Friday, January 13, 2012

Does Deodorant Ingredient Affect Breast Cancer Risk? (HealthDay)

THURSDAY, Jan. 12 (HealthDay News) -- For several years, researchers have studied a possible link between substances called parabens -- widely used as a germ-fighting preservative in cosmetics such as deodorant/antiperspirants -- and breast cancer.

Investigators have learned that parabens, also found in some drugs and food products, can mimic weakly the action of the female hormone estrogen -- an established risk factor for breast cancer. And the fact that a disproportionate number of breast tumors occur nearer the underarm also had scientists wondering.

But now, British researchers who examined breast tissue samples from 40 women who had mastectomies have found that traces of parabens are widespread in tissues, even in the seven women who said they'd never used underarm products.

"The implication is that in these seven nonusers, the paraben measured must have come from another product or products," said Dr. Philippa Darbre, a cancer researcher at the University of Reading who has long studied the issue.

In the study, published online in January in the Journal of Applied Toxicology, Darbre and her colleagues report that one or more kinds of parabens were found in 158 of the 160 samples taken from the tissue collected from the 40 women. They found 96 samples contained all five of the most common paraben esters (forms).

The levels of paraben found were higher, by about four times, than Darbre found when she did a similar but smaller study in 2004. "Since 2004, many manufacturers (although not all) have been removing parabens from the underarm deodorant/antiperspirant products and so I was rather surprised when we found higher levels of parabens in these breast tissues (sourced after 2004)," Darbre said.

Higher levels of one form of paraben were found in the region of the breast closest to the armpit, she said, and the women had a disproportionate incidence of breast cancer in that area.

However, Darbre cautioned that the research cannot be taken to imply cause and effect.

"Although estrogen is an acknowledged component in the development of breast cancer, it remains to be established as to whether environmental chemicals with estrogenic [estrogen-like] properties contribute a functional component to the disease process," she said.

"I remain as ambivalent as ever about hounding any one chemical," she added. "I feel sure the issue is bigger than one chemical." Darbre believes the parabens found in breast tissue come from a wider range of products than underarm cosmetic products.

More research is needed, Darbre noted. Meanwhile, she suggests women cut down or cut out the use of cosmetic products as much as possible. "We simply use too much in the modern world -- too much for our body systems and too much for the wider environment," she said.

For its part, the American Cancer Society finds no clear link between deodorant/antiperspirants and breast cancer. In a posting on its Web page, it notes that, "There are no strong epidemiological studies in the medical literature that link breast cancer risk and antiperspirant use, and very little scientific evidence to support this claim."

Dr. Michael J. Thun, vice president emeritus of epidemiology and surveillance research for the American Cancer Society, reviewed the new study findings. The fact that the preservatives were found in the majority of the breast tissue samples cannot be taken to imply they actually caused the breast cancer, he said, reiterating a point the authors also emphasized.

"Rather," Thun said, "the study merely confirms earlier, smaller studies which detected parabens in breast tissue of women with cancer. It shows that parabens can be absorbed (probably from personal care products) and the underarm deodorant is not the only source."

Other studies have found that parabens, also found in lotions, makeup and sunscreen products, can be absorbed through the skin, according to the American Cancer Society. However, the society says more and larger studies are needed to find out what effect, if any, the parabens might have on breast cancer risk.

More information

To learn more, visit the American Cancer Society .

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/cancer/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20120112/hl_hsn/doesdeodorantingredientaffectbreastcancerrisk

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Thursday, January 12, 2012

Jennifer Hudson offers Beyonce mothering advice





>>> ea's buzz."

>> our good friend, rob, naughty but nice columnist for " huffington post " celebrity, mr. fancy news title.

>> show-off.

>> very much.

>> beyonce had a girl. we talked about that in the open.

>> she did. a baby girl over the weekend. security is so tight at the hospital, the controversy you were referencing earlier on the show, the gentleman said he couldn't actually see his baby because security was so tight. this is not being proven at all, unconfirmed. but people who know beyonce and jay-z say they would never allow that to happen. often people make decisions in the name of celebrities.

>> that's right. because they're here often and they have big, big security guards downstairs. they don't know who a lot of these people are. i have trouble getting into my own dressing room sometimes. they think they're just doing their job.

>> precisely.

>> a place like a hospital, this gentleman is saying his twins have been born in if neo tayal unit and -- you know.

>> very sensitive.

>> hope it's not true.

>> this is the most private probably in the world.

>> they are.

>> they have not even confirmed they have had a baby yet. three years later.

>> i respect that about them. they keep private private.

>> she has 2 million tweets to follow up and has not sent a single tweet.

>> are you kidding me? brian williams , he sends a tweet, everybody follows him.

>> that is her first child. she's experiencing it.

>> yeah. wants to enjoy it.

>> there is time -- okay.

>> katy perry 's mom and dad spoke out about their daughter, which made some headlines over the weekend and she spoke out about them speaking out.

>> their pastor said they have a congregation and audience, and from their pulpit they talked about katy and the marriage and the divorce, and some people got a little upset with this, including apparently katy perry , once again back to the twitter, she twittered nobody talked to me, friends, magazines, even my parents. i think this is a signal here she wants everybody to shut up. when she's ready to talk, she will talk.

>> until somebody tells us the the reason for it, there will be rumors, of course.

>> exactly. people will make things up.

>> parents do have a public platform like that, for them to give a service and not mention their daughter's divorce, maybe that would have been deafening, too. i'm not sure they could have --

>> is does she have a relationship with her parents?

>> not a great relationship with them, but they are still parents of superstars. i think they felt they had to say something.

>> what do you hear is the reason for the breakup?

>> we do not know yet. there are many different opinions. i think somebody like katy is quite private, as well, so we've made as many calls as we can and still haven't got on the bottom-it.

>> no bad-mouthing about them.

>> a rumor we should set straight is he's been disinvited from an award show she's performing at. that's not true. he was invited and decided not to go because it's her night.

>> brad pitt was seen on the red carpet with a little pain.

>> he had a slight tumble while carrying his daughter, vivian, angie had a great laugh about this, not the first time as parents they've been injured. you will do anything to make sure your kids are okay.

>> stephanie frankel has a reality show but maybe more.

>> the third season of betheny is not coming back. what's been said is she wants to go out on a high note , doesn't want to this to string on to the point there's no viewers left. viewers have been declining a little bit over the year.

>> they do on those shows.

>> she doesn't want that drama. what attracts viewers to these shows are those crazy sorts of moments that betheny i think is trying to distance herself from. it looks like she's not coming back, but she doesn't need to --

>> she'll find a way.

>> yes.

>> kathie griffin has her own show.

>> yes. her own talk show , an hour one day a week on bravo. she'll gossip about celebrities.

>> i'm sure she will.

>> she will have celebrities come on. it will be a prime-time show.

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45969646/ns/today-entertainment/

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Android and Me: Verizon Samsung Galaxy Nexus Review

The Samsung Galaxy Nexus has quickly become the Holy Grail of Android smartphones. After a lengthy wait, the Galaxy Nexus finally made its way stateside with a release on Verizon Wireless back in December to much fanfare, with people lining up in droves to pick one up on release day. The Galaxy Nexus marks the third release in Google?s Nexus line of devices, bringing a pure Android experience without the bloatware handset makers are keen to putting on their devices.

The Galaxy Nexus is the first device to feature Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich, Google?s biggest leap forward in the mobile market to date, as well as the best hardware on the market today. On paper, it has the potential to be the perfect phone; but how does it hold up after a few weeks of use? Read on for our full review.

1. Display

The Galaxy Nexus features a 4.65-inch Super AMOLED HD display, with a 1280?720 resolution. Some have complained that the display is an RGBG PenTile display and that it renders color poorly with other various quirks, but having spent several weeks with the device, the display is simply as stunning as we?ve come to expect in Samsung devices. But the Galaxy Nexus takes it a step further; the display is the best in any phone I?ve used thus far, and I think we can safely say we?re beyond the point where PenTile is an inherently negative feature.

2. Hardware and Performance

2011 was the year of the dual core processors, and the Galaxy Nexus features one of the best ? Texas Instruments? OMAP 4460 clocked at 1.2GHz. Though it may not feature the highest clock speed out there, performance on the Galaxy Nexus is always snappy and fluid. The phone was able to handle every task I threw its way without any lag, even when playing graphically intensive games, such as Dead Space and Modern Combat 3, thanks to the PowerVR SGX 540 GPU.

Will the hardware be eclipsed next week when NVIDIA showcases devices with their quad-core Tegra 3 processor? Perhaps, but the Galaxy Nexus is powerful enough to get the job done with top-notch performance.

3. Camera

Over the last several months, we have reached the point where cameras can perform as well as point and shoot cameras for most people. Handset makers are doing truly amazing things with cameras, but the Galaxy Nexus is another story altogether. Though the Nexus can take pictures almost instantaneously and features a solid array of photo editing tools, the pictures taken with the Galaxy Nexus camera comes up average and leaves me reaching for my point and shoot more than I?d like.

What the Galaxy Nexus lacks in high-quality images it more than makes up for in the camera software. You can take panoramic pictures, edit the photos on the fly, and take time lapse images. The camera app is more intuitive to use than previous implementations, as well. Overall, the Galaxy Nexus camera isn?t horrible, but it?s not good either.

Some sample pictures and video taken from the Galaxy Nexus follow, so you can judge for yourself.

IMG_20111216_061351 IMG_20111218_104620 IMG_20111221_172416 IMG_20111223_171658 IMG_20120103_085226 IMG_20120108_101201 IMG_20120108_101202 IMG_20120108_101205


4. Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich

Ice Cream Sandwich takes the Android operating system and kicks it up about 5 notches. Android 4.0 is a complete reimagining of Android, with a new font throughout the system, a new Holo UI theme, reworked notification pulldown, and many, many other features we?ve previously covered.

Android?s biggest critique thus far has been that Android was built for geeks, favoring function over form. Many have claimed that Android has lacked the polish found in iOS and Windows Phone platforms. Ice Cream Sandwich is the first Android platform released that beautifully melds form and function into an elegant, intuitive user experience.

5. Verizon 4G LTE

By now, it should come as no surprise that we totally love Verizon?s superfast LTE network. Though Verizon?s network went down three times in the month of December (leading many to question Verizon?s ?most reliable network? claim), when LTE is up it?s super fast. Faster than most people actually need.

Verizon?s LTE network provided speeds that averaged about 10 mbps download and 5 mbps upload. That?s fast enough to stream basically anything you want, including music and HD movies, and is faster than what most people have in their homes. The era of LTE is upon us, and Verizon?s been leading the way for about a year now.

6. Battery Life

LTE isn?t all unicorns and rainbows, however. Battery Life has been the Achilles? heel of LTE networks since LTE has been released, with several LTE devices struggling to get through a day of use. This trend continues with the Galaxy Nexus, which I?ve generally needed to charge before the end of the workday came. On average, the stock battery provided 7 to 8 hours of juice with moderate use, which though better than most LTE devices to date, is still pretty subpar.

Verizon is offering an extended battery that promises battery life in the 9 to 10 hour range for $24.99, which is highly recommended in this case. I didn?t spend hands-on time with the extended battery myself, but both Clark and Taylor bought the extended battery for their phones, and claim the extended battery is essential in getting them through the day.

7. Call and Sound Quality

Call quality on the Galaxy Nexus was excellent; everyone I called from the device were able to hear me perfectly, and they came through loud and clear as well. We?ve come to expect this with Samsung devices, whose handsets generally offer the best call quality of any smartphone out there.

The speakers on the Galaxy Nexus are a different story altogether. Whether using the phone?s speakerphone function, watching Netflix, or streaming music, the sound produced by the Galaxy Nexus is not good. The volume needs to be cranked up considerably, as I had a difficult time hearing the person on the other end of the line on speakerphone even when I was standing right next to the device.

8. Build Quality

Many were concerned with how big the Galaxy Nexus is, with the massive 4.65-inch display.The Galaxy Nexus is certainly bordering on Phablet territory, though certainly not as much as the Galaxy Note. Rest assured, the phone is lightweight, slender, and feels incredible in the hand. Because of the slim form factor, the Nexus also feels good in the pocket, and adds less bulk than many other devices on the market today.

9. Software Support

This one really goes without saying, but one of the biggest advantages to the Nexus line of phones is that the software updates come directly from Google. This means that the Galaxy Nexus will always be first in line to get the latest and greatest software updates because the updates will come directly from Google, rather than having to wait for handset makers to build their UI overlays atop the core software.

10. Notification Light

Handset makers need to understand that notification lights are essential to smartphones. We want to be notified when a new email or text message comes in and don?t want to have to constantly turn our screens on to figure it out. Google strayed from this with the Nexus S, and this omission was one of the main beefs with that device. Fortunately, Google has put the notification light back into the Galaxy Nexus, though it sits at the bottom of the device instead of the top as we?ve become accustomed.

Regardless of the location, the fact that the Galaxy Nexus has a notification light is a huge plus in our book and is something we rely on every day in our smartphone use.

galaxy nexus and galaxy s II - 2 galaxy nexus and galaxy s II - tweetdeck galaxy nexus and galaxy s II - whites galaxy nexus and galaxy s ii nexus s and galaxy nexus galaxy nexus back galaxy nexus battery and back plate 2 galaxy nexus battery and back plate galaxy nexus side galaxy nexus nexus s and galaxy nexus back plates nexus s and galaxy nexus boot animations

Final Thoughts

Samsung Galaxy Nexus8.5 / 10

The Samsung Galaxy Nexus is THE phone to have on Verizon?s network. If you?re in the market for a high-end phone, you simply owe it to yourself to purchase the Galaxy Nexus. The phenomenal hardware mixed with Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich highlights what an Android phone should be, and despite its shortcomings, the Nexus offers the best user experience on the market today.

Just be sure to pick up an extended battery if you don?t have a charger readily available throughout the day (or, you know, turn off LTE when you?re not using it). The Galaxy Nexus is currently available at Verizon Wireless for $299.99 with new 2-year agreement.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidandme/~3/z0TOaNc5_N4/

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Wednesday, January 11, 2012

ethnicomm: The #MRK634 facebook page http://t.co/wcAWdQoU is up and already busting with digital media and other marketing related links.

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Source: twitter.com --- Sunday, January 08, 2012
ethnicomm: The #MRK634 Facebook page http://t.co/wcAWdQoU is up and already busting with digital media and other marketing related links. ...

Source: http://twitter.com/ethnicomm/statuses/156166270700617728

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Tuesday, January 10, 2012

GOP Candidates Report a Wide Disparity in Campaign Contributions (ContributorNetwork)

Candidates running for office are required to file quarterly financial reports with the Federal Elections Commission. These reports must include the names of specific categories of contributors, the total cash received and the amount spent. The latest reports available are from the Jan. 1 to Sept. 30, 2011, reporting period.

Here is a summary of the financial reports from each of the major GOP candidates:

* Mitt Romney - The former Massachusetts governor has raised $32 million, and had nearly $14.7 million in cash on hand. According to the report filed with the FEC, his largest contributions came from California ($3.9 million). Romney accepted limited funds from PACs ($177,301). The bulk of his fundraising was from contributors who gave $2,000 or more.

* Rick Perry - The Texas governor raised more than $17.2 million, with more than $15 million in cash at the end of the reporting period. His largest contributors were from Texas ($9.7 million). FEC reports he accepted slightly more than $180,000 from PACs. Like most candidates, the bulk of his contributions were $2,000 or more from an single individual.

* Ron Paul - The Texas congressman raised more than $12.6 million, with approximately $3.7 million in cash on hand. FEC reports his largest contributors were from California ($791,000). He accepted no money from PACs. More than $7.3 million was raised from contributors who donated $200 or less to his campaign.

* Jon Huntsman -- The former Utah governor reported $4.5 million in contributions, with $2.2 million coming from the candidate. FEC reports that Huntsman accepted $22,000 from PACs, leaving $327,000 in cash at the end of the reporting period. His largest contributors were from Utah ($256,000). With the exception of his personal donation, the majority of his contributors each gave more than $2,000 to his campaign.

* Newt Gingrich - The former House Speaker raised $2.9 million, leaving approximately $353,000 in cash on hand. FEC reports his largest contributors were from Georgia ($353,000), plus $40,000 in PAC contributions. Nearly $1.4 million was raised from contributors who donated $200 or less to his campaign.

* Rick Santorum - The former Pennsylvania senator has raised $1.3 million as of the reporting period, leaving approximately $190,000 in cash on hand. FEC reported his largest contributors were from Pennsylvania ($340,000).Santorum accepted slightly more than $31,000 in PAC contributions and nearly one-third of his contributions were from donors who gave $2,000 or more to the campaign.

Campaigns will be required to file the last quarterly report for 2011 by Jan. 15.

Dan McGinnis is a freelance writer, published author and former newspaper publisher. He has been a candidate, campaign manager and press secretary for state and local political campaigns for more than 30 years.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20120109/pl_ac/10809471_gop_candidates_report_a_wide_disparity_in_campaign_contributions

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Monday, January 9, 2012

Week In Politics: Jobs; Recess Appointments; GOP Campaigns

Melissa Block speaks with our regular political commentators, E.J. Dionne, of the Washington Post and Brookings Institution, and David Brooks, of the New York Times. They discuss the jobs numbers, Obama's recess appointments and presidential campaign developments.

Copyright ? 2012 National Public Radio?. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

MELISSA BLOCK, HOST:

Mitt Romney, today, jumped on those jobs numbers. Good news, of course, he said, but no cause for celebration with the unemployment rate above 8 percent for 35 consecutive months. We'll start our weekly conversation with columnists E.J. Dionne and David Brooks talking about the latest economic news. David Brooks back from Iowa, here in the studio with me, welcome back.

DAVID BROOKS: Good to be here.

BLOCK: And E.J., up in New Hampshire. Welcome to you, E.J.

E.J. DIONNE: Thank you. Good to be with you.

BLOCK: And first question to both of you, Mitt Romney is saying that President Obama's policies have slowed the recovery and created misery for millions of Americans who are out of work. If the downward trend continues, if the unemployment rate, David, continues to drop, does that Republican argument lose its potency?

BROOKS: It loses some of its potency. Clearly, if we have a year of declining unemployment rates or good jobs numbers like today, obviously, the sense of crisis goes away. I don't think it really erases it, though. The problems with the economy are not so much cyclical now, they're structural. They have to do with wave stagnation, inequality, a sense the country's in long term decline. I don't think we're going to be in a period of 400,000 or 400 jobs a month growth where people will feel, oh, yeah, it's morning in America. We're not going to see that. So, it's still going to be fundamentally jobs, economy, election.

BLOCK: E.J.?

DIONNE: Well, it's hard ever to say with confidence: Ah, this economic mess is over. But these numbers actually are good news for Obama for a particular reason. The political scientists tell us that voters tend to form their opinions of the economy early in the election year. If they feel badly early, it's very hard to shake them out of that - out of their view and that hurt President George H.W. Bush in 1992, who was presiding over a much better economy, it turned out, than the voters thought.

So, starting out strong is certainly helpful, if not decisive, for President Obama. But he needs more months like this. And I think the Republicans will still keep saying what they're saying because unemployment is still going to be way higher than it usually is.

BLOCK: I want to ask you both about a new CNN-TIME magazine poll of likely voters in South Carolina, which votes after New Hampshire. The Newt Gingrich lead that we saw a month ago, 43 percent there, now down to 18 percent and Mitt Romney has risen sharply, up to 37 percent. Rick Santorum as well, but Mitt Romney out ahead. If those numbers hold, if Mitt Romney can pull out a win, not just in New Hampshire but also in socially conservative South Carolina, is the primary fight effectively over there, David?

BROOKS: Yeah, it would move from 85 percent likely Romney to 95 percent Romney and it would sign that he can get above 25 percent. South Carolina has a lot of social conservatives, has a lot of establishment mainstream conservatives, too. Though, I would say, what we're going to see over the next couple weeks, and especially in South Carolina, is an explosion of ill temper, especially in the debates starting this weekend. South Carolina, traditionally, has been the nastiest of the primaries.

Gingrich is like this unexploded missile that seems to be going off in all directions at once. He's going to - I think the Gingrich we've seen so far is going to like Kelly Ripa compared to the last couple weeks.

(SOUNDBITE OF LAUGHTER)

BROOKS: So, I think we're in for quite a volatile period or at least the nasty period. It might be like - you know, I assume Romney will still get it. But this will be volatile.

BLOCK: I'm trying to imagine that Newt Gingrich-Kelly Ripa match-up. E.J., you're in New Hampshire. Are you sensing this explosion of ill temper that David Brooks is talking about there?

DIONNE: Well, I'm looking forward to its possibility and we're going to see that - I think we might see it in the debates this weekend. Here's what I'm struck by. I'm struck by the fact that Rick Santorum has an enormous opportunity up here, which he has not fully seized yet.

I went to a Santorum event last night in Windham, New Hampshire. And what struck me is that he was running to be an excellent teacher at a Jesuit high school rather than running for president. He gave these long, sometimes Socratic answers. They were actually very interesting. And, in some cases, I gave him credit for not pandering to his audience. But he had a real opportunity here and he still got a little opening to do it. There was some energy coming in, and you don't feel that he's built on that energy.

Having said that, I think these numbers in South Carolina suggest - even though I agree with David - it's hard to see any of these other candidates stopping Romney right now. Santorum's now second. Perry is doing very badly. So the fracturing of the non-Romney vote may end by default and that's got to give Santorum an opportunity, especially if Gingrich ever comes to his support and still does the thing that David suggests he's going to do.

BLOCK: Finally, I want to ask you both about the president's decision this week to do an end run around Republican opposition in Congress. He made recess appointments to head the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, also appointed three members to the National Labor Relations Board. And there are lots of questions about whether the Senate actually was in recess when he did this, whether these appointments are constitutional. Republicans are outraged.E.J., what are your thoughts?

DIONNE: Well, I say thank God he did this. I mean, what the Republicans have done on Richard Cordray is really irresponsible and I think unprecedented. They are not against him as the head of the Financial Consumer Protection Agency. They want to change a law that's already passed. Well, you don't do that by blocking a presidential appointee. You do that by trying to change the law. And, yes, we're going to have these fights about whether this will work or not legally. I suspect it will.

But the president really made a point of how awful the whole confirmation process has become, and how much it's been abused by the Republican minority in the Senate.

BLOCK: David, there have been lots of presidents made recess appointments before? Why is this any different?

BROOKS: Well, usually they were - the Senate was actually in recess when they made the recess appointments. You know, to me, this is an example of sort of the perfect hypocrisy. Barack Obama was outraged by recess appointments when President Bush was in office. Now that he's the president, he thinks the obstructionism is bad.

I'm more on the side of the president in general. I think they should get to appoint the people they want. But I am really struck by the presidential strategy of picking fights with Congress. Out in the country, people are really concerned about big issues - national decline. To get in one little intra-Washington fight after another, strikes me as out of scope with what the country wants right now.

BLOCK: OK. David Brooks of The New York Times here in Washington, E.J. Dionne of the Washington Post up in Manchester, New Hampshire, thanks to you both.

BROOKS: Thank you.

DIONNE: Thank you.

Copyright ? 2012 National Public Radio?. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to National Public Radio. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2012/01/06/144801649/week-in-politics-jobs-recess-appointments-gop-campaigns?ft=1&f=139482413

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Obama to promote insourcing of jobs

President Barack Obama has a quiet lunch with a small group of supporters who were winners of his re-election campaign's "Lunch with Barack" fundraising sweepstakes, Friday, Jan. 6, 2012, at a restaurant in Washington. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

President Barack Obama has a quiet lunch with a small group of supporters who were winners of his re-election campaign's "Lunch with Barack" fundraising sweepstakes, Friday, Jan. 6, 2012, at a restaurant in Washington. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Graphic shows unemployment rate and jobs since President Clinton and jobs by sector.

WASHINGTON (AP) ? President Barack Obama is highlighting companies that have returned jobs to the U.S. and he says that's one more way of putting people back to work.

The White House plans a forum Wednesday, called "Insourcing American Jobs," that will bring together business leaders who shifted work back home. The president said Saturday in his weekly radio and Internet address that the event will discuss ways business leaders can return more jobs to the country.

"We're heading in the right direction. And we're not going to let up," Obama said on the heels of the government reporting Friday that the unemployment rate fell to 8.5 percent in December.

Obama noted that the jobs report showed the economy added more than 200,000 private sector jobs last month and that more than 3 million private sector jobs had been added during the past 22 months. He said the nation was "starting 2012 with manufacturing on the rise and the American auto industry on the mend."

The president said the U.S. couldn't return "to the days when the financial system was stacking the deck against ordinary Americans," citing his decision to install former Ohio Attorney General Richard Cordray as the director of the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau while the Senate was on break, circumventing Republican opposition to the appointment.

Obama said his "New Year's resolution" to all Americans was to "keep doing whatever it takes to move this economy forward and to make sure that middle-class families regain the security they've lost over the past decade."

New York Rep. Nan Hayworth, delivering the GOP address, said the jobs report showed the difficulty that many Americans face in finding work. Hayworth said the unemployment rate has remained above 8 percent for 35 straight months, "the longest such stretch since the Great Depression."

"Leaders in Washington should have no higher priority this year than getting our economy back to creating jobs," Hayworth said.

The New York congresswoman said House Republicans would promote small business and reduce government regulation.

___

Online:

Obama address: www.whitehouse.gov

GOP address: http://www.youtube.com/HouseConference

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-01-07-Obama/id-371c3d575f0045979148c550978487d5

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Sunday, January 8, 2012

Brawl at German indoor event ends with arrests

updated 7:38 a.m. ET Jan. 7, 2012

HAMBURG, Germany - Organizers say they have abandoned an indoor soccer tournament in Germany after the opening day finished with a mass brawl that had to be broken up by police using tear gas.

German media reported that Hamburg police made 72 arrests and that 49 people were injured, including 11 officers, after violence broke out Friday night following a 3-3 draw between second-division St. Pauli and regional league team VfB Luebeck in the Schweinske Cup.

Organizers announced on the tournament website they were scrapping the second day of the event on Saturday, saying they were "shocked and feel for all the innocent guests at our event who were injured."

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Dempsey grabs hat trick for Fulham

Roundup: Clint Dempsey scored the first hat trick of his career, Brad Guzan saved a penalty and Landon Donovan had an assist on a successful day for Americans in the third round of the FA Cup on Saturday.

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He's back

Thierry Henry has rejoined Arsenal on a two-month loan from the New York Red Bulls after the Premier League club completed insurance agreements with Henry's Major League Soccer team.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/45909773/ns/sports-soccer/

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Saturday, January 7, 2012

Washington D C Area Sports Update 01 07 2012


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Key Stretch Awaits Hokie Basketball
by Chris Coleman, TechSideline.com,

Virginia Tech has a great opportunity ahead of them in basketball. Right now the Hokies are 11-3 on the season, and ranked in the top 40 of the RPI. They have three very winnable games coming up, and the chance to move to 14-3 and into the top 30 of the RPI is staring them right in the face.

So far this year, it appears the ACC is probably a four-bid league when it comes to the NCAA Tournament. The Hokies can't afford to lose games they shouldn't lose, and thus far they've done a good job of avoiding that. Here's a look at their next three games, which are all winnable.

Virginia Tech's Next Three Games
Date Opp. RPI Record Location
Jan. 7 Wake Forest 111 9-5 Winston-Salem
Jan. 10 Florida State 66 9-5 Blacksburg

Jan. 14

Boston College 262 5-9 Chestnut Hill


In today's preview of the Wake Forest game, we noted that Virginia Tech is better than the Demon Deacons in almost every statistical category, including strength of schedule. That's a game the Hokies should win, though everyone knows that upsets happen in basketball every day.

Online Publishing and MarketingSo far, Boston College is the worst team in the ACC, and they are rivaling 2010-11 Wake Forest as the worst team in ACC history. They have losses to Holy Cross, UMass, Saint Louis, New Mexico, Penn State, Boston U, Providence, Harvard and Rhode Island, and their computer numbers are as bad as it gets for a power conference team. The Eagles are breaking in almost an entirely new roster from last season, and they don?t resemble the team that upset the Hokies last season, just a game after Tech beat Duke.

The game between Wake and Boston College, at home against Florida State, is interesting. The Noles were expected to make the NCAA Tournament again this year, but they are off to a very disappointing start, with losses to Harvard and Princeton. FSU should probably get away from scheduling the Ivy League for awhile.

That said, the Noles are still a talented team. They have a lot of height, and they play good defense, but they are offensively challenged. That makes them about the same as every other Florida State team under Leonard Hamilton.

Here's a look at the current ACC standings, based on RPI rank.

ACC Standings
Team Record RPI
Duke 12-2 2
UNC 13-2 18
Virginia Tech 11-3 39
Virginia 13-1 52
NC State 11-4 53
FSU 9-5 66
Miami 9-4 75
Maryland 10-3 110
Wake Forest 9-5 111
Georgia Tech 7-7 156
Clemson 7-7 234
BC 5-9 262


Virginia Tech has played a good non-conference schedule, and as a result they have the third best RPI of all the ACC schools. Right now, it's fair to say that Duke and UNC are NCAA Tournament locks, while Virginia Tech, Virginia and NC State are the next three in line.

Florida State and Miami are not out of it, because they've played a tough enough schedule to keep their RPI in the ballpark. However, they are going to have to go on big winning streaks.

As far as Virginia Tech goes, they've got a chance for a decent road win tomorrow, and then they can beat a team who might end up in the top 50 in the following game. Their objective when they go to Chestnut Hill next weekend is simply to avoid what would be an embarrassing loss.

TURNER LEADS BOWIE STATE TO ITS FIRST WIN

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(BOWIE, Md. ? January 5, 2012) Juliette Turner led all players with career-highs of 25 points and 18 rebounds as Bowie State University opened its CIAA season with a 69-49 victory over Fayetteville State University.

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The win is the first this season for the Lady Bulldogs (1-8, 1-0) while the Lady Broncos (6-4, 0-1) dropped back-to-back games for the first time this season.

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When first year head coach Renard was asked what made the difference tonight, he simply responded, ?They wanted it ? Every last one of them wanted to win at home!?

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Kimberly Jones added 16 points, tying her career-high while Brooke Miles chipped in 12 for the Lady Bulldogs.

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Je?Lena Robertson led Fayetteville State with nine points while Akysia Resper and SheQuitia Manning had eight apiece. Manning led the Lady Broncos with 12 rebounds.

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The Lady Broncos struggled mightily in their first game in 17 days, showing considerable rust while being foul prone in the first half. Fayetteville State made just one of its first 12 field goal attempts, and finished the half shooting just 24 percent from the field.

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Turner had a lot to do with Bowie State?s quick start, scoring her team?s first 10 points and 14 of its first 18. She had a double-double by the break, with 15 points and 11 rebounds, leading the previously winless Lady Bulldogs to a 30-19 lead at the half.

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Bowie State continued to pour it on after the break, scoring 10 of the first 12 points of the period to stretch out a 20-6 scoring run that spanned halftime. That gave the Lady Bulldogs their largest lead to that point, 40-21, with 16:50 left in the game.

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The Lady Bulldogs will hit the road for a week long southern swing to Winston-Salem State University (January 9th), Shaw University (January 12th) and Saint Augustine?s College (January 14th).? Bowie State returns home Monday, January 16th, hosting Livingstone College at 5:30 pm in the A.C. Jordan Arena.

15th-RANKED BULLDOGS ROLL TO 97-85 VICTORY OVER FAYETTEVILLE STATE

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(BOWIE, Md. ? January 5, 2012) The 15th ranked Bulldogs of Bowie State University had a tough first half, but pulled away in the final period and rolled to a 97-85 win over the Fayetteville State University.

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Fayetteville State gave Bowie State all they could handle for a half.? But a brilliant 6-minute stretch spanning the halftime break was enough for the Bulldogs to prevail 97-85 in the CIAA opener for both teams on Thursday night.

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In a matchup of the CIAA?s top two scoring teams, Bowie State was able to overcome a sterling shooting performance by Fayetteville State?s Jarmel Baxter.? Baxter finished with a game-high 18 points, setting a new career-high for 3-point field goals made in a single game with six.

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Paced by Baxter?s four triples and 12 points, Fayetteville State (2-6, 0-1 CIAA) trailed just 45-42 at the half. The teams traded the lead several times, with the Broncos recovering from an early seven-point deficit to take a 40-36 edge with 2:41 to go in the half after Tyrrel Tate?s jumper.

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But Bowie State (9-1, 1-0 CIAA) was only getting started.

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The game was tied entering the final seconds of the half before senior Jay Gavin buried a deep 3-pointer as the shot clock was winding down to give Bowie State the 3-point advantage, closing the first half on a 9-2 spurt.

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Gavin added another 3 in the opening minute of the second period while senior Darren Clark put together a three-point play, stretching the Bulldogs? run to 14-2 and the lead to 51-42 just 67 seconds into the half.

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In all, the Bulldogs scored 14 unanswered points to open the period, stretching the scoring run to 23-2 for a 59-42 lead just over three minutes into the second half.

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Fayetteville State managed to recover midway through the period, and on Baxter?s sixth 3-ponter, the Broncos trailed 79-67 with 7:59 remaining. But the Bulldogs, who shot 53 percent from the field for the game, quickly pushed the lead back to 16 to regain control.

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?A string of second half stops in the second half really helped us pull away?, said third year coach Darrell Brooks.? ?When asked about the Bulldogs balance this season, Brooks responded, ?We do everything by committee and hopefully that will be the strength for us this year ? We have the depth, especially inside.?

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Gavin and senior Travis Hyman led five Bowie State players in double figures with 16 points apiece. Sophomore Julian Williams and junior Byron Westmorland added 12 points each while junior Dameatric Scott chipped in 11.

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Tim Plummer added 15 points and seven rebounds for the Broncos while Tate chipped in 13 points and a game-high three steals.

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Bowie State will take their six-game winning streak on the road, making stops at Winston-Salem State (January 9th), Shaw (January 12th) and Saint Augustine?s (January 14th).? The Bulldogs? next home contest will take place Monday, January 16th versus Livingstone College.? Game time is set for 7:30 pm in BSU?s A.C. Jordan Arena.



Source: http://www.fastpitchnetworking.com/pressrelease.cfm?PRID=76205

portland news

Summary Box: Belarusian tightens Internet control (AP)

TIGHTER CONTROLS: Belarus' authoritarian government is imposing a new law that requires service providers to monitor Internet users and report them to authorities if they visit opposition websites blacklisted by the government.

OTHER RESTRICTIONS: Belarusian businessmen also cannot use outside Internet resources such as online stores registered outside the country.

THE BACKDROP: President Alexander Lukashenko, whom Western rights group have called "Europe's last dictator," has consistently suppressed opposition and cracked down on independent media.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120106/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_belarus_internet_summary_box

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At Freestyle, Investing Is A Family-Friendly Alternative to Startup Life ...

Wade Roush1/5/12

Josh Felser has three kids. Dave Samuel has four. You won?t hear any highfalutin business-speak from these former tech entrepreneurs about why they started Freestyle Capital, their San Francisco-based seed-stage investing fund. They say they did it because they recognized that it?s pretty hard to create a?business and be an involved parent at the same?time.

?If we could balance the lifestyle of being a?founder/CEO with having large families, we would likely still be entrepreneurs,? says Felser. ?But we can?t, so this is the next best?thing.?

Felser and Samuel started building companies together 14 years ago, and in one sense that?s what they?re still doing: Freestyle is known as a?hands-on fund where startups get recruiting, public relations, and business-development help, as well as cash, in return for their equity. But what gave them the flexibility to become investors, rather than starting over as entrepreneurs once more, was a?pair of healthy exits. The Internet music service Spinner, which they co-founded in 1997, was acquired by AOL Time Warner in 1999 for $320 million. Their next venture, the video network Grouper, was acquired by Sony in 2006 for $65 million in cash. (It?s now known as?Crackle.)

The pair got back together to start Freestyle in 2009. After a?two-year shakedown run in which they invested only out of their own pockets, they?ve now raised $27 million, and have completed 29 investments averaging about $500,000 each. They get investing help from a?trio of startup veterans, including Joe Stump, the former lead architect at Digg and the co-founder of SimpleGeo; Lane Becker, the co-founder of Adaptive Path and Get Satisfaction; and David Bill, a?veteran of Spinner and the ex-CTO of?CoTweet.

For rookie investors, this team has a?pretty good batting average: already, seven of the Freestyle portfolio companies?About.me, Backtype, Cardpool, CoTweet, Indextank, SimpleGeo, and Typekit?have been?acquired.

I?ve seen Freestyle?s name turn up in so many interesting seed-stage deals since I?got to San Francisco that I?wanted to meet Felser and Samuel in person and hear their whole story. I?visited their Mission District office?which doubles as the headquarters of Typekit, now part of Adobe?back in November. Felser introduced himself as ?the talky one? while Samuel is supposedly ?the quiet one,? but to be honest, I?didn?t notice much difference. In any case, what follows is a?compressed version of our conversation.

Xconomy: Is it really easier to be an investor than a?founder? How are your lives different?now?

Josh Felser: Venture investing is a?way to be close to entrepreneurs and have a?family without being an entrepreneur or starting a?business. We have complete flexibility about work location. As a?founding CEO, you have to set the culture and tone in the office, and there is no way to do that, that we have figured out, and to spend time with our young kids. Being an investor, I?am still working as hard as I?did as an entrepreneur, but I?can do it from anywhere. I?can go online from home at 8:00 pm and work until?midnight.

Dave Samuel: I?think that?s definitely true about the lifestyle, but there is also a?little bit of ADD in each of us. We are able to have our hands in a?bunch of different, great companies. Josh is in charge of five companies per year and I?am in charge of five. So we are able to leverage our experience and background across numerous?companies.

JF: We sat back and said, ?What can I?do with my life that would at least let me have dinner with my family, and also be part of creating really interesting, world-changing companies.? There aren?t actually many opportunities to do that, if you try to put those things together. Early stage investing was the best?fit.

For the first two years, we were just investing our own money, to make sure we liked it, and we didn?t try to run those companies. We were decent at it, and we were able to check off a?lot of the boxes and then raise a?larger fund of other people?s?money.

X: Why do seed-stage investing? Why not become partners at established venture?firms?

JF: You don?t ever stop being an entrepreneur. We enjoy helping entrepreneurs like us get their businesses off the ground. If you are doing the kind of seed investing we strive to do, you are ? Next?Page ?

Wade Roush is Xconomy's chief correspondent and editor of Xconomy San Francisco. You can e-mail him at wroush@xconomy.com or follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/wroush.

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Source: http://www.xconomy.com/san-francisco/2012/01/05/at-freestyle-investing-is-a-family-friendly-alternative-to-startup-life/

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Thursday, January 5, 2012

Now you see it, now you don't: Time cloak created (AP)

WASHINGTON ? It's one thing to make an object invisible, like Harry Potter's mythical cloak. But scientists have made an entire event impossible to see. They have invented a time masker.

Think of it as an art heist that takes place before your eyes and surveillance cameras. You don't see the thief strolling into the museum, taking the painting down or walking away, but he did. It's not just that the thief is invisible ? his whole activity is.

What scientists at Cornell University did was on a much smaller scale, both in terms of events and time. It happened so quickly that it's not even a blink of an eye. Their time cloak lasts an incredibly tiny fraction of a fraction of a second. They hid an event for 40 trillionths of a second, according to a study appearing in Thursday's edition of the journal Nature.

We see events happening as light from them reaches our eyes. Usually it's a continuous flow of light. In the new research, however, scientists were able to interrupt that flow for just an instant.

Other newly created invisibility cloaks fashioned by scientists move the light beams away in the traditional three dimensions. The Cornell team alters not where the light flows but how fast it moves, changing in the dimension of time, not space.

They tinkered with the speed of beams of light in a way that would make it appear to surveillance cameras or laser security beams that an event, such as an art heist, isn't happening.

Another way to think of it is as if scientists edited or erased a split second of history. It's as if you are watching a movie with a scene inserted that you don't see or notice. It's there in the movie, but it's not something you saw, said study co-author Moti Fridman, a physics researcher at Cornell.

The scientists created a lens of not just light, but time. Their method splits light, speeding up one part of light and slowing down another. It creates a gap and that gap is where an event is masked.

"You kind of create a hole in time where an event takes place," said study co-author Alexander Gaeta, director of Cornell's School of Applied and Engineering Physics. "You just don't know that anything ever happened."

This is all happening in beams of light that move too fast for the human eye to see. Using fiber optics, the hole in time is created as light moves along inside a fiber much thinner than a human hair. The scientists shoot the beam of light out, and then with other beams, they create a time lens that splits the light into two different speed beams that create the effect of invisibility by being too fast or too slow. The whole work is a mess of fibers on a long table and almost looks like a pile of spaghetti, Fridman said.

It is the first time that scientists have been able to mask an event in time, a concept only first theorized by Martin McCall, a professor of theoretical optics at Imperial College in London. Gaeta, Fridman and others at Cornell, who had already been working on time lenses, decided to see if they could do what McCall envisioned.

It only took a few months, a blink of an eye in scientific research time.

"It is significant because it opens up a whole new realm to ideas involving invisibility," McCall said.

Researchers at Duke University and in Germany's Karlsruhe Institute of Technology have made progress on making an object appear invisible spatially. The earlier invisibility cloak work bent light around an object in three dimensions.

Between those two approaches, the idea of invisibility will work its way into useful technology, predicts McCall, who wasn't part of either team.

The science is legitimate, but it's still only a fraction of a second, added City College of New York physicist Michio Kaku, who specializes in the physics of science fiction.

"That's not enough time to wander around Hogwarts," Kaku wrote in an email. "The next step therefore will be to increase this time interval, perhaps to a millionth of a second. So we see that there's a long way to go before we have true invisibility as seen in science fiction."

Gaeta said he thinks he can get make the cloak last a millionth of a second or maybe even a thousandth of a second. But McCall said the mathematics dictate that it would take too big a machine ? about 18,600 miles long ? to make the cloak last a full second.

"You have to start somewhere and this is a proof of concept," Gaeta said.

Still, there are practical applications, Gaeta and Fridman said. This is a way of adding a packet of information to high-speed data unseen without interrupting the flow of information. But that may not be a good thing if used for computer viruses, Fridman conceded.

There may be good uses of this technology, Gaeta said, but "for some reason people are more interested in the more illicit applications."

___

Online

Nature: http://www.nature.com/nature

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/science/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120104/ap_on_sc/us_sci_invisible_time

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Tuesday, January 3, 2012

REPLAY - 1/7/11: Melbourne Mining Club in London

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Source: http://www.brr.com.au/event/90189/ms-cynthia-carroll-chief-executive-anglo-american

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