বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৮ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Sibling's Death May Boost Your Own Risk of Dying From Heart ...

depression812 Siblings Death May Boost Your Own Risk of Dying From Heart Attack: Study

By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, Feb. 27 (HealthDay News) ? When a brother or sister dies ? especially from a heart attack ? the risk of a surviving sibling also dying from a heart attack increases sharply in the following years, a large new study from Sweden suggests.

Chronic stress or lifestyle choices like drinking, smoking, unhealthy diet and lack of exercise may follow the loss of a sibling, increasing the risk of a heart attack over time, the researchers said.

?Health care providers should follow bereaved siblings to help recognize signs of acute or chronic psychosocial stress mechanisms that could lead to heart attack,? said lead researcher Mikael Rostila, an associate professor at Stockholm University and the Karolinska Institute.

?We might be able to prevent heart attacks and other heart-related conditions by treating these siblings early on and recommending stress management,? he added.

Reasons for the association between a sibling?s death and the death of a brother or sister years later aren?t clear, Rostila noted. And although the study showed an association between a sibling?s heart attack death and heightened death risk, it did not establish a cause-and-effect relationship.

?More detailed information from medical records, shared childhood social environment and family characteristics, and data on personal and relational characteristics is needed to uncover the mechanisms causing the association between sibling death and heart attack,? Rostila said.

The report was published in the Feb. 27 issue of the Journal of the American Heart Association.

To see the effect of a sibling?s death on their other siblings, Rostila?s team collected data on more than 1.6 million people in Sweden, aged 40 to 69.

They found the risk of dying from a heart attack increased 25 percent among surviving sisters and 15 percent among surviving brothers compared to people who had not lost a sibling. If their brother or sister died of a heart attack, risk of also dying from a heart attack in the following years increased by 62 percent among women and 98 percent among men, Rostila?s team found.

Death from a heart attack was not likely to happen immediately after siblings died, the researchers said. Rather, the risk rose in the four to six years after a sibling?s death among women and in the two to six years afterward among men, they found.

?This is a red flag for families,? said Dr. Stephen Green, associate chairman of the department of cardiology at North Shore University Hospital, in Manhasset, N.Y. ?We know that heart disease is genetic and environmental and typically siblings and family members share the same gene pool, but also share the same bad habits.?

Many siblings whose brother or sister died from a heart attack have undiagnosed heart disease, Green said.

If you ? or someone you know ? has a family member with a history of heart disease or heart attack, or a family member who died from heart disease, it is important to talk with your primary care doctor or a cardiologist to make sure it doesn?t happen to you, Green said.

More information

To learn more about heart attacks, visit the American Heart Association.

HEALTHDAY Web XSmall Siblings Death May Boost Your Own Risk of Dying From Heart Attack: Study

Source: http://news.health.com/2013/02/27/siblings-death-may-boost-your-own-risk-of-dying-from-heart-attack-study/

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Practice Fusion Makes Its First Acquisition, Scoops Up Peter Thiel, Reid Hoffman-Backed Mobile Health Startup 100Plus

photo 1-29With nearly $70 million raised since its inception in 2005, Practice Fusion has become the frontrunner in the multi-horse race to become the go-to electronic health record platform. When Josh spoke to the startup back in June, it had just closed a $34 million series C financing round, which put its valuation close to $500 million and put it on the path to an eventual IPO.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/EbrNGA6Fiv4/

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বুধবার, ২৭ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

UW students want to keep cap on tuition hikes

MADISON, Wis. (AP) -- University of Wisconsin students asked state legislators Monday to renew a tuition cap, fearing that failure to do so would put higher education out of reach of many families.

About 100 students from campuses around the state descended on the Capitol to call for a tuition increase of no more than 3 to 4 percent in the academic year starting this fall. Gov. Scott Walker's proposed budget would end the cap, currently at 5.5 percent, after the current academic year.

Geoff Murray, president of the United Council of UW Students, a student rights advocacy group representing 140,000 UW students at 20 campuses, said ending the cap could lead to a tuition spike that would make it difficult for many students to pay for college. The existing cap went into effect after tuition shot up 15 to 18 percent a decade ago.

Murray, a senior majoring in economics at UW Stevens Point, said tuition increases in the last two years have two-thirds of Wisconsin college students graduating with debt averaging $26,000.

Tuition for undergrads at the flagship campus in Madison rose 7.4 percent this school year compared to a year before, among the highest increases for public universities in the Big Ten, according to the Legislative Fiscal Bureau. (The cap is an overall average; the rise in graduate student tuition was lower.)

Walker's budget would leave it to the Board of Regents to set tuition. The governor's proposal would edge funding for the UW system up $181 million, a figure that UW spokesman David Giroux said sets the stage for a modest tuition increase.

Regents will decide the exact amount by summer.

Walker's plan to drop the cap will likely face opposition in the Legislature.

Rep. Steve Nass, R-Whitewater and chairman of the Assembly's Colleges and Universities Committee, has supported a 5 percent annual cap.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/uw-students-want-keep-cap-150445211.html

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Hagel?s confirmation; the Republican scorecard, with particular attention to Rand Paul (Powerlineblog)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/287680214?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Will Ferrell To Receive First-Ever Comedic Genius Award At MTV Movie Awards

'Anchorman 2' star's contribution to world of comedy will be recognized with inaugural honor.
By Amy Wilkinson


Will Ferrell
Photo: Getty Images

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1702692/will-ferrell-comedic-genius-movie-awards.jhtml

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মঙ্গলবার, ২৬ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

ZTE Grand Memo hands-on: a first look at Qualcomm's Snapdragon 800 in action (video)

ZTE Grand Memo handson a first look at Qualcomm's Snapdragon 800 in action

ZTE caught us by surprise today, outing a Snapdragon 800-infused version of the Grand Memo at its MWC 2013 presser. The device, which still features the same 5.7-inch 720p display, 13-megapixel rear camera and 3,200mAh battery, is nearly indistinguishable from the other variants we've seen. But for this go-round, ZTE's added in Dolby Digital Plus Surround for a superior audio experience and an extra GB of RAM.

Its external chassis may have remained the same -- plasticky and lightweight -- but the difference in this 8.9mm thick Memo's real-world performance is immediately noticeable. OS actions on the skinned Jelly Bean UI don't just zip, they now quite literally fly -- truly, this device is deserving of the long-deceased "beast" moniker. Although international tradeshow WiFi connections are typically dreadful, we did manage to successfully run the Sunspider benchmark to get a quick taste of its rendering performance. The result? The Grand Memo notched a score of 1,186.7ms -- an unimpressive result when contrasted with the Tegra 4's 499ms (as derived from a reference tablet).

As for ZTE's MyFavorite UX layered atop Android 4.1.2, well, we're pleased to say it yields some neat animations. The entire homescreen, including widgets, revolves with a smooth 3D effect that just imbues the handset with a special "feel." It's a shame then that the Memo's encased in a less than premium shell, as it creates a disconnect between the smoking internals and humdrum exterior. But with a newly announced commitment to building its brand (a sentiment popular with Chinese OEMs as of late), this particular Memo is proof positive that ZTE's serious about raising its profile and consumer perception.

You won't be seeing this Grand Memo hit US shores anytime soon -- it's a China and Europe-only affair for now. So while you wait (and hold onto hope), check out our video tour after the break.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/1rrZ9cqdW9Q/

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Film of Austrian girl's hostage ordeal premieres

Austrian Natascha Kampusch poses for photographers before the premiere of the film "3096 Days" in Vienna, Austria, Monday Feb. 25, 2013. The film tells the story of Kampusch who was abducted as a schoolgirl and held prisoner in a cellar for almost nine years. (AP Photo/Ronald Zak)

Austrian Natascha Kampusch poses for photographers before the premiere of the film "3096 Days" in Vienna, Austria, Monday Feb. 25, 2013. The film tells the story of Kampusch who was abducted as a schoolgirl and held prisoner in a cellar for almost nine years. (AP Photo/Ronald Zak)

Director Sherry Hormann poses for photographers before the premiere of the film "3096 Days" in Vienna, Austria, Monday Feb. 25, 2013. The film tells the story of Natascha Kampusch who was abducted as a schoolgirl and held prisoner in a cellar for almost nine years. (AP Photo/Ronald Zak)

Director Sherry Hormann poses for photographers before the premiere of the film "3096 Days" in Vienna, Austria, Monday Feb. 25, 2013. The film tells the story of Natascha Kampusch who was abducted as a schoolgirl and held prisoner in a cellar for almost nine years. (AP Photo/Ronald Zak)

British actress Antonia Campbell-Hughes, and Danish actor Thure Lindhardt, right, pose for photographers before the premiere of the film "3096 Days" in Vienna, Austria, Monday Feb. 25, 2013. The film tells the story of Natascha Kampusch who was abducted as a schoolgirl and held prisoner in a cellar for almost nine years. (AP Photo/Ronald Zak)

British actress Antonia Campbell-Hughes, and Danish actor Thure Lindhardt, right, pose for photographers before the premiere of the film "3096 Days" in Vienna, Austria, Monday Feb. 25, 2013. The film tells the story of Natascha Kampusch who was abducted as a schoolgirl and held prisoner in a cellar for almost nine years. (AP Photo/Ronald Zak)

VIENNA (AP) ? The story of Natascha Kampusch, who grew from a 10-year old to a young woman as a captive of a sadistic abductor, is now a movie.

The film depicting her more than eight-year long ordeal premiered late Monday in Vienna. Titled "3096 Days," the English-language film is based on Kampusch's biography.

Thure Lindhardt, who played abductor Wolfgang Priklopil, says the role was "challenging," while Campbell-Hughes describes her portrayal of Kampusch as "a very great responsibility."

Prominent Austrians in the audience came away impressed. Former Interior Minister Karl Blecha said the film succeeded in depicting the horrors of Kampusch's torment.

Kampusch was snatched off a Vienna street when she was 10 and held prisoner until she fled in August 2006. Priklopil committed suicide within hours of her escape.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-02-26-EU-Austria-Hostage-Girl/id-cea4efa655034fb9930f50ebfdd02ae1

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Barnes & Noble chair wants to buy retail business

FILE - In a Feb. 26, 2008 file photo Leonard Riggio, chairman of Barnes & Noble, is seen in New Orleans. Riggio disclosed in a regulatory filing Monday morning Feb. 25, 2013, that he wants to acquire the company's stores and website, but not the business that makes the Nook e-reader or the company's college bookstores. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

FILE - In a Feb. 26, 2008 file photo Leonard Riggio, chairman of Barnes & Noble, is seen in New Orleans. Riggio disclosed in a regulatory filing Monday morning Feb. 25, 2013, that he wants to acquire the company's stores and website, but not the business that makes the Nook e-reader or the company's college bookstores. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

NEW YORK (AP) ? Barnes & Noble founder and Chairman Leonard Riggio has told the book seller he is going to try to buy the company's retail business.

The news sent shares up nearly 9 percent in midday trading.

Riggio disclosed in a regulatory filing Monday that he wants to acquire the company's stores and website, but not the business that makes the Nook e-reader or the company's college bookstores. No price was disclosed.

It's the latest attempt by a company founder to take back control of all or part of a company he founded. Best Buy's co-founder Richard Schulze is mulling a bid for the electronics retailer, and Michael Dell earlier this month announced a $24.4 billion deal to take the namesake computer company he founded private. The deals are a way executives can have more control over companies without the need to run everything by shareholders.

"When you've got control outside public eye or public market, you can invest and translate your strategy at your own pace," said Morningstar analyst Peter Wahlstrom.

Riggio, who founded Barnes & Noble in the 1970s and helped it expand its "big box" presence, is Barnes & Noble's largest shareholder, with nearly 30 percent of the company's shares. (While Riggio didn't found the original Barnes & Noble store in New York, which opened in 1917, he bought the store and brand name in the 1970s to create the current-day company.)

Barnes & Noble said the offer will be considered by a committee of three independent directors. But there is no set timetable for the process.

The New York-based bookseller has been struggling to find its place in the retail landscape as more readers have shifted to electronic books and competition has grown from discount stores and online competitors.

It has invested heavily in its Nook e-book readers and digital library and struck a deal with Microsoft last April to create a Nook subsidiary.

But the Nook faces tough competition from other devices like Apple's iPad Mini, Amazon's Kindle and Google's Nexus tablet.

Earlier this month, the company said it expects Nook media revenue of less than $3 billion. It also anticipates a loss for the unit before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization to exceed the $262 million loss recorded in its 2012 fiscal year.

This follows a report from the retailer in January that its Nook unit revenue fell 12.6 percent to $311 million during the critical holiday period. Overall sales during the holiday period fell 10.9 percent at bookstores and online compared with a year ago. Barnes & Noble is scheduled to report third-quarter results Thursday.

The filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said Riggio will seek to negotiate a price with Barnes & Noble's board and pay for the deal with cash and debt.

Riggio is making the offer in order to facilitate the company's review of its strategic options for separating its Nook business, according to the filing.

Morningstar's Wahlstrom said the deal makes sense considering the retail side of the business has been overshadowed by investments needed for the Nook business.

"The retail business for Barnes & Noble is mature-slash-declining, but it's profitable," he said. "The company has done a good job executing amid a pretty challenging environment."

Wahlstrom added that the move by Riggio was not unexpected and has been a possibility for years. His large stake in the company and history would likely make finding any extra needed financing not much of a problem, he said.

"Riggio feels like he can run it better than just about anyone else, and with four decades of operating history there's not much reason to believe that he can't," he said.

Barnes & Noble operates 689 bookstores in 50 states and 674 college bookstores.

Shares rose $1.18, or 8.8 percent, to $14.69. Its shares have traded in a 52-week range of $10.45 in mid-April to $26 later that same month.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-02-25-Barnes%20and%20Noble-Chairman/id-9bff71003e0f4f4ebab25cdef22afe18

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Older women, don't take vitamin D for bones: Panel

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Older women shouldn't take vitamin D and calcium supplements to prevent broken bones, and there's not enough evidence to say whether it would help anyone else either, says a U.S. government-backed panel.

Based on two reviews of past research, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force waded into the debate over the two vitamins that are thought to strengthen bones to prevent against breaks.

"Calcium and vitamin D are important in general health and bone health. For this recommendation, we review data on whether supplements of vitamin D and calcium can prevent fractures in addition to dietary intake," said Dr. Jessica Herzstein, a member of the Task Force.

Approximately 1.5 million Americans suffer from breaks that are tied to brittle bones each year. And about half of all women over 50 years old will end up with a break that's linked to the bone-weakening disease osteoporosis.

That's a major concern, according to the Task Force, because broken bones are linked to chronic pain, disability and increased risk of sickness and early death.

Based on the reviews, the panel found there were no benefits but some risk for post-menopausal women taking low-dose vitamin D and calcium supplements - below 400 international units and 1,000 milligrams, respectively.

Specifically, taking low-dose supplements didn't change the older women's risk for broken bones, but was tied to a small increase in the risk of kidney stones (see Reuters Health article of June 12, 2012 here: http://reut.rs/W760bF

They also found that there is not enough evidence to suggest higher doses of the vitamins would be effective or safer in older women, or that taking any dose of the supplements would help men or younger women.

For men and younger women, "We're not saying don't take it, we're just saying we don't know enough right now," said Herzstein, who is in charge of employee health at Air Products in Allentown, Pennsylvania.

She added that these recommendations do not apply to people who already have a diagnosis of osteoporosis, a history of fractures or are living in an assisted-living community.

TALK WITH YOUR DOCTOR

Herzstein said it's important for people to talk with their doctors about the supplements.

Cara Welch, senior vice president of scientific and regulatory affairs for the Natural Product Association in Washington, D.C., told Reuters Health she agreed that people should talk to their doctors, but said the group disagrees with the new recommendation.

"We believe this recommendation is out of step with current research, and it really should not affect consumers who are trying to supplement their calcium and vitamin D intake with supplements," Welch said.

According to the most recent data from a national survey of Americans, 56 percent of women over 60 years old take vitamin D supplements, and 60 percent take calcium supplements.

The two vitamins are often sold together and are relatively inexpensive.

The Task Force already recommends women older than 65 years old be screened for the bone-weakening disease osteoporosis, and younger women who have a higher risk of broken bones.

The panel also recommends senior citizens with a history of falls and vitamin D deficiency take supplements to help strengthen muscles and help with balance (see Reuters Health article of May 30, 2012 here: http://reut.rs/V1ARom

Vitamin D has also been researched as a preventive measure against dementia, heart disease and cancer, but with mixed results. Herzstein said the panel will soon be issuing recommendations about the vitamin for some of those diseases.

Marion Nestle, a nutrition researcher from New York University who coauthored a commentary published alongside the recommendations in the Annals of Internal Medicine, said that good studies on vitamin D are hard to do, and any end to the debate over whether to take supplements or not is a long way off.

"These studies are so difficult to do and to interpret that scientific consensus seems impossible to achieve, especially in situations where entire organizations are devoted to convincing people to take high-dose vitamin D," she wrote in an email to Reuters Health.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/Ms1ZbQ Annals of Internal Medicine, online February 25, 2013.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/older-women-dont-vitamin-d-bones-panel-221323175.html

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সোমবার, ২৫ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Why can't Washington compromise? They're too human

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Turns out politicians are people, too, only worse.

Just ask pros who make their living in the trenches of everyday human drama such as divorce, family feuds or schoolyard scraps. They recognize in Washington's bitter budget standoff a hint of human nature as they know it, but with the crazy pumped up to absurd levels.

"We're seeing middle school behavior here," says Barbara Coloroso, who crusades against childhood bullying. Psychologist Piers Steel, an expert on procrastination, says Congress has the worst case of it he's seen. Divorce attorney Sanford Ain's assessment is blunter: "It's nuts!"

A sampling of conflict-savvy professionals and scholars interviewed by The Associated Press finds dismay that the nation is in political stalemate after two years of showdowns and near-misses for the economy. Not that these they have any easy solutions, either.

Some dream of locking up President Barack Obama and House Speaker John Boehner. R-Ohio, together until the nation's tax and spending issues are settled.

"That's my fantasy: To go into a room and tell them what to do, right or wrong, and make them do it," said Marvin McIntyre, a prominent financial adviser in the District of Columbia who writes political novels on the side.

With lawmakers and the president on the brink of yet another compromise-or-else deadline Friday, the nonpoliticians shared their take on the all-too-human behavior in Washington.

Historian Altina Waller is reminded of the Hatfields and McCoys. Of course, she would be: Waller's an authority on the deadly 19th century feud.

Despite the myth, the Hatfield-McCoy conflict wasn't primarily about clan hatred, Waller said, and she doesn't think today's acrimony between Republicans and Democrats is fully explained by partisanship or ideology.

The Appalachian feud grew out of economic anxiety as farming declined and logging and coal moved in, she said. These days, Democrats and Republicans worry about the economy and the loss of American jobs and influence to foreign competition, and blame each other.

"Like the Hatfields and McCoys," Waller said, "they are personalizing a problem brought about by larger economic forces."

Coloroso, author of "The Bully, the Bullied and the Bystander," sees too many politicians acting like the mean girl who taunts unpopular classmates in the cafeteria.

"Bullying is about contempt for the other person," Coloroso said. "Do you see how that fits with some of the people in Congress? Utter contempt, bullying, wanting to bring somebody down. You cannot resolve a major issue like a budget with name-calling, with disdain for the person you're supposed to be working with."

Ain says the political fight illustrates something he's learned in 40 years of striving to keep family law cases amicable: "If you have extreme views and won't compromise, you can't get anything done. It's going to go to war."

Yet a sudden switch to civility will not guarantee that tough decisions get made.

Human brains are wired to put off the unpleasant, says "The Procrastination Equation" author Steel.

We postpone starting a diet, put off going to the gym, keep meaning to write those thank-you notes. Congress members are masters of this.

"They're pretty much the worst, hands down, of any group we ever investigated," said Steel, who has researched procrastination for more than a decade. "They're worse than college students."

What finally gets people moving? A deadline. The paper must be written to pass the class. The house is tidied because company's coming. The expense report is finished because the boss demands it by 5 p.m.

So it makes sense to set deadlines for solving the nation's pressing fiscal problems. Only it isn't working.

Congress and the White House have lurched from the brink of default or government shutdown or "fiscal cliff" to the next potentially disastrous deadline, this time automatic budget cuts known as the "sequester." They've only achieved temporary fixes without resolving the big disagreements over the deficit, taxes and Medicare and Social Security spending. Obama calls it "drifting from one manufactured crisis to the next."

Why aren't the deadlines working?

Pushing the limits isn't always procrastination; sometimes it's strategy.

Negotiation expert Robert Mnookin points to labor disputes resolved just before the strike deadline and lawsuits settled on the courthouse steps on the eve of trial. Bargainers tend to play "chicken" like two drivers speeding toward each other in hopes the other will swerve first.

"It's often believed that you won't be able to extract the very best concession from the other side unless you are on the brink of something that's very bad," said Mnookin, chairman of Harvard's Program on Negotiation and author of "Bargaining with the Devil."

Both the Republicans and Democrats have die-hards pushing to keep charging ahead.

"It's a hugely dangerous game to play," Mnookin warns, "because people aren't always rational in their behavior."

What happens if Democrats and Republicans collide head-on this time? Some $85 billion in automatic federal budget cuts over the next seven months, with more in following years.

Obama says that would weaken the military, disrupt programs Americans rely on, eliminate jobs and weaken the economy. Boehner calls it "an ugly and dangerous way" to reduce spending. These cuts were designed to be so distasteful that politicians would agree on more rational budget-cutting to stop them.

But there's another way out. Lawmakers and Obama could agree to block the cuts, before or after they kick in, and once again postpone making big fiscal decisions that might cost some of them re-election.

That's a problem with artificial deadlines: They're hard to enforce.

Economist Christopher Kingston, whose research ranges from 19th century dueling to modern game theory, says what lawmakers need is a strong "commitment device." He cites the story of William the Conqueror burning his ships after his invading army landed in England, ensuring his soldiers couldn't retreat.

A less reliable commitment device: A shopaholic cutting up his credit cards. That works unless he gets new ones and start running up debt again.

"It's really hard to create a commitment device artificially, particularly if you don't have an external power that's going to enforce it," said Kingston, an associate professor at Amherst College.

Congress and the president have no judge, no referee, no board of directors. Washington won't hear from the voters again for two years, and even then the message may be unclear.

With human nature against them, how can politicians escape gridlock?

A few tips from the pros:

?Shock them with kindness. "Try to do something unexpectedly nice for the other side," advises Ain, and your surprised opponent may reciprocate.

?Avoid the "zero-sum" trap. Just because something is good for one side doesn't mean it's bad for the other. "There are all kinds of deals that the president and the Congress could make that would be better for the economy and the nation as a whole and in that sense would benefit them all," Mnookin says.

?Get a mediator. Maybe the special 2011 deficit committee could have reached agreement with the help of a trusted outsider. It's worth a try, Ain says, because "that works in major litigation and all sorts of situations."

?Shame the bullies. If politicians denounced their fellow party members who display contempt for the other side, Coloroso says, it would squelch the mocking tone.

America's citizens also are mostly silent bystanders right now, the author said.

"What are we going to do about it?" she asked. "Do we just stand by and shrug our shoulders?"

___

Follow Connie Cass on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/ConnieCass

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/why-cant-washington-compromise-theyre-too-human-131324676.html

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Jason Kincaid On The Mythology Of TechCrunch

I was happily surprised to see Hunter Walk interview Jason Kincaid, one of the first TechCrunch employees. The interview is here and I’m reprinting it below. Jason joined TechCrunch when it was still being run out of my house (before the city of Atherton kicked us out). Even after “retiring” he’s still no. 11 on the all time tech writers list. Jason broke a lot of big stories. But he also has the rare ability to write thought pieces that shape Silicon Valley culture and thinking. From the moment he joined he was part of the core backbone of TechCrunch. From the article I wrote when he resigned in 2012: Jason has the rare ability in a writer to both break big stories on his own, as well as write strong opinion articles on the topics of the day. Younger writers (who were often older than him) looked to him for leadership and guidance. He could have quite easily run TechCrunch entirely after we left. Anyway, this interview is interesting because it talks about some of the things that happened early on, things that became part of the mythology of TechCrunch. It was great to see this. Early Employees: Jason Kincaid & the Rise of TechCrunch Jason Kincaid, early TechCrunch reporter (@jasonkincaid) Q: When did you join TechCrunch and how did you originally get connected to the team? A: I usually tell a sanitized version of this story, but what the hell. It was March 2008, and I?d just graduated from UCLA with a B.S. in biology, a minor in ?society and genetics?, and zero sense as to what I wanted to do with my life. My good friend Ed McManus (now cofounder of Yardsale) invited me to a party being thrown by an investor in honor of Scribd?s (the ?YouTube for documents?) first birthday. The party was unlike anything college had prepared me for ? and the likes of which I haven?t seen since. Caviar and vodka shots. Sculptures made of seafood. A basement that had been overhauled to resemble a vintage gas station. Waiters who walked around with endless glasses of champagne, deftly swooping in as soon as one hit empty. I?d had a few ? and sure, I sampled the vodka ? but the single stair, running the full length between the living room and a hallway, really should not have been there. It was too easy

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/YOZ4tSl58Mg/

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NKorea warns U.S. commander of 'destruction' over drills in SKorea

PYONGYANG, North Korea (AP) ? North Korea warned the top American commander in South Korea on Saturday of "miserable destruction" if the U.S. military presses ahead with routine joint drills with South Korea set to begin next month.

Pak Rim Su, chief of North Korea's military delegation to the truce village of Panmunjom inside the Demilitarized Zone, sent the warning Saturday morning to Gen. James Thurman, Pyongyang's official Korean Central News Agency said, in a rare direct message to the U.S. commander.

The threat comes as the U.S. and other nations discuss how to punish North Korea for conducting an underground nuclear test on Feb. 12 in defiance of U.N. Security Council resolutions banning Pyongyang from nuclear and missile activity.

North Korea has characterized the nuclear test, its third since 2006, as a defensive act against U.S. aggression. Pyongyang accuses Washington of "hostility" for leading the charge to punish North Korea for a December rocket launch that the U.S. considers a covert missile test.

The U.S. and North Korea fought on opposite sides of the three-year Korean War, which ended in a truce in 1953, not a peace treaty, and left the Korean Peninsula divided by a heavily fortified border monitored by the U.S.-led U.N. Command.

Washington also stations 28,500 American troops in South Korea to protect its ally against North Korean aggression.

South Korea and the U.S. regularly conduct joint drills such as the Key Resolve and Foal Eagle exercises slated to take place next month. North Korea calls the drills proof of U.S. hostility, and accuses Washington of practicing for an invasion.

"You had better bear in mind that those igniting a war are destined to meet a miserable destruction," KCNA quoted Pak as saying in his message to Thurman. He called the drills "reckless."

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, meanwhile, has been making a round of visits to military units guiding troops in drills and exercises since the nuclear test, KCNA said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nkorea-warns-us-commander-skorea-over-drills-094438933.html

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Jason Steidl: The Scandal of Catholicism and the Lesson to Learn From It

Recent reports by Italian media are heaping fuel onto the fire of rumors raging around the scandal-laden Vatican bureaucracy. According to La Repubblica, Pope Benedict's recent and shocking resignation stemmed in part from his frustrations over entrenched corruption and the wide-ranging influence of a network of gay Vatican officials operating within the hierarchy. The news comes at a time of transition for the institution, whose powerful College of Cardinals is preparing to meet soon in a secret conclave to elect the next pope.

The details of the story from La Repubblica are vague yet intriguing. According to undisclosed sources, a recent commission report on the Vatileaks scandal read only by the pope concluded that high-ranking church officials were being blackmailed by those with whom they had "ties of worldly nature." Though La Repubblica's description of these relationships is unclear, the article alludes to transgressions against the Biblical commandments "Non fornicare, non rubare" -- "thou shalt not commit adultery" and "thou shalt not steal."

Whether La Repubblica's report is true or false remains to be seen. Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone -- himself a possible, though controversial, candidate for the papacy -- has strongly denied the story, deploring the accusations as groundless media attempts to smear Vatican officials and improperly influence the papal conclave. Whatever the truth of La Repubblica's reporting, however, there is no question that this account of Vatican corruption is an explosive topic in the media, increasing the scrutiny of an institution already mired in rumors of conspiracy and vice. The story titillates and incorporates elements of the best harlequin novels -- sex, power, secrecy, hypocrisy, greed.

Some Catholics may come to the defense of the institutional church, claiming that the media is inherently biased against the faith. In opposition to a hostile world these Catholics defend the current pope as an innocent, if na?ve, defender of Christianity and the Vatican as a God-ordained, if human, organization unwaveringly following its founder, Jesus Christ.

As a Roman Catholic, I don't deny the church's claims to be a guardian of Christian belief. The institutional hierarchy plays an important role defining and sharing the faith with the world. As a realist, however, I also recognize that the church is characteristically human. Scandal has been a part of the Catholic Church from its start. Peter, the first pope, publicly denied Christ three times, renouncing the savior in his hour of darkest need. Later popes didn't fare much better. As many authors have pointed out, the Roman Church has throughout time been a source of sin and scandal for the faithful. Dante's Inferno famously portrays Hell as a place populated with pontiffs eternally damned for their offenses. More recently, the sex abuse scandal has rocked the world by uncovering the depths of depravity within the heart of the church. The Vatileaks scandal continues to reveal corruption at the center of the papal household and an ecclesial administration often far more concerned with personal gain and power than charity and service. The church seems a hypocrite. Though it preaches holiness, it lives in sin. Though it claims access to divine truths, it wallows in wanton debauchery.

How, then, is the scandalized Christian to respond to a church so clearly comprised of the vilest sinners? What should our reactions be to the rumors of sex and greed and lies and power-mongering and cover-ups? First, I suggest, we shouldn't be surprised. As experience has shown and Christian faith has taught, people are sinners and make mistakes. The world is a broken, messed up place, and no one -- not even the pope himself -- is exempt from sin's effects. As the scriptures make clear, every human being has fallen short of God's purposes. We are all in this mess of a world together and no one is innocent. To pretend that the leaders of the institutional church are somehow different than the rest of us is to deny Christian claims that sin is universal and its effects are pervasive.

It is for this reason, however, that Christian faith proclaims God's mercy and free gift of salvation. In the midst of human brokenness only God's love can restore human nature and only divine grace can fix the bad condition we share. Wrongdoing in our lives and in the church reveals to us how greatly in need of the Christian Gospel we are. It is because we are all touched by and contribute to the fallen state of things -- because it penetrates our souls and reaches into the deepest places of our collective institutions -- that we need someone to come rescue us from our self-initiated destruction. Christian faith claims that this savior was Jesus Christ, and that he made a way to right relationship with God and the world through his life on earth, death on the cross, and triumph through the resurrection. The Catholic Church knows the hope for salvation is necessary precisely we have known the terrible effects of our painful state.

During Lent, Christians take time in preparation for Easter to consider human nature and the condition of sin. We realize that our actions have betrayed a world that God intended for our best. Our relationships with each other, God, ourselves, and the world are disordered and distressing. We do not love as we should love, and we fail time and time again to contribute to God's good purposes on earth. For this reason, during Lent church sanctuaries and priestly vestments are bedecked in purple, a sign recognizing collective sin and confessing that the institutions and leaders of faith are themselves part of the problem. As we prepare for the celebration of Easter, Christians would do well to remember that belief in God's triumph over sin presupposes the constant presence of a dark, wounded nature within and around us. Scandals at the Vatican remind us that the faith in redemption we share is a message which we and the world need to hear.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jason-steidl/the-scandal-of-catholicism-and-the-lesson-to-learn-from-it_b_2752144.html

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OPTiM outs wireless smartphone-to-smartphone screen sharing and remote control app for Android

OPTiM outs wireless smartphonetosmartphone screen sharing and remote control app for Android

One of the more notable features of BlackBerry 10 is built-in screensharing, but here in Barcelona at MWC 2013, OPTiM has just one-upped Waterloo with a new app for Android. It not only lets users share screens, but it also allows them to remotely control devices over WiFi. Called Optia for Android, it works with handsets running Android 2.3 and up, and has a built-in chat function for facilitating communication while screensharing. Naturally, the app's a boon to IT pros who manage devices from afar, but it should also prove useful for helping you teach mom and dad how to use the fancy new smartphones you got them for Christmas. The app's currently free from Google Play, though only for a limited time. Head on past the break for a video of Optia in action, and you can grab the app at the source link below.

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Source: Google Play Store

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/25/optim-android-smartphone-to-smartphone-screen-sharing-app/

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Raw tornado footage captured by Nashville used-car dealer

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

Source: http://www.tennessean.com/article/20130222/NEWS01/130222009/2275/RSS05

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10 Search and Social Posts You Don't Want to Miss (1.7) | Social ...

Josh S Peters Search and Social Weekly

Excel Statistics for SEO and Data Analysis

Statistics is all about collecting, analyzing and interpreting data. It comes very handy when decision making faces uncertainty. By using statistics, we can overcome these situations and generate actionable analysis?

How to Do SEO in 2013

The important thing for businesses to understand is that they need apply a degree of high importance to setting up a content strategy. A solid content strategy creates a framework for the business and those involved in the content production process. It helps to align business units with a core statement results in consistent content and sets the scene for governance and workflow. It will also help to plan everything from gaining an audience to defining distribution channels?

Skewering Instagram

My Facebook feed (a free service I use from time to time, which you may be aware allows me to maintain social contact with my friends ? with, of course, a backdrop of adverts that I can choose not to click on?) has been awash with rampant anger regarding Instagram?s now aborted plan to sell your family album. You know, the ?family album? of some people you met in Thailand that you have so carefully protected from intrusive eyes by placing on a public social network in full view of the world?

O Come All Ye Faithful: Attract, Engage & Convert Fans to Brand Advocates

Wouldn?t it be awesome to have your own army of word-of-mouth marketers, standing by for deployment at your beck and call??Social media has taken these brand advocates of days gone by, given them each a megaphone and shot them full of espresso and steroids. Your most loyal fans are now exponentially louder, more influential, and able to spread the word about your brand just as quickly as they can thumb-type a status update or tweet?

Give Me 5 Minutes a Day and I?ll Make You a Better Facebook Page Owner

What?s the number 1 thing Facebook Page owners struggle with??Time management.?You?re busy running your business, keeping up with your kids, etc.?Sometimes the last thing you have time for is your Facebook page.?There are tons of books and resources out there you could read?

Social Media ROI: 14 Formulas to Measure Social Media Benefits

Measuring social media ROI can be a daunting task, but not impossible. Check out these handy formulas for calculating tangible social media benefits ? advertising, content, leads,research, support, sales, and more!

Did Twitter just introduce their own version of EdgeRank?

Twitter announced it will soon introduce two new meta-data fields for their API: language and filter level. ?Language? will identify the language the tweets are written in and ?filter level? will segment tweets into four filterable categories: (none, low, medium, and high). In plain English, your tweets can now be segregated by language, and by an unknown hierarchical algorithm.

30 Terrible Pieces of Social Media Advice You Should Ignore

There are a lot of so-called ?social media experts? out there. Dishing out advice, sometimes based on limited experiences, and sometimes based on nothing at all. Even the true social media experts sometimes share some misguided advice based on their beliefs and experiences. So with all this bad advice floating around the web, how do you distinguish between what you should ? and shouldn?t ? believe?

The Demographics of Social Media Users ? 2012

A late 2012 survey by the Pew Research Center?s Internet & American Life Project shows that young adults are more likely than others to use major social media. At the same time, other groups are interested in different sites and services.

Social Media Strategy in Times of Tragedy

Brands seek to engage their fans, friends and followers; some even go so far as to buy fans. They want people to ?Like? them on Facebook or follow them on Twitter. Brands want to socialize, share a laugh, hangout, join a Group and even have a conversation. The strategy of becoming a more social company is clearly working; 87% of people report Liking or friending a brand on Facebook.

Thanks for reading and have a great weekend,
Josh S Peters

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Galaxy Nexus broken





Hi,
my friend dropped his Galaxy Nexus on the floor and broke the screen (glass and display). But the phone seems to be working, since it gives the vibration and a little sound when turned on and off. When connected to the PC the storage is displayed correctly (all the photos are there). The problem is when i stick the SIM and when i try to call it fails to receive the call, but afterward you can see the LED notification blinking the white color about every 7 secs.
Since i cannot return for warranty because it was dropped, now im looking to buy the display. Prices seem a bit high...
The question that I've got is this: Is it worth to Change the Display? Can I be sure that the phone will eventually work?
It concerns me the fact that maybe something else is damaged.
Any help or thought is appreciated.
Many thanks.

PS: My friend is a Noob when talking about phones and he didnt know whether it was on 4.0.4 or 4.2.1

Source: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2160815&goto=newpost

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Watching molecules grow into microtubes

Feb. 22, 2013 ? Sometimes the best discoveries come by accident.

A team of researchers at Washington University in St. Louis, headed by Srikanth Singamaneni, PhD, assistant professor of mechanical engineering & materials science, unexpectedly found the mechanism by which tiny single molecules spontaneously grow into centimeter-long microtubes by leaving a dish for a different experiment in the refrigerator.

Once Singamaneni and his research team, including Abdennour Abbas, PhD, a former postdoctoral researcher at Washington University, Andrew Brimer, a senior undergraduate majoring in mechanical engineering, and Limei Tian, a fourth-year graduate student, saw that these molecules had become microtubes, they set out to find out how.

To do so, they spent about six months investigating the process at various length scales (nano to micro) using various microscopy and spectroscopy techniques.

The results were published in the journal Small.

"What we showed was that we can actually watch the self-assembly of small molecules across multiple length scales, and for the first time, stitched these length scales to show the complete picture," Singamaneni says. "This hierarchical self-organization of molecular building blocks is unprecedented since it is initiated from a single molecular crystal and is driven by vesiclular dynamics in water."

Self-assembly, a process in which a disordered collection of components arrange themselves into an ordered structure, is of growing interest as a new paradigm in creating micro- and nanoscale structures and functional systems and subsystems. This novel approach of making nano- and microstructures and devices is expected to have numerous applications in electronics, optics and biomedical applications.

The team used small molecules p-aminothiophenol (p-ATP) or p-aminophenyl disulfide added to water with a small amount of ethanol. The molecules first assembled into nanovesicles then into microvesicles and eventually into centimeter-long microtubules. The vesicles stick onto the surface of the tube, walk along the surface and attach themselves, causing the tube to grow longer and wider. The entire process takes mere seconds, with the growth rate of 20 microns per second.

"While it was exciting to watch the self-assembly of these molecules, we are even more excited about the implications of the self-assembly of such small molecules," Singamaneni says. "This mechanism can be used to load the vesicles with the desired macromolecules, such as proteins, antibodies or antibiotics, for example, and build microtubes with a biological function."

Singamaneni says his research team collaborated with researchers in Singapore who are experts in molecular crystals, as well as with colleagues in the Department of Chemistry.

"We hope that once we can co-assemble some functional nanostructures along with these small molecules, then these molecular assemblies can have applications in biological sensors and chemical sensors," Singamaneni says.

Funding for this research was provided by the U.S. Army Research Office and Army Research Laboratory.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Washington University in St. Louis. The original article was written by Beth Miller.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Abdennour Abbas, Andrew Brimer, Limei Tian, D. Andr? d'Avignon, Abdulrahman Shahul Hameed, Jagadese J. Vittal, Srikanth Singamaneni. Vesicle-Mediated Growth of Tubular Branches and Centimeter-Long Microtubes from a Single Molecule. Small, 2012; DOI: 10.1002/smll.201202509

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/39eI02lWOtQ/130222120707.htm

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Ford has decided to relaunch the Fiesta Movement campaign

Ford has decided to relaunch the Fiesta Movement campaign as part of a strategy to sell the 2014 Fiesta. In 2009, this program had Ford giving away free cars to ?influencers? who record details and gains about their Fiestas online. The new program will give away a 2014 Ford Fiesta to each of the 100 ?social influencers,? like celebrities and members of the last Fiesta Movement, in exchange for making social media content about the model. Ford is doing this due to the belief that millennials (who are those born since the mid-1980s) account for a huge number of Fiesta customers so Ford hopes to sell its new car directly to them. Those who joined the 2009 Fiesta Movement (who are known in ford as ?Agents?) drove more than a million miles, created 50,000 pieces of online content, and had been seen nearly 30 million times.

Ford advertising manager Keith Koeppen said in a statement that millennials like being a part of the brands they feel represent them. He added that this demographic is used to building content about their lives, so it seems sensible that their creativity is given a bigger platform with wider scale. He said that these ?Agents? will receive a free 2014 Ford Fiesta, as well as free gas and insurance. They also get digital cameras and ?other tools? required so that they can post these cars online.

He said that these are no limits to the possibilities. He cited a video can be made into a TV ad while a favourite photo can be used in a print campaign. The 2014 Ford Fiesta will receive a variety of upgrades, which include a new wide-mouth front grille similar to what?s used on the Fusion sedan, improved interior materials, and an optional 1.0-liter EcoBoost inline-four engine. In addition, Ford will launch the Fiesta ST in 2013, as well as a warmed-up model powered by a 197-hp 1.6-liter EcoBoost engine, more robust brakes, a racy body kit, and a sharper suspension.

Source: http://www.4wheelsnews.com/ford-has-decided-to-relaunch-the-fiesta-movement-campaign/

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'Django Unchained' Christians Evangelizing Military Youth on the Taxpayer?s Dime

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Quentin Tarantino deals in tawdry fiction writ large, bloody, and outrageous, as is the case with his latest Best Picture Oscar-nominated exploitation epic, " Django Unchained." Even he would be cowed by the pathetic tale of woe that follows.

From the onset of Operation Enduring Freedom in October 2001, U.S. military servicemembers and their families have borne the tragic brunt of prolonged operations in Afghanistan and Iraq. The Herculean task at hand, spanning the full spectrum of human endurance, from coping with multiple deployments to the hopelessly bleak, inhospitable frontlines of the War on Terror hasn't fallen on war fighters alone. Indeed, the oozing sores of perpetual anxiety,?debilitating depression, and other extreme disorders have proven themselves across military and civilian communities to be communicable diseases, affecting servicemembers and their dependents alike. Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder has become a household word across the nation, as active-duty servicemembers, for the first time in a generation, are more likely to fall on their own swords and take their own lives than face death in a war zone. This national tragedy continues to play out despite the phasing out of the U.S. role in Iraq and a sharp drop in troop levels in Afghanistan.

Some of the most acute psychological torment has fallen heaviest on servicemembers' children. Speaking as a veteran "military brat" from a family with a long and proud multigenerational tradition of service in our nation's armed forces, I can surely empathize with these youth in terms of the trials that they face.?

Enter Tarantinoesque fiction - except it's real.

It came as a sickening jolt of shock when we at the Military Religious Freedom Foundation (MRFF) learned that a group of?savagely opportunistic fundamentalist Christian vultures known as " Club Beyond" are using taxpayer dollars - let me emphasize that point one more time: TAXPAYER DOLLARS - and Department of Defense property to aggressively prey on these youth, as well as advertising their activities via the official Army.mil website. Club Beyond's mission, in their own words, is to "'celebrate life with military kids, introducing them to the life giver, Jesus Christ, and helping them to become more like him,' while offering youth a chance build meaningful relationships." [italics added]. All of the foregoing would be just fine and dandy if only the United States military was not subject to the United States Constitution - but it is. Thus, the just-mentioned "sickening jolt."

In other words, Club Beyond's?nefariously unconstitutional modus operandi is the outright, incontestable proselytization and religious indoctrination of vulnerable youth perceived to be "unchurched." Club Beyond is a sectarian enterprise with global reach. It's a subsidiary of a raging fundamentalist Christian parachurch organization called " Military Community Youth Ministries" (MCYM). MCYM offers, get this, "well chaperoned" weekly 90 minute club meetings, retreats, and Bible Study courses facilitated by "staff and volunteers [that] love young people and are available to journey with them through the hard challenges of adolescence, providing positive role models and exhibiting Christ-like behavior." Uh huh. Want some more?

Ok. Well, one of the ways that Club Beyond shows its "love" for these captive audiences is by hosting so-called "Purity Conferences," events where the widely debunked abstinence-only movement is, ahem, propagated. In fact, this year's Valentine's Day was the occasion for one such "Virginity Ball," an event called "Can't Lose." At this "ball," rather than receiving a realistic sexual education, youth enmeshed in a cannonade of hormonal tides of teenage passion are schooled solely in the ways of puritanical self-denial. The "virginity movement" has long been exposed as a transparent, fundamentalist Christian campaign that perniciously undermines reproductive health and cloaks old-school misogyny of the very worst kind in mawkish rhetoric regarding "preserving yourself for your future husband." Yep. That'll work for sure.

Source: http://www.alternet.org/speakeasy/michaelweinstein/django-unchained-christians-evangelizing-military-youth-taxpayers-dime

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We're So Glad to See Robin Roberts Return to 'GMA'!

Robin Roberts has made her long-anticipated return to Good Morning America, and she did it in style.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/robin-roberts-makes-her-return-igmai/1-a-522502?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Arobin-roberts-makes-her-return-igmai-522502

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GOP senator signals support for Hagel nomination

WASHINGTON (AP) -- A senior Republican senator said he will vote to confirm Chuck Hagel as defense secretary, a major boost for President Barack Obama's nominee just days before a showdown vote.

Five-term Sen. Richard Shelby of Alabama told the Decatur Daily that while he has concerns about Hagel, he plans to support his fellow Republican and the former two-term senator from Nebraska.

"He's probably as good as we're going to get," Shelby said.

Jonathan Graffeo, a spokesman for Shelby, said Thursday that barring any unforeseen surprises between now and an expected Senate vote on Tuesday, the senator will back Hagel.

Obama's choice to succeed Defense Secretary Leon Panetta has faced strong Republican opposition, and last week the GOP succeeded in an unprecedented filibuster of a nominee for Pentagon chief. Shelby joined most of his Republicans colleagues in voting against moving ahead on the Hagel nomination.

With another vote slated for next week, Shelby now stands with two other Republicans who have indicated their support for Hagel -- Thad Cochran of Mississippi and Mike Johanns of Nebraska. The GOP support -- combined with 55 Democratic votes and two other Republicans opposed to delaying tactics -- would give the nomination the requisite 60 votes out of 100 necessary to move ahead.

Republicans have criticized Hagel for his past statements and votes, contending that he hasn't been sufficiently supportive of Israel and has been too tolerant of Iran. They also have challenged his support for reducing the nation's nuclear arsenal and his opposition to the Iraq war after his initial vote for the conflict.

His nomination also has become entangled in GOP demands for more information from the Obama administration about the deadly assault on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya, last September that killed Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans.

(Copyright (c) 2013 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

Source: http://www1.whdh.com/rss/read/news/articles/politics/10009915999658/

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ২১ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Child asthma reduced by smoking bans - Mother Nature Network

Child asthma reduced by smoking bans

British study finds a significant drop in hospital admissions for childhood asthma attacks after a law is enacted banning smoking in enclosed spaces.

Mon, Jan 21 2013 at 2:09 PM

A new study in the United Kingdom has some good news for children who suffer from asthma. According to researchers at the Imperial College London, childhood asthma attacks have dropped significantly since a law was enacted in 2007 banning smoking in enclosed spaces.

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The new study, which was published in a recent issue of Pediatrics, found that the hospital admissions for children suffering from asthma attacks dropped more than 12 percent in the first year after the law was introduced in July 2007. ?The admission rates continued to decline in subsequent years suggesting that the health benefits from the law have had a sustained effect on England's kids.

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Before the ban was implemented, hospital admissions for childhood asthma attacks were rising at a rate of 2.2 percent per year, with admissions hitting a peak of 26,969 admissions in 2006-07. ?Researchers estimate that the rapid decline in admissions, which began immediately after the law came into effect, is equivalent to 6,800 fewer hospital admission within the first three years after the law came into effect. ?

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The decline in hospital admissions was seen across the board in both boys and girls and for children living in poor neighborhoods or wealthier communities.?

Source: http://www.mnn.com/health/fitness-well-being/blogs/child-asthma-reduced-by-smoking-bans

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বুধবার, ২০ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

MTV Twitter ?Hack? Prank Was A Risky Ploy For Attention

Look-at-Me1-460x230MTV has officially acknowledged that early reports of their hacked Twitter account was, in fact, a prank. An hour ago, MTV's twitter account began tweeting naughty comments about musicians (screen shots below) and fooled a few media outlets into reporting the prank. A spokesman for MTV tells TechCrunch in an email "the hack was pre-planned in the spirit of corporate camaraderie with our sister network, BET [Black Entertainment Television]".

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/w-x43iJtXd0/

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Power connects decision makers to the future

Power connects decision makers to the future [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 20-Feb-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Amy Blumenthal
amyblume@marshall.usc.edu
213-740-5552
USC Marshall School of Business

New USC Marshall study shows how power can embolden decision makers

Decision makers who feel powerful and in control of resources are more likely than others to make decisions that will benefit their future selves, according to researchers at the USC Marshall School of Business.

Conversely, those who lack feelings of power tend to prefer smaller immediate gains those that benefit the present self to potentially greater benefits in the future, according to "Power and Reduced Temporal Discounting," a research paper by Nathanael Fast, an assistant professor of management and organization at and Priyanka Joshi, a doctoral candidate in management and organization at the USC Marshall School of Business. The paper is in the current issue of Psychological Science.

A pervasive tendency among decision makers to opt for immediate gratification known as temporal discounting has implications for everything from investing money and saving for retirement to developing a business strategy, Fast said. For more than a decade, researchers in numerous disciplines have sought ways to overcome temporal discounting because it is so widespread.

Joshi and Fast hypothesized that one of the ways to help people wait for larger future benefits in lieu of small immediate gains is to make them feel more powerful. "Consistent with our predictions, we found that feeling powerful actually increased people's willingness to wait for larger rewards," reported Joshi. "We also found that the experience of power in the workplace is positively correlated with one's total accrued assets, even after controlling for more likely factors such as annual income and age." In other words, power appears to foster saving behavior by putting people more in touch with their future selves.

"Power provides control over future outcomes, so the future seems more certain when you feel powerful." Fast said. "You're therefore more likely to expand your sense of self to include your future self and, as a result, consider long-term consequences when making decisions."

Decision makers may better connect with their future selves by "power priming," or thinking of a time in their lives when they did have power over others, Joshi said. "By revisiting experiences from the past, one typically experiences the same feelings they had during that time," she said. "Of course, the best way for organizations to make their employees feel powerful is to actually give them more power."

"Our research doesn't mean that power holders are always going to make the best decisions," said Fast. "Power also leads to greater risk-taking, illusory control, and heightened reward sensitivity, all tendencies that can lead to disinhibition and poor decision making. Yet, power holders do often make good decisions and they may be particularly good at considering future consequences." Indeed, as Fast noted, we often think of the best leaders as being visionary and helping subordinates adopt these future goals and aspirations. In this way, perhaps the experience of power is an essential part of what allows effective leaders to lead.

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Power connects decision makers to the future [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 20-Feb-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Amy Blumenthal
amyblume@marshall.usc.edu
213-740-5552
USC Marshall School of Business

New USC Marshall study shows how power can embolden decision makers

Decision makers who feel powerful and in control of resources are more likely than others to make decisions that will benefit their future selves, according to researchers at the USC Marshall School of Business.

Conversely, those who lack feelings of power tend to prefer smaller immediate gains those that benefit the present self to potentially greater benefits in the future, according to "Power and Reduced Temporal Discounting," a research paper by Nathanael Fast, an assistant professor of management and organization at and Priyanka Joshi, a doctoral candidate in management and organization at the USC Marshall School of Business. The paper is in the current issue of Psychological Science.

A pervasive tendency among decision makers to opt for immediate gratification known as temporal discounting has implications for everything from investing money and saving for retirement to developing a business strategy, Fast said. For more than a decade, researchers in numerous disciplines have sought ways to overcome temporal discounting because it is so widespread.

Joshi and Fast hypothesized that one of the ways to help people wait for larger future benefits in lieu of small immediate gains is to make them feel more powerful. "Consistent with our predictions, we found that feeling powerful actually increased people's willingness to wait for larger rewards," reported Joshi. "We also found that the experience of power in the workplace is positively correlated with one's total accrued assets, even after controlling for more likely factors such as annual income and age." In other words, power appears to foster saving behavior by putting people more in touch with their future selves.

"Power provides control over future outcomes, so the future seems more certain when you feel powerful." Fast said. "You're therefore more likely to expand your sense of self to include your future self and, as a result, consider long-term consequences when making decisions."

Decision makers may better connect with their future selves by "power priming," or thinking of a time in their lives when they did have power over others, Joshi said. "By revisiting experiences from the past, one typically experiences the same feelings they had during that time," she said. "Of course, the best way for organizations to make their employees feel powerful is to actually give them more power."

"Our research doesn't mean that power holders are always going to make the best decisions," said Fast. "Power also leads to greater risk-taking, illusory control, and heightened reward sensitivity, all tendencies that can lead to disinhibition and poor decision making. Yet, power holders do often make good decisions and they may be particularly good at considering future consequences." Indeed, as Fast noted, we often think of the best leaders as being visionary and helping subordinates adopt these future goals and aspirations. In this way, perhaps the experience of power is an essential part of what allows effective leaders to lead.

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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-02/umso-pcd022013.php

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