Saturday, December 31, 2011

Alexandra Katehakis, M.F.T.: The Year in Good Sex: 20 Defining Moments

In parallel storylines, two of Glee's teenage power couples -- Rachel and Finn, Kurt and Blaine -- experience their first time "going all the way." For both Kurt and Rachel, this is a major decision resulting in the loss of their virginity. This controversial episode explores their positive and negative motives and expectations, as well as out-of-control moments of heightened arousal. In the end, these heterosexual and homosexual pairings are intercut in a sweet and sexy montage as the two couples consummate their love, showing both sexual orientations as equally natural expressions.
How did/do you imagine your first time to feel? The exact moment is not always clear for everyone. Traditionally, going all the way refers to penile-vaginal penetration. But certain sexual partners, like lesbians and gay men, may consider losing virginity to be frottage to climax, oral sex, or penetrative vaginal or anal sex, active or receptive. Survivors of sexual abuse may decide to define their first time as consensual sex with the partner of their choice. How much do any of us really make consciously driven choices rather than submitting to the circumstances? It's possible that any and every sexual activity steers our individual psychological patterns toward definite habitual expression and resulting experience. After all, the first impression of any new event sets the standard, and while this will certainly change over time, the very first impression might still overshadow subsequent experiences. I wonder what kind of sexual footprint we are making on our paths.
--By Alexandra Katehakis, M.F.T., C.S.T., C.S.A.T., Clinical Director of Center for Healthy Sex

In parallel storylines, two of Glee's teenage power couples -- Rachel and Finn, Kurt and Blaine -- experience their first time "going all the way." For both Kurt and Rachel, this is a major decision resulting in the loss of their virginity. This controversial episode explores their positive and negative motives and expectations, as well as out-of-control moments of heightened arousal. In the end, these heterosexual and homosexual pairings are intercut in a sweet and sexy montage as the two couples consummate their love, showing both sexual orientations as equally natural expressions.

How did/do you imagine your first time to feel? The exact moment is not always clear for everyone. Traditionally, going all the way refers to penile-vaginal penetration. But certain sexual partners, like lesbians and gay men, may consider losing virginity to be frottage to climax, oral sex, or penetrative vaginal or anal sex, active or receptive. Survivors of sexual abuse may decide to define their first time as consensual sex with the partner of their choice. How much do any of us really make consciously driven choices rather than submitting to the circumstances? It's possible that any and every sexual activity steers our individual psychological patterns toward definite habitual expression and resulting experience. After all, the first impression of any new event sets the standard, and while this will certainly change over time, the very first impression might still overshadow subsequent experiences. I wonder what kind of sexual footprint we are making on our paths.

--By Alexandra Katehakis, M.F.T., C.S.T., C.S.A.T., Clinical Director of Center for Healthy Sex

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alexandra-katehakis-mft/the-year-in-good-sex_b_1170240.html

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Mohegan Sun casino fails to refinance $811M debt

UNCASVILLE, Conn.?

The parent company of the Indian-run Mohegan Sun casinos in Connecticut and Pennsylvania says it has failed to reach an agreement to refinance $811 million in debt, but lenders have waived a possible default.

The Mohegan Tribal Gaming Authority said Thursday that a delay in refinancing debt was among conditions that "raise substantial doubt about our ability to continue as a going concern."

Mitchell Etess, chief executive of the authority, which owns and operates the Mohegan Sun in Uncasville and Mohegan Sun at Pocono Downs in Wilkes-Barre, Pa., told The Associated Press on Friday that the dire warning is only a financial requirement of auditors.
"Auditors have no choice," he said. "They must put in that language."

Etess cited the waiver as a vote of confidence by lenders and cited fourth-quarter income of $46.7 million, compared with a $26.3 million loss in the same quarter last year.

Etess said refinancing is taking a long time because of the weak recovery following a deep and prolonged recession that has sharply cut into consumers' entertainment spending.

He also cited the "status of Native American gaming financing" generally.

"Those impacts that have happened in the outside world have impacted our bondholders' thoughts as we go through the process," Etess said.

The neighboring Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation in eastern Connecticut has worked to restructure billions of dollars in debt after its Foxwoods casino was hit hard by the economic downturn and increased competition in the Northeast.

Last month, the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians received a six-month extension on loans to May.

And in Washington state, revenue at some tribal casinos fell as much as 30 percent at the start of the recession, forcing tribes to struggle with ways to refinance debt on new casinos and other ventures.

A report issued in March said that for the first time, revenue fell in 2009 at American Indian gambling casinos nationwide as the recession forced consumers to curtail spending. The report by economist Alan Meister of Nathan Associates Inc. said casinos generated about $26.4 billion in 2009, down 1 percent from 2008.

AP-WF-12-30-11 1813GMT

Source: http://www.courant.com/news/local/statewire/hc-ap-ct-mohegansun-debtdec30,0,2033175.story?track=rss

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Listen to the Engadget Mobile Podcast, live at 5PM ET!

Myriam. Brad. Mat Smith? Yes, we have another in-house guest to grace the airwaves and offer perspective on the mobile world as we quickly approach the new year and CES. So join us at 5PM ET -- same bat time, different bat day -- as we chat (and vent) about phones. It'll be peachy!

December 28, 2011 5:00 PM EST

Continue reading Listen to the Engadget Mobile Podcast, live at 5PM ET!

Listen to the Engadget Mobile Podcast, live at 5PM ET! originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 28 Dec 2011 15:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/GT03W1KCw4A/

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Friday, December 30, 2011

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Google Plus can reach 400 million users in 2012, already has 62 million says unofficial statistician

Google may have finally found a solution to the social networking problem that has eluded them for years ? Google Plus is populated by 62 million users and will hit 400 million by the end of 2012, according to self-proclaimed ?unofficial statistician? Paul Allen (no, not that Paul Allen).

The last official figure we got was 40 million users, but that was way back in October. Allen?s estimates put the growth rate of Google Plus at 625,000 new users per day. At this rate, Google Plus will hit the 100 million users mark before the end of February and 200 million in August.

By end of the 2012 that number grows to 293 million. But Paul Allen bets the number of newcomers per day will increase, so Google Plus will actually have 400 million users by the end of next year.

Now, Allen may have a tendency to overestimate the number of users ? for example, he reported 50 million users at the end of September, then in October Google came out with an official number of 40 million.

Still, if Google manages to attract even just 200 million users to its social network in less than two years, it will be an amazing feat. It took Facebook about 4 years to hit that mark in April 2009 (though they?ve grown to 800 million since then).

Source

Source: http://blog.gsmarena.com/google-plus-can-reach-400-million-users-in-2012-already-has-62-million-says-unofficial-statistician/

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New synthetic molecules treat autoimmune disease in mice

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

A team of Weizmann Institute scientists has turned the tables on an autoimmune disease. In such diseases, including Crohn's and rheumatoid arthritis, the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues. But the scientists managed to trick the immune systems of mice into targeting one of the body's players in autoimmune processes, an enzyme known as MMP9. The results of their research appear today in Nature Medicine.

Prof. Irit Sagi of the Biological Regulation Department and her research group have spent years looking for ways to home in on and block members of the matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) enzyme family. These proteins cut through such support materials in our bodies as collagen, which makes them crucial for cellular mobilization, proliferation and wound healing, among other things. But when some members of the family, especially MMP9, get out of control, they can aid and abet autoimmune disease and cancer metastasis. Blocking these proteins might lead to effective treatments for a number of diseases.

Originally, Sagi and others had designed synthetic drug molecules to directly target MMPs. But these drugs proved to be fairly crude tools that had extremely severe side effects. The body normally produces its own MMP inhibitors, known as TIMPs, as part of the tight regulation program that keeps these enzymes in line. As opposed to the synthetic drugs, these work in a highly selective manner. An arm on each TIMP is precisely constructed to reach into a cleft in the enzyme that shelters the active bit ? a metal zinc ion surrounded by three histidine peptides ? closing it off like a snug cork. 'Unfortunately,' says Sagi, 'it is quite difficult to reproduce this precision synthetically.'

Dr. Netta Sela-Passwell began working on an alternative approach as an M.Sc. student in Sagi's lab, and continued on through her Ph.D. research. She and Sagi decided that, rather than attempting to design a synthetic molecule to directly attack MMPs, they would try trick the immune system to create natural antibodies that target MMP-9 through immunization. Just as immunization with a killed virus induces the immune system to create antibodies that then attack live viruses, an MMP immunization would trick the body into creating antibodies that block the enzyme at its active site.

Together with Prof. Abraham Shanzer of the Organic Chemistry Department, they created an artificial version of the metal zinc-histidine complex at the heart of the MMP9 active site. They then injected these small, synthetic molecules into mice and afterward checked the mice's blood for signs of immune activity against the MMPs. The antibodies they found, which they dubbed 'metallobodies,' were similar but not identical to TIMPS, and a detailed analysis of their atomic structure suggested they work in a similar way ? reaching into the enzyme's cleft and blocking the active site. The metallobodies were selective for just two members of the MMP family ? MMP2 and 9 ? and they bound tightly to both the mouse versions of these enzymes and the human ones.

As they hoped, when they had induced an inflammatory condition that mimics Crohn's disease in mice, the symptoms were prevented when mice were treated with metallobodies. 'We are excited not only by the potential of this method to treat Crohn's,' says Sagi, but by the potential of using this approach to explore novel treatments for many other diseases.' Yeda, the technology transfer arm of the Weizmann Institute has applied for a patent for the synthetic immunization molecules as well as the generated metallobodies.

###

Weizmann Institute of Science: http://www.weizmann.ac.il

Thanks to Weizmann Institute of Science for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/116320/New_synthetic_molecules_treat_autoimmune_disease_in_mice

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Newly released files detail Thatcher's 1981 crisis (AP)

LONDON ? Rioting on Britain's streets and criticism from colleagues during an economic crisis tested the mettle of Margaret Thatcher. Government documents released Friday detail how early challenges shaped the woman who dominated the country's political life for 11 years.

Official records for 1981 released by the National Archives depict a prime minister grappling with violent dissent, rising tensions in Northern Ireland and sharp criticism from her own allies. The papers were being made public just five days before the London premiere of "The Iron Lady," the film about Thatcher's career starring Meryl Streep.

The documents were made public under Britain's policy of withholding sensitive official documents for 30 years.

Elected in 1979, Thatcher ? now aged 86 ? early on cut public spending and prioritized efforts to tame Britain's rocketing inflation rate, bringing a dramatic fall in industrial output and pushing unemployment to 2.5 million. In London's ethnically diverse Brixton neighborhood, and in the impoverished Toxteth suburb of the northern city of Liverpool, anger over joblessness helped fuel the country's worst riots in decades.

Undeterred, the government's March budget had introduced a new financial squeeze, with Treasury chief Geoffrey Howe announcing plans to raise taxes.

That led to a crisis July 23 Cabinet meeting in which Thatcher was confronted by internal critics ? known as the "wets" after the private school slang for "weak" ? who advocated an abrupt change of economic policy to appease public anger. According to minutes of the meeting, Thatcher's critics, many of them supporters of her predecessor Edward Heath, laid out a detailed attack.

"With unemployment totals rising to 3 million later in the year, and following the recent rioting in a number of cities, the tolerance of society was now stretched near to its limit," the critics argued, according to the note.

"To give people renewed hope and confidence for the future, it was essential to take new and constructive action urgently," the document said the leader was told.

Thatcher's combative press secretary Bernard Ingham fired off a memo warning his boss that she led "a manifestly divided and warring Cabinet."

In her memoirs, Thatcher described the meeting as "one of the bitterest arguments on the economy, or any subject, that I can ever recall taking place at Cabinet."

She was not deterred.

Thatcher fired education secretary Mark Carlisle; Christopher Soames, the leader of the House of Lords; and Ian Gilmour, a senior foreign office minister. She switched Jim Prior, then the employment secretary, to the Northern Ireland Office, to stifle his influence over economic policy.

The move calmed loyalists who had feared that Thatcher could be swayed by her opponents.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111230/ap_on_re_eu/eu_britain_thatcher

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Stores, downturn create new kinds of shoppers

Four new types of American shoppers have emerged this holiday season.

There's the bargain hunter who times deals. The midnight buyer who stays up late for discounts. The returner who gets buyer's remorse. And the "me" shopper who self-gifts.

It's the latest shift by consumers in the fourth year of a weak U.S. economy. Shoppers are expected to spend $469.1 billion during the holiday shopping season that runs from November through December. While it won't be known just how much Americans spent until the season ends on Saturday, it's already clear they are shopping differently than they have in years past.

"We're seeing different types of buying behavior in a new economic reality," says C. Britt Beemer, chairman of America's Research Group.

The bargain timer
Cost-conscious shoppers haven't just been looking for bargains this season. They've also been more deliberate about when to find those deals. Many believe the biggest bargains come at the beginning and end of the season, which has created a kind of "dumbbell effect" in sales.

For the week ended on Nov. 26, which included the traditional start of the holiday shopping season on the day after Thanksgiving, stores had the biggest sales surge compared with the prior week since 1993, according to the International Council of Shopping Centers-Goldman Sachs Weekly Chain Stores Sales Index. The cumulative two-week-sales drop-off that followed marked the biggest percentage decline since 2000. Then, stores had another surge in the final days, as retailers stepped up their promotions again.

"Shoppers are budgeting their money and time," says Paco Underhill, whose company, Envirosell, studies how consumers behave in stores. "They're focused on being opportunistic bargain shopping vultures."

Kalilah Middleton, 30, of Queens, is one of them. Starting late on Thanksgiving night, she spent five hours and $400 at Wal-Mart and Target. She bought a TV and clothing at 50 percent off. Then, she waited until Christmas Eve to shop again because she believed she'd get better deals later in the season.

"This is when you get the best deals," says Middleton, an office manager, about her holiday shopping.

Going forward, shoppers are expecting even bigger discounts. According to America's Research Group research firm, 34 percent of shoppers say they want to see post-Christmas discounts of about 70 to 80 percent, up from 20 percent last year.

The midnight buyer
Used to be, bargain shoppers would wake up at the crack of dawn to take advantage of big discounts on Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving. This year, some shoppers instead stayed up late on Thanksgiving night to get deals.

This behavior was in large part due to retailers' efforts to outdo each other during the traditional start to the holiday shopping season. Stores like Macy's, Best Buy and Target for the first time opened at midnight on Thanksgiving night, offering deals that once were reserved for the next day.

Twenty-four percent of Black Friday shoppers were at stores at midnight, according to a poll by the National Retail Federation, the industry's biggest trade group. That's up from 9.5 percent the year before when only a few stores were open during that time.

Of those shopping at midnight on Black Friday, 37 percent were ages 18 to 34. That percentage was higher than among 35- to 54-year-olds, of whom 23.5 percent were in stores by midnight.

Macy's, for one, drew 10,000 people to its midnight opening. Terry Lundgren, Macy's CEO, says many of them were young people who turned out for the Justin Bieber $65 gift sets and discounted fashions.

Anika Ruud, 15, of Boca Raton, Fla., went out with her four cousins to Macy's at midnight and then shopped at Target until 2:30 a.m. She picked up two bras at Macy's for $10. Then, she and her cousins went home to bed.

"It's always been inconvenient," Ruud says of the traditional 4 a.m. Black Friday openings of years past. "No one likes to wake up early."

The returner
Shoppers who were lured into stores by bargains gleefully loaded up on everything from discounted tablet computers to clothing early in the holiday season. But soon after, many of them were rushing back to return the items they bought.

For instance, Elizabeth Yamada, 55, of Fort Lee, N.J., says she got caught up with the shopping frenzy over the Thanksgiving weekend and picked up a $350 coat that was marked down more than 50 percent off at Macy's. She ended up returning the item one week later.

"It was nice, but I didn't need it," says Yamada, who works part-time as a waitress and a hospital aide. "It was impulsive shopping. But I am doing more reflecting."

It's all about buyer's remorse.

For every dollar stores take in this holiday season, it's expected they will have to give back 9.9 cents in returns, up from 9.8 last year, according to the a survey of 110 retailers the NRF. It would be the highest return rate since the recession. In better economic times, it's about 7 cents.

Stores have themselves to blame for the higher returns. They lured shoppers in with deals of up to 60 percent off as early as October. Because of the deals, shoppers spent more than they normally would. And retailers' return policies have been more lax since 2008, with some sweetening their policies even more this year.

The 'me' shopper
One for you; one for me.

After scrimping on themselves during the recession, Americans turned to shopping for themselves. It's a trend that started last year but became more prevalent this season.

According to the NRF, spending for non-gift items will increase by 16 percent this holiday season to $130.43 per person. That's the highest number recorded since it started tracking it in 2004.

"This season, the consumer put herself ahead of the giving," says Marshal Cohen, chief industry analyst with market research firm The NPD Group.

Betty Thomas, a health care coordinator at a hospital in Raleigh, N.C., says she spent $1,700 on a ring and bracelet for herself and a rug for her home during the holiday season. That's up dramatically from the $200 she spent last year.

"I have been putting other people first," Thomas says. "I definitely felt I earned it."

Stores have been encouraging such self-gifting.

AnnTaylor's campaign "Perfect Presents: One for you. One for her" highlighted merchandise like brightly colored sweaters. Brookstone's print ads urged shoppers to get accessories for their iPads and other electronics with the words: "gifts for your gadgets." And Shopittome.com, an online site that alerts consumers to clothing sales they're interested in, launched "Treat Yourself Tuesday" after Thanksgiving weekend.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45796877/ns/business-holiday_retail/

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When Pres. Obama goes on vacation, plays golf, or uses a teleprompter, how angry do you get?

Summertime Answered:
Doesn't bother me.

Shirley Answered:
Yes, berry angry hun. STRAWBERRY angry?

Cricket Answered:
It's okay, Hussein will be dethroned

rmack Answered:
While millions of Americans are losing their jobs and homes ?he goes on lavish trips?THAT pisses me off.

RJC Answered:
Not at all?.however I do like the questions because they bring 0bamas hypocrisy to light.
You know,,,"Americans need to eat their peas."

Daniel Answered:
not at all

Lear 45 Continued II Answered:
F**K' him and feed him fishheads! Elitist Bastard!

Butch Answered:
u mean u get angry when da Prez ackts white?

The Solution Answered:
I get $4.1 MILLION Dollars Angry!!!

Don't you?I'm sure 99% of us can't afford a $4.1 MILLION Dollar Vacation.

And how many people make less PER YEAR than the $10,000/NIGHT Room at the The Four Seasons in Hawaii on her vacation?(I know it's not tax money, but doesn't she stand as one of those that the OWS Hates?)

I find it appalling, obscene and just plain wrong that these people are paying this much, and yet are representing me.They don't represent me, they know NOTHING about me and my needs and my life.

You should be offended.

Answered:
Doesn't bother me at all. He is, after all, a politician and that's what they do ? Self first, party second, country after that. I've gotten use to the politician mind-set and very little of what they do surprises me. I try to vote them out of office but they have bamboozled enough people to vote for them so remain on the public dole for life.

Eve Answered:
On a scale of 1-10, 10 being "I detest the use of the teleprompter, vacations and golf" I'd give it a 0 on the "angry scale."

mr joe cool Answered:
Yes because he is on vacation while countrie is turning to ****

Source: http://golfsway.com/when-pres-obama-goes-on-vacation-plays-golf-or-uses-a-teleprompter-how-angry-do-you-get/

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Top 10 college football coach Christmas wishes

It?s beginning to look a lot like Christmas. Coaches come and go ?

Aw, we love our college football coaches. The sport would be so boring without these masters of strategy, these leaders of men, these architects of scandal. Certainly, we prefer to see them happy this holiday season.

With that, The List?s Top 10 college football coach Christmas wishes:

1. Todd Graham, Arizona State: a better data plan. Because having to take pains to awkwardly explain yourself afterward really defeats the purpose of sending a hundred or so student-athletes a life-altering text message with cold-hearted detachment.

2. Chris Petersen, Boise State: a QBPS to go with his GPS. Look, who the hell knows where and whom the Broncos will play once the whole Big ?East? thing gets rolling? More urgently, Petersen has to develop a successor to 50-win Kellen Moore at quarterback. Do people really think the Boise program is such a well-oiled machine that such a thing takes care of itself?

3. Jimbo Fisher, Florida State, and Brian Kelly, Notre Dame: Year 2 do-overs.The postgame-handshake powwow at the Champs Sports Bowl in Orlando will go something like this. Coach A: ?Nice game.? Coach B: ?What are you, high?? Coach A: ?You?re right. I seriously can?t believe I just said that.? Coach B: ?Let?s just pretend this season never happened, OK??

4. Bret Bielema, Wisconsin: a wing and a prayer ? make that two prayers. What are the chances the Badgers have a player in the pipeline with an arm like Russell Wilson?s and the as-yet-unfelt presence to lead them to their third consecutive Rose Bowl? But first: a nice torrential downpour where it almost never rains to neutralize Oregon?s insane speed would be mighty convenient.

5. Larry Fedora, North Carolina: a new old hat. Everybody seems to like and believe in Fedora, which is what happens when one steers a non-BCS program into the mainstream consciousness. But Fedora had better improve the state of football in Chapel Hill or else?in the eyes of major-conference ADs?it?ll be like his time well spent in Hattiesburg never happened.

6. Charlie Weis: a healthy quarterback. No, we aren?t referring to Notre Dame transfer Dayne Crist?s physical well-being; he?s healthy as a horse, strong as an ox, what have you. His emotional state, however, may be a different story after the way Kelly chewed him up and spit him out in South Bend in 2011. When the going gets tough (like it?s not going to at KU), will Crist ever believe in himself again?

7. Tim Beckman, Illinois: a defibrillator. How can Beckman possibly revive a team that was DOA for six straight games after a 6-0 start? Clear!

8. Rich Rodriguez, Arizona: more time for offseason workouts. Come to think of it, one must be careful with that sort of thing. Perhaps Rodriguez would be better off with a right-hand man who has a clue about coaching defense.

9. Bob Davie, New Mexico: a new footbaw. Because we?ll tell you what: At the end of the day, a footbaw coach can?t win a whole lot of footbaw games unless he has one heck of a footbaw team, without a bunch of good footbaw players. And what does all that start with? That?s right, a footbaw.

10. Mike Leach, Washington State: a crimson-and-gray eye patch. Don?t worry about the possibility the Pirate of the Palouse already has one. As bad as the Cougars are likely to be in 2012, Leach may need to cover both eyes.

Source: http://aol.sportingnews.com/ncaa-football/story/2011-12-23/top-10-college-football-coach-christmas-wishes

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Nissan Murano vs Ford Edge (Last post on 12/26/2011 at 09:04 AM PST)

Things to do:

Things to buy:

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Monday, December 26, 2011

UCO Women's Basketball vs Midwestern State University 6:00PM - Wichita Fall, Texas

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Yemen President Saleh says he plans a stay in US

Yemen's embattled President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who is set to stand down in February, told reporters on Saturday he is planning a stay in the United States in the coming days.

"I will travel to the United States in the coming days, not for treatment because I am well, but in order to create favourable conditions ... for the presidential election" set for February 21, he told a news conference in Sanaa.

He said that after his US trip -- without saying when this would be -- he would return to Yemen to resume his political activities in opposition.

"I will lead political action in the heart of my party in opposition," he said of his General People's Congress (GPC) party, which has shared the reins of power in a transition government of national unity since December 10.

Saleh, who has wounded in a June 3 explosion at his Sanaa palace and air lifted to hospital the next day in Saudi Arabia, needs "important" medical treatment abroad, Jamal Benomar, the UN envoy in Yemen, said on Wednesday.

UN chief Ban Ki-Moon had said last month that Saleh would visit New York for medical treatment.


Copyright AFP 2008, AFP stories and photos shall not be published, broadcast, rewritten for broadcast or publication or redistributed directly or indirectly in any medium

Source: http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=CNG.902406f9519505ad3e16ad3753be5c92.b1&show_article=1

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Australia's Gloucester Coal has reportedly agreed to a merger with China's Yanzhou in a deal valued at some $2.3 bln

Australia's Gloucester Coal has reportedly agreed to a merger with China's Yanzhou in a deal valued at some $2.3 bln

This file photo shows workers surveying a large open-cut and shaft mine system in New South Wales. Australia's Gloucester Coal said it had agreed to a merger with China's Yanzhou in a deal valued at some Aus$2.2 billion (US$2.3 billion) to create a major listed Australian coal firm.

Source: AFP - Copyright AFP 2008, AFP stories and photos shall not be published, broadcast, rewritten for broadcast or publication or redistributed directly or indirectly in any medium

Source: http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=iafpCNG.80399cc727f238aad1aa13330649b4c9.191p0&show_article=1

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Gingrich fails to qualify for GOP primary ballot in Virginia

By Steve Brusk, CNN

updated 7:19 AM EST, Sat December 24, 2011

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich will not appear on the GOP primary ballot in Virginia, joining Texas Gov. Rick Perry.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • Gingrich and Perry have failed to collect the required 10,000 signatures, the Virginia GOP says
  • The deadline to file ballot petitions with the Virginia State Board of Elections was Thursday
  • Mitt Romney and Ron Paul have qualified for the primary ballot in Virginia, the state GOP says

Washington (CNN) -- Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich failed to collect enough signatures to appear on the Virginia primary ballot, the Republican Party of Virginia announced Saturday morning, leaving the longtime Virginia resident without a place on the state's ballot and raising questions about his campaign's organization.

Gingrich, as well as Texas Gov. Rick Perry, did not meet the state's requirement of 10,000 signatures and, therefore, did not qualify for the ballot, the Virginia GOP said via Twitter.

The state GOP announced Perry's failure to qualify late Friday.

The news from the Virginia Republicans is a significant setback for Gingrich, who clamored earlier this week to gather enough voter signatures in the state. Gingrich utilized paid staffers to comb Virginia, asking voters to sign petitions that would allow him a place on the ballot.

On Wednesday, Gingrich ensured a crowd of supporters he had met the threshold for appearing on the ballot, saying he had gathered anywhere from 12,000-14,000 signatures.

Virginia requires candidates to obtain 10,000 signatures from registered voters, with 400 signatures coming from each of the commonwealth's eleven congressional districts.

Gingrich's spokesman said Wednesday the effort to secure a spot on the Virginia ballot was meant to showcase the campaign's ground game.

"It's a demonstration that Gingrich is outrunning Romney in states beyond Iowa," said press secretary R.C. Hammond.

Gingrich and his wife Callista have resided in McLean, Virginia, a wealthy suburb of Washington, for several years. Callista is active in Northern Virginia organizations, including playing the French horn in a Fairfax, Virginia band.

Gingrich and Perry were among four candidates who submitted ballot petitions to the Virginia State Board of Elections on Thursday, which was the deadline to file. Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and Texas Rep. Ron Paul also submitted petitions.

The state party spent Friday verifying that the submitted petitions met the requirements to appear on the ballot. The Virginia GOP said on its Twitter page Friday that Romney and Paul had both submitted enough signatures to appear on the ballot.

Virginia holds its Republican primary on March 6. At stake in the primary are 49 delegates.

CNN's Kevin Liptak and Robert Yoon contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.cnn.com/2011/12/24/politics/gop-virginia-primary/index.html?eref=rss_topstories

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Dropbox 2.0 for Android Is So Slick, I Might Actually Start Using It [Android]

Dropbox released its newest Android App iteration Thursday with a revamped layout and better functionality. Were the new app a kitten, it'd now do back-flips and be 500MB larger for college students. That's right, a 500MB back-flipping kitten. On your phone. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/asZ0tSJtDEs/dropbox-20-for-android-is-so-slick-i-might-actually-start-using-it

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Friday, December 23, 2011

iOS Jailbreak developer?s take on Android?s user experience

Noted iPhone Jailbreak developer Grant Paul, better known as chpwn, has started the ICS Paper Cuts blog to share his thoughts on user interface and user experience inconsistencies in Google’s latest version of Android, Ice Cream Sandwich. Android Central‘s Jerry Hildenbrand has responded, agreeing with some of Paul’s...


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/5Z7X9QbSEDI/story01.htm

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Autism-friendly Santas a hit at malls, parties (AP)

HARTFORD, Conn. ? Visiting the mall to share Christmas wishes with Santa has never been part of Ben Borre's childhood, a sad but necessary concession to the autism that would make the noise, lights and crowds an unbearable torment for the 10-year-old.

Now, though, a growing number of "sensitive" Santas in shopping centers, at community parties and elsewhere are giving Ben and others a chance to meet the big guy in autism-friendly settings ? and providing families a chance to capture elusive Christmas photos and memories that families of typical children may take for granted.

Ohio-based Glimcher Realty Trust recently started offering sensitive Santa sessions in its two dozen malls nationwide, and several service organizations and autism family groups have recruited low-key Kris Kringles who adjust their demeanor to the special needs of their young guests.

"Every parent dreads the noise and chaos of the mall Santa scene, but this isn't even dreading. It's just literally un-doable for us," said Darlene Borre of West Hartford, Ben's mother.

Ben, a nonverbal fourth-grader, is among the up to 1.5 million Americans living with autism spectrum disorders that can include delays or disabilities in communication, behavior and socialization. They can range from mild difficulties to significant impairments that make it difficult for those children to interact with others.

Many children with autism are especially sensitive to loud noises, jangling music, crowds and unpredictable situations, and some parents say the idea that they could wait patiently in a long line to see Santa is laughable at best.

The Borres tried without success a few times over the years to grab quick snapshots if Ben randomly walked close enough to any Santa they encountered, but with mixed results.

Now, he visits an autism-friendly Santa each December at an informal yearly event that Borre and other autism families hold at a local playground. The sensitive Santa happens to be Ben's grandfather, Ray Lepak, who was compelled to become an autism-friendly Santa for local families after seeing what his daughter's family was experiencing.

"Just because a family has a child with special needs doesn't mean they don't want all the same memories that everyone else does," Borre said. "We all want those same holiday joyful moments; it just has to be approached differently."

Ben's sister, 4-year-old Lila, who does not have autism, and is getting wise to the fact that Santa and Grandpa bear a suspicious resemblance. But she's not letting on to Ben, and visiting the autism-friendly Santa is giving the Borres a chance to share a family experience they otherwise might be denied.

Lepak, 69, of Manchester recently donned his Santa suit ? plus a brand-new beard and snow-white wig ? and met with several Hartford-area children and their parents at their now-annual playground gathering. He's learned over the years how to pep it up for siblings who don't have autism, and how to tone it down for children who seem overwhelmed.

He starts with a few mellow "Ho, Ho, Ho" greetings, watches for those who are intrigued, and smiles or beckons to them to come closer. Many steer clear but watch him, either curiously or warily, while others remain disinterested.

"You'll see them watch Santa out of the corner of their eye, then little by little they'll come closer, then walk away as if you're not there, and come back in a bit," Lepak said. "It's really about following their lead and communicating on their terms."

Some will give him a high five; the braver ones might sit on his lap. At the recent gathering, one child had no interest at all in Santa until he realized that the big guy in the bright red suit was willing to push him on a swing ? and those fleeting moments were enough for the boy's family to snap pictures.

A growing number of malls also are setting aside special times for sensitive Santa visits when the shopping centers would otherwise be closed, including the 23 shopping malls of Glimcher Realty Trust, based in Columbus, Ohio.

A recent autism-friendly Santa visit at its Northtown Mall in Blaine, Minn., just outside of Minneapolis, drew 55 children despite poor weather, and last year drew more than 100.

Linda Sell, Northtown's marketing director, said the two-hour window on a recent Sunday morning was devoid of lines and the bustle of a regular Santa visit. Instead, children could play and color nearby or walk in a safe, contained area until their number was called.

Sell said they also turned off the Christmas music, dimmed the lights, sent maintenance workers and other potential distractions away, and asked parents to fill out a form in advance to give Santa the heads up on the boys' and girls' wish lists.

"Some kids will sit next to Santa. Some will want to stand a little farther away and look at him, or sit in the chair next to him, or have mom or dad next to him," Sell said.

For a child on the autism spectrum, sometimes the smallest item or gesture can spark a connection ? such as the Northtown Mall Santa's gold watch and the tiny Christmas train that rotates inside of it, for instance, or Ray Lepak's time as a swing-pushing Santa at the Connecticut park.

For many families, those small moments captured in pictures and memories are a holiday gift of their own: a chance to go beyond the constraints of autism and experience a Christmas tradition with their children that might not otherwise be possible.

"It's so hard on some of these families trying to take some of the kids out," Lepak said. "What a feeling that is, when I'm inside the Santa suit and I see those little innocent faces. They love it and it warms my heart."

__

Online: http://bit.ly/rL0BFk

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111221/ap_on_re_us/us_sensitive_santas

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Vote now for the casual gaming app of the year [TiPb Awards]

TiPb Awards: Casual game of the yearMany of the most popular casual iOS games in 2011 were, in some ways sadly, the same games that were popular in 2010 — the same Angry Birds and Cut the Rope and Smurf’s Village and various Farm/Village/City/World franchises....


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/pWmwEPaL5Mk/story01.htm

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Video: Acts of kindness in tough times

We'll focus on?efforts to help veterans find?jobs and deal with health and family problems. "One of the great blessings in my life has been the exposure I've received to the military?active duty, in the field and veterans,"?says Brian Williams. "They are America?s genuine heroes, and it's a privilege to use our platforms at NBC News to honor all that they have done."

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40153870/vp/45690713#45690713

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Marshal's shooting, 3-hour manhunt shake Ind. town (Providence Journal)

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OPEC oil deal puts Saudi back in charge (Reuters)

VIENNA (Reuters) ? OPEC oil producers on Wednesday sealed their first new output agreement in three years in a deal that settles a 6-month-old argument over supply policy firmly in Saudi Arabia's favor.

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries agreed a target of 30 million barrels daily, ratifying current production near 3-year highs. It did not discuss individual national quotas.

The deal vindicates Saudi Arabia after its proposal to raise output in June to stem rising prices was rejected by price hawks led by Iran, Algeria and Venezuela.

"For the Saudis it's a fantastic decision," said Jamie Webster of Washington consultancy PFC Energy.

Saudi said it pumped 10 million barrels a day last month, in what Gulf delegates said was a demonstration of strength to the price hawks ahead of the meeting.

In theory the agreement caps output for all 12 OPEC members for the first half of 2012 at levels that should permit a modest rebuilding of lean global inventories.

"We're not going to bypass it, we're going to adhere to it," promised OPEC Secretary General Abdullah al-Badri of the new supply limit. "Saudi Arabia will abide by this decision for sure."

That will depend on whether or not Saudi and its Gulf Arab allies decide to ease back supply as post-civil war Libya heads towards full production, or keep the taps open to drive oil below $100 a barrel.

Saudi Arabia Naimi did not allay the doubts.

"If Libya increases it doesn't necessarily mean Saudi will cut," said Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi. "We don't react to that, we react to market demand," he said.

Oil analysts warned that without defined individual national quotas, leakage above the new limit was very possible.

"Someone has to cut back to accommodate Libya, that has to be done," said analyst Lawrence Eagles of JP Morgan. "As always with OPEC the proof will be in the pudding. How closely will they stick to the new limit?"

"The whole organization has to be at 30 million so if someone goes up somebody else should come down. But it's like anything when you divide responsibility -- it often ends up falling through the cracks," said Webster of PFC.

Rising supply from Saudi Arabia and its Gulf allies has kept a leash on oil prices as Riyadh seeks to help nurture global growth by keeping fuel costs under control.

Brent eased nearly $3 on Wednesday to below $107 a barrel, down from a year-high $127 in April.

HAWKS WANT NO LESS THAN $100

OPEC's price hawks, all of whom already pump at full capacity, want to keep prices above $100.

"We think the present level is appropriate for producers and consumers," Algerian Oil Minister Youcef Yousfi said of prices.

"Prices are reasonable," said Iranian Oil Minister Rostam Qasemi.

The Gulf Arab producers would prefer prices that don't hinder economic growth while meeting their budget and oil investment needs. The UAE said recently that $80-$100 was reasonable.

"Saudi Arabia is the central banker of the oil market and the decision that they will bring more oil to the market is definitely a good one," said Fatih Birol, chief economist at consumer body the International Energy Agency.

World oil inventories should now rise, boosted by Libyan oil output that hit 1 million bpd this week on the way back to pre-war output of 1.6 million.

OPEC's secretariat calculates that 30 million barrels a day from the group will meet demand in the first half of the year and build stocks by 650,000 bpd.

According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration that would lift inventories among industrialized OECD nations from 56 days of OECD demand now to 60 days by the middle of 2012.

OPEC next meets on June 14. Badri said point OPEC would be ready by then to tackle the tricky issue of re-establishing individual quotas.

(additional reporting Ramin Mostafavi, Dan Fineren, Alex Lawler, writing Richard Mably)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111214/bs_nm/us_opec

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Friday, December 16, 2011

US calls Congo vote 'seriously flawed' (AP)

WASHINGTON ? The United States has strongly criticized Congo's recent presidential election and is refusing to say if it recognizes President Joseph Kabila as the winner.

State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland says the elections were "seriously flawed, lacked transparency and did not measure up to the democratic gains" seen in recent African elections.

Nuland said Wednesday it was unclear if the irregularities changed the outcome of the vote. She called for Congo to review the election and offered U.S. assistance.

Her comments come amid increased questioning of Kabila's November re-election.

Kabila was declared the winner with 49 percent of the vote. But the United Nations and Congo's influential clergy have raised concerns.

Nuland says all parties should act responsibly and refrain from violence.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111214/ap_on_re_us/us_us_congo

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High-energy physicists set record for network data transfer

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Researchers have set a new world record for data transfer, helping to usher in the next generation of high-speed network technology. At the SuperComputing 2011 (SC11) conference in Seattle during mid-November, the international team transferred data in opposite directions at a combined rate of 186 gigabits per second (Gbps) in a wide-area network circuit. The rate is equivalent to moving two million gigabytes per day, fast enough to transfer nearly 100,000 full Blu-ray disks?each with a complete movie and all the extras?in a day.

The team of high-energy physicists, computer scientists, and network engineers was led by the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), the University of Victoria, the University of Michigan, the European Center for Nuclear Research (CERN), Florida International University, and other partners.

According to the researchers, the achievement will help establish new ways to transport the increasingly large quantities of data that traverse continents and oceans via global networks of optical fibers. These new methods are needed for the next generation of network technology?which allows transfer rates of 40 and 100 Gbps?that will be built in the next couple of years.

"Our group and its partners are showing how massive amounts of data will be handled and transported in the future," says Harvey Newman, professor of physics and head of the high-energy physics (HEP) team. "Having these tools in our hands allows us to engage in realizable visions others do not have. We can see a clear path to a future others cannot yet imagine with any confidence."

Using a 100-Gbps circuit set up by Canada's Advanced Research and Innovation Network (CANARIE) and BCNET, a non-profit, shared IT services organization, the team was able to reach transfer rates of 98 Gbps between the University of Victoria Computing Centre located in Victoria, British Columbia, and the Washington State Convention Centre in Seattle. With a simultaneous data rate of 88 Gbps in the opposite direction, the team reached a sustained two-way data rate of 186 Gbps between two data centers, breaking the team's previous peak-rate record of 119 Gbps set in 2009.

In addition, partners from the University of Florida, the University of California at San Diego, Vanderbilt University, Brazil (Rio de Janeiro State University and the S?o Paulo State University), and Korea (Kyungpook National University and the Korean Institute for Science and Technology Information) helped with a larger demonstration, transferring massive amounts of data between the Caltech booth at the SC11 conference and other locations within the United States, as well as in Brazil and Korea.

The fast transfer rate is also crucial for dealing with the tremendous amounts of data coming from the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN, the particle accelerator that physicists hope will help them discover new particles and better understand the nature of matter, and space and time, solving some of the biggest mysteries of the universe. More than 100 petabytes (more than four million Blu-ray disks) of data have been processed, distributed, and analyzed using a global grid of 300 computing and storage facilities located at laboratories and universities around the world, and the data volume is expected to rise a thousand-fold as physicists crank up the collision rates and energies at the LHC.

"Enabling scientists anywhere in the world to work on the LHC data is a key objective, bringing the best minds together to work on the mysteries of the universe," says David Foster, the deputy IT department head at CERN.

"The 100-Gbps demonstration at SC11 is pushing the limits of network technology by showing that it is possible to transfer petascale particle physics data in a matter of hours to anywhere around the world," adds Randall Sobie, a research scientist at the Institute of Particle Physics in Canada and team member.

The key to discovery, the researchers say, is in picking out the rare signals that may indicate new physics discoveries from a sea of potentially overwhelming background noise caused by already understood particle interactions. To do this, individual physicists and small groups located around the world must repeatedly access?and sometimes extract and transport?multiterabyte data sets on demand from petabyte data stores. That's equivalent to grabbing hundreds of Blu-ray movies all at once from a pool of hundreds of thousands. The HEP team hopes that the demonstrations at SC11 will pave the way towards more effective distribution and use for discoveries of the masses of LHC data.

"By sharing our methods and tools with scientists in many fields, we hope that the research community will be well positioned to further enable their discoveries, taking full advantage of 100 Gbps networks as they become available," Newman says. "In particular, we hope that these developments will afford physicists and young students the opportunity to participate directly in the LHC's next round of discoveries as they emerge."

###

California Institute of Technology: http://www.caltech.edu

Thanks to California Institute of Technology for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/115961/High_energy_physicists_set_record_for_network_data_transfer

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Kenyan forces pledge further push into Somalia (AP)

RAS KAMBONI, Somalia ? Kenyan troops and their Somali allies said Tuesday they will push deeper into insurgent-controlled territory in Somalia now that rains have stopped, as the U.N. called for $1.5 billion in aid for those hit by famine in the Horn of Africa nation.

Mohamed Ibrahim Farah, a spokesman for a Kenyan-allied Somali militia at Somalia's southern tip, said troops would move soon, by the end of the year.

"We are going forward within this week," he said as he addressed foreign journalists in a ramshackle hut of twigs and corrugated iron that served as the militia headquarters. "There was a lot of problems with the rain. There's a lot of places with the water there is no place to cross."

Somalia's devastating drought ? which has killed tens of thousands of people ? came to an end two months ago with torrential rains in the south. The thorn trees are covered in delicate green leaves and there are pools of water on the ground. But the puddles have been drying up since last week, and the Somalis are getting ready to move alongside their Kenyan allies.

But now that the rains have finally come, many fields lie unplanted. Many farmers were driven off their land by the combined effects of drought and war. And humanitarians have warned that the effects of the crisis will last well into next year.

The problems were exacerbated when the militant group al-Shabab levied heavy taxes on families living under their control, said residents of Ras Kamboni.

"You either had to join them or you had to pay," said resident Hassan Mohamed, as his family peered out from the wattle-and-daub home, the women giggling. "If you had ten goats they could take two."

A Somali militia that was partly trained and funded by Kenya captured the ramshackle town about a month ago after al-Shabab insurgents withdrew.

Kenyan Maj. Seif Said Rashid said the local population urgently needed humanitarian aid. Kenyan soldiers had been doing the best they could, he said, but were stretching their resources ahead of the post-rain push.

"Food, water, medicine and education," he said, ticking off the needs on his fingers as a helicopter roared to life nearby.

He said international allies can help more by sending aid to the Somali people than by supporting Kenya's military.

"We need this aid for people more than any military equipment," he said.

"So now, we have been welcomed because we improved the security," he said. "But if we cannot make their lives better, than maybe we will lose hearts and minds."

Kenya crossed the border into Somalia in an offensive against al-Shabab in October after Somali gunmen carried out several kidnappings, including of four Europeans, in Kenya.

But aid agencies have been reluctant to move into areas occupied by the Kenyan forces, because they fear further attacks and worry about being too closely associated with the military.

In the Kenyan capital of Nairobi, the U.N.'s top humanitarian official for Somalia said they needed $1.5 billion to fund hundreds of lifesaving projects, including food, health and education projects.

"The Somalia crisis is everybody's responsibility and Somalis need support now," said Mark Bowden, the U.N.'s humanitarian coordinator for Somalia. "We can't afford to wait, or we will let down the Somali people."

He also called on all parties to Somalia's conflict to grant aid agencies unconditional access.

The Islamist fighters who rule much of the country's southern and central regions last month barred 16 aid groups from operating in areas under their control.

He said while the lives of tens of thousands of people were saved by the world's rapid response to the famine crisis, continued support is crucial to building the population's resistance to future drought and other shocks.

Bowden said the world's response to the famine has proven effective, with the number of people receiving food each month tripling to more than 2.6 million. He said more than 480,000 acutely malnourished children have received nutrition supplements, and that mass vaccination campaigns reduced cases of measles by almost 50 percent. Three of the six areas where famine was declared in July had improved to pre-famine levels by November, he said.

"Without the generosity of donors in providing emergency funds, tens of thousands more people would have died," Bowden said.

Somalia hasn't had a fully functioning government since 1991, when warlords toppled the country's last central government and plunged the country into a continuum of civil war, lawlessness and violence.

___

Associated Press writer Malkhadir M. Muhumed contributed to this report from Nairobi, Kenya.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/un/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111213/ap_on_re_af/af_somalia

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LunaTik Touch Pen seeks Kickstarter funding, an all in one rollerball and iPad stylus

The LunaTik Touch Pen is currently seeking Kickstarter funding and before you assume that it is just another stylus, it does offer something quite unique. The stylus is actually a rollerball pen but with a click of a button, the ink point disappears and it becomes a...


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/trkfWY54ePE/story01.htm

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