of public opinion. The vast majority think it's time we had a say on our membership."

Cameron said he agrees with the need for fundamental EU reform and is committed to "bringing back more powers" from Brussels. But he said it is in Britain's national interest to remain part of the EU.

"Those who are supporting today's motion, but don't actually want to leave the EU, I say to you this: I respect your views, we disagree about ends, not about means, I support your aims," the prime minister told lawmakers. "Like you, I want fundamental reform, like you I want to refashion our membership of the EU so that it better serves our nation's interests. The time for reform is coming, that is the prize, let us not be distracted from seizing it."

Foreign Secretary William Hague, a longtime euroskeptic, said that with the EU mired in a debt crisis and Britain's economy fragile, a referendum "would create additional economic uncertainty in this country at a difficult economic time."

"Europe is undergoing a process of change and in an in-out referendum people would want to know where the change was going to finish up before they voted," Hague told the BBC. "Clearly an in/out referendum is not the right idea."

____

Associated Press Writer Jill Lawless contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/britain/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111024/ap_on_re_eu/eu_britain_europe

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Pew study: Tablet users don't want to pay for news

(AP) ? Although tablet owners spend more time consuming news than poking around on Facebook, they're reluctant to pay for news content.

That's according to a study from the Pew Research Center's Project for the Excellence in Journalism, due out on Tuesday. It found that 11 percent of American adults own a tablet of some kind, and a majority of them spend 90 minutes a day using the device.

Consuming news is one of the most popular activities, up there with email and more popular than social networking. Only general Web-browsing proved more popular on tablets than news and email.

Even so, just 14 percent of tablet users said they have paid for news content on their tablets. Another 23 percent, though, pay for a print subscription that includes tablet content. So in all, about a third of tablet users have paid to access news on their gadgets.

"That is a much higher number than previous research has found more broadly of people paying for digital content," the report says. Nonetheless, a "large majority" of people who have not paid for news are "reluctant to do so, even if that was the only way to get news from their favorite sources," the report adds.

This is bad news for media companies hoping to boost revenue by charging for content on the iPad and other tablets. Of the people who have not paid directly to access news on their tablet, just 21 percent said they would spend $5 a month if that was the only way to access their favorite news outlet.

Apps, it turns out, are not the most popular way to access news content. Only 21 percent of tablet owners said they get their news mainly through apps they have downloaded. By contrast, 40 percent said they get their news mainly by way of a Web browser, while 31 percent said they use apps and the browser equally.

The study was conducted on landlines and cell phones from June 30 to July 31 among 5,014 adults in the U.S.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-10-25-Pew-Tablets/id-8be5894becae4ff4868bfc39240f0aef

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BPA in pregnant women might affect kids' behavior (AP)

CHICAGO ? Exposure to the chemical bisphenol-A before birth could affect girls' behavior at age 3, according to the latest study on potential health effects of the compound used in the manufacturing of some plastic drink bottles and food can linings.

Preschool-aged girls whose mothers had relatively high urine levels of BPA during pregnancy scored worse but still within a normal range on behavior measures including anxiety and hyperactivity than other young girls.

The results are not conclusive and experts not involved in the study said factors other than BPA might explain the results. The researchers acknowledge that "considerable debate" remains about whether BPA is harmful, but say their findings should prompt additional research.

The researchers measured BPA in 244 Cincinnati-area mothers' urine twice during pregnancy and at childbirth. The women evaluated their children at age 3 using standard behavior questionnaires.

Nearly all women had measurable BPA levels, like most Americans. But increasingly high urine levels during pregnancy were linked with increasingly worse behavior in their daughters. Boys' behavior did not seem to be affected.

The researchers said if BPA can cause behavior changes that could pose academic and social problems for girls already at risk for those difficulties.

"These subtle shifts can actually have very dramatic implications at the population level," said Joe Braun, the lead author and a research fellow at Harvard's School of Public Health.

For every 10-fold increase in mothers' BPA levels, girls scored at least six points worse on the questionnaires.

The study was released online Monday in Pediatrics.

Linda Birnbaum, director of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences and the National Toxicology Program, said the study contributes important new evidence to "a growing database which suggests that BPA exposure can be associated with effects on human health."

Grants from that federal agency helped pay for the study.

The Food and Drug Administration has said that low-level BPA exposure appears to be safe. But the agency also says that because of recent scientific evidence, it has some concern about potential effects of BPA on the brain and behavior in fetuses, infants and small children. The FDA is continuing to study BPA exposure and supports efforts to minimize use in food containers.

BPA has many uses, and is found in some plastic bottles and coatings in metal food cans. It was widely used in plastic baby bottles and sippy cups but industry phased out that use.

Braun said it's possible that exposure to BPA during pregnancy interferes with fetal brain development, a theory suggested in other studies, and that could explain the behavior differences in his study. Why boys' behavior wasn't affected isn't clear. But BPA is thought to mimic the effects of estrogen, a female hormone.

The researchers evaluated other possible influences on children's behavior, including family income, education level and whether mothers were married, and still found an apparent link to BPA.

But Dr. Charles McKay, a BPA researcher and toxicologist with the Connecticut Poison Control Center, said the researchers failed to adequately measure factors other than BPA that could explain the results.

For example, there's no information on mothers' eating habits. That matters because mothers' higher BPA levels could have come from eating lots of canned foods instead of healthier less processed foods, which might have affected fetal brain development.

The American Chemistry Council, a trade group whose members include companies that use BPA, said the research "has significant shortcomings ... and the conclusions are of unknown relevance to public health."

___

Online:

FDA: http://tinyurl.com/ya4d4ku

Info for parents: http://www.hhs.gov/safety/bpa/

___

AP Medical Writer Lindsey Tanner can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/LindseyTanner

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/parenting/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111024/ap_on_he_me/us_med_bisphenol_children_s_behavior

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