Saturday, January 26, 2013

Child soldier's tale illustrates Mali's dirty war

SEVARE, Mali (AP) ? The boy sits with his knees tucked under his chest on the concrete floor of the police station here, his adolescent face a tableau of fear. He's still garbed in the knee-length tunic he was ordered to wear by the Islamic extremist who recruited him.

It's these same clothes, styled after those worn by the Prophet Muhammad in the 7th century, which gave him away when he tried to flee earlier this week. They have now become his prison garb.

Adama Drabo is 16, and his recruitment into the ranks of a group designated as a terrorist organization, followed by his violent interrogation at the hands of the Malian army, underscores the obstacles faced by France as it tries to wash its former West African colony clean of the al-Qaida-linked fighters occupying it.

"In terms of the rules of engagement, you have to think to yourself, what will you do if a child comes up to you wearing an explosive vest? What do you do if a 12-year-old is manning a checkpoint?" says Rudolph Atallah, former director of counterterrorism for Africa at the Pentagon during the Bush administration. "It's a very difficult situation."

France, which now has around 2,500 troops on the ground, plunged headfirst into the conflict in Mali two weeks ago, after the Islamist groups that have controlled the nation's northern half since last year began an aggressive push southward. The French soldiers are equipped with night vision goggles, anti-tank mines and laser-guided bombs. However, their enemy includes the hundreds of children, some as young as 11, who have been conscripted into the rebel army.

Among those the French will have to fight are boys like Adama, the uneducated, eldest child of a poor family of rice growers, who until recently spent his days plowing fields with oxen near the village of N'Denbougou. Living just 15 miles (25 kilometers) from the central Malian town of Niono, which has become one of the frontlines in the recent war, Adama fits the profile of the types of children the Islamists have successfully recruited. His village has a single mosque, and unlike the moderate form of Islam practiced in much of Mali, the one he and his family attended preached Wahabism.

"We have observed a pattern of recruitment of child soldiers from villages that for many years have practiced a very strict form of Islam, referred to as Wahabism," says Corinne Dufka, senior researcher for West Africa at Human Rights Watch. "We estimate that hundreds of children have been recruited."

The groups allied with al-Qaida started recruiting children soon after they seized control of northern Mali last April. Rebel leaders quoted verses from the Quran which they claim describe children as the purest apprentices. Since then witnesses have described seeing children staffing checkpoints, riding in patrol vehicles, carrying out searches of cars stopped at roadblocks, as well as preparing tea and cooking food for the fighters in the towns controlled by the insurgents, says Dufka.

The United Nations children's agency said late last year that it had been able to corroborate at least 175 reported cases of child soldiers in northern Mali, bought from their impoverished parents for between $1,000 and $1,200 per child. Malian human rights officials put the total number of children recruited by the Islamists considerably higher at 1,000 ? and that was before the French intervention.

Adama, who is now being held at the Sevare gendarmerie, was hired as a cook two weeks ago by Islamist fighters in Douentza, a city controlled by the Movement for Oneness and Jihad, or MUJAO. Its members have been linked to the recent terrorist attack on a natural gas plant in Algeria, which ended in the death of at least 37 hostages, according to the Algerian government.

The teenager claims he didn't know he was working for a terrorist group, even though the insurgents who ate the macaroni he cooked carried guns, wore beards and dressed in the unfamiliar Gulf-style clothes they gave him. He says he joined them only for the money they promised they would pay at the end of each month. The police holding him say he was promised around $200 a month, several times the average monthly salary here.

Adama explains that his friends in Niono said they knew people in Sevare who would give them work. So they took a Peugeot 207 taxi to reach the town.

"It was there in the town that we met some people and they hired us to cook for them," he says. "They said that at the end of each month we would get paid. ... And so we started cooking for them."

He says that even though some of the fighters in their entourage went to fight in the Niono area, he was unaware of their battle plans. The men spoke Arabic and Tamashek, a Tuareg language, which he did not understand.

One day, when he went to the corner store, the shop owner told him a war was on, he says.

"I told my friend, 'Even if the month isn't over yet, we need to get out of here.' We walked to the next village, where we found an old man there, and we asked him if he could please give us some water? The old man said he couldn't give us any water, because we're rebels. We said, 'We're not rebels. Give us some water.' It was then that a man on a motorcycle came by. The motorcyclist said that we are wearing the clothes of the Islamic fighters."

The boys tried to run.

The friend got away. Adama was handed over to the Malian military, which in recent days has been accused of executing dozens of suspected Islamists, including a group of six men who arrived in Sevare without identity cards. Adama may have been saved by the international outcry that followed the reported executions this week, says Atallah, putting immense diplomatic pressure on Mali's ill-trained and often incompetent army to respect human rights conventions.

"I was frightened," says Adama. "They said they were going to kill me. ... They said this several times."

During the interrogation, especially on the first day, the soldiers threatened to execute Adama if he did not tell the truth, he says. They hit him, he says, and slapped him across his face. It was only on Friday, according to Adama, that the soldiers told him they would not kill him.

"For four days, they kept me in jail with two big people," he says. "I feel somewhat reassured now, but not totally reassured. Because I am still not free."

Child soldiers have been part of the fabric of African conflicts for decades now. In Liberia's civil war more than 10 years ago, drugged 12- and 13-year-olds were famously photographed toting automatic weapons and teddy bears. However, the standoff this time is between a Western army bound by the Geneva Convention and Western values on human rights, and an enemy that includes hundreds of children. One of the most active groups in northern Mali is al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, the terror network's affiliate in Africa, which originated in Algeria. In 2008, the group released a video showing a cheerful 15-year-old in Algeria who was suffering from a terminal illness, Atallah says. The Islamists convinced the boy that the best thing he could do with what remained of his life was to die for Allah, according to Atallah, who saw the recording.

"The video shows him smiling," he says. "They taught him how to drive a van. And then they filmed the van as it left, just before he detonated himself. I wouldn't put it past them to do this again."

___

Associated Press writer Krista Larson contributed from Mopti, Mali.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/child-soldiers-tale-illustrates-malis-dirty-war-121007549.html

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For Sandy's homeless, lives of anxiety in hotels

Ayanna Diego looks over her living room while waiting for inspectors at her home, which was damaged by Superstorm Sandy, in the Rockaways section of New York, Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013. Not only was the basement flooded, but water leaked through the roof and damaged the higher floors as well. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

Ayanna Diego looks over her living room while waiting for inspectors at her home, which was damaged by Superstorm Sandy, in the Rockaways section of New York, Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013. Not only was the basement flooded, but water leaked through the roof and damaged the higher floors as well. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

Ayanna Diego looks over her living room while waiting for inspectors at her home, which was damaged by Superstorm Sandy, in the Rockaways section of New York, Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013. Not only was the basement flooded, but water leaked through the roof and damaged the higher floors as well. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

Ayanna Diego, left, watches as inspectors and contractors from the Rapid Repair program inspect the damage to her home in the Rockaways section of New York, Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013. Not only was the basement flooded during Superstorm Sandy, but water leaked through the roof and damaged the higher floors as well. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

Ayanna Diego and her son William Diego stand in their dining room, which was damaged during Superstorm Sandy, at their home in the Rockaways section of New York, Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013. Not only was the basement flooded, but water leaked through the roof and damaged the higher floors as well. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

Ayanna Diego talks with inspectors and contractors from the Rapid Repair program at her home in the Rockaways section of New York, Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013. Not only was the basement flooded during Superstorm Sandy, but water leaked through the roof and damaged the higher floors as well. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

(AP) ? Diane Burstein spends her days sifting through apartment listings and disaster paperwork and her nights lying awake with worry, her daughter and grandson sleeping feet from her in a cramped hotel room.

The family has nowhere else to go. Three months after Superstorm Sandy destroyed their apartment, the Bursteins are among at least 3,500 families displaced by the storm in New York and New Jersey who have been living in hotels and motels, sometimes bouncing to a different room as reservations for weddings, parties and conferences eat up hotel space.

Their hotel stays ? funded by the Federal Emergency Management Agency ? expire every two weeks, leaving them in a constant state of anxiety over whether they'll be pushed out onto the street.

"I'm panicking. I just panic," said Burstein, who is staying at a hotel in Toms River. "I feel like I'm going to have a heart attack."

The next deadline is Saturday, when families will learn whether they must pack their bags and check out. The program has been extended in New York and New Jersey until Feb. 9, but individual families are still waiting to hear whether they will be allowed to stay because claims are evaluated on a case-by-case basis.

According to FEMA, people are no longer eligible for hotel assistance if they have received rental assistance, have a viable housing option or an insurance settlement, or can return to a repaired home.

For storm victims with no other housing options, the anxiety is palpable. Most spend their days on the phone with a never-ending stream of federal agencies, contractors and insurance agents, struggling to sort out the housing mess Sandy left behind.

"What happens if you don't have the money to fix your home?" wondered Ayanna Diego, who is holed up at a hotel near LaGuardia Airport with her mother, 17-year-old son and 12-year-old niece. "It's an issue."

Diego, 37, is staring down $180,000 in repairs to her family's home in the Far Rockaway section of Queens. She was laid off from her job at Verizon last summer and is currently living off FEMA money and unemployment checks to feed her family and pay for daily expenses.

The family has been living in a blur of hotel rooms and short-term rentals since the storm. Her 61-year-old mother stopped showing up to work as a roaming public school nurse after the storm because the commute became too difficult.

Diego qualified for the maximum $31,900 lump sum allowed under FEMA's household assistance program, and the money is supposed to be used for home repairs and short-term rentals. Instead, she is using those dollars to pay for gas and tolls to drive her niece to school in their old neighborhood, pay the mortgage on their wrecked home and buy meals for the family of four.

"We're in a hotel. I can't cook," Diego said. "You have breakfast, lunch and dinner. What's happening is you're using that money to survive off of, day to day. We've had to order meals."

Agnes Ruggiero, 69, whose Toms River apartment was destroyed, has been told by FEMA that she shouldn't expect to remain in a hotel for much longer. She doesn't understand why she and others are out of housing options when millions of dollars are being spent to rebuild boardwalks in the tourist-heavy region.

"How could they start worrying about a boardwalk when all these people have no place to live?" she said.

At the Clarion Hotel and Conference Center in Toms River, which sits on a state highway leading to a barrier island that suffered some of the state's worst damage, a hotel manager said about 80 percent of the hotel's guests are in the FEMA program.

The Sandy victims have formed a community here, waving to one another as they walk through the lobby to their rooms, sneaking out for cigarettes together and offering rides to people who need them. On a recent afternoon, a white box filled with cookies and cannoli was passed around for someone's birthday.

Burstein, 69, who is on disability, and her 37-year-old daughter ? who doesn't work because her 3-year-old disabled son recently had surgery ? have been living here since early December. Like many other storm victims, they can't find an affordable rental. Even if they did find one, they barely have enough money for a security deposit.

On Saturday, they will file down to the lobby along with the other Sandy refugees to learn their fate, as they do every two weeks. Burstein and Ruggiero said hotel staff will read the names of people whose assistance was extended for another two weeks. In the past, some people have been left off the list.

"Can't you let the people know ahead of time so they don't go crazy worrying?" she asked.

People like 68-year-old Janice Yunginger, of Point Pleasant, N.J., are stranded because they're waiting to hear back from their insurance companies.

Yunginger's home was destroyed, and she is still awaiting a final flood insurance estimate. Her hotel assistance ran out Jan. 12. She and her 26-year-old daughter are paying the $450 a week, out of pocket, for a room at the Red Roof Inn in Tinton Falls, N.J.

"I've applied for everything I can apply for, and for some reason they extended some of the people under the temporary shelter program, but not me," Yunginger said.

FEMA officials in both states say they are working with people staying in hotels on a daily basis, trying to resolve the obstacles that are preventing them from finding other housing opportunities.

"We're there to fill the gap between the devastation that you encountered and getting you to a more permanent solution," said Michael Byrne, the FEMA official supervising Superstorm Sandy recovery in New York.

The process of figuring out how to help homeless Sandy victims find a more permanent solution was delayed by Congress' slow passage of the hurricane recovery bill. New Jersey has set aside 1,000 Section 8 federal housing vouchers for low-income families displaced by the storm and currently living in hotels.

New Jersey created dozens of housing units at Fort Monmouth, a former military installation, for Sandy victims.

Both FEMA and New Jersey have set up websites to help connect people displaced by the storm with rental listings.

The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development is working with state and local officials to help find long-term housing for displaced people, according to a spokesman for HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan who could not give details on specific plans.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-01-25-Superstorm-Hotel%20Refugees/id-8e96a7b411af4c5f98cc1409c2b64af5

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Thursday, January 24, 2013

Stories From Hollywood

Stories From Hollywood

Socialite Paris Hilton thinks we all want to see her tiny boobiesDakota Fanning Pulls Off a Cute Outfit [The Frisky] Robert Redford Bashes Paris Hilton [HollyWire] Alison Sweeney Marks Two Decades on Soap Opera [Right Celebrity] Adele Slated to Perform “Skyfall” at Oscars [The Celebrity Cafe] Aida Yespica Sex It Up in Miami [The Blemish] Jennifer Lopez Team Up with Andrea Bocelli [The Huffington Post] Kim ...

Stories From Hollywood Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News

Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/01/stories-from-hollywood/

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Jenna Jameson Hair Affair: Love It or Loathe It?

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/01/jenna-jameson-hair-affair-love-it-or-loathe-it/

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Nexus 4 hitting retail shelves in Australia come Feb. 1

Down Under

If you're one of he many still trying to get your hands on a Nexus 4, and happen to live in Australia, we have some good news. Starting February 1, the phone that plays hard to get will be available in retail stores across the land of Oz. The 16GB version will set you back $499 AUD (that's about $525 US) without any pesky contracts or commitments. Of course, you can also choose to get it bundled with an Optus plan for just $35 AUD (about $37 USD) a month.

The pricing isn't bad compared to retail on other unlocked phones, but is still marked up a bit over the Google Play price of $349 US. It's a case of demand setting the market price, and it's still cheaper than eBay.

Via: Ausdroid



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/uwwI_Q7lPTE/story01.htm

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Wednesday, January 23, 2013

China HSBC flash PMI hits two-year high in January

BEIJING (Reuters) - Growth in China's giant factory sector accelerated to a two-year high in January, a preliminary private survey showed, as manufacturers received more local and foreign orders in an encouraging sign for the country's economic rebound.

The HSBC flash purchasing managers' index (PMI) rose to 51.9 in January, the highest since January 2011 and above the 50-point level that shows accelerating growth in the sector from the previous month.

The PMI, the earliest preview of China's economic health in 2013, is the latest indication that the world's second-largest economy is steadily recovering from a near two-year cool-down.

"Despite the still tepid external demand, the domestic-driven restocking process is likely to add steam to China's ongoing recovery in the coming months," Qu Hongbin, chief China economist at HSBC, said on Thursday.

HSBC said the sub-indices for output, new orders and employment that account for three quarters of the flash PMI all improved in January to hover above 50.

The output index climbed to 22-month highs while the employment sub-index was at its highest since May 2011.

Demand for Chinese exports also improved slightly this month, the flash index showed, but it shed little light on whether the pick-up would last.

China's exports had a surprisingly strong spurt in December, contributing to the country's emergence from a protracted cool-down, though analysts worry the rebound would be short-lived on soft U.S. and European demand.

EXPORT ORDERS RECOVER

The new export orders sub-index rose to 50.1 in January, up from December's 49.2 that pointed to waning demand.

The sub-index was persistently weak in the past year, rising above the 50-point threshold for only three months in 2012 and at times contradicting China's official trade data.

HSBC's final PMI had showed China's new export orders cooling in December, at odds with government data that said exports zoomed to seven-month highs that month.

The jump in exports, alongside generous government investment in infrastructure, helped to pull China's economy out of its worst downturn in three years between October and December to grow 7.9 percent from a year earlier.

But the late spike in activity was not enough to prevent China from sinking into its slowest annual pace of economic expansion in 13 years in 2012, growing 7.8 percent.

Many analysts are cautiously optimistic about China's economic prospects this year and are betting on steady state investment to stabilize growth. Exports, however, are expected to remain a drag.

A Reuters poll this week showed analysts predict China's annual economic growth would rebound a shade to 8.1 percent this year.

But faster growth is also expected to fuel inflation.

While a majority of the 24 analysts polled by Reuters believed China would not change its monetary policy this year, a third of them thought the central bank could raise interest rates in the second half of 2013.

Thursday's flash PMI showed price pressures may be building. The input price sub-index was at its highest since September 2011, while the output price sub-index was steady after months of factory-gate deflation.

HSBC said its PMI survey is based on a poll of purchasing executives from over 420 manufacturing firms, and that the flash PMI is compiled from responses from 85 percent to 90 percent of that pool.

(Editing by Kim Coghill)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/china-hsbc-flash-pmi-hits-two-high-january-015438711--business.html

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Striving to increase survival rates in pancreatic cancer, UK ...

Posted 22nd January 2013 in Articles, Disease Area, Interviews | Register to comment

Rebecca Aris interviews Alex Ford

Pancreatic Cancer UK

As our disease focus this month is on gastrointestinal and hepatic disorders, we interviewed the CEO of Pancreatic Cancer UK to hear more about the aims of the charity.

Pancreatic cancer is the ninth most common cancer in the UK1. It has a poor prognosis and a low survival rate. Evidence suggests that of all the cancers, the experience of having pancreatic cancer is one of the worst. As such, the key aims of Pancreatic Cancer UK are to increase survival rates in and improve the experience of pancreatic cancer.

Alex Ford is the Chief Executive Officer of the charity, providing the overall direction and leadership for Pancreatic Cancer UK. She speaks with us here on the charity?s aims and the upcoming advances that she hopes to see in this area in the next ten years.

Interview summary

RA: What are the main aims of the charity?

AF: The fundamental aims of the charity really are directly related to our Campaign for Hope. We launched Campaign for Hope about a year or so ago. The two key aims which we are working towards underneath the banner of that, are to double the UK five survival rates of pancreatic cancer within five years, and to change the NHS experience of pancreatic cancer patients from being one of the worst, which we have evidence that it is at the moment, to being one of the best.

Those are our long-term goals. Obviously, we?re not going to deliver all of those directly, but part of the work we?re doing is to engage other people, such as politicians, clinicians, policy makers and individuals who have been affected by pancreatic cancer, to enable us to move together to achieve those goals.

Pancreatic Cancer UK essentially fights pancreatic cancer on all fronts, we provide information, support, we campaign, and we fund research. So we?re a fairly broad based charity at the moment.

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??this is a cancer that?s been very much forgotten.?

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RA: What kind of information do you find that patients are seeking on your website?

AF: We know that the most popular sections are the facts about pancreatic cancer, which includes the basic information about diagnosis, types of pancreatic cancer and signs and symptoms.

We find that a lot of people visiting have a new diagnosis, and because of the poor prognosis of the disease they?re often trying to find out if there are other treatment options available, or the best place to get treated.

RA: What would you say appear to be patient?s unmet needs in this area?

AF: Sadly enough in pancreatic cancer there are a huge amount of unmet needs. One of the issues that we?ve been hearing about a lot on our support line is about the management of dietary symptoms. A lot of people are experiencing problems with diet relating to pancreatic cancer, and they haven?t always been given good information on how to manage that.

RA: Can you tell us about the aims and the outcomes of the Study for Survival?

AF: The primary aim of the Study for Survival was to conduct the first ever comprehensive mapping of pancreatic cancer in the UK. It draws on the experience and views of over 1,000 people living and working with cancer. But it also looked at, through data analysis, the experience and challenges related to pancreatic cancer patients within the NHS.

It was an attempt to map the patient experience right from pre-diagnosis through to death, and to identify where the real challenges and opportunities are.

We are a very broad based charity, and we wanted to have evidence and a clear indication of where our activities can make the most difference, particularly in terms of our campaigning work. We also wanted to provide insight for all the other partners and people that we work with, so that we can all work together in an evidenced way.

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??pancreatic cancer is significantly underfunded in terms of research??

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RA: What do you think can be done to raise awareness in this area, and why is it so important?

AF: The breast cancer cause has actually achieved an awful lot from raising awareness. In many ways providing awareness within the public and in a political arena is actually the first start to getting the cause recognised and more understood.

Three or four years ago, pancreatic cancer was really not known at all, people didn?t even actually know where their pancreas was. But over the last few years charities and the pancreatic cancer community have been trying to get the disease on the agenda, get people to understand and recognise the fact that the death rates are appalling, and that this is a cancer that?s been very much forgotten. Those death rates haven?t changed for some considerable time.

Once the public is more aware of it, then we can actually start achieving a bit more public pressure and bit more political pressure.

It?s particularly challenging for us, because of the fact that our patients don?t survive very often, which means that we haven?t got that large group of survivors out there (such as with breast cancer), who work so hard and on an ongoing basis to raise the profile of the cause.

It is hugely important that people who care about this disease, who are often the people sadly left behind, do help us in this work. We also need to raise the profile of the disease specifically with particular health professionals. GPs will only see about one new pancreatic cancer patient every five years, so it?s not a disease that?s top of mind when patients present with symptoms that could indicate a concern. Pancreatic cancer patients visit the GP many more times than other cancer patients before being diagnosed, 50% are diagnosed in an emergency situation through emergency admission to hospital. So that?s also a very particular opportunity to tackle the disease in terms of awareness raising with a particular group of health professionals.

?

??it?s responsible for 5% of cancer deaths, and yet it only gets 1% of cancer research funding.?

?

RA: What advances in this area do you hope to see over the next 10 years?

AF: The main thing we?d like to see is a change in the five survival rates, because they?re 4%, which is at least 1% more than they were three years ago. But they?re still very small. We?re talking about a 96% death rate, which in this day and age the opportunities in cancer and the fantastic progress that?s been made in terms of new technologies and new treatments is a really appalling legacy for the disease.

So we are calling for a doubling of five year survival rates, and also we want to do something about the pancreatic cancer patient experience in the NHS. So in terms of what we?d like to achieve over the next say five to 10 years, those would be our calls to action.

Obviously we want more research, we have clear evidence that pancreatic cancer is significantly underfunded in terms of research, so it?s actually the fifth biggest cancer killer in the UK, and it?s responsible for 5% of cancer deaths, and yet it only gets 1% of cancer research funding.

There are starting to be opportunities in terms of biomarkers, early detection and possible emerging treatments, so there are things that can be supported in relation to research funding.

In terms of health professionals we feel that early diagnosis is key to increasing those survival rates. We had an early diagnosis summit recently, which attracted about 70 or 80 health professionals including GPs. We agreed that we need to find ways of raising awareness with GPs in relation to pancreatic cancer symptoms, and providing support for them to enable them to quickly refer on to an appropriate secondary care setting, and request appropriate tests.

So there are a number of very specific actions that we can achieve in relation to that area. Those are just a few. One of our real challenges for pancreatic cancer I think is a sense of lack of hope, because it?s such a poor death rate, and because nothing has changed for 40 years. I do believe there?s this strategic leap of faith to make. I know many people have been doing amazing things, but we have to raise the public profile, we have to get these issues on the agenda and we have to get more funding into research, because otherwise in another 10?20 years we are going to be the biggest cancer problem of the future!

RA: Alex thank you very much for your time today.

References:

1. Cancer Research UK ?Key facts:- http://publications.cancerresearchuk.org/downloads/Product/CS_KF_PANCR.pdf

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About the interviewee:

Alex Ford has been CEO of Pancreatic Cancer UK since 2009. Before then she worked for six years in gynaecological and breast cancer charities, having moved on from a career in higher education following a diagnosis of ovarian cancer in her early thirties.

How can we achieve earlier diagnosis of pancreatic cancer?

Source: http://www.pharmaphorum.com/2013/01/22/striving-to-increase-survival-rates-in-pancreatic-cancer-in-the-uk/

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Solid Advice For People Thinking About Homeschooling | How to ...

Lots of people don?t trust their local public schools. And many of these same people don?t have the resources for private education. Homeschooling can be an excellent answer to this problem. Homeschooling your children provides a great education at low cost. Continue reading for more information.
Designate a space in your home for schooling. Students that go all over your house can easily be distracted. A designated work area will ensure that your children concentrate on their studies and have a specific area to keep their supplies.
Become familiar with laws governing homeschooling in your particular state. You can find lots of state-specific information on the website of the HSLDA. Also, you can join a homeschooling organization, which can help with credibility. The help you get will be well worth the cost of joining.
You should realize that it?s not always going to be tons of fun homeschooling your children. You need to realize that this is work for both of you since you are teaching them new ideas, and it is not always going to be fun and games. Remind your children that you are doing this for their benefit because you love them.
Network with homeschooling families nearby to plan excursions. Doing this will introduce your children to kids their own age. It keeps costs down due to bulk rates, too!
You should always carry out thorough research before you consider engaging in homeschooling. The Internet has an abundance of helpful information to help you make this huge decision. Regardless of your interest in homeschooling, you must make certain to have enough time, money and energy to educate your kids at home.
If your child is having difficulty in public school, homeschooling may be a good option. It can greatly reduce your child?s stress. It is also an excellent bonding experience for parents and children. Homeschooling can be a great alternative to stranding your child in a situation that he or she finds challenging and uncomfortable.
Decide how you will manage your younger children while you are teaching the older ones. For example, the younger child will only be allowed to stay in the classroom if she can play quietly without interrupting your lesson. Don?t have unrealistic expectations of your toddler. Take frequent breaks in which you can give your toddler some attention and engage in fun activities. This can keep your frustration levels down.
Put your reasoning on paper. Although you may wish to homeschool your child, it may be hard for you to convince other members of your family that homeschooling is the best idea if you do not write any logical reasoning down on paper. This gives you a resource to reference when others ask what you?re doing. This will help you deal with it easier.
There are many different homeschooling methods that can be employed to help your child succeed. Learn all you can from the above tips to help you plan your child?s education. You can become the best teacher your child ever had if you are ready to apply yourself. Your children are lucky to have you.

Source: http://homeforschool.blogspot.com/2013/01/solid-advice-for-people-thinking-about.html

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Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Time to move on?

After another postseason fall, perhaps
Pats coach should try a new franchise

Image: Bill BelichickGetty Images

Bill Belichick earned three Super Bowl rings while serving as head coach of the New England Patriots, but none since the Spygate scandal broke in September 2007.

Trash Talk

By Michael Ventre

NBCSports.com contributor

updated 2:21 p.m. ET Jan. 21, 2013

Michael Ventre

Maybe Bill Belichick should become the next Andy Reid.

You know, an excellent NFL head coach who has outlived his usefulness with the same franchise and understands that it?s time to move on.

Belichick earned three Super Bowl rings while serving as head coach of the New England Patriots, but none since the Spygate scandal broke in September 2007. Maybe it?s coincidence or bad luck that Belichick hasn?t won another world championship since then. Maybe it isn?t.

It seems that year in and year out since that brouhaha erupted, Belichick?s Patriots have disappointed. Indeed, he lost two close Super Bowl games to the New York Giants after the 2007 and 2011 seasons. Most coaches would give their entire bank accounts for those opportunities.

But Belichick isn?t most coaches. Remember, he?s a genius. You can?t get through a head coaching debate without the name Belichick being tossed out as the Albert Einstein of the gridiron.

He wasn?t the best coach in the NFL this year. He wasn?t last year. In fact, he hasn?t been since the 2004 season, although I give Belichick major props for the minor miracle of turning Matt Cassel into an NFL quarterback for the 2008 season in New England when Tom Brady was injured.

No one really doubts that Reid can coach. That was illustrated by how quickly the Kansas City Chiefs pounced on him as their choice for a new head coach. In the same way, no one really doubts Belichick can coach.

Yet there is the nagging sense that, for all his ballyhoo and reputation, he isn?t getting it done. Obviously he did a much better job this season with the Patriots than Reid did with the Eagles. But disappointment is all relative. The way the Patriots were outclassed Sunday by the Baltimore Ravens was a little surprising.

Plus, Belichick snubbed CBS after that game, reminding us what a classy guy he is. It might be time for him to hit the refresh button on his career, because he doesn?t seem to be handling failure well.

Most teams would open the bank vault and do anything it takes to get a coach like Belichick. The Patriots aren?t most teams, however. They?ve had him. Now it might be time to have someone else.

Let the hype begin!
From now until the Super Bowl, you are going to be bombarded with hype. Wear a helmet and keep low.

But likely you will not be given a true look at San Francisco and Baltimore leading up to the clash between the 49ers and the Ravens. Here are some important points to remember about the two cities:

San Francisco gave us ?Dirty Harry.? Baltimore gave us "Diner."

San Francisco provided the backdrop for ?The Streets of San Francisco.? Baltimore provided the backdrop for ?The Wire.?

Don?t visit San Francisco without sampling sourdough bread. Don?t visit Baltimore without trying the blue crabs.

The most reviled individual in Baltimore is the late Art Modell. The most reviled individual in San Francisco is Tommy Lasorda.

Tony Bennett left his heart in San Francisco. Earl Weaver left no umpire alone in Baltimore.

Herb Caen captured the essence of San Francisco. H.L. Mencken captured the essence of Baltimore.

San Francisco has a giant stone edifice with a nefarious reputation called Alcatraz where no activity takes place. The closest thing Baltimore has to that is the United States Capitol in nearby Washington.

San Francisco has the Golden Gate Bridge. Baltimore has the Francis Scott Key Bridge.

The median home price in Baltimore is about $265,000. The median home price in San Francisco is about $659,000.

A 49er is a participant in the California Gold Rush of 1849. A Raven is an ominous black bird and title character of Edgar Allan Poe?s ?The Raven.?

Bruce Lee was born in San Francisco. Nancy Pelosi was born in Baltimore.

San Francisco?s professional football team has a head coach with the last name Harbaugh. So does Baltimore.

Tour de Public Relations
Most people have no awareness about cycling other than the Tour de France. I?m one of them. I?m sure there?s a Tour de This, a Tour de That, maybe even a Tour de The Other. But clearly, the Tour de France is the Grand Papa of all Cycling Events.

And the 2013 version is about five months away.

So this would be an ideal time, in the wake of the Oprah interviews conducted with lying pin cushion Lance Armstrong, for the Tour de France to begin a public-relations campaign declaring that this year?s race will be the cleanest ever.

Instead, silence.

The Tour de France is missing an opportunity. Right now, after listening to Armstrong, and considering all the other dopers who have ruined the sport, the Tour de France and the International Cycling Union (UCI) should have unleashed a massive effort to get the word out that testing will be more accurate and more rigorous than ever. They should start now, and continue the PR onslaught right up to, and then through, the race.

Last week the International Cycling Union did announce the establishment of an anti-doping helpline so that professional riders could ask questions or blow the whistle on others anonymously. That?s a good step.

But the Tour de France, once one of the most beautiful sights in sports, is uglier now because of Armstrong and others. And that needs to be corrected. Otherwise the cheaters will still control the sport, even when they?re long gone.

Fading memories
Theoretically, memories are among the most precious assets of a sports franchise ? except when it moves. Then those memories fade, and eventually disappear.

Take the Oklahoma City Thunder, for instance. That team moved to OKC from Seattle for the 2008-2009 season. The Seattle SuperSonics had been established in 1967. They won an NBA championship in 1979. Among their illustrious alumni are Lenny Wilkens, Fred Brown, Slick Watts, Gus Williams, Dennis Johnson, Jack Sikma, Paul Silas, Tom Chambers, Xavier McDaniel, Shawn Kemp, Gary Payton and, yes, Kevin Durant, for his rookie season of 2007-08.

Yet you?ll rarely hear anyone around the Thunder ? or the NBA, for that matter ? evoke fond memories of those great SuperSonics of yesteryear, or stirring moments in the team?s history. When a team re-brands itself, it shoves all traces of the past out of the picture. And that?s a little sad.

The Maloof brothers, who own the Sacramento Kings, are about to finalize a deal to move the team to Seattle, to become a new incarnation of the SuperSonics. This is a unique situation, because re-establishing the brand in Seattle means restoring the memories, much like the Cleveland Browns did when the original club moved to Baltimore, and a new Browns was later established in Cleveland.

Of course, that?s little consolation to the folks in Sacramento ? who got the franchise from Kansas City in 1985 ? because it?s unlikely another NBA team will relocate to California?s state capital to replace the Kings. Sacramento fans will have only the memories of that brief period in the late '90s-early 2000s when the Kings had Chris Webber, Vlade Divac, Mike Bibby, Hedo Turkoglu, Peja Stojakovic, Doug Christie and head coach Rick Adelman, and they sniffed at the championship.

Kansas City doesn?t hold annual candlelight vigils for its departed Kings. Sacramento won?t, either. Because a team?s history is only as vivid as a team?s present lets it be.

A game of pepper
The Manti Te?o imaginary girlfriend story will not end when all the facts are out, but rather when all the jokes have been exhausted. ...

Tim Duncan got another night off by the Spurs in a recent game against Atlanta. He?s the closest thing professional sports has to a semi-retired person. ?

I couldn?t tell if that was Jim Harbaugh being upset over a call on Sunday, or if that was just his tribute to the late Earl Weaver. ?

Harbaugh, Harbaugh, Harbaugh. I haven?t heard one last name mentioned this often since Gillooly.

Michael Ventre is a regular contributor to NBCSports.com. Follow him on Twitter.

? 2013 NBC Sports.com? Reprints

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Time to move on?

Trash Talk: Most teams would do anything it takes to get a coach like Bill Belichick. The Patriots aren?t most teams, however. And after another postseason collapse, it might be time to have someone else.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/50536233/ns/sports-nfl/

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Monday, January 21, 2013

Report: Cuba using undersea fiber-optic cable

2 hrs.

Cuba apparently has finally switched on the first undersea fiber-optic cable linking it to the outside world nearly two years after its arrival, according to analysis by a company that monitors global Internet use.

In a report posted Sunday on the website of Renesys, author Doug Madory wrote that Cuba began using the ALBA-1 cable on Jan. 14.

Until now the island's Internet service has been through satellite links that are slower than hard-wired fiber-optic connections. Starting a week ago, Madory said, routing data showed significantly faster traffic to the country and the emergence of Spanish telecom Telefonica as a provider of routing service to Cuban state-run communications company ETECSA.

Routing speed is measured by how long it takes to send a data packet somewhere and receive confirmation back at the original server, akin to how submarines "ping" each other with radar to determine location.

Madory wrote that the sudden improvement in latency measurements between Cuba and four cities in the U.S., Mexico and Brazil indicates the cable is in use. But speeds have not reached levels suggesting that the cable is handling all traffic, leading him to conclude that outgoing data is still traveling via satellite.

"We believe it is likely that Telefonica's service to ETECSA is, either by design or misconfiguration, using its new cable asymmetrically (i.e., for traffic in only one direction)," Madory wrote.

Cuban government officials and Telefonica did not immediately respond to requests for comment Monday. Cuba has said in the past that it would prioritize the cable for usage deemed in the public interest and for social good.

Dial-up Internet access, essentially the only option for most Cubans who are able to go online, has continued to be slow and creaky in recent days.

Cuba is the last country in the western hemisphere to get a fiber-optic hookup and, according to Akamai, has the second-lowest Internet connectivity rates in the world.

Havana says about 16 percent of Cubans are online in some capacity, mostly through work or school, but often that's limited to email and access to an island Intranet. Just 2.9 percent report having full Internet access, though analysts say it's probably more like 5 or 10 percent due to underreporting of black-market resale of minutes.

"While the activation of the ALBA-1 cable may be a good first step to providing ETECSA a better link to the Internet, the lack of widespread public access to Internet service throughout the island will likely continue," Madory wrote.

The $70 million cable strung from Venezuela came onshore in eastern Cuba in February 2011 and was supposed to be online as early as that summer.

But officials suddenly stopped talking about the cable amid rumors of arrests at ETECSA and the Ministry of Communications, and whispers of purported mismanagement or embezzlement involving the project.

Last May, Venezuela's minister of science and technology said the cable was operational and it was up to Cuba to decide how it wanted to use it.

? 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/report-cuba-using-undersea-fiber-optic-cable-1B8041253

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Digital Coupons Relevant to You | MyDealCompass Blog | Business ...

No matter where you travel on the World Wide Web you are certain to be bombarded with claims of ?big savings? and ?unbeatable deals.? Additionally, you are promised digital coupons or savings when you ?click here? or complete ?a few simple steps.? However, if you opt to gamble and click here or dive into the so-called simple steps, the result is typically the same: you are either bombarded with ?pay to access? deals or a virus that steals the personal information from your computer.

Nonetheless, do not become discouraged. There are many legitimate savings sites to choose from. The key is deciphering the real from the misleading. Some key elements to look for when searching for digital coupons include:

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  • If you ever encounter a copy of a coupon or savings, this may be illegal and you should report it

There are many coupon sites that require consumers to pay a monthly fee to access their deals. However, when you log onto myDealCompass you will quickly learn the deals are not only legitimate, but they offer unprecedented savings that are ALWAYS free for consumers. This means you access the deals you want, and redeem them at stores in your local area. The site has taken measures to safe-guard your personal information and make the site as easy to use as possible. Utilizing this service will make saving money a fun and enjoyable experience you will want to have over and over again.

Source: http://mydealcompass.com/blog/index.php/digital-coupons-relevant/

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Explosive device at shopping mall near Athens injures two

ATHENS (Reuters) - An explosive device went off on Sunday at a shopping centre near Athens causing damage and lightly injuring two security employees, police said.

"The device was placed in a garbage bin near a branch of National Bank. There were two warning calls to a newspaper about half an hour before the explosion but police thought it was a hoax," a police official who declined to be named told Reuters.

(Reporting by George Georgiopoulos; Editing by Alison Williams)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/explosive-device-shopping-mall-near-athens-injures-two-092916119.html

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Sunday, January 20, 2013

Islamists flee Malian town after French airstrikes

Malian soldiers jubilate as they return to Niono, from Diabaly, some 400 kms (300 miles) North of the capital Bamako, Saturday Jan. 19, 2013. French troops encircled a key Malian town on Friday, trying to stop radical Islamists from striking against communities closer to the capital and cutting off their supply line, a French official said. The move around Diabaly came as French and Malian authorities said that the city whose capture prompted the French military intervention in the first place was no longer in the hands of the extremists. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

Malian soldiers jubilate as they return to Niono, from Diabaly, some 400 kms (300 miles) North of the capital Bamako, Saturday Jan. 19, 2013. French troops encircled a key Malian town on Friday, trying to stop radical Islamists from striking against communities closer to the capital and cutting off their supply line, a French official said. The move around Diabaly came as French and Malian authorities said that the city whose capture prompted the French military intervention in the first place was no longer in the hands of the extremists. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

Malian soldiers jubilate as they return to Niono, from Diabaly, some 400 kms (300 miles) North of the capital Bamako, Saturday Jan. 19, 2013. French troops encircled a key Malian town on Friday, trying to stop radical Islamists from striking against communities closer to the capital and cutting off their supply line, a French official said. The move around Diabaly came as French and Malian authorities said that the city whose capture prompted the French military intervention in the first place was no longer in the hands of the extremists. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

travelers climb back on a transport truck after being checked by Malian soldiers at a checkpoint in Niono, Mali, some 400 kms (300 miles) North of the capital Bamako Saturday Jan. 19, 2013. French troops encircled a key Malian town on Friday, trying to stop radical Islamists from striking against communities closer to the capital and cutting off their supply line, a French official said. The move around Diabaly came as French and Malian authorities said that the city whose capture prompted the French military intervention in the first place was no longer in the hands of the extremists.(AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

A Malian well-wisher displays his French flag as French soldiers enter Niono, Mali, some 400 kms (300 miles) north of the capital Bamako Saturday Jan. 19, 2013. French troops encircled a key Malian town on Friday, trying to stop radical Islamists from striking against communities closer to the capital and cutting off their supply line, a French official said. The move around Diabaly came as French and Malian authorities said that the city whose capture prompted the French military intervention in the first place was no longer in the hands of the extremists.(AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

Malian soldiers jubilate as they return to Niono, from Diabaly, some 400 kms (300 miles) North of the capital Bamako, Saturday Jan. 19, 2013. French troops encircled a key Malian town on Friday, trying to stop radical Islamists from striking against communities closer to the capital and cutting off their supply line, a French official said. The move around Diabaly came as French and Malian authorities said that the city whose capture prompted the French military intervention in the first place was no longer in the hands of the extremists. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

(AP) ? Burned out vehicles and scattered bullets dotted the streets of a central Malian town after radical Islamists retreated following days of French airstrikes, according to video obtained Sunday.

The Malian military announced late Saturday that the government was now controlling Diabaly, marking an important accomplishment for the French-led offensive to oust the extremists from northern and central Mali.

"People are calm since the Islamists left the city of Diabaly before it was taken by the Malian and French forces yesterday," said Oumar Coulibaly, who lives in the nearby town of Niono.

The Associated Press obtained video filmed Saturday by a local resident, which shows people from Diabaly inspecting the fighters' vehicles and charred weaponry destroyed by French airstrikes and Malian ground forces.

Several armored vehicles belonging to the Malian army also can be seen lying abandoned and damaged at the side of roads in Diabaly, a town of 35,000 that is home to an important military camp.

The video marks the first pictures to emerge from the area, which was taken over by al-Qaida-linked militants at the beginning of the week. The zone remains blocked off by a military cordon and journalists have not been able to access the area so far.

Residents who had fled to the nearby town of Niono and officials described how Islamists fled the town on foot after days of French airstrikes that destroyed their vehicles.

"They tried to hijack a car, but the driver didn't stop and they fired on the car and killed the driver," said a Malian intelligence officer who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to journalists.

The Islamists first seized control of the main towns in northern Mali nine months ago, taking advantage of a power vacuum after a military coup in the distant capital of Bamako.

West African regional neighbors talked of a military intervention to retake northern Mali for months, but it was not until the French began their offensive Jan. 11 that the Islamists faced a military threat to their grip on power.

The Islamists took Diabaly several days later ? 270 miles (430 kilometers) away from the capital ? as part of an alarming descent into central Mali and closer to the government seat of power in Bamako.

Speaking Saturday on French 3 television, French Defense Minister Jean-Yves Drian said France now has 2,000 troops in Mali and "could go beyond" the 2,500 troops initially announced for Mali.

Neighboring countries are expected to contribute around 3,000 troops to the operation. While some initial contributions from Togo, Nigeria and Benin have arrived to help the French, concerns about the mission have delayed other neighbors from sending their promised troops so far.

France's foreign minister said Saturday that "our African friends need to take the lead" in the military intervention, though he acknowledged it could be weeks before neighbors are able to do so. Laurent Fabius spoke at a closely-watched summit in Ivory Coast focusing on ways that African forces can better help Mali as France's military intervention there entered its second week.

"Step by step, I think it's a question from what I heard this morning of some days, some weeks, the African troops will take over," Fabius said in Abidjan, the commercial capital of Ivory Coast.

Fabius also said that a donor summit in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on Jan. 29 "will be a key event."

___

Associated Press writers Robbie Corey-Boulet in Abidjan, Ivory Coast and Jamey Keaten in Dakar, Senegal contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-01-20-Mali-Fighting/id-97c1f26b90e748dd87b364d6cedfd41d

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Dempsey saves the day for Spurs

By ROB HARRIS

AP Sports Writer

Associated Press Sports

updated 2:21 p.m. ET Jan. 20, 2013

LONDON (AP) -Clint Dempsey scored a second crucial goal of the season for Tottenham against Manchester United on Sunday, striking in stoppage time to secure a 1-1 draw against the Premier League leaders.

The United States forward, who gave Tottenham its first win at United in 23 years in September, canceled out Robin van Persie's first-half header to give the fourth-place hosts something to show for their dominance at a snowy White Hart Lane.

"Before (this season) I'd never scored against them, so it's good to help the team get results," said Dempsey, who joined from Fulham in August. "We've got a win and a draw now (against United)."

United remains top but its lead has been trimmed to five points this weekend after second-place Manchester City beat Fulham 2-0 on Saturday.

Despite salvaging a point, Tottenham fell four points behind third-place Chelsea after its London rival beat Arsenal 2-1 earlier in the day.

While United managed just five shots, Tottenham scored with its 25th shot in the third minute of stoppage time.

Dempsey swept in the winner after being set up by Aaron Lennon, who had pounced after goalkeeper David de Gea punched a shot by Benoit Assou-Ekotto inadvertently to him.

"They kept pumping the ball in the box and got their reward. You'd have thought we would have dealt with it better," United manager Alex Ferguson said. "We should have killed them off on the counterattack in the second half. It was the final ball that was letting us down."

United rarely threatened Tottenham goalkeeper Hugo Lloris after Van Persie rose in the 25th minute to meet Tom Cleverley's cross and head in his 22nd goal since joining from Arsenal in August.

"It was a good build up from Danny to Thomas and then Robin did what he has been doing all season," Ferguson said. "He notched another goal."

But Ferguson turned his fury on an assistant referee for not awarding a penalty after Wayne Rooney, a surprise substitute who only came on in the second half, was caught by Steven Caulker.

"It was definitely a penalty - he has put his leg right in there," Ferguson said. "The linesman (Simon Beck) is facing it. I thought he had a very poor game, the linesman. I thought he was disappointing.

"We have got that history with him. He never gave offside with (then-Chelsea striker Didier) Drogba at Old Trafford (in 2010) when he was three yards offside. Everyone remembers that. I certainly do."

But United had been heavily reliant on center backs Rio Ferdinand and Nemanja Vidic, as well as De Gea's blocks, to protect its lead.

"We dominated the whole game, played well and deserved to win to be fair," Tottenham manager Andre Villas-Boas said. "We had 60 per cent possession against United ... and should have won.

"Champions like United have to go through moments like this but I think we deserved this last-minute goal."

The four points Spurs have claimed off United this season are the most since beating them twice in the 1989-90 campaign.

Despite being in control from the start, Tottenham missed the goal scoring threat of Emmanuel Adebayor, who is at the African Cup of Nations with Togo.

But danger was being created down the right flank by Aaron Lennon, who came close to scoring after 13 minutes when he burst into the penalty area and unleashed a shot that De Gea pushed away.

Van Persie's goal against the run of play didn't dampen Tottenham's spirits, with Gareth Bale's deflected shot saved by De Gea before halftime and the Wales winger also curled over after the break.

Dempsey's first chance to equalize came in the 52nd after Mousa Dembele had withstood two challenges before slipping the ball through to the striker, whose close-range shot was blocked by De Gea's foot.

"I couldn't believe he saved that," Dempsey said. "I was going to celebrate."

But while Tottenham continued to pile on the pressure, the end products lacked venom with Dempsey also seeing a tame shot easily saved on the hour.

A decisive intervention by Ferdinand prevented Jermain Defoe breaking through on goal after being released by Lennon and the center back got his head in the way to deflect a shot from Bale wide.

But United's resistance broke down in stoppage time, just when Ferguson's United has been accustomed to stunning opponents with goals.

"Tottenham worked their socks off, you have to give them credit," Ferguson said.

United headed from the stadium to the airport and an overnight flight to Qatar for warm-weather training.

"We can get the sun cream out hopefully and get out on the beach and relax a bit," United midfielder Michael Carrick said. "It's a busy season and there are busy times ahead. It's about recuperating."

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


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Dempsey saves the day for Spurs

Clint Dempsey scored a second crucial goal of the season for Tottenham against Manchester United on Sunday, striking deep into stoppage time to secure a 1-1 draw against the Premier League leaders.

Who had best weekend, Jozy or Clint?

PST: Jozy Altidore seemed to have a stranglehold on best weekend for a Yank abroad,?but what about Clint Dempsey?s day at snowy White Hart Lane?

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/46620194/ns/sports-soccer/

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Video: Panel weighs in on foreign policy of Obama?s second term

A Second Take on Meeting the Press: From an up-close look at Rachel Maddow's sneakers to an in-depth look at Jon Krakauer's latest book ? it's all fair game in our "Meet the Press: Take Two" web extra. Log on Sundays to see David Gregory's post-show conversations with leading newsmakers, authors and roundtable guests. Videos are available on-demand by 12 p.m. ET on Sundays.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3032608/vp/50526010#50526010

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Thursday, January 17, 2013

Can kids outgrow autism? | MNN - Mother Nature Network

Is it possible for children to outgrow autism?

?

Autism has always been considered a lifelong diagnosis, but a new study might just refute that claim.

?

According to a study published recently in the?Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, some young children who were diagnosed as autistic might outgrow both their symptoms and their diagnosis as they get older. The study, funded by the National Institutes of Health included children, teens, and young adults who were diagnosed as autistic as children but then moved off the autism spectrum as they grew older. ?

?

For the study,?Dr. Deborah Fein from the University of Connecticut and her research team evaluated 34 children who had been diagnosed with autism in early childhood as well as 34 other children in their classes at school. These children were then compared with?another group of 44 children who were the same age and sex and had the same non-verbal IQ scores but were diagnosed as having "high-functioning" autism, in other words, they were less severely affected by their condition.

?

Using both cognitive and observation tests, researchers found that children who were originally diagnosed as autistic no longer had distinguishable symptoms of the condition. These children showed no sign of problems with language, face recognition, communication or social interaction.

?

So, did these children outgrow autism? It's possible, but researchers urge caution when interpreting these results. Another possibility is that the children had learned how to expertly compensate for their autistic symptoms.

?

In either case, it's potentially good news for children who are diagnosed with autism, and the families who love them.

?

Source: http://www.mnn.com/health/fitness-well-being/blogs/can-kids-outgrow-autism

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Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Jan 16 - Rock Em Sock Em, Unified Communications Smackdown: A Comparison of Cisco Jabber vs. Microsoft Lync

Jan

Your Business Technology & Networking Events This Week:

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Tuesday, January 15, 2013

News page | International Society for Horticultural Science

Today a new meeting has been announced to take place September 2-5, 2013, Cuzco (Peru):

International Symposium on Medicinal Plants and Natural Products.

More info: Dr. Jalal Ghaemghami, PO Box 320172, West Roxbury, MA 02132, United States of America. Phone: (1)3393686838, Fax: (1)3393686838, E-mail: jalal@shmen.org or Prof. Dr. Roberto Ponugal, Universidad Global Peru, Av. Camina Real L126, Urb. Quispicanchis, Cuzco, Peru. E-mail: antigua-ishs@shmen.org

Source: http://www.ishs.org/news?p=2121

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Republican Powell defends Clinton on Benghazi, rips GOP

Clinton and Powell during the 2009 unveiling of his official State Department portrait in Washington (Getty)

Former Secretary of State Gen. Colin Powell defended current Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's handling of the attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya, saying it could've happened under anyone's watch.

"I think she's had a distinguished record," Powell said in an interview on NBC's "Meet The Press" broadcast Sunday. "And I don't think that this one incident--which is one of these things that those of us in government have been through many, many times where suddenly an action happens late at night ... I don't think it's a blot on her record."

"You're surprised," Powell said of the Sept. 11, 2o12, attack that killed four Americans, including U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens. "Somebody gets killed, something gets blown up. And then the after-action reports start and everybody wants to know who was at fault. Who was responsible? 'Why didn't you keep this from happening?' Well, you can't keep everything from happening. Benghazi was a very, very difficult one and a difficult situation, and maybe they shouldn't have been there in the first place."

Earlier, Powell was asked for his assessment on Chuck Hagel, President Barack Obama's nominee for defense secretary.

"This is a guy who knows veterans, knows the troops," Powell said. "And when people say, 'Well, that doesn't necessarily make him a good candidate for secretary of defense,' I'll tell you who thinks that makes him a good candidate for secretary of defense: The men and women in the armed forces of the United States and their parents, who know that this is a guy who will be very careful about putting their lives at risk, 'cause he put his life at risk."

Powell continued: "He knows what war is, and he will fight a war if it's necessary. But he's a guy who will do it with great deliberation and care. ? He is a fellow he speaks his mind. He sometimes gets in trouble with those who thinks he should not speak his mind, but he says what he believes and he sticks with it."

The retired general said Hagel--who was criticized for past comments about Israel--"will be on Israel's side."

Powell, who served as secretary of state during President George W. Bush's first term, also gave a frank assessment of the GOP. "I think the Republican Party right now is having an identity problem, and I'm still a Republican," Powell said. "But in recent years, there's been a significant shift to the right, and we have seen what that shift has produced: two losing presidential campaigns. I think what the Republican Party needs to do now is take a very hard look at itself and understand that the country has changed. The country is changing demographically. And if the Republican Party does not change along with that demographic, they're going to be in trouble.

"There's also a dark vein of intolerance in some parts of the party," he added. "Everybody wants to talk about, 'Who's going to be the candidate?' You've got to think first about, 'What's the party actually going to represent?' If it's just going to represent the far right wing of the political spectrum, I think the party is in difficulty."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/colin-powell-hillary-clinton-benghazi-libya-184718922--politics.html

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