মঙ্গলবার, ৩১ জানুয়ারী, ২০১২

White House criticizes Italian captain comparison (AP)

WASHINGTON ? The White House is criticizing comments by the Republican National Committee chairman comparing President Barack Obama to the Italian cruise ship captain who allegedly abandoned his sinking ship.

RNC Chairman Reince Priebus (ryns PREE'-bus) said Sunday on CBS's "Face the Nation" that Obama was "our own little Captain Schettino (skeh-TEE'-noh)." Priebus accused Obama of abandoning ship in the U.S. and spending more time on his re-election campaign.

Former RNC Chairman Michael Steele told MSNBC the analogy was "unfortunate."

In response, White House press secretary Jay Carney said: "If you are so desperate for attention that you make an analogy that Michael Steele deems inappropriate, you know you've probably gone too far."

Sixteen people remain unaccounted for and are presumed dead in the shipwreck of the Costa Concordia.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120130/ap_on_el_pr/us_republicans_ship_aground

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সোমবার, ৩০ জানুয়ারী, ২০১২

Experts, officials to testify on Cuba oil drilling (AP)

MIAMI ? Members of the U.S. Coast Guard, experts and U.S. officials will testify on the risk of oil drilling off the coast of Cuba, and whether the U.S. is prepared for any possible spill.

Those expected to speak Monday at the satellite congressional sub-committee hearing in Sunny Isles, just north of Miami Beach, include U.S. Rep Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, who chairs the House Foreign Affairs Committee. Also on the list, fellow South Florida Cuban-American U.S. Reps. Mario Diaz-Balart and David Rivera. They will discuss possible impacts of the deep-water oil drilling Cuba is seeking to begin.

Ros-Lehtinen wants to deny U.S. visas to anyone helping the Cuban government advance its oil drilling plans.

Florida University Professor John Proni says spills could reach U.S. coastal waters, seriously damaging the nation's ecology and economy.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/science/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120130/ap_on_re_us/us_cuba_oil_drilling

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Kenya police arrest imam over weapons cache (AP)

MOMBASA, Kenya ? Kenyan police say they have arrested an imam after they found a cache of weapons in his house.

The chief of police for the coastal region says that the suspect is a sympathizer with Somalia's al-Shabab militia. Deputy Commissioner Aggrey Adoli says that the haul included a pistol, a rifle, bomb detonators and some hand grenades.

Aboud Rogo was named in a U.N. report last year as having links to al-Shabab. He is currently on bail for possession of weapons.

But Rogo's wife Khania Saidi Sagar says that police framed her husband. She says the house was searched in front of Rogo's mother and children and nothing was found.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120129/ap_on_re_af/af_kenya_arrest

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রবিবার, ২৯ জানুয়ারী, ২০১২

Video: Where airline delays often start

The Federal Aviation Administration says more than one-third of the nation?s flight delays come from just four airports. NBC?s Kate Snow reports.

>>> if you have ever found yourself sitting on the tarmac during a long delay like i was just last night, looking for someone to blame, you might want to remember this. the faa says one-third of all flight delays across the country caused by a ripple effect from delays at just four airports. new york 's big three, jfk, laguardia and newark, plus the airport in philadelphia. perhaps the airline industry expert puts it best to "the new york times," says, when new york sneezes the rest of the national air space catches a cold.

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/46176623/

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SAG Awards menu is months in the making

In this Oct. 19, 2011 photo, SAG Awards producer Kathy Connell, left, and SAG Awards supervising producer Mick McCullough participate in the SAG Awards tasting and table decor preview at Lucques restaurant in Los Angeles. The SAG Awards will be held Sunday, Jan. 29, 2012. (AP Photo/Matt Sayles)

In this Oct. 19, 2011 photo, SAG Awards producer Kathy Connell, left, and SAG Awards supervising producer Mick McCullough participate in the SAG Awards tasting and table decor preview at Lucques restaurant in Los Angeles. The SAG Awards will be held Sunday, Jan. 29, 2012. (AP Photo/Matt Sayles)

In this Oct. 19, 2011 photo, a plate of chopped chicken salad with apples, radicchio, walnuts and whole grain mustard sits on display during the SAG Awards tasting and table decor preview at Lucques restaurant in Los Angeles. The SAG Awards will be held Sunday, Jan. 29, 2012. (AP Photo/Matt Sayles)

In this Oct. 19, 2011 photo, from left, SAG Awards Committee Chair JoBeth Williams, SAG Awards Committee member Paul Napier, chef Suzanne Goin, of Lucques Catering, and SAG Awards event designer Keith Greco take part during the SAG Awards tasting and table decor preview at Lucques restaurant in Los Angeles. The SAG Awards will be held Sunday, Jan. 29, 2012. (AP Photo/Matt Sayles)

In this Oct. 19, 2011 photo, a plate with grilled chicken breast with black rice, pea shoots and tangerine vinaigrette displays during the SAG Awards tasting and table decor preview at Lucques restaurant in Los Angeles. The SAG Awards will be held Sunday, Jan. 29, 2012. (AP Photo/Matt Sayles)

In this Oct. 19, 2011 photo, a bottle of champagne sits on display during the SAG Awards tasting and table decor preview at Lucques restaurant in Los Angeles. The SAG Awards will be held Sunday, Jan. 29, 2012. (AP Photo/Matt Sayles)

(AP) ? When your dinner party guests include Brad Pitt, George Clooney, Kate Winslet and Glenn Close, and the whole affair is televised live, it can take months to plan the menu. That's why the team behind the Screen Actors Guild Awards began putting together the plate for Sunday's ceremony months ago.

It was still summer when show producer Kathy Connell and executive producer and director Jeff Margolis first sat down with chef Suzanne Goins of Los Angeles eatery Lucques with a tall order: Create a meal that is delicious at room temperature, looks beautiful on TV, is easy to eat and appeals to Hollywood tastes. Oh, and no poppy seeds, soups, spicy dishes, or piles of onions or garlic.

"It can't drip, stick in their teeth or be too heavy," Connell said. "We have to appease all palates."

The chef put together a plate of possibilities: Slow-roasted salmon with yellow beets, lamb with cous cous and spiced cauliflower and roasted root vegetables with quinoa. There was also a chopped chicken salad and another chicken dish with black beans.

To ensure the dishes are both tasty and TV-ready, Connell and Margolis, along with the SAG Awards Committee and the show's florist and art director, dined together at this summertime lunch on tables set to replicate those that will be in the Shrine Exposition Center during the ceremony. The pewter, crushed-silk tablecloths and white lilies you'll see on TV Sunday were also chosen months ago.

The diners discussed the look of the plate, the size of the portions and the vegetarian possibilities.

"We'd like the portions a little larger," Connell told the chef.

"And a little more sauce on the salmon," Margolis added.

Come Sunday, it's up to Goins to prepare 1,200 of the long-planned meals for the A-list audience.

___

Online:

www.sagawards.org

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-01-28-SAG%20Awards-Menu/id-c4447ed94e484ab19d8a5d1836eb2f5c

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শনিবার, ২৮ জানুয়ারী, ২০১২

Video: Chelsea Handler: Empowering women with humor

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/46162389#46162389

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Anti-matter set for gravity test

The question of whether normal matter's shadowy counterpart anti-matter exerts a kind of "anti-gravity" is set to be answered, according to a new report.

Normal matter attracts all other matter in the Universe, but it remains unclear if anti-matter attracts or repels it.

A team reporting in Physics Review Letters says it has prepared stable pairs of electrons and their anti-matter particles, positrons.

A beam of these pairs can be used to finally solve the anti-gravity puzzle.

Falling up

For every particle in physics, there is an associated anti-particle, identical in every respect that scientists have yet measured, except that it holds an opposite electric charge.

Current theory holds that, at the birth of the Universe, matter and anti-matter were created in equal amounts. When they meet, however, they destroy each other in energetic flashes of light.

The question has remained, then, why did any Universe come into being at all, and why is the one we see overwhelmingly made of normal matter?

One of the characteristics that may differentiate anti-matter is its gravitational behaviour. Most scientists believe that anti-matter will be attracted to normal matter.

Others are not so sure; anti-matter may repel - it may "fall up".

That has implications for the question of why the Universe didn't disappear into a grand flash of light just as soon as it formed. It also might help explain why the Universe is expanding ever more quickly.

It has simply been impossible to test the idea, but researchers at the University of California Riverside are getting closer to addressing the question once and for all.

They have created electron-positron pairs that are in stable orbits around one another - the result is called positronium.

The pairs are kept from bumping into and destroying each other by carefully dumping energy into them to create what are known as "Rydberg states".

Like the lanes of an automotive test track, particles can move into different orbits around one another if they reach higher energies, and these Rydberg positronium atoms are spun up to high energies, lasting for a comparatively long three billionths of a second.

The team hopes to extend the method, up to a few thousandths of a second, preparing a beam of the artificial atoms and seeing just which way they fall.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/science-environment-16756457

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৬ জানুয়ারী, ২০১২

Paramount Movies lets you stream UltraViolet films from the cloud, for a price

Paramount became the first studio to offer UltraViolet-based movies this week, with the launch of Paramount Movies. With this new service, users can purchase a film in either digital or physical form, and automatically store a copy of it within Paramount's cloud-based digital locker. This effectively allows you to stream a film to any iOS device, though support for Android and Windows Phone remains unavailable (as does compatibility with most set-top boxes). It's all part of DECE's "buy once, play anywhere" ethos, though it should be noted that the studio's UV offerings are somewhat limited. At the moment, Paramount Movies boasts about 60 titles, all of which are available at comparatively steep prices: $20 for HD quality movies, and $13 for SD versions. Check it out for yourself at the source link below.

Paramount Movies lets you stream UltraViolet films from the cloud, for a price originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 25 Jan 2012 07:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink SlashGear  |  sourceParamount Movies  | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/01/25/paramount-movies-lets-you-stream-ultraviolet-films-from-the-clou/

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Democrats club Romney with his tax records (Daily Caller)

Democratic officials are using Gov. Mitt Romney?s tax records to hammer him in Florida.

Romney?s 2010 records show he paid out 13.9 percent of his income in taxes.

?We appreciate that Mitt Romney is a fabulously wealthy individual,? said Democratic National Committee Executive Director Patrick Gaspard.??There are questions about how he amassed that wealth ? [so] it is right for voters in Florida and other states to ask whether Mitt Romney is advocating [tax] principles that benefit him ? to the detriment of working Americans.?

For several months, Obama?s campaign deputies have criticized Romney, and largely ignored rival candidates, such as former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, who they believe would be easier to defeat in the 2012 election.?(RELATED:??Obama for Gingrich? memo hits Romney)

?Mitt Romney is against Americans paying their fair share. ? Romney doesn?t believe that we all have a responsibility to do our fair share,? said Gaspard, who declined to say what Romney?s ?fair share? of taxes would be.

Romney?s 2010 records show he produced nine times as much in taxes and charities as President Barack Obama produced during the same year.?Romney produced $6 million in taxes and gifts for his fellow Americans, while Obama only produced taxes and gifts totaling $700,000.

By not releasing 23 years of tax records, Gaspard said, Romney ?is continuing to keep those records secrets. ? Romney has significant offshore investments [in] famous tax havens ? [and] these [2010 records] don?t show how much tax he?s avoiding.?

?I have no treason to doubt the returns are perfectly lawful,? said Ed Kleinbard, a law professor at the University of Southern California, who joined Gaspard during a midday press conference.

But, he added, ?is this candidate so personally or financially invested in certain [tax-related] positions that he cannot separate his own position from what is good for the country going forward??

Their criticisms match Obama?s campaign-trail effort to portray Romney as a out-of-touch elitist, and the same themes will likely be part of this evening?s State of the Union speech.

Romney?s 2010 tax payments amounted to 13.9 percent of his income;?Obama?s taxes of $453,770 came to 26 percent of his 2010 income.

Combined, Obama?s taxes and gifts were worth $245,075, and amounted to almost 40 percent of his income;?Romney?s combined taxes and gifts added up $6 million, or almost 30 percent of his income.

That combined rate is higher than the percentage of taxes paid by any income group, according to a 2010 report by the bipartisan congressional Joint Committee on Taxation.

The highest rate ? 27 percent ? is paid by people earning between $200,000 and $500,000, according to the committee?s report, titled ?Present Law and Background Data Related to the Federal Tax System In Effect For 2010 and 2011.?

Romney?s tax rate ? but not his tax bill ? was lower than the rate paid by taxpayers earning between $40,000 and $50,000, according to the report.

However, Romney?s tax record does not show any information about the tax revenue generated by the firms that he helped established when he was working at Bain Capital.

Romney argues that his investments helped create tax-generating jobs for 110,000 people.

Nationally, tax revenue has declined since 2009, when Obama was inaugurated.

In 2008, federal revenues stood at $2.29 trillion. The next year, revenues fell to $1.9 trillion because of an economic downturn. But because of the stalled economy, 2011 revenues were expected to reach only $1.9 trillion ? still far below the 2008 level, according to the Tax Policy Center.

During 2010, the federal government also borrowed $1.27 trillion to pay for programs that could not be supported with the $2.38 trillion paid in taxes by Romney and other taxpayers.

Join the conversation

Read more stories from The Daily Caller

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Democrats club Romney with his tax records

Texas congressman introduces bill to force Keystone XL approval

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/democrats/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/dailycaller/20120124/pl_dailycaller/democratsclubromneywithhistaxrecords

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বুধবার, ২৫ জানুয়ারী, ২০১২

Dollar falls against euro after Fed statement (AP)

NEW YORK ? The dollar turned lower against the euro Wednesday, erasing gains it made earlier in the day, after the Federal Reserve said that it is unlikely to raise interest rates before late 2014.

Lower interest rates tend to weigh on a currency by reducing the returns investors get from holding it. The central bank has kept interest rates near zero since cutting them during the financial crisis in December 2008. Keeping rates low is a sign that the Fed thinks the economy still needs help in order to recover.

The Fed also forecasted slightly lower growth in 2012 but said the unemployment rate could fall.

The euro rose to $1.3084 in late trading Wednesday from $1.3021 late Tuesday.

The dollar was also lower against most other currencies around the world.

The British pound rose to $1.5643 from $1.5603. The dollar fell to 0.9231 Swiss franc from 0.9286 Swiss franc and to 1.0074 Canadian dollar from 1.0101 Canadian dollar.

But the dollar rose to 77.81 Japanese yen from 77.73 Japanese yen after Japan posted its first annual trade deficit since 1982

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120125/ap_on_bi_ge/us_dollar

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Palestinian woman escapes father's dark captivity (AP)

JERUSALEM ? A young Palestinian woman who was imprisoned for 10 years in a series of dark rooms by her father said Monday she survived the ordeal by listening to the radio, dreaming of seeing sunshine again and finding small pleasure in an apple she was fed each day.

Baraa Melhem, 20, said she was enjoying her first taste of freedom after a decade of isolation and threats of rape and abuse, and she hopes to use her experience to help others.

"I have joy now. My life has begun," the young woman, dressed in red sweat pants, white shoes, a black shawl for warmth and a headscarf, told The Associated Press.

Melhem was rescued by Palestinian security forces in the West Bank town of Qalqiliya on Saturday after an aunt notified police. Adnan Damiri, a Palestinian police spokesman, said she was in "deplorable" condition.

Her father and stepmother, both Arab citizens of Israel, were turned over to Israeli authorities. Locked up in Israel, neither could be reached for comment. The father, Hassan Melhem, 49, is expected to appear in an Israeli court on Wednesday, said police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld. The stepmother's name wasn't available.

Speaking softly but confidently, Baraa Melhem said she was beaten, barely fed and let out only in the middle of the night to do housework. She was given only a blanket, radio and a razor blade by her father and stepmother, and both of them encouraged her to kill herself.

"I don't hate my father. But I hate what he did to me. Why did he do it? I don't understand," she said.

Melhem said she was first locked up in a bathroom after she ran away from home when she was 10. Police brought her home, and her father forced her to sign a statement saying she didn't want to go back to school. Melhem's parents divorced when she was four years old, and her father received custody.

Melhem is now living with her mother, Maysoun, in an Arab neighborhood of Jerusalem.

Melhem she said she was finally happy in her new home ? a shabby, purple-painted room with pink curtains, four mattresses on the ground and a red blanket. She clutched a large doll that her mother gave her as a gift.

"This is heaven. Because you have always been free, you don't appreciate it. But for somebody like me, who has tasted the bitterness of a prison, this is heaven."

Maysoun, who has remarried, refused to give her last name or age. She said she was so eager to divorce her first husband that when he insisted on keeping their daughter, she agreed. She took their son because the father used to spray perfume into his eyes. She said he was not violent toward the daughter.

"I was so young when I was getting a divorce. I didn't understand anything. I was just so desperate to be rid of that man," she said.

Melhem described her father as a violent man who also terrified her half brother and half sister. Although their conditions were better, they, too, were not allowed to leave the house when the father wasn't home. She said the siblings, who are believed to be staying with relatives now, were mentally disabled and were not sent to school.

"Fear, fear, fear ? that was the basis of my life," Melhem said.

Melhem said she kept sane by listening to a small transistor radio that her father gave her in the past five years. The young woman was up to date with news and current affairs and named her favorite radio hosts.

In one instance, she said, her spirits were lifted when she heard on her radio that her astrological sign was Leo, meaning she had a fiery personality.

Over the years the family moved twice more. Each time she was locked up. In her final home in Qalqiliya, she was kept in what she described as a bathroom that measured 3-by-3 feet (1-by-1 meters).

She dreamed of fleeing, but Melhem said her father threatened to rape her until she became pregnant if she tried to escape. Then he warned he would kill her and justify the crime by saying that she had shamed the family ? what is known in Arab society as "honor killing."

She said when he was angry, he regularly beat her with electric cables and sticks. He poured cold water on her when she asked for her mother, and sometimes shaved her head and eyebrows. She was let out only late at night to clean the rest of the house. Before dawn, her father then locked her back inside. He gave her bread, oil and an apple every day.

At one point, her father gave her a razor blade, telling her it would be better if she killed herself. Melhem said her stepmother urged her to do it, telling her she was a nobody.

To cope, Melhem said she often jumped up and down for exercise, cleaned the bathroom, dusted off her blanket, washed her clothes and then listened to the radio all day.

Hala Shreim, a social worker who accompanied police on the rescue, said Melhem was found in the small bathroom with a tiny window. She said the woman was wrapped in a blanket and wore threadbare clothes so old that they were disintegrating.

When she was taken outside, Melhem said she was blinded by the pale winter sun. It was more sunlight than she had seen in 10 years.

"Is that the sun? Is that the sun I was dreaming of?" she said she asked police. Melhem said the sight of so many people startled her. "Are those the people I was hearing on the radio?" she asked the police.

Melhem said her first request, after she was released, was for hard candy ? something she had been denied since she was a child. Then she asked to see her mother.

Melhem's mother, who remarried and moved to a different town, had asked about her daughter, but her ex-husband would make up excuses why the young woman wasn't around and sometimes told the mother to mind her own business, said social worker Shreim said.

Melhem said she paid special attention to mental health programs on Palestinian radio. She believes that listening to voices from the outside world, modest exercise and eating an apple each day saved her. Although she has nothing more than an elementary school education, she said she hopes to study psychology and one day treat people who had similar fates.

"There is no house in the world ? look outside the window. In every house, somebody is suffering," she said.

When asked if she hoped to marry, Melhem was visibly upset. "If the violence I experienced was between a father and a daughter, what happens between a man and a wife? No, I never want to marry," she said.

There have been a few similar known cases in the West Bank over the years.

In 2008, Palestinian police discovered two disabled siblings, a man and a woman, whose family had locked them in concrete rooms stinking of excrement and sweat for decades. Shamed by their state, the family feared their conditions would ruin the marriage prospects of their healthy brother.

In perhaps the most notorious case of child abuse worldwide, Austrian police discovered a man that year who had imprisoned his daughter in a windowless cellar for 24 years and repeatedly raped her, fathering her seven children.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/mideast/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120123/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_palestinians_captive_daughter

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Santorum says Obama pushes doctors from Medicare (AP)

LADY LAKE, Fla. ? Rick Santorum warned Florida's seniors that Democrats' health law would limit their access to doctors and dollars, cautioning them that his rivals for the Republican presidential nomination once backed pieces of the overhaul that requires Americans to buy health care coverage.

Santorum said rivals Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney backed the so-called individual mandate that has emerged as a problem for both candidates. The former Pennsylvania senator said Republicans cannot pick a nominee who would not be able to challenge President Barack Obama aggressively on the law its opponents call "Obamacare."

"I never supported anything close to Obamacare. Sadly, that is not the case with the rest of the people in this field," Santorum told an older audience at an American Legion hall near Orlando. "Whether it's Gov. Romney with Romneycare or Speaker Gingrich and a 20-year promotion of the individual mandate."

Both candidates, he said, should be unacceptable to conservatives, especially among seniors who make up much of Florida. Some 3.3 million Floridians are over the age of 65.

Santorum centered his criticism of the health care law on a panel that controls payments to health care providers. The Independent Payment Advisory Board's unelected members would have too much power over seniors' care, he said.

The panel was designed to curb Medicare spending and its recommendations ? such as cutting Medicare rates paid to doctors ? are binding unless Congress overrules them.

"When they continue to cut doctors and hospital reimbursements, doctors who have to make money are going to have to take more private-pay patients and less Medicare patients," he said.

It's good politics, Santorum said, but terrible policy.

"The bottom line is more and more providers of health care are not taking Medicare because of the reimbursement rates," he added.

He said it was a clever way for Obama to avoid taking responsibility for cuts.

"The effect is rationing care. It's rationing indirectly. You'll be mad at your doctor, you'll be mad at your hospital," he said. "You won't be mad at Obama, who is the real reason for your doctor or hospital not seeing you."

And when people do see a doctor, it is after delay, Santorum said.

"The average wait is getting longer and longer," he said. "The average wait is 29 days now."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120123/ap_on_el_pr/us_santorum_medicare

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মঙ্গলবার, ২৪ জানুয়ারী, ২০১২

Mexico officials: 'Chapo' aide killed in gunfight

(AP) ? Members of a Mexican army special forces unit fatally shot a high-ranking aide to the country's most-wanted drug dealer in a gunfight in the northern state of Durango, officials said Monday.

Luis Alberto Cabrera Sarabia was responsible for the operations of Guzman's Sinaloa Cartel in Durango and part of the neighboring state of Chihuahua, army spokesman Gen. Ricardo Trevilla said.

The army says Sarabia is know as "The Architect," and was named to the role after the December arrest of his brother Felipe Cabrera Sarabia, or "The Engineer."

Sinaloa gunmen traded fire with troops during the operation to arrest Luis Cabrera Sarabia on Friday. One of the gunmen was slain and 11 others were captured. Four soldiers were hurt in the gunfight.

Mexican officials said that another high-ranking member of the Sinaloa cartel, Fidel Mancinas Franco, was arrested in the northern state of Sonora on Saturday. Mancinas had been extorting money from immigrants seeking to travel to the United States, they said. Mancinas is wanted in the U.S. in connection with the deaths of 11 migrants during a car crash in Texas in 2009, officials said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-01-23-LT-Drug-War-Mexico/id-57572f297af84d3880d723a803bfffd0

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Just another newbie here :P

As you probably noticed, I am fairly new here :P I am kinda an old RPer so I kinda suck at it lol.
Other then that, I am just a straight forward person, I am helping if I can and stuff. I'm alot into Anime and fighting games aswell as VNs.

So yeaaaaah I am kinda bad at introduction...soo hello I guess lol

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/la5YNehIJ5o/viewtopic.php

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রবিবার, ২২ জানুয়ারী, ২০১২

Obama sings soul, briefly (AP)

NEW YORK ? President Barack Obama took a brief and unexpected turn as a soul singer at a New York fundraiser, crooning a bar from an Al Green classic and then joking that he hadn't been ushered offstage.

It happened at Manhattan's Apollo Theater late Thursday, when Obama stepped to the podium and veered from prepared remarks to thank Green for warming up the crowd.

Apparently not content with simply praising him, Obama suddenly launched into Green's "Let's Stay Together," starting with the vibrato "I" and pausing for enthusiastic applause before finishing up with the line "so in love with you."

Obama said his staff didn't believe he'd really do it.

Then he joked that the Sandman hadn't come out ? a reference to Sandman Sims, the tap dancer who chased unpopular acts offstage at the Apollo for decades.

___

Online: http://apne.ws/x7ak4B

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/music/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120120/ap_en_mu/us_obama_al_green

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Maldives journalists say gov't intimidating them (AP)

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka ? The Maldives government is threatening and harassing the media over their reporting of a political crisis and the military's arrest of the nation's top criminal court judge, a journalists' group said Thursday.

The Maldives Journalists' Association said in a statement that television stations are being penalized for airing opposition politicians' comments that authorities perceive to be lies.

An independent regulator, the Maldives Broadcasting Commission, accused the communication minister of threatening to withdraw frequencies of television and radio stations after he accused the commission of failing to monitor media.

Communication Minister Adil Saleem denied the allegations of harassment but said that he told the commission that he may have to withdraw media frequencies until the commission works out a mode for proper monitoring.

Judge Abdulla Mohamed was arrested Monday after he released an opposition leader who had been detained without a warrant. He is still under military custody despite the supreme court and the prosecutor general calling for his release.

MJA President Ahmed Zahir said the government has been unhappy over the media reporting on alleged corruption, mismanagement and the arrest, and live telecasts of opposition protests.

"The responsibility of a remark or a comment made by an individual or a political party shall be undertaken by themselves, but not by the broadcaster or the publisher," the MJA said. "Media is only a vessel which carries comments and interviews of both the government and the opposition."

The broascasting commission also said that the minister had no legal power to suspend or revoke a broadcasting license.

"We are concerned that the recent attempts to intimidate the media both directly and indirectly will result in grave consequences to the maturing process of an infant industry," the commission said.

Saleem said of the alleged intimidation, "We are for media freedom, we are for democracy. All we are saying is not to deceive the public."

Saleem said he felt some television stations were using old video clips to exaggerate crowds during live coverage of opposition protests.

On Thursday about 500 protesters gathered in capital Male to demand the release of the judge and a halt to arbitrary arrests. "No to dictatorship. We want justice," they cried.

Maldives was under 30-year autocratic rule until the government of former pro-democracy political prisoner President Mohamed Nasheed was elected in the country's first free elections in 2008.

The current crisis arose after opposition politician Mohamed Jameel Ahmed in a television interview allegedly accused Nasheed's government of trying to undermine Islam with the support of Christians and Jews. Islam is the official state religion of Maldives, and practicing other faiths is banned.

Police have brought Ahmed before court three times on allegations of hate speech but the court has freed him on all occasions.

The Maldives government has warned of rising Islamic extremism in this Indian Ocean archipelago of 300,000 people.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120119/ap_on_re_as/as_maldives_politics

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শনিবার, ২১ জানুয়ারী, ২০১২

Salvage Efforts Begin for Stricken Cruise Ship Costa Concordia

[unable to retrieve full-text content]A Dutch marine salvage company is preparing to pump half a million gallons of fuel from the stricken Costa Concordia cruise liner, the first step toward determining whether to save or scrap it.

Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=580d7f46c32023c832732d2863870580

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Why scarab beetles dance on a ball of dung

The ancient Egyptians would have nodded sagely: scarab beetles perform a dance to the sun atop a ball of dung. They're not worshipping a sun god, though: the beetles dance to orient themselves and ? crucially ? to roll their dung ball in a straight line.

Dung beetles were sacred in ancient Egypt, their dung-rolling linked with the nocturnal activity of Khepri, the god of the rising sun. Khepri was supposed to roll the sun through the underworld at night, pushing it over the horizon in the morning. Now Emily Baird of Lund University in Sweden and colleagues have shown that a diurnal dung beetle in South Africa (Scarabaeus nigroaeneus) uses celestial cues to ensure it keeps going in a straight line away from the dung pile.

Beetles collect dung from a pile and form it into manageable balls. Making a ball costs time and energy, and competition for dung can be intense, so it's best for a beetle not to hang around when it's got a precious new ball ready to roll.

"As a fresh dung pat can attract many beetles, it is necessary for individual beetles to try to avoid the others that may try to steal their ball," says Baird. "To do this, the beetles roll their ball away from the dung pile in the most efficient manner possible. That is, in a straight line."

Beetle boogie

When beetles have fashioned their ball, they climb to the top and "dance" ? actually rotate on the surface ? before returning to the ground and pushing. Their aim is to find a suitable patch of ground where they can bury the ball and eat it. The beetles shove the ball facing backwards, with their head down and rear legs pushing the dung.

Through an ingenious series of experiments, the biologists found that the beetles perform the dance before moving away from the dung pile, and also when they encounter an obstacle or lose control of the ball. Baird's team sent the beetles down semicircular tunnels to put them off course, made them roll balls down rotating pathways, and used a mirror to change the apparent position of the sun. In both cases, most beetles performed the orientation dance before changing the direction they pushed the ball.

"Similar behaviours are seen in ants, which rotate about their vertical axis to memorise landmarks near the nest, and sandhoppers, [small seashore crustaceans] which rotate back and forth to find a particular magnetic orientation," says Baird.

Journal reference: PLoS One, DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0030211

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Source: http://feeds.newscientist.com/c/749/f/10897/s/1bf04f92/l/0L0Snewscientist0N0Carticle0Cdn213680Ewhy0Escarab0Ebeetles0Edance0Eon0Ea0Eball0Eof0Edung0Bhtml0DDCMP0FOTC0Erss0Gnsref0Fonline0Enews/story01.htm

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শুক্রবার, ২০ জানুয়ারী, ২০১২

'America, Israel, and the Future of Liberal Democracy'

The Tikvah Fund is hosting an evening with Yuval Levin and Leon Wieseltier tomorrow at the Hudson Institute in Washington, D.C. on "America, Israel, and the Future of Liberal Democracy." Here are the details:?

Young professionals and college and graduate students interested in Jewish affairs are invited to a policy discussion and information session with the Tikvah Fund on Thursday, January 19th. Hosted at the Hudson Institute, the evening will commence at 7 pm with a discussion on ?America, Israel, and the Future of Liberal Democracy.? Panelists include Leon Wieseltier, literary editor of The New Republic and author of Kaddish; and Yuval Levin, founding editor of National Affairs magazine. Immediately following the panel, the Tikvah Fund will present, over dessert, three stipend-bearing opportunities that it is offering to students and young professionals in 2012: a two-week summer seminar at Princeton for undergraduates; a five-week seminar in Israel on the intellectual and historical underpinnings of Zionism for those between the ages of 20-29; and a fellowship combining academic and work experience for individuals with at least a college degree, but also open to those possessing more advanced degrees or professional experience. RSVP through the event?Facebook page, or by emailing cfilipetti@tikvahfellowship.org.

Browse 15 Years of the Weekly Standard

Source: http://www.weeklystandard.com/blogs/america-israel-and-future-liberal-democracy_617161.html

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Oil rig arrives for Cuba offshore exploration work (Reuters)

HAVANA, Jan 19 (Reuters) ? A Chinese-built drilling rig to be used in the first major exploration for oil in Cuba's offshore waters arrived on Thursday off the coast of the communist-ruled island's capital.

The rig, known as Scarabeo 9, could be seen as it sailed slowly westward, miles off the north coast and Havana's famed Malecon seaside boulevard.

Its arrival went mostly unnoticed by people in the capital, but it was a long-awaited and landmark day for the island's oil industry, which believes the platform will tap into rich oil fields in Cuba's part of the Gulf of Mexico.

Starting next week, Spanish oil giant Repsol YPF, working in partnership with Norway's Statoil and ONGC Videsh, a unit of India's Oil and Natural Gas Corp, is expected to drill at least two wells in Cuban waters about 70 miles from the Florida Keys.

Malaysia's Petronas, in partnership with Russia's Gazprom Neft, will also drill a well using the Scarabeo 9. The rig has been contracted from its owner Saipem, a unit of Italian oil company Eni.

All the wells will be in water at least a mile deep, like that of the BP well that blew out and spilled millions of gallons of oil in the U.S. part of the Gulf of Mexico in 2010.

Cuba has said it may have 20 billion barrels of oil in its parts of the Gulf, but the U.S. Geological Survey has estimated about 5 billion.

Repsol drilled the only previous offshore well in Cuba in 2004 and said it found oil, but said it was not "commercial."

It has been trying for several years to bring another rig for more drilling, a task that was complicated by the longstanding U.S. trade embargo against Cuba and the limits it places on the amount of U.S. technology that can be used.

The Scarabeo 9, a semi-submersible rig that floats on four giant pontoon legs and has living quarters for more than 200 crewmembers, was built in China, then sent to Singapore in late 2010 for completion.

The only part of the rig said to be American-made is the blowout preventer, the part that failed in the BP disaster.

Cuba is hoping oil will ease its chronic economic woes and bring energy independence. It currently receives 115,000 barrels a day from its oil-rich socialist ally Venezuela.

Cuban exile leaders in the United States fear that oil could help the communist government stay in power for years to come. They have filed several pieces of legislation trying to scuttle the offshore project.

Floridians have worried that Cuba could suffer a BP-style blowout that would send oil into the Straits of Florida and stain the coast and coral reefs of both the island and the U.S. state 90 miles to the north.

Drillers in Cuban waters could get within about 45 miles of Florida, more than twice as close as they can in U.S. waters, where no oil exploration is permitted with 125 miles of the Florida coast.

At Repsol's invitation, a team from the U.S. Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement and the U.S. Coast Guard inspected the Scarabeo 9 last month in Trinidad and Tobago and found it to "generally comply with existing international and U.S. standards."

(Reporting by Jeff Franks; Editing by Tom Brown and Cynthia Osterman)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120119/wl_nm/us_cuba_oil_rig

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ১৯ জানুয়ারী, ২০১২

Chill out during Icebox Days in International Falls, Minn.

Courtesy International Falls CVB

A participant in the 2010 Icebox Derby hurls a frozen turkey toward a set of bowling pins.

By Rob Lovitt, msnbc.com contributor

In the middle of January you could certainly be forgiven for wanting to spend the days curled up in a Snuggie, nursing cups of hot tea and feeding pages of your quote-a-day calendar to the fire in desperate anticipation of spring.

Or you could head to International Falls, Minn., aka, the Icebox of the Nation, for the frigid festivities known as Icebox Days (Jan. 18?22). Now in its 32nd year, the five days of bone-chilling, teeth-chattering fun earns a tip of the tuque and top honors as January?s Weird Festival of the Month.

?We do suffer some long, cold months,? conceded Faye Whitbeck, president of the International Falls Chamber of Commerce.? Whitbeck said that local officials came up with the festival in 1980 as a means to boost citizen morale and pump up the local economy.

?We wanted to play up what we could,? she told msnbc.com.

And how does one play up temperatures that typically hover between zero and -10 degrees? Apparently, by engaging in unique outdoor activities, including frozen-turkey bowling, smoosh racing and, for the truly hardy, the 5k/10K Freeze Yer Gizzard Blizzard Run (FYGBR).

Take frozen-turkey bowling, which, as the name suggests, involves tossing a rock-hard gobbler at a set of bowling pins. ?You know, I think we just felt a kinship with frozen turkeys,? said Whitbeck, who also provided the answer to a reporter?s question about where a bowler might put his or her fingers.

?Anywhere they fit,? she said.

And smoosh racing? Smooshing, it turns out, is an activity in which teams of four strap their feet to 8-foot 2x4s ? think cross-country skis with more weight, less maneuverability and three other people trying to coordinate strides ? and race down a snow-covered street.

Courtesy International Falls CVB

Smoosh racers wrap themselves in the Canadian flag during last year's Icebox Days in International Falls, Minn.

?You can imagine the synchronicity that?s required,? said Whitbeck. This year, the festivities will include the first-ever kids? smoosh race, which, as anybody who has watched small children ski or skate knows, promises its own brand of amusement.

Personal mortification aside, though, the biggest test of cold-weather courage during Icebox Days is the Freeze Yer Gizzard Blizzard Run, which operates under the motto of Only the Bold Run the Cold.

Of course, as part of Icebox Days, it?s only fitting that runners have been known to show up in grass skirts, Bermuda shorts and the occasional bumblebee outfit. With up to 300 competitors expected, the race is like a reunion, says longtime participant Bob Conner, drawing competitors from around the Upper Midwest and nearby Ontario.

Conner, in fact, has run in every race since the first one, chalking up his accomplishment to ?sheer luck, some determination and an unknown amount of insanity and very good fortune.?

He also gives credit to event organizers who have never canceled a race due to excessive cold, although they apparently considered it in 1981 when the temperature dipped to -28 degrees, which plunged to -78 with the wind chill.

?People were worried as heck because the conditions were just brutal,? he told msnbc.com. The solution? ?They cut the 10K down to a 5K.?

Fortunately, participants and spectators should have an easier go of it this year. Daytime highs in the nation?s Icebox are expected to be in the single digits during the week with the weekend seeing balmy temperatures about 10 to 20 degrees warmer.

Related stories

Rob Lovitt is a longtime travel writer who still believes the journey is as important as the destination. Follow him at Twitter.

Source: http://itineraries.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/17/10176027-chill-out-during-icebox-days-in-international-falls-minn

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বুধবার, ১৮ জানুয়ারী, ২০১২

Nigeria unions suspend strike after fuel price cut (Reuters)

ABUJA (Reuters) ? Nigerian trade unions called off strikes and protests on Monday, pulling Africa's top oil producer back from a major confrontation after President Goodluck Jonathan announced a cut in petrol prices by a third.

His move partially reinstated a fuel subsidy, the scrapping of which was a key policy of Jonathan and his economic team. But it slashes the cost of the benefit to the government and leaves open negotiations to phase it out again later.

Jonathan said fixing the liter price at 97 naira ($0.60) was a short-term response to ease hardships.

"In the past eight days through strikes, mass rallies, shutdown, debates and street protests, Nigerians demonstrated clearly that they cannot be taken for granted and that sovereignty belongs to them," Abdulwahed Omar, president of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), said during a press conference.

"Labour and its allies formally announce the suspension of strikes, mass rallies and protests across the country."

The strikes paralyzed Africa's second-largest economy last week and the oil workers union had threatened to shut down its 2 million barrel a day production.

Jonathan met union leaders late on Sunday in search of a compromise to end the strikes but he said later the talks had "yielded no tangible result" and he would pursue a policy of removing subsidies which he says breeds waste and corruption.

"The government will continue to pursue full deregulation of the downstream petroleum sector. However, given the hardships being suffered by Nigerians, and after due consideration and consultations ... the government has approved the reduction of the pump price of petrol," he said in a national broadcast.

Residents of Nigeria's biggest city Lagos reported soldiers in the streets in an apparent security move to contain any further protests.

PUBLIC ANGER

It remains unclear whether the government will be able to keep the lid on the wider public anger unleashed by the subsidy protests, which is rooted in years of frustration at corrupt and incompetent governance.

A few hundred protesters chanting "solidarity forever" tried to continue protesting in Ketu, on the outskirts of Lagos, but were blocked by armed riot police and soldiers.

"He can't just set the price unilaterally at 97 naira per liter. That's not listening to the voice of the Nigerian people. We're not stupid and he shouldn't treat us as if we don't know what's going on," said IT consultant Mavila Sadiq.

When a price cap of 65 naira ended on January 1, pump prices more than doubled, to 150 naira. The new cap of 97 naira still represents a 50 percent price increase since January 1.

Analysts said the unions reckoned that Jonathan, having a made a large concession, would be unlikely to back down further.

Critics of the subsidy cut have urged the government to lower its own spending first. Jonathan pledged such cuts in his speech, though trade unions are likely to fear that that cost-saving could mean public sector job cuts.

"There was an implicit threat to the unions in that promise to cut recurrent expenditure," said Kayode Akindele, a director of the Lagos investment firm 46 Parallels, noting that much of that spending was on civil service wages.

"It will lead to job losses, and that's a big fight for the unions. They don't want to push it too far."

He added that the president had salvaged credibility by restoring only part of the old subsidy.

Analysts note the protests were only in some parts of the country, as most Nigerians away from the main urban centers have never had fuel at the official subsidized price anyway.

Oil output by Nigeria, Africa's biggest crude exporter, has not been affected so far by the labor unrest.

NO OIL CUT

Global oil prices were boosted by fears of reduced supplies from Nigeria late last week. A serious production outage would push them sharply higher, traders and analysts say.

Several people were killed in clashes between strikers and police last week and 600 were treated for wounds, according to the Red Cross.

Unions said they wanted the government to bring the petrol price immediately back down to 65 naira, at which point they would cancel strikes and protests and talks could continue.

Many economists argue that the subsidy should be dropped because it was wasteful and open to corruption. Protesters have countered that position by asking the government to work harder to tackle graft and waste before rescinding public benefits.

Jonathan gave approval on Sunday for an investigation. Oil Minister Diezani Alison-Madueke said she had written to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission inviting the regulator to examine the subsidy procedure.

The state oil company NNPC and fuel regulators have come under fire for lacking transparency and for mismanagement, including in a report compiled by international accounting firm KPMG. Alison-Madueke pledged to review such reports, although some analysts question the ministry's good faith in doing so.

"The KPMG report has been on your desk for over a year. So why now?" said Akindele said of the oil minister. "The president might have to sacrifice somebody, and it might have to be the petroleum minister. Nobody has said anything in support of her."

Alison-Madueke said she would meet legislators in the next week to seek progress towards passing a wide-ranging Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) that has been stuck in parliament for years, costing Nigeria billions of dollars in lost investment.

Africa's most populous nation holds the world's seventh largest gas reserves but its infrastructure only provides enough power to run one medium-sized European city, meaning most of the country's 160 million people live without electricity.

(Additional reporting by Camillus Eboh in Abuja, James Jukwey, Tim Cocks and Njuwa Maina in Lagos; Writing by Tim Cocks and Joe Brock; Editing by Alastair Macdonald)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120116/wl_nm/us_nigeria_strike

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Fewer children require hospitalization following drowning-related incidents

Fewer children require hospitalization following drowning-related incidents [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 16-Jan-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Tim Parsons
tmparson@jhsph.edu
410-955-7619
Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health

Fewer children required hospitalization following a drowning incident over the last two decades, according to a new study from the Johns Hopkins Center for Injury Research and Policy. According to the study, pediatric hospitalizations from drowning-related incidents declined 51 percent from 1993 to 2008. The rates declined significantly for all ages and for both genders, although drowning-related hospitalizations remained higher for boys at every age. Hospitalization rates also decreased significantly across the U.S., with the greatest decline in the South. Despite the steep decline, the South still experienced the highest rate of pediatric hospitalizations for drowning. The study will be published in the February issue of Pediatrics, and available on the journal's website January 16.

Drowning is the second leading cause of unintentional injury death of children age 1 to 19 in the U.S. For every pediatric drowning death, another two children are hospitalized for non-fatal drowning injuries.

"We found a significant decline in the rate of pediatric drowning hospitalizations, which is consistent with documented decreases in pediatric deaths from drowning," said lead study author Stephen Bowman, PhD, MHA, an assistant professor with the Johns Hopkins Center for Injury Research and Policy, part of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. "Our findings provide evidence of a true decrease in drowning-related incidents, rather than simply a shift towards more children dying before reaching a hospital."

The authors note that over the study time period, important public and private efforts to reduce the risk of drowning in children have been promoted, such as installation of four-sided pool fencing, the use of personal flotation devices, and the endorsement by public health authorities of childhood swim lessons. Reductions in bathtub drowning hospitalizations, most common among children younger than 4, may be a result of targeted injury prevention efforts aimed at parents and caregivers of young children that encourage vigilance in supervision and offer education on the risks of infant bathtub seats.

"Continued funding and support for these efforts offer the potential to further reduce drowning hospitalizations in children," said Bowman. Drowning accounts for over 1,000 pediatric deaths annually in U.S. and over 5,000 related injuries. Total lifetime costs associated with drowning were estimated to exceed $5.3 billion in 2000, including $2.6 billion for children ages 0 to 14 years.

To document the trends, the study authors used data from the 1993-2008 Nationwide Inpatient Sample (NIS) of the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project, sponsored by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

###

Support for this research was provided by the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, through a grant to the Johns Hopkins Center for Injury Research and Policy, and through support from the National Institutes of Health/National Center for Research Resources Clinical and Translational Research grant UL1RR029884 (Arkansas Translational Research Institute, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences).

Additional media contact: Alicia Samuels, MPH, Johns Hopkins Center for Injury Research and Policy, 914-720-4635 or alsamuel@jhsph.edu.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Fewer children require hospitalization following drowning-related incidents [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 16-Jan-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Tim Parsons
tmparson@jhsph.edu
410-955-7619
Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health

Fewer children required hospitalization following a drowning incident over the last two decades, according to a new study from the Johns Hopkins Center for Injury Research and Policy. According to the study, pediatric hospitalizations from drowning-related incidents declined 51 percent from 1993 to 2008. The rates declined significantly for all ages and for both genders, although drowning-related hospitalizations remained higher for boys at every age. Hospitalization rates also decreased significantly across the U.S., with the greatest decline in the South. Despite the steep decline, the South still experienced the highest rate of pediatric hospitalizations for drowning. The study will be published in the February issue of Pediatrics, and available on the journal's website January 16.

Drowning is the second leading cause of unintentional injury death of children age 1 to 19 in the U.S. For every pediatric drowning death, another two children are hospitalized for non-fatal drowning injuries.

"We found a significant decline in the rate of pediatric drowning hospitalizations, which is consistent with documented decreases in pediatric deaths from drowning," said lead study author Stephen Bowman, PhD, MHA, an assistant professor with the Johns Hopkins Center for Injury Research and Policy, part of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. "Our findings provide evidence of a true decrease in drowning-related incidents, rather than simply a shift towards more children dying before reaching a hospital."

The authors note that over the study time period, important public and private efforts to reduce the risk of drowning in children have been promoted, such as installation of four-sided pool fencing, the use of personal flotation devices, and the endorsement by public health authorities of childhood swim lessons. Reductions in bathtub drowning hospitalizations, most common among children younger than 4, may be a result of targeted injury prevention efforts aimed at parents and caregivers of young children that encourage vigilance in supervision and offer education on the risks of infant bathtub seats.

"Continued funding and support for these efforts offer the potential to further reduce drowning hospitalizations in children," said Bowman. Drowning accounts for over 1,000 pediatric deaths annually in U.S. and over 5,000 related injuries. Total lifetime costs associated with drowning were estimated to exceed $5.3 billion in 2000, including $2.6 billion for children ages 0 to 14 years.

To document the trends, the study authors used data from the 1993-2008 Nationwide Inpatient Sample (NIS) of the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project, sponsored by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

###

Support for this research was provided by the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, through a grant to the Johns Hopkins Center for Injury Research and Policy, and through support from the National Institutes of Health/National Center for Research Resources Clinical and Translational Research grant UL1RR029884 (Arkansas Translational Research Institute, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences).

Additional media contact: Alicia Samuels, MPH, Johns Hopkins Center for Injury Research and Policy, 914-720-4635 or alsamuel@jhsph.edu.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-01/jhub-fcr011212.php

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মঙ্গলবার, ১৭ জানুয়ারী, ২০১২

Rivals say split SC conservative vote aids Romney (AP)

COLUMBIA, S.C. ? A splintered conservative vote in South Carolina could pave the way for Mitt Romney to win this week's pivotal primary, some rivals said Sunday, acknowledging an outcome that prominent state lawmakers suggested could end the nomination fight.

"I think the only way that a Massachusetts moderate can get through South Carolina is if the vote is split," said Newt Gingrich, portraying himself as the lone conservative with a "realistic chance" of beating Romney in the first-in-the South contest.

Polls show Romney, the former Massachusetts governors who struggled to a fourth-place finish in South Carolina during his 2008 White House run, with a lead heading into Saturday's vote. The state has a large population of evangelicals and other conservative Christians, and concerns arose four years ago about his Mormon faith.

But Gingrich, Rick Santorum and Rick Perry all said Romney, after victories in Iowa and New Hampshire, continued to benefit from the fractured GOP field and the failure of social conservatives to fully coalesce around a single alternative.

"If for some reason he's not derailed here and Mitt Romney wins South Carolina ... I think it should be over," said the state's senior senator, Republican Lindsey Graham. He added, "I'd hope the party would rally around him if he did in fact win South Carolina."

Santorum said South Carolina is "not going to be the final issue" and spoke of the "need to get this eventually down to a conservative alternative" to Romney. "When we get it down to a two-person race, we have an excellent opportunity to win this race," said the former Pennsylvania senator who won the endorsement of an influential group of social conservatives and evangelical leaders Saturday in Texas.

Perry, the Texas governor, said it was "our intention" to compete in the next contest, Florida's primary Jan. 31, even if he finished last in South Carolina.

Gingrich said he would "reassess" his candidacy if he lost in South Carolina and acknowledged that a Romney victory would mean "an enormous advantage going forward."

The former House speaker appealed for the support of "every conservative who wants to have a conservative nominee."

"I hope every conservative will reach the conclusion that to vote for anybody but Gingrich is, in fact, to help Romney win the nomination," he said.

To Rep. Tim Scott, R-S.C., the equation is simple: "If Romney wins South Carolina, I think the game's over. This is the last stand for many candidates."

He noted that three candidates are pursuing the evangelical vote "very strongly and without any question that works to the Romney campaign's benefit. It's hard to find a single candidate that rallies all of the Christian voters in South Carolina and therefore that splintered approach will probably have a major impact" in the primary.

Romney took a rare day off from campaigning while his opponents focused on the South Carolina coast. They also attended church services and prayer breakfasts in a state with a large population of evangelicals and other conservative Christians.

At the Cathedral of Praise in North Charleston, Gingrich was cheered by church members as he criticized activist judges who he said had made "anti-American" rulings to keep God out of schools. Santorum spoke at the same church Saturday.

At a prayer breakfast in Myrtle Beach, Perry appealed to religious conservatives to back his candidacy.

"Who will see the job of president as that of faithful servant to the American people, and the God who created us?" Perry said. "I hope each of you will peer into your heart and look for that individual with the record and the values that represent your heart."

The candidates faced a packed week of campaign events and nationally televised debates Monday and Thursday. No Republican has won the party's presidential nomination without carrying South Carolina.

Santorum battled Romney to a virtual tie in Iowa before falling to fifth place in New Hampshire. Gingrich and Perry fared poorly in both states.

All three have the backing of well-financed independent groups known as super political action committee that can help keep their candidacies afloat.

Santorum refused to suggest anyone should drop out of the race as a way to consolidate conservative support behind an anti-Romney candidate. But he said Republicans would have a hard time beating President Barack Obama in November if Romney were the nominee. Santorum cited Romney's push for mandatory insurance coverage in Massachusetts.

Gingrich and Perry used television interviews to focus on Romney's former leadership of the Bain Capital venture firm. Both defended raising questions about Bain's business practices, saying Romney's tenure would come under relentless assault from Democrats in the general election.

Former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman picked up the endorsement of The State, one of South Carolina's leading newspaper. Huntsman came in a weak third in New Hampshire after skipping Iowa, but the paper described him as a "realist" able to appeal to the centrist voters who will decide the general election.

Texas Rep. Ron Paul was returning to campaigning for the first time since Wednesday. He has spent several days at home in Texas after his second-place finish in the New Hampshire primary last week.

Gingrich, Graham and Scott appeared on NBC's "Meet the Press," while Santorum spoke on "Fox News Sunday" and Perry was interviewed on CNN's "State of the Union."

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Associated Press writers Tom Beaumont in Myrtle Beach and Julie Pace in North Charleston contributed to this report.

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Follow Beth Fouhy on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/bfouhy

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120115/ap_on_el_pr/us_gop_campaign

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