Monday, January 16, 2012

More, Faster Weight Loss Seen With Gastric Bypass Than Banding (HealthDay)

MONDAY, Jan. 16 (HealthDay News) -- Gastric bypass surgery results in faster and longer-lasting weight loss than does gastric banding, according to a new study by Swiss investigators.

A gastric bypass operation called Roux-en-Y involves reducing stomach size with staples and connecting the smaller "pouch" directly to the small intestine. It is irreversible.

Gastric banding, as its name implies, involves placing a band around part of the stomach to reduce its size. This procedure is reversible, the researchers noted.

"Both gastric banding and gastric bypass are currently performed for morbid obesity," said lead researcher Dr. Michel Suter, chief surgeon at Chablais Hospital in Aigle.

"Bypass is more effective in terms of directs results such as weight loss, but a bit more dangerous immediately than banding," he said.

However, banding often leads to long-term complications requiring some sort of major re-operation, Suter said.

"In addition, many bands are not going to stay in place for much more than 10 years; hence, banding is unlikely to be the only weight-loss procedure the patient will be submitted to," he said. "Patients should make a choice knowing this, and decide whether they accept a slightly higher early risk to improve their results, or if they want the least invasive procedure, but then accept a high risk of further surgery at a later time."

The report was published in the Jan. 16 online edition of the Archives of Surgery.

For the study, Suter's team followed for six years 442 patients who had either gastric bypass surgery or banding.

Although there were more early surgical complications among those who had Roux-en-Y surgery, these patients lost more weight faster than those who had gastric banding, the researchers found.

After bypass surgery, about 17 percent of the patients had complications, compared with more than 5 percent of those who underwent banding, the researchers noted.

But at six years there were more problems with gastric banding, including about 48 percent who had weight gain or the procedure reversed, compared with about 12 percent who had bypass surgery, the study found.

Gastric banding was associated with more long-term complications (more than 42 percent versus 19 percent) and more new procedures than bypass surgery (about 27 percent vs. 13 percent).

Cholesterol levels among those who had gastric bypass surgery were consistently lower than among those who had gastric banding, who saw no change over time, the researchers add.

This finding implies that blood sugar levels were also lower among those who underwent gastric bypass surgery, the study authors said.

Suter is concerned that many patients are only offered banding and not told of its drawbacks.

"There is, in the United States, an extensive campaign promoting gastric banding as 'the solution' for obesity, which is far from being true," he said.

It can result in significant weight loss, but it remains a surgical procedure, and is certainly associated with significant risks, both in the short and long term, Suter said.

"Patients must be informed that surgery alone is not sufficient to achieve significant weight loss, and they must be instructed about other things they have to do such as changing their eating and lifestyle habits," he said.

In addition, Suter said, "Patients calling or referred for gastric banding must be informed about the other available procedures for morbid obesity, and not offered band only, as is the case in several places."

Depending on the actual operation, either procedure costs between $10,000 and $20,000 plus follow-up costs, and insurance coverage is very inconsistent, according to Dr. Edward Livingston, who serves as the Dr. Lee Hudson-Robert R. Penn Chair in Surgery at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, in Dallas.

Hospital stay for bypass is usually two days, and banding usually one day, but this can vary depending on surgeon, hospital and complications.

Dr. Jacques Himpens, from the European School of Laparoscopic Surgery at Saint Pierre University Hospital in Brussels and author of an accompanying journal editorial, is less concerned with a particular procedure than with the specific surgeon.

"Not all surgeons can do bypasses," he said. "Maybe they don't have the skills or the experience, but in any case it's not the best option because they are not up to it," he said. "That's the case for many surgeons."

In addition, it is not clear what the long-term results of a bypass are, because there is evidence that although a bypass "cures" diabetes, it does come back after time, Himpens said.

"The bypass is a very good procedure, but not everyone can do it and we have to be very careful and watch what the long-term effects of the procedure are," he said.

Also, while a gastric bypass causes changes in metabolism, banding does not, Himpens said.

"But the good thing is that it is reversible. When you take out the band, no harm has been done and you can still do another procedure if you need to," he said.

However, among patients who receive bands, only 40 percent retain them after 10 years, either because of complications or the desire to have it removed, Himpens said.

More information

For more on gastric bypass procedures, visit the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/weightloss/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20120116/hl_hsn/morefasterweightlossseenwithgastricbypassthanbanding

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It's earnings vs Europe for stocks (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) ? U.S. stock investors will return to a tug of war between signs of domestic strength and overseas concerns this week as a batch of critical earnings reports look to add credence to the idea the economy is improving, while credit rating downgrades in Europe will keep that region's difficulties in view.

Bank stocks will probably once again be a primary focus, as not only will European issues call the group's profit outlook into question, but many key names report results.

Equities have recently undergone a decoupling with respect to Europe's sovereign debt crisis as signs of progress in the euro zone, along with improving U.S. data, have pushed Wall Street higher on improved growth prospects. Financials have been a beneficiary of that rising tide, with Bank of America up about 20 percent since the start of the year.

So far this month, the S&P 500 (.SPX) is up 2.5 percent, while the Dow (.DJI) is up 1.7 percent and the Nasdaq (.IXIC) is up 4.1 percent.

"We're going to see more volatility in the weeks ahead with tension between earnings and Europe," said Christopher Sheldon, the Boston-based director of investment strategy at BNY Mellon Wealth Management, which oversees $171 billion globally.

"We want to see Europe resolved, but there will continue to be ups and downs, and while earnings will continue to be relatively good, we do expect slowing compared with 2011."

However, the uncertainty about Europe returned in a big way on Friday after Standard & Poor's downgraded the ratings of nine of the 17 euro-zone countries, including France, Italy and Spain after the market closed. Talk of the downgrades spurred a selloff that erased most of the gains for the week, when the S&P rose for four straight sessions.

The downgrades could exacerbate the euro zone's difficulties and bring concerns about how they might affect U.S. banks' profits back to the forefront.

Still, market participants looking for signs of strength don't have to look far. Data has been bullish lately, including Friday's consumer sentiment reading at an eight-month high that sharply exceeded what was anticipated.

"The prospect of a downgrade has been around for a while, so despite today's reaction, everyone was aware of the potential, and I don't think it will be as impactful, especially as corporate business trends remain strong," said Hank Herrmann, chief executive of Waddell & Reed Financial Inc in Overland Park, Kansas.

HINTS OF BETTER TIMES AHEAD

Earnings reports from numerous bellwethers could reinforce the growth story. Bank of America Corp (BAC.N), General Electric Co (GE.N), Intel Corp (INTC.O), Goldman Sachs Group Inc (GS.N) and Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O) are among the names set to report.

Early reads have supported the idea that better times lie ahead. JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM.N) said the domestic economy was strengthening even as its profit fell 23 percent, while Alcoa Inc (AA.N) rallied earlier in the week after giving a bullish outlook for the aluminum sector.

"Banks will be an important part of the story, especially with Europe in the picture, and investors will also be looking at names like GE, which have global exposure, to see what insights can be gleaned from that," said Herrman, who helps oversee $90 billion in assets.

The U.S. stock market will be closed on Monday in observance of the U.S. holiday honoring the birthday of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., the slain civil rights leader.

When trading resumes on Tuesday, Wall Street will watch a number of economic indicators to gauge the strength of the recovery. Data scheduled for release in the abbreviated week includes the New York Fed's Empire State Index on January manufacturing, the December readings on the U.S. Producer Price Index and the Consumer Price Index, as well as December housing starts and December existing home sales.

For the past week, the Dow rose 0.5 percent while the S&P 500 gained 0.9 percent and the Nasdaq added 1.4 percent.

(Wall St Week Ahead runs every Sunday. Questions or comments on this column can be emailed to: ryan.vlastelica(at)thomsonreuters.com)

(Reporting by Ryan Vlastelica; Editing by Jan Paschal; Multimedia versions of Reuters Top News are now available for: * 3000 Xtra: visit http://topnews.session.rservices.com * BridgeStation: view story .134 For more information on Top News: http://topnews.reuters.com; For London stock market outlook please click on <.L/O>; Pan-European stock market outlook <.EU/O>; Tokyo stock market outlook <.T/O>)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120115/bs_nm/us_usa_stocks_weekahead

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Walgreen sued for overcharging for generics (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? A union benefits fund filed a class action suit Wednesday, accusing Walgreen Co and generic drug maker Par Pharmaceutical Cos Inc of overcharging for various generic drugs in a bid to boost profits.

The complaint, filed by the United Food and Commercial Workers Unions and Employers Midwest Health and Pension Fund, alleges that Walgreen, the largest U.S. drugstore chain, violated federal racketeering laws.

"Starting April 1999 through December, 2006, Par and Walgreen conspired to increase their profit through at least two schemes to illegally fill prescriptions with Par's higher-priced products rather than the specific drugs prescribed by physicians," the complaint alleged.

The drugs involved included generic versions of antidepressant drug Prozac and anti-heartburn drug Zantac, the complaint said.

Neither company could immediately be reached for comment outside U.S. business hours.

The case is In re: United Food and Commercial Workers Unions and Employers Midwest Health Benefits Fund vs. Walgreen Co., U.S. District Court for Northern District of Illinois, No. 12-CV-00204. (Reporting by Saqib Iqbal Ahmed in Bangalore; Editing by Helen Massy-Beresford)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120113/us_nm/us_walgreen

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Sunday, January 15, 2012

In BP case, legal ties are topsy turvy: James Gill | NOLA.com

Louisiana has fielded a double team in the litigation over the BP oil spill, but nobody appears to have told Gov. Bobby Jindal and Attorney General Buddy Caldwell that they are supposed to be on the same side. Jindal generally loses no opportunity to ingratiate himself with the right wing, where the orthodox view is that greedy trial lawyers are a canker on the republic. In this case, however, according to Caldwell, Jindal has exceeded his legal authority in advancing their interests at the expense of Louisiana taxpayers.

One of the law firms that stand to rake in plenty of moolah as a result is Baron & Budd of Dallas, a generous contributor to Jindal's election campaign. Jindal has hired Burton LeBlanc, a Baron & Budd shareholder, as his special counsel in the BP case. Another Baron & Budd shareholder, Scott Summy, has a seat on the Plaintiffs' Steering Committee that federal Judge Carl Barbier appointed to manage the case and divvy up the damages.

Barbier, as a former trial lawyer himself and a Clinton appointee, is the kind of judge conservatives might be expected to regard as practically a subversive. But when Barbier ordered a portion of all awards held back to pay off the lawyers, over Caldwell's vehement objections, Jindal's lawyers up and declared the deal jake with them.

Since Louisiana will be entitled to billions in compensation, the lawyers will be pocketing vast sums from the taxpayers whose interests Jindal is supposed to protect. Under Barbier's order, private plaintiffs must reserve 6 percent of their awards for the lawyers, public bodies 4 percent.

Jindal's team not only approved the bonanza, but pledged that the state would not appeal any awards that Barbier might approve for the plaintiffs' committee. Jindal signed an agreement to that effect, and invited Caldwell to do so, but he refused.

Caldwell, who had been under the impression that he was the state's top legal officer, protested that Jindal had no authority to intervene. Throwing in the towel before the opening bell was not Caldwell's idea of a prudent strategy, either.

Caldwell now wants the appeals court to throw out Barbier's order holding back a portion of all settlements. His petition suggests that he is weary of being shunted aside while Louisiana's interests are hostage to the whims of Barbier, his pals on the plaintiffs' committee and a manifestly conflicted governor's office.

Caldwell complains that Barbier's orders include a "diatribe" against him because, for instance, of an alleged failure to co-operate with the plaintiffs' committee. Caldwell was under the impression that a lawyer has a right to disagree when his client's interests are at stake.

The plaintiffs' committee, in requesting the set-aside order, claimed that 300 lawyers had spent 230,000 hours on the BP case and incurred costs of $11.54 million. We need not fear that they will wind up uncompensated; lawyers can always be trusted to collect their fees.

The rationale for Barbier's order is that all oil-spill claimants should leave money on the table because they all benefit from the plaintiffs' committee's work even if they weren't clients. This is plainly specious. BP does not contest liability and has, indeed, put $20 billion in Kenneth Feinberg's hands for distribution to victims outside the court system. Jindal, according to his spokesman, does not think any of that money should be held back, but Barbier's order contains no exemption.

The plaintiffs' committee's goal, naturally, is to grab as much loot as possible, but it is hard to see why huge chunks of our money should be set aside for lawyers who do not represent Louisiana or even get along with the man who was elected to do so. Louisiana stands to lose plenty from the deal; that 4 percent escrowed for the lawyers' benefit is urgently needed to repair the colossal environmental damage caused by the spill.

A united front would come in handy at this stage, but it is plain that Caldwell regards Jindal as treacherous and interfering, and that he bitterly resents Barbier for treating him like dirt while bestowing "repeated lavish praise" on the plaintiffs' steering committee.

So our allegedly rock-ribbed governor takes up for the trial attorneys, while the attorney general is against them. The oil spill seems to have turned the entire state topsy turvy.

James Gill is a columnist for The Times-Picayune. He can be reached at jgill@timespicayune.com.

Source: http://www.nola.com/opinions/index.ssf/2012/01/in_bp_case_legal_ties_are_tops.html

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Dark chocolate and red wine are heart-healthy foods of love, dietitians say

ScienceDaily (Jan. 13, 2012) ? Forget the oysters and the champagne this Valentine's Day. If you want to keep your true love's heart beating strong, Susan Ofria, clinical nutrition manager at Gottlieb Memorial Hospital, said the real food of love is dark chocolate and red wine.

"You are not even choosing between the lesser of two evils, red wine and dark chocolate have positive components that are actually good for your heart," said Ofria, a registered dietitian at the Loyola University Health System's Melrose Park campus.

Red wine and dark chocolate with a cocoa content of 70 percent or higher contain resveratrol, which has been found to lower blood sugar. Red wine is also a source of catechins, which could help improve "good" HDL cholesterol.

Ofria, who is also a nutrition educator, recommends the following list of heart-healthy ingredients for February, which is national heart month, and for good heart health all year.

Eight Ways to Say "I Love You" -- Top Heart-Healthy Foods Red Wine -- "Pinots, shirahs, merlots -- all red wines are a good source of catechins and resveratrol to aid 'good' cholesterol."

Dark chocolate, 70 percent or higher cocoa content -- "Truffles, souffl?s and even hot chocolate can be a good source of resveratrol and cocoa phenols (flavonoids) as long as dark chocolate with a high content of cocoa is used."

Salmon/tuna -- "Especially white, or albacore, tuna and salmon are excellent sources of omega-3 fatty acids, and canned salmon contains soft bones that give an added boost of calcium intake."

Flaxseeds -- "Choose either brown or golden yellow, and have them ground for a good source of omega-3 fatty acids, fiber, phytoestrogens."

Oatmeal -- "Cooked for a breakfast porridge or used in breads or desserts, oatmeal is a good source of soluble fiber, niacin, folate and potassium."

Black or kidney beans -- Good source of niacin, folate, magnesium, omega-3 fatty acids, calcium, soluble fiber.

Walnuts and almonds -- "Both walnuts and almonds contain omega-3 fatty acids, vitamin E, magnesium, fiber and heart-favorable mono- and polyunsaturated fats."

Blueberries/cranberries/raspberries/strawberries -- "Berries are a good source of beta carotene and lutein, anthocyanin, ellagic acid (a polyphenol), vitamin C, folate, potassium and fiber."

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/D3qyvfs-SMI/120113093818.htm

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Showtime making documentary about Dick Cheney (AP)

PASADENA, Calif. ? The Showtime television network says it is preparing a new documentary on former Vice President Dick Cheney.

Showtime said Thursday that filmmaker R.J. Cutler, who made "The War Room" about Bill Clinton's presidential campaign in 1992, will make the film. No date was set for airing.

Cutler called Cheney, who was George W. Bush's vice president, "perhaps the single most influential non-president in the nation's political history." He promised a balanced and multi-dimensional look at Cheney.

Last weekend, Cutler placed ads in the Casper Star-Tribune newspaper asking residents if they had any footage or still pictures of Cheney. The former vice president lived in Wyoming as a teen and attended the University of Wyoming. He represented Wyoming in Congress from 1979 to 1989.

"Maybe somebody has a home video somewhere that we haven't heard about that we'd just like to see," said Ryan Gallagher, as associate producer at Actual Reality Pictures, Cutler's production company.

Showtime said it has begun an effort to produce high-end profiles. Its other project is about rap mogul Suge Knight.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tv/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120113/ap_en_tv/us_tv_showtime_cheney

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Saturday, January 14, 2012

NewME Accelerator Adds Andreessen Horowitz As Sponsor, Plus New Tech Mentors

Screen Shot 2012-01-12 at 12.33.14 PMThe NewME Accelerator program is getting more support as it heads towards its second class of founders, today announcing that it's landed top venture firm Andreessen Horowitz as a sponsor/partner. Joining other backers, including Google, HP and Tagged, the firm will also provide mentors for companies, speakers at founder dinners, as well as connect top minority tech talent with its Talent Agency.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/Yh4G8paAHMU/

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The Best Looking 3D Glasses Are From a Company You've Never Heard Of [Ces]

If you're lucky enough to get a pair of 3D glasses with your fancy new 3D TV, chances are good that they're hideous. So this year, I decided to scour CES for 3D specs that weren't embarrassingly awful. And I found them, in a place I never would have expected. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/ZWmRqlczKec/

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Friday, January 13, 2012

2nd mosque in Canada on Target [Anonymoused]

Ottawa, January 09: A second Gatineau, Que., mosque was the target of anti-Muslim slurs last week just hours after vandalism at another mosque.
Hicham Ouhaid, president of the Mosque of Aylmer, said he received an email early last Monday urging Muslims to get out of Canada.
The message, he said, included a photo of a 2010 Time magazine cover depicting a young Afghan woman whose nose and ears were cut off.
This is not the first time the Aylmer mosque, located at the corner of Park Street and Chemin Eardley, has been targeted, he added, as a hateful letter was dropped in the mailbox last spring.
"We felt very concerned. We felt our community is somehow targeted," Ouhaid told the CBC's Alistair Steele.
"Although we don't really understand why, because we have been there for quite some time and everything was fine."
Ouhaid said he has yet to forward the email to police.

Anti-Muslim incidents may be linked
Ouhaid believes the email is connected to vandalism where cars were smashed outside the Outaouais Islamic Centre in Gatineau early last Monday.
Then in the early morning of Jan. 5, a lone man in his 20s was caught on camera painting racist messages on the centre's front doors, across the building's side and on two other entrances to the building.
The same man is suspected of both cases of vandalism at the Gatineau mosque.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Immigration Minister Jason Kenney have spoken out against the Gatineau mosque attacks, and Marc Bureau, the city's mayor, visited Friday prayer.
Gatineau police are investigating the Monday vandalism at the Outaouais Islamic Centre as a hate crime.
-Agencies

Source: 2nd mosque in Canada on Target | Siasat

The following is in reference to the first mosque:

Star of David on Canada Mosque

Ottawa, January 09: A mosque in Canada?s largest province of Quebec has been vandalized, with anti-Arab slurs and a Star of David spray-painted on the Muslim worship place, to the condemnations of Jews and Muslims in the country.
"This kind of bigotry has no place in Canada," said Immigration Minister Jason Kenny, reported CTV Television Network.
Anti-Arab slurs and a Star of David were spray-painted on the doors of a mosque Gatineau in Quebec last week.
The attack came a few days after unknown people attacked the mosque, smashing its windows.
?Any act of vandalism is deplorable. But vandalism against houses of worship of any faith is particularly cowardly and hateful,? said Kenny.
?Our government strongly condemns these heinous attacks that have been terrorizing the whole community,? said Kenney.
?Our government is deeply disturbed by the acts of individuals who promote this type of hatred. Canada is recognized as a peaceful and tolerant country, where people from around the world aspire to live.?
Prime Minister Stephen also condemned the "heinous attacks" in a statement in French.
"Members of the mosque have asked for help in funding infrastructure and security projects and have received funding from our government," Harper said.
The attack is the fourth on the mosque in the past six months.
"It is classified as a hate crime," said Guy Berthelotte, deputy chief of the Gatineau police.
Condemnations
The mosque attack was swiftly condemned by Jewish and Muslim groups in the country.
"The incident is not only an affront to the some 4,000 Muslims in the Gatineau area, but is also an outrage to all Canadians who value diversity and respect,? said Frank Diamant, the chairman of the Jewish group B'nai B'rith Canada.
?The use of the Jewish star in association with hate messaging only adds to the offensive nature of this latest incident.?
The mosque?s imam downplayed the attack, saying it does not reflect a wide anti-Muslim hostility in Canada.
"This does not characterize Canadians," imam Nabil Bouzoubaa said.
"We live with them and, thank God, we're all Canadians."
Muslims make around 2.8 percent of Canada's 32.8 million population, and Islam is the number one non-Christian faith in the Roman Catholic country.
A recent report from the Washington-based Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life said that Muslims are expected to make up 6.6% of Canada?s total population in 2030.
A recent survey showed that the overwhelming majority of Muslims are proud to be Canadian, and that they are more educated than the general population.
-Agencies

Source: Star of David on Canada Mosque | Siasat

Source: http://forums.islamicawakening.com/f18/2nd-mosque-in-canada-on-target-54999/

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Mild winter creates problems for ice wine makers

FILE - In this Nov. 25, 2005 file photo, Vidal grapes hang on the vine covered in snow waiting to be harvested and pressed for ice wine in Branchport, N.Y. Winery and vineyard operators from Michigan to New York and parts of Canada have waited nervously for temperatures to get low enough to harvest the tender fruit. (AP Photo/Julie Jacobson, File)

FILE - In this Nov. 25, 2005 file photo, Vidal grapes hang on the vine covered in snow waiting to be harvested and pressed for ice wine in Branchport, N.Y. Winery and vineyard operators from Michigan to New York and parts of Canada have waited nervously for temperatures to get low enough to harvest the tender fruit. (AP Photo/Julie Jacobson, File)

TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. (AP) ? Along with ski resort operators and snowmobile vendors, the unusually mild winter has been rough on makers of a cold-climate delicacy called ice wine.

The pricey dessert beverage, produced by wineries stretching from Minnesota through New York and in parts of Canada, is revered for its sweetness and often-syrupy texture. It comes from grapes that are picked and pressed while they're still frozen, yielding precious drops of concentrated juice. Winemakers have waited nervously for temperatures to drop low enough to harvest the fruit.

Many were finally able to do so last week, thanks to a short-lived cold snap. But winery operators say the delay resulted in far fewer usable grapes.

"What's ironic about the ice wine harvest is it's one of the few times when people actually say, 'Great, it's going to be bitter cold,'" said Jim Trezise, president of the New York Wine and Grape Foundation. "We were kind of twiddling our thumbs, but it finally came together."

Grapes used in most wines from the Upper Midwest and the Northeast are harvested by late October or November. But some vineyard operators leave a small portion of their crop behind for another month or longer, hoping it will develop suitably for ice wine.

They acknowledge it's a gamble.

Federal regulations prohibit using the "ice wine" label unless the product came from grapes that were at least partially frozen on the vine. That requires temperatures of roughly 17 degrees ? the point at which water inside the fruit solidifies ? or lower. When the largely dehydrated grapes are pressed, what emerges is the sugary portion of the juice. If all goes well, the treasured nectar is fermented and becomes high-quality ice wine.

But much can go wrong. The longer the harvest is delayed, the greater the risk that grapes will rot or shrivel past the point of usefulness. Some growers who have managed to harvest ice wine grapes say their yields were down by as much as 40 percent this year compared to a typical harvest.

Grapes left on the vine for extended periods also are more likely to be eaten by birds, deer, raccoons and other wildlife. Some growers shield the fruit with nets and install noisemaking devices, but the critters are resourceful.

Sleet and hail can damage the grapes. If too much snow falls, it can bury low-hanging bunches, making them hard to retrieve.

"I'm delighted if we can harvest 50 percent of what we left hanging for ice wine," said Mark Johnson, winemaker at Chateau Chantal winery on Traverse City's Old Mission Peninsula. That's about what his operation managed to take in last week on the half-acre set aside for the purpose.

Delaying the harvest also can stress vines and stunt production for a year or two, said Edward O'Keefe III, president of nearby Chateau Grand Traverse, which sometimes makes ice wine but took a pass this season.

All those risks ? and the fact that it can take three or four times more grapes to make a bottle of ice wine than ordinary wine ? explain the high price tag. Chateau Chantal charges $68 for a 375-milliliter bottle, which is half the size of a standard wine bottle. Some ice wines sell for $90 or more.

"It's just something really special, something to be sipped and savored," Johnson said. "You're not going to kick back and chug a tumbler full. You want an ounce or a half-ounce."

Ice wine is a niche product, accounting for less than 5 percent of the wine made in Michigan, said Linda Jones, director of the Michigan Grape and Wine Industry Council. In New York, it makes up just 1 to 2 percent, Trezise said. So even if a winery loses all its ice wine grapes one year, it's unlikely to be ruinous.

Still, it's an important marketing tool for the northern wine industry ? an item that warm-weather competitors can't match.

"If you're known for something that's really special and rare, it helps build your reputation," Trezise said.

Ice wine usually is made with white wine grapes such as Riesling and Vidal, although the red variety Cabernet Franc is another frequent choice. It originated in Germany in the late 1700s and remains popular there. Canada is a leading producer, especially the Niagara region of southern Ontario.

Some Canadian vineyards got cold enough briefly in late December to harvest. Crews in Nova Scotia spent Christmas Eve in the vineyards, industry spokeswoman Christine White said. Henry of Pelham Estate Winery in St. Catherines, Ontario, took advantage of a short freeze the night of Dec. 29, said its president, Paul Speck.

"We had about seven to eight hours that were perfect to pick in," Speck said. "We were happy to get what we could. It's been ridiculously mild here."

For many operations, the window of opportunity finally came last Tuesday, when a cold spell settled across ice wine country. Workers jumped into action after dark at Lemon Creek Winery in Berrien Springs, Mich. Aided by a harvesting machine, they secured about 4 tons in a couple of hours.

The haul was less than half of what it would have been in early December, owner Jeff Lemon said. But it could have been worse.

"This was the latest we've ever gone," he said. "We were one evening away from ending up with nothing."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-01-09-US-Food-and-Farm-Ice-Wine/id-fe25d6a857804abc953e08e2086a2539

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The Head Made of Green Cheese Gabfest

On this week?s Slate Political Gabfest, John Dickerson and Emily Bazelon talk with author Jodi Kantor about her controversial new book The Obamas. They also discuss the GOP primary in New Hampshire and a Supreme Court case on religious freedom and ministerial exception.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=e321d0e9858fcacde95ec63636342019

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Nigeria Paralyzed by 'Occupy' Strike Over Gas Prices (Time.com)

Oil-rich Nigeria ground to a halt, Monday, amid mass demonstrations and strikes protesting a government decision to end billions of dollars in fuel subsidies that saw pump prices double overnight. At least 20 people were wounded and at least three demonstrators were reported killed as police opened fire on protests in the country's business capital, Lagos, as well as in the largest northern city, Kano. Witnesses said police also attacked protestors with batons and tear gas overnight in the capital, Abuja. Banks, airports, gas stations and markets were closed throughout the country on Monday, as streets in some of Africa's largest cities, normally blocked solid with traffic, were quiet but for the sound of protests. And the violence against protesters comes in a security climate already clouded by mounting Muslim-Christian tensions that have seen an upsurge of sectarian violence in the north.

The demonstrations mark the start of what is expected to be a drawn-out battle that protest organizers have called Occupy Nigeria, adopting the brand name franchised by the Wall Street protests against economic inequality. But while the fuel price hikes -- and their knock-on inflationary effect on the cost of food, power, telecommunications and other essentials -- may impoverish poorer Nigerians in the short term, government economists say ending subsidies is essential to the long-term prospects of reducing poverty. The subsidy cut has become the acid test of whether or not President Goodluck Jonathan will succeed in his effort to reform the economy of Africa's most populous country, and one of its most corrupt. (See "Nigeria's Christmas Bombings Herald Muslim-Christian Conflict.")

Nigeria's economic plight, and the failure of its political leadership, is encapsulated by the fact that despite being Africa's largest producer of crude oil (ranked fifth among suppliers to the U.S.) it relies on imports for almost all of its own gasoline requirements. The ineptitude and corruption of successive governments has allowed Nigeria's own refineries to rot: Funds allocated for maintenance and upgrades have gone missing, not least because annual subsidies to make imported fuel affordable -- which amounted to $8 billion in 2011 -- have earned fortunes for politically connected fuel importers, while killing off any incentive to regenerate domestic refining capacity. Almost all of the 2 million barrels a day of crude pumped in Nigeria is exported, while four domestic refineries operate at less than 25% capacity, according to industry estimates. And crime is rife: Militants, state officials, army officers and others all siphon off crude to sell on the black market, while imported fuel is smuggled out of Nigeria and sold to countries where, absent subsidies, fuel is three times the price. (Photo: The Two Sides of Lagos)

But for many ordinary Nigerians, the import subsidy amounts to the only tangible benefit from their country's oil wealth, and they've previously fought -- and won -- battles to prevent its removal. Jonathan vows that this time, however, the government will not back down. "If I were in your shoes at this moment, I probably would have reacted in the same manner," he said in a speech Saturday. But reform, and the fight against corruption, must take priority, he said, adding he would use the money saved to improve Nigeria's decaying infrastructure. "The deregulation policy is the strongest measure to tackle this challenge in downstream sector." As a gesture to skeptics, who say his administrationis no less corrupt and self-aggrandizing than its predecessors, he also pledged to reduce by 25% salaries of all politicians in the executive arm, which exceed their equivalents in the U.S.

Many Nigerians agree with Jonathan's diagnosis of Nigeria's problems but question his methods. "How can you ask people to tighten their belts when you run an obese system?" asked one protestor via Twitter. Many believe money saved from the hand-out withdrawal will go straight into government coffers. "The politicians are using the money from oil to enrich themselves instead of rebuilding our country," said protestor John Paul from Benue state in the southeast. "They are talking of building a new refinery but our current refineries do not even work. They should fight corruption, not the fuel subsidy." Gbenga Bojuwomi, a member of the Youth Reformation Group Nigeria, added: "Why does everything boil down to the masses? Why should we suffer for the mistakes of the government?" At least for now, the credibility of Jonathan's presidency rests on whether Nigerians accept his answers to those questions.

(Photo: Bombing in Nigeria)

View this article on Time.com

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/energy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/time/20120109/wl_time/08599210405300

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Israel parliament: Labor leader takes glass of water in the face (VIDEO)

Israel?s parliament is often a lively and irreverent place, and almost universally bemoaned among the people it is supposed to represent for the crudeness and ineffectiveness of its proceedings.

The Knesset Speaker, Likud member Ruby Rivlin, the scion of one of Jerusalem?s great families, is often dismissed for his courtly ways.

This morning the house found itself at an unprecedented low when right-wing Israel Beiteinu representative Anastasia Michaeli, a crony of Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, threw a glass of cold water at the face of Labor party member of parliament Ghaleb Majadele. The entire sorry episode was filmed by Knesset TV and became talk of the day.

Ironically, the event occurred during a debate on the conduct of a school principal from the southern Negev Beduin town of Arara, who took his students on a field trip to a human rights parade in Tel Aviv.

Israel radio announcers could not help but purse their lips and comment all afternoon on the ?unseemly example? offered by the two supposed leaders.

Both Knesset members are minor celebrities in their own right. Anastasia Michaeli, a possessor of striking blonde who paid for her year abroad in Paris by modeling, was born into a Christian family in St. Petersburg and converted to Judaism after marrying her husband, Josef Samuelson, at the age of 22. She is a mother of eight, and maintains a full political agenda.

Longtime Labor party figure Majadele, originally form the Galilee town of Baka el-Gharbiyyeh, was appointed minister of science, culture and sport in 2007, becoming the nation?s first Muslim minister.

Today, neither performed with particular distinction, Majadele screaming ?Shut up! Shut up! Shut up!? at Michaeli, and Michaeli, well, hurling the laden glass.

The fate of the high school principal remained undecided at the end of the debate.
?

http://www.globalpost.com/dispatches/globalpost-blogs/the-casbah/israel-parliament-knesset

Source: http://www.globalpost.com/dispatches/globalpost-blogs/the-casbah/israel-parliament-knesset

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I love music.? My first big purchase after getting my first job out of college was a stereo system.? After I bought my small house, I got rid of my stereo with the big floor speakers that could literally blow out a match, and I just don’t listen as much.? When I try listening with [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2012/01/12/thinksound-ms01-monitorseries-earphones-review/

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Thursday, January 12, 2012

CRE Guide: Community Spotlight - Downtown Milwaukee

Construction projects under way in downtown Milwaukee will bring hundreds of new apartments and three new hotels to the market, while real estate experts are optimistic that a new office project could draw enough tenants to kick off in 2012.

Demolition and other site preparation work has begun for the new $54 million Marriott hotel near the southwest corner of East Wisconsin Avenue and North Milwaukee Street. The 200-room hotel is being developed by Jackson Street Management LLC, Milwaukee. Completion is projected for mid 2013.

First Hospitality Group Inc. of Rosemont, Ill., is renovating the Loyalty Building at East Michigan Street and North Broadway into a 128-room Hilton Garden Inn.

In the apartment market, the 30-story Moderne apartment and condominium project is under construction at the corner of West Juneau Avenue and North Old World Third Street. The project includes 14 condominiums and 203 apartments, according to The Moderne website.

Construction is under way for the 68-unit 1910 on Water apartment project at 1910 ...

Construction projects under way in downtown Milwaukee will bring hundreds of new apartments and three new hotels to the market, while real estate experts are optimistic that a new office project could draw enough tenants to kick off in 2012.

Demolition and other site preparation work has begun for the new $54 million Marriott hotel near the southwest corner of East Wisconsin Avenue and North Milwaukee Street. The 200-room hotel is being developed by Jackson Street Management LLC, Milwaukee. Completion is projected for mid 2013.

Developer Gorman & Co. of Oregon, Wis., is converting the former brewhouse at The Brewery?

First Hospitality Group Inc. of Rosemont, Ill., is renovating the Loyalty Building at East Michigan Street and North Broadway into a 128-room Hilton Garden Inn.

In the apartment market, the 30-story Moderne apartment and condominium project is under construction at the corner of West Juneau Avenue and North Old World Third Street. The project includes 14 condominiums and 203 apartments, according to The Moderne website.

Milwaukee developer Mandel Group?

Construction is under way for the 68-unit 1910 on Water apartment project at 1910 N. Water St. Wangard Partners, Milwaukee, is the project?s developer.

CommonBond Communities of St. Paul Minn., expects to begin construction of a 48-unit senior apartment project at The Brewery in March with completion projected for November.

Other proposed apartment projects include a four-story, 34-unit building on the northwest corner of North Jackson and East Pleasant streets by Dermond Property Investments of Milwaukee. RSC Associates of Oak Park, Ill., has proposed an 85-unit building in the Park East Square development.

Tony DeRosa, vice president of development for Wangard Partners, said there is significant pent-up demand in the market for quality apartments in downtown, particularly from young professionals.

?You continue to see young people move to the downtown area and attracted to this lifestyle,? he said.

Also at The Brewery, the remodeling and expansion of an existing building at 1240 N. 10th St. for the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee School of Public Health is under way. Mike Mervis, vice president of The Brewery?s developer Zilber Ltd., said the building will be turned over to the university in late May or early June.

?We have four other significant projects that we are hoping to resolve in 2012,? he said.

Planet Fitness health club has opened in the 19,000-square-foot former Borders bookstore space in the ASQ Center on West Wisconsin Avenue near the Shops of Grand Avenue.

One question for downtown is whether a new office project will get under way this year.

Proposed projects include the 300,000-square-foot Washington Square office building on the southeast corner of North Jefferson and East Mason streets and an office building and parking structure at the Marcus Center for the Performing Arts?

Rainier Properties LLC has proposed a mixed-use development in the Park East that would include a Marcus movie theater and office tower.

Major tenants looking for space have been identified as Michael Best & Friedrich, Godfrey & Kahn and Baker Tilly Virchow Krause. Baker Tilly Virchow Krause recently said it is looking for space in existing buildings.

?There are a number of high-quality development sites available in downtown that have teams committed to trying to get projects off the ground,? said William Bonifas, executive vice president for CBRE Inc. With the array of tenants in the market for space, ?we?re optimistic, with the improving economy, that some combination of tenants would probably lead to an announcement in 2012.?

Jeff Fleming, a spokesman for the Milwaukee Department of City Development?

?There are projects that are in the discussion stages right now that would be very positive developments for downtown, and I would anticipate some of those coming together,? he said.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/vertical_61/~3/0OYFFc7J7RM/cre-guide-community-spotlight-downtown.html

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University of Utah and Google Team Up to Help Families with Children on the Autism Spectrum

SALT LAKE CITY--(BUSINESS WIRE)--These days, we hear a lot about the disorder of autism, but researchers at the University of Utah have created a program that helps kids with autism focus on building their skills and utilizing an aptitude for visual-spatial thinking, computers and other electronic media.

?Many of the boys were in inclusive, regular educational settings so when they presented to their peers, it was the first time some of their classmates had seen the boys in control of a situation and teaching something the other kids didn?t know?

One of the program participants is 12-year-old Christopher Charles, who was diagnosed with what?s now known as high-functioning autism when he was 18 months old. His parents started him in therapies early on, but hadn?t found something that seemed to hold Christopher?s interest or accommodate his behaviors.

Chris has participated for the past year and a half in workshops at the University of Utah to teach 3D modeling software by Google called SketchUp. Cheryl Wright, associate professor of family and consumer studies, coordinated the workshops in partnership with Google?s Project Spectrum, an initiative to teach job skills to kids with autism. Steve Gross, a certified SketchUp instructor and designer for Universal Creative theme parks, leads the workshops.

Wright and her team soon found far greater benefits to these workshops than acquiring a skill set for potential employment, however. The sessions facilitated social engagement among the students and their peers, parents, siblings and even grandparents.

They have published a study about these findings in the December issue of Family & Consumer Sciences Research Journal. The study focuses on the effects of the workshops on individual students involved as well as on multiple generations within their families ? an uncommon opportunity in the research on social interactions of people with autism spectrum disorders (ASD).

After just weeks in the workshops, Christopher Charles? parents noticed a big difference. ?Christopher spends hours on his design projects,? says his father Nik. ?There are few activities that have been able to hold Christopher?s attention like SketchUp.? In fact, Christopher once noted that he wouldn?t miss the SketchUp sessions ?even if aliens invaded the Earth.?

Each session was two hours long and included hands-on training in the use of the design program as well as time for students to share their design projects. At the end of six weeks, the participants, all boys, presented their designs to classmates at their schools and at community events.

?One of the most compelling parts of this program came from when the boys presented their findings to their classmates,? says Wright, who notes that children with autism sometimes struggle in a regular school setting, where their disability is highlighted more than their talents.

?Their talents are often invisible. In our program, we provided a platform for their talents to shine,? she says. Many of the parents of participants were pleased that the workshops had developed self-confidence in their children, and noted that this made the parents more confident about what their children will be able to accomplish in the future.

BUILDING FRIENDSHIPS, CONFIDENCE

Parents enrolled their children in the workshops with a bit of skepticism. Like Christopher?s parents, they had experienced prior failures and had found few activities their sons enjoyed. The parents soon noticed that these workshops were different than other extracurricular activities, and seemed to be more aligned with their sons? interests.

In turn, the success of the workshops led to greater self-confidence in parents, who began to rethink what they expected of their parenting ability and began to feel more effective.

They also noticed their sons? sincere concern about friends in the workshops ? something that hadn?t happened in other social interactions. The parents and grandparents who noticed these changes began to feel optimistic that the boys would be able to develop genuine relationships with children and adults in the future.

?Many of the boys were in inclusive, regular educational settings so when they presented to their peers, it was the first time some of their classmates had seen the boys in control of a situation and teaching something the other kids didn?t know,? Wright says.

She uses the example of a 10-year-old in the program who taught his class how to use SketchUp in a 40-minute training session. ?It was great; he kept saying, ?I need to hear from someone else,? modeling his teacher?s behavior. That modeling is something not always seen in these kids, and it showed their peers that kids with autism can contribute too.?

Chris? mother Kay notes, ?Chris was always off-task, but it?s been amazing to see him develop the ability to stay on task for something, even with different groups of kids, not just in the SketchUp workshops. He is now very comfortable in front of a group of people, and he even will wait his turn to answer questions if he?s with other presenters.?

A second-grader who attended the workshops and who had struggled on a daily basis with attention issues and self-esteem problems was asked about his presentation and he said simply, ?It went great. I was awesome.?

BUILDING BRIDGES

Just as an engineer might use SketchUp to design a bridge from one side of a canyon to another, Wright and her team noticed that the SketchUp sessions were building bridges between generations within a family.

?This is a very exciting outcome of this study,? Wright explains. ?We were really given a wonderful opportunity to study a different aspect of ASD with the multi-generational model that we used in the workshops.?

Wright says that there were different types of intergenerational relationships that the researchers were able to analyze: parent-to-child, grandparent-to-grandchild, and grandparent-to-adult-child. In addition, the sibling relationships of the boys were studied.

The parents of the workshop participants mentioned a greater ability to connect with their child with ASD. As Chris? father noted, new conversations were sparked in speaking about what they learned and in sharing their designs. ?He now teaches me how to do things with SketchUp. The other day, we designed a wall for his bedroom. I don?t see us doing that before the workshops, even if we had the technical ability to use the software.?

Similarly, the boys? siblings no longer viewed their brother as a source of embarrassment, but as someone who could teach them and others how to use the design tool. ?You can just see the pride on his sister?s face when Chris is presenting his work,? Kay says. ?She even acts as his assistant sometimes in the presentations. That did not happen before.?

Wright?s program provided many opportunities for grandparents to participate in the workshops. Six grandparents were labeled by the researchers as ?active? grandparents and had a particular investment in their grandsons with ASD.

The researchers noticed that the communication between the grandparents of the boys with their adult child (the boys? parent) increased significantly after the workshops. There seemed to be less shame associated with the child?s autism. One parent noted the grandparents now had something ?they could be proud of.?

The researchers explain that grandparents often feel added frustration when coping with a grandchild with autism because they empathize with their own child as well as their grandchild and are concerned about the well-being of both.

A parent of one of the participants said the program gave her parents a renewed hope for her son?s future, and also gave them a forum to discuss their feelings in coping with their grandchild?s ASD.

BUILDING THE FUTURE

In October the team presented their research at a Google Tech Talk in Colorado.

?Cheryl and her team have brought an amazing amount of professionalism, data, credibility and excitement to the SketchUp/autism connection and, because of it, people in the larger ASD community are taking note and wanting to learn more,? said Tom Wyman, leader of the SketchUp team in Boulder and business development manager for Google, after their presentation. ?We?re excited to be partnering with the University of Utah on this project.?

Wyman says he looks forward to a continuing partnership between Google and the University of Utah?s project, now named iSTAR.

Wright and her colleagues have served 18 students in a school-based version of their program. The researchers surmise that workshops that incorporate familial participation with multiple generations will likely be most successful in affecting the social engagement and computer skill development of the children.

The research team also plans to replicate this program with larger samples of children and incorporate additional types of technology and software. They hope to soon create a virtual community that will provide resources by way of learning tools and a support system for youth with ASD and their families. They have presented their program at national conferences and developed a free teacher-training toolkit so that educators may start a similar program in their own classrooms.

More information about these workshops and resources for parents and teachers of kids with ASD can be found at istar.utah.edu. The complete study by Wright et. al is available by contacting University Public Relations.

The University of Utah offers a satellite uplink service for live interviews or video feeds about this story. For more information about broadcast services, visit: http://unews.utah.edu/broadcast-services

This release and high-resolution photos are available for download at http://tiny.utah.edu/b6d5

Source: http://www.businesswire.com/news/banggoogle/20120109007072/en

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German recession fears weigh on markets (AP)

LONDON ? The rally in stock markets ground to a halt Wednesday as hopes of a recovery in the U.S. economy were offset by concerns that Germany was heading back into recession.

Germany's Federal Statistics Office suggested that Europe's biggest economy likely contracted by 0.25 percent in the last quarter of 2011 as the country suffers from the fallout of the debt crisis that's afflicting the 17-country eurozone.

If Germany's economy did actually shrink and does so again in the first quarter of 2012, it would officially be in recession. That would be an ominous sign for Europe, considering Germany has been the strongest-performing economy during the region's two-year debt crisis.

Concerns over the German economy and further sovereign debt problems across the 17 countries that use the euro sent the single currency down 0.5 percent to $1.268.

Stock markets have mostly risen this year, largely on optimism over the recovery in the U.S. as well as hopes that Chinese authorities will ease monetary policy.

"Global equities have swung toward losses for the day as optimism in the U.S. economy and speculation of easing in China give way to pessimism in Europe after news that the German economy likely contracted in the final quarter of 2011," said Carl Campus, an analyst at BMO Capital Markets.

In Europe, the FTSE 100 index of leading British shares closed down 0.5 percent at 5,670.82 while Germany's DAX fell 0.2 percent to 6,152.34. The CAC-40 in France ended 0.2 percent lower at 3,204.83.

The euro remained volatile, falling to a new 16-month low of $1.2674 at one stage after a leading Fitch Ratings analyst said the European Central Bank had to do much more to save the euro. By late afternoon London time, it was back around the $1.27 mark.

The unease was evident on Wall Street too ? the Dow Jones industrial average fell 0.4 percent to 12,417 while the broader Standard & Poor's 500 index dropped 0.3 percent to 1,288.81.

Over the rest of the week, Europe's debt crisis will likely be at the forefront of investors' minds, especially as Italy is due to raise substantial amounts of money.

Italy is the epicenter of Europe's debt crisis. Though it has a relatively low budget deficit in comparison to its economy, the country is saddled with massive amounts of debt. Fitch has said there was a "substantial" chance that it would be downgrading its rating on the country's debt by the end of this month.

Italy's financial trouble's escalated in recent months as investors demanded increasingly high interest rates to lend it money. The yield on the country's ten-year bonds continues to hover around the 7 percent mark that is widely considered to be unsustainable.

In an interview with Germany's Die Welt newspaper ahead of his meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Italy's Prime Minister Mario Monti said he wanted to see more concrete support in exchange for having passed painful austerity measures.

Some economists say the European Central Bank should help Italy more by buying its government bonds on the open market in larger quantities. That would lower Italy's borrowing rates and ease pressure on its finances. But the ECB, along with Germany, resists such a move.

The ECB will hold its monthly policy meeting on Thursday but most economists expect it to keep interest rates steady.

Another key focus in the debt crisis is Greece's talks with private creditors about having them take a 50 percent cut in their Greek bondholdings. That demand is considered crucial to reducing Greece's enormous debt load, and Merkel has indicated that Greece would not get any more rescue loans until that deal is clinched. A deal is expected by next week, according to Greek officials.

Earlier in Asia, financial markets closed mostly higher on expectations that China will tweak its monetary policy to encourage growth, but in a limited way to prevent inflaming its already sizzling property market.

Japan's Nikkei 225 index rose 0.3 percent to close at 8,447.88 and Hong Kong's Hang Seng index gained 0.8 percent to 19,151.94.

However, mainland Chinese shares edged lower as traders booked profits following two days of sharp gains. The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index lost 0.4 percent while the Shenzhen Composite Index was marginally lower at 880.71.

Oil prices tracked equities slightly lower ? benchmark crude for February delivery lost $1.20 to $101.04 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

___

Pamela Sampson in Bangkok contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120111/ap_on_bi_ge/world_markets

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Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Baseball Hall Of Fame Results 2012: Mark McGwire Receives 19.5% Of Vote

The National Baseball Hall of Fame released their 2012 selection results and long-time Cincinnati Reds shortstop Barry Larkin was elected with 86.4% of the vote. Larkin was the only candidate to achieve the minimum 75% required for election. Jack Morris increased his vote total from 53.5% to 66.7% but faces an intriguing challenge in 2013 when Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens and other notable players are on the ballot. Jeff Bagwell and Lee Smith also surpassed the 50% mark this season.

Star-divide

Former Oakland Athletics slugger Mark McGwire saw his percentage decrease for the second straight season as he appeared on 19.5% of the ballots with 112 votes. In 2011 he got 19.8% of the vote an in 2010 he got a personal high of 23.7% of the vote. At this point, it seems highly unlikely that he will get voted into the Hall by the BBWAA. He could very well get in down the road with the Veterans' Committee, but it could very well depend on how the PED issue develops in the coming years.

Source: http://bayarea.sbnation.com/oakland-athletics/2012/1/9/2694658/baseball-hall-of-fame-results-2012-mark-mcgwire-receives-19-5-of-vote

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Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Here's a seven-minute Nikon D4 sample video: try not to drool

Corey Rich. Might not ring a bell off-hand, but it'll be someone you're insanely jealous of after you head past the break and mash play. Sir Rich was fortunate enough to get hands-on with a Nikon D4 during the company's launch efforts, and he put together an absolutely stunning seven-minute video montage showcasing exactly what the new beast is capable of. We're told that the captures were taken over a grueling 11 day period, with all of the action shots captured directly onto SanDisk Extreme Pro CF cards. The author has posted a reminder that the Vimeo clip is compressed using H.264 at 10,000kbps, and while some have spotted glitching in parts, he assures us the original media was devoid of the stuff. Enough talking -- get to watching.

[Thanks, Wynn]

Continue reading Here's a seven-minute Nikon D4 sample video: try not to drool

Here's a seven-minute Nikon D4 sample video: try not to drool originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 08 Jan 2012 19:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google paying to have Android installed on TVs #google #android http://neow.in/y...

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SwissRamble: @mikesred Weirdly, both iPad apps seem to work fine.

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Uni baseball coach Chris Conlin welcomed back by friends

University baseball coach Chris Conlin, who has been battling neck cancer since October, made a surprise visit to the gymnasium Friday night for the University-Woodbridge girls basketball game.

Conlin, 58, has been undergoing radiation and chemotherapy treatments but looked healthy as he visited with coaches, school officials, players and friends before Friday's game at University.

Marci Boden (from left), Mark Cunningham, Caprice Leonard,Vickie Stone and assistant basketball coach Kenny Shin were among those who welcomed back Coach Conlin (dark blue jacket) on Friday.

TIM BURT, THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

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Many gave him hugs, greeting the baseball coach with smiles.

Mike Gerakos, Kevin McCaffrey and Kevin Conlin have been running the University program in his absence. It is not known when Chris Conlin will return but he said before undergoing treatments he hoped to be able to coach this upcoming season.

He explained Friday night his voice was weak because of the treatments, but in an email over the weekend said:

"Coach Gerakos, Coach Kevin Conlin and Coach McCaffrey have been doing great. Also, Garrett Atkins and Mark Cresse have been able to come over to put on some great one day clinics for our players. Cresse coached with the Dodgers for 28 years as the bench and catching coaching. Garrett was one of the top hitters in the big leagues during the first seven years in his career. I appreciate the team work and the commitment from the coaches to help our kids become better players.

"I'm going to take it one day at a time. Right now, I'm hoping that the parents are donating their time and effort so that everything comes together. If the coaches keep up the good work and the kids train hard each day then they are doing their jobs."

Conlin, who is also an athletic director at the school and an assistant football coach, said he has another week of chemotherapy and radiation treatments and then will be re-tested in three months.

Conlin spent time visiting with football coach Mark Cunningham, who battled throat cancer but has since received a clean bill of health. University Principal John Pehrson was among others happy to see Conlin, who is in his 23rd year as head coach.


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Source: http://www.ocregister.com/news/coach-334735-conlin-treatments.html

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Sarkozy gains ground on Socialist rival: poll (Reuters)

PARIS (Reuters) ? French President Nicolas Sarkozy has cut his Socialist rival's lead to the smallest margin so far in the run up to an April and May presidential election, a poll showed Sunday.

However, the poll showed that Socialist candidate Francois Hollande would still comfortably beat Sarkozy in a run-off.

The president has been capitalizing on his central role in Europe's struggle to contain its debt crisis, and gained ground even after announcing plans for an unpopular sales tax hike and after Hollande's campaign took a more aggressive tone.

In the first round of the two-stage vote, on April 22, Hollande would win 28 percent of the vote while Sarkozy would secure 26 percent, the poll by IFOP for weekly newspaper Le Journal du Dimanche found.

Hollande had a 10-point first-round lead shortly after the Socialist Party chose him as their candidate in October.

In the run-off, the poll showed Hollande winning with 54 percent of the vote while Sarkozy would get 46 percent, also the smallest margin registered so far in the election race and down from 20 percentage points in October.

Sarkozy hopes that, in the May 6 run-off, he can pick up ballots from people voting for far-right candidate Marine Le Pen and centrist Francois Bayrou in the first round. Pollsters say many of those voters have not decided yet who to pick in the second round.

Sarkozy, widely expected to announce in February that he is seeking a second mandate, has been gaining momentum in opinion polls even though his economic credentials are under fire, with France at risk of losing its AAA credit rating and unemployment running at a 12-year high.

The president is putting a new focus on spurring growth and reviving French companies' competitiveness. In a political gamble, the government said it would finance a cut in social welfare contributions paid by large companies with an increase in sales tax.

Hollande has stepped up his attacks on Sarkozy, accusing him in an open letter of running the economy onto the rocks and being a "president of the privileged."

The IFOP poll was based on telephone interviews between January 4 and January 6 with 1,163 people registered to vote.

A second poll by Viavoice for newspaper Liberation also found that Hollande's lead had narrowed with 41 percent of those polled wanting him to be France's next president compared with 31 for Sarkozy.

The poll marked the smallest margin since August and was down from as much as 18 percentage points in October, after Hollande became the socialist candidate.

However, the poll, based on interviews with 2,011 people on January 5 and January 6, showed a sharp increase in the number of people wanting the next president to be Bayrou, who closed in on Sarkozy with 26 percent.

"Although voting intentions for the two men are still separated by a margin, this convergence shows a shift in the political power relations," said Viavoice analyst Francois Miquet-Marty in a text accompanying the poll's results.

Bayrou has seen a growing number of politicians on the right rally behind him with former foreign minister Philippe Douste-Blazy, who was one of the founders of Sarkozy's UMP party, announcing Sunday that he was lending his support to the centrist.

(Reporting by Leigh Thomas; Editing by Alessandra Rizzo and Matthew Jones)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120108/wl_nm/us_france_politics_poll

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