Friday, August 31, 2012

Romney asks US to 'turn the page' on Obama

Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney addresses delegates before speaking at the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla., on Thursday, Aug. 30, 2012. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney addresses delegates before speaking at the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla., on Thursday, Aug. 30, 2012. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

Balloons fall as Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney and Republican vice presidential nominee, Rep. Paul Ryan's families take the stage at the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla., on Thursday, Aug. 30, 2012. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney and Republican vice presidential nominee, Rep. Paul Ryan, left, wave following Romney's speech during the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla., on Thursday, Aug. 30, 2012. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney addresses delegates before speaking at the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla., on Thursday, Aug. 30, 2012. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney addresses the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla., on Friday, Aug. 31, 2012. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

(AP) ? Lifted by a show of Republican unity that once seemed so distant, Mitt Romney plunged into the presidential campaign's final 67 days focused more than ever on jobs and the economy, and depicting President Barack Obama as a well-meaning but inept man who must be replaced.

"America has been patient," he told the nation. "Americans have supported this president in good faith. But today, the time has come to turn the page."

Obama, who will hold his own convention next week, served notice that he will use his powers of incumbency to make Romney's mission hard. Obama planned to visit a Texas military base exactly two years after declaring the end of the U.S. combat mission in Iraq, the war that haunts the last Republican president. This, as Democrats prepare to gather in Charlotte, N.C., for Obama's convention.

Romney capped a high-energy night closing the Republican National Convention with a spirited and unusually personal speech infused with his family life, touching on his Mormon faith and recounting his youth. The cheers were loud and frequent, surely music to the ears of a candidate who struggled throughout the bruising primary season and beyond to bury doubts among many in his party that he was the authentic conservative in the field.

"Now is the time to restore the promise of America," Romney declared to a nation struggling with unemployment and the slowest economic recovery in decades.

Polls suggest a to-the-wire campaign finish. The two men will spend the next 10 weeks in a handful of competitive states, none more important than Florida and Ohio, and meet in one-on-one debates where the stakes could hardly be any higher.

The campaign themes are mostly set. Romney depicts the president as a once-inspiring but disappointing figure who doesn't understand job-creation or ordinary Americans' frustrations. Democrats portray Romney as a man shifting ever rightward in the absence of core convictions, and a wealthy plutocrat who can't relate to the middle class.

Hanging over the campaign is a big number: the nation's 8.3 percent unemployment rate. It is Obama's biggest impediment to a second term. Republicans seem to be banking on the notion that it will bring Obama down if Romney simply presents himself as a competent alternative.

Strikingly absent from Romney's campaign, including the three-day convention in Tampa, were detailed explanations of how he would tame deficit spending while also cutting taxes and expanding the armed forces. He seems to be asking voters to trust his ability to create jobs and to make tough, unpopular decisions later.

Romney used his biggest moment yet in the spotlight, Thursday's televised acceptance speech, to put a softer glow on his business record and to make short work of a conservative checklist that is now less important as he pursues swing voters.

He briefly hailed "the sanctity of life," but did not mention "abortion," illegal immigration, or even Ronald Reagan by his first name.

Romney's speech also omitted many of the sharp barbs that he and his allies often throw at Obama.

"I wish President Obama had succeeded, because I want America to succeed," Romney said. "But his promises gave way to disappointment and division. ... We deserve better."

He repeated his claim that Obama can't lead America out its economic doldrums because he has no business background.

"Jobs to him are about government," Romney said.

The relatively toned-down rhetoric was a shift from Romney's taunt, only two weeks ago, of "Mr. President, take your campaign of division and anger and hate back to Chicago."

Thursday's gentler tone by Romney might simply be a nod to reality. Polls repeatedly find that voters find Obama more likable than Romney. Romney's convention message was: It's OK to like Obama even as you fire him.

Of course other top Republicans, and Romney himself, might revert to ripping into Obama, especially if they don't see polls moving in Romney's direction soon in the 10 or so states up for grabs.

Democrats hope their convention in Charlotte will, at a minimum, neutralize any GOP bounce out of Tampa.

Obama seemed equally willing to avoid bombastic rhetoric for a while. He told Time magazine he hoped his re-election would help end the political stalemate in Washington, much like "popping a blister."

The president also said he wants to do a better job of explaining how his policies will help boost the economy.

Obama planned to campaign this weekend in Ohio, Colorado and Iowa.

Romney planned to campaign Friday in Virginia, Saturday in Ohio and both days in Florida before taking a couple of days to rest while Democrats start their quadrennial show in Charlotte.

Obama narrowly won North Carolina in 2008, and scheduled his 2012 convention there in hopes of repeating the unexpected feat. Romney's path to victory is severely complicated unless he puts the state back in the GOP column.

Like any presidential challenger, Romney must do two things: Make voters willing to oust the incumbent, and make himself an acceptable replacement.

In Thursday's address, Romney seemed to assume Americans have already cleared the first hurdle, weary of high unemployment.

"What America needs is jobs, lots of jobs," Romney said. "To the majority of Americans who now believe that the future will not be better than the past, I can guarantee you this: if Barack Obama is re-elected, you will be right."

White House press secretary Jay Carney said Obama's visit to Fort Bliss on Friday will highlight administration efforts to support U.S. service members and their families, both in Iraq and Afghanistan. Those efforts include attempts to combat what Carney called "unseen wounds" of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, including post-traumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain injury.

Romney avoided the topic of terrorism and wars in Islamic countries, which bedeviled President George W. Bush's final years and helped launch Obama's career. In his big speech Thursday, Romney did not mention Iraq, Afghanistan or terrorism.

___

Associated Press writers Kasie Hunt, Steve Peoples, Philip Elliott, Beth Fouhy, Thomas Beaumont and Julie Mazziotta in Tampa and Jennifer Agiesta and Cal Woodward in Washington contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-08-31-Presidential%20Campaign/id-bc4f7bcbfd8e4a2a86f344a6dbfd32dc

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AusTex Oil Limited (ASX:AOK) Production Well Development Program on Track at Snake River

Sydney, Aug 30, 2012 (ABN Newswire) - United States focused oil & gas produer AusTex Oil Limited (ASX:AOK) (OTCQX:ATXDY) is pleased to update shareholders on its well development program at the company's 100% owned 5,500 acre Snake River Project in Kay County, Oklahoma.

In line with the company's strategy of drilling two new wells each month until Devcember of this year, AusTex is pleased to confirm the Cletus #20-5 in the East Tonkawa Production Hub has reached total depth. Also, spudding of the Blubaugh #20-2, also in the East Tonkawa Production Hub, will occur in the next few days.

Cletus #20-5 well

Drilling on the Cletus #20-5 well successfully reached Total Depth of 4,772 feet. Sample and logs confirmed multiple intervals with hydrocarbons present including the Tonkawa Sand, Cleveland Sand, Layton Sand, Mississippi Lime, Woodford Shale and Wilcox Sand.

Casing has been set and the well will be completed for oil production from the Mississippi Lime interval. The well encountered multiple intervals of porosity within the 340 gross feet of Mississippi Lime intersected including 2 distinct "chert/chat" sections.

Blubaugh #20-2 well

The rig has moved onto the location of the #20-2, also located in the Production Hub 2 area. The well is expected to spud in the next few days and it be the 10th vertical well drilled on the Snake River Project. The #20-2 is targeting the Mississippi Lime interval with an expected TD of 4,800 feet.

Executive Chairman Richard Adrey said: "Our program of drilling two wells each month between now and December is on-track and progressing to plan. As we have previously stated, increasing production from current levels of 300 boepd is our key objective at this time, and our well development program ensures we can substantially grow current production from these levels.

"AusTex is also assessing additional horizontal well participation opportunities and negotiations with interested parties are ongoing. The interest in our projects and our acreage is very encouraging, and confirms the fact that our projects have significant up-tapped value."

AusTex will update shareholders shortly on production rates from new wells that have recently come on stream as reported in the announcement to the Australian Securities Exchange on 22 August 2012.

View the full AusTex Oil announcement incuding Figure 1 at the link below:
http://media.abnnewswire.net/media/en/docs/ASX-AOK-692185.pdf

Source: http://www.abnnewswire.net/press/en/73470/

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marketnewsvideo: Lukoil Oil Company Breaks Below 200-Day Moving Average - Notable for LUKOY PXH: In trading on Thursday, shares o... http://t.co/UVaymkrh

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Source: http://twitter.com/marketnewsvideo/statuses/241203434978693120

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Thursday, August 30, 2012

Families sue over Kansas grain elevator blast

(AP) ? Family members of four people killed in a grain elevator explosion last year in northeast Kansas are suing employees of Bartlett Grain Co., including its current president Bob Knief, less than five months after federal investigators pinned the blame for the blast on the Kansas City, Mo., company.

The wrongful death lawsuits were filed Monday in Jackson County Circuit Court in Missouri on behalf of Bartlett employees Chad Roberts, 20; Ryan Federinko, 21; Curtis Field, 21; and John Burke, 24. They were killed along with two grain inspectors ? Travis Keil, 34, and Darrek Klahr, 43 ? when the Bartlett elevator exploded Oct. 29, 2011, in Atchison, Kan.

"It hurts as bad today as it did then," Roberts' stepfather, Kevin Bock, said Wednesday. "The feelings don't stop. You learn to work through certain things, but they don't stop."

Bock, whose wife is suing on behalf of Roberts, said he encouraged the other families to also sue Bartlett after the Occupational Safety and Health Administration issued a report in April saying the grain-dust explosion could have been prevented if the elevator's operators had addressed hazards known in the industry.

"Bartlett Grain's disregard for the law led to a catastrophic accident and heartbreaking tragedy for the workers who were injured or killed, their families and the agricultural community," U.S. Labor Secretary Hilda Solis said in April in response to the OSHA report, which sought $406,000 in penalties in addition to citations alleging five willful and eight serious safety violations.

Department of Labor spokesman Scott Allen said the company has contested the citations and fine, and it could take up to a year or more for it to go through the administrative review process.

Bartlett officials have called the OSHA findings flawed and vowed to fight the claims.

When contacted for comment on the lawsuits Wednesday, Bartlett provided the same statement it sent out in April criticizing OSHA's report, though it added a paragraph saying it still believes its employees acted reasonably at all times prior to the explosion.

"While we are just seeing the suit and its allegations, it appears to be based on nothing more or less than the OSHA citations, with which we take total exception and which we therefore, certainly have appealed," the company said.

Ed Dougherty, an attorney for the Bocks and one of the other plaintiffs, said the families of Keil and Klahr have obtained attorneys but aren't involved in the lawsuits filed Monday because the men weren't Bartlett employees and their cases will be handled separately.

The Missouri State Fire Marshal's Office issued a preliminary report in October calling the explosion an accident and saying there was no evidence of criminal activity. The OSHA report, though, came down much harder on the grain company.

Among the willful violations, OSHA alleged Bartlett Grain allowed grain dust, which is nine times as explosive as coal dust, to accumulate and used compressed air to remove dust without first shutting down ignition sources. OSHA defines a willful violation as one committed with intentional knowing or voluntary disregard for the law's requirements or with plain indifference to worker safety and health.

The serious violations, defined as those with a substantial probability of death or serious physical harm, include claims that there was a lack of preventative maintenance and that the housekeeping program was deficient because it didn't prevent grain dust accumulations.

Bock said the company was helpful to the families of the victims, but eventually the stream of communication from Bartlett ran dry. He said he hasn't heard anything from the company since receiving a letter in late June informing families of a memorial the company plans to establish overlooking the Missouri River and the grain elevator in Atchison.

Bock criticized the company for not working with the families on the memorial, noting that the elevator isn't a welcome sight for people who lost loved ones there.

"One thing I can say for the families, especially the three families that live in Atchison, is none of them like the location," Bock said. "They don't want to look over at Bartlett when they see this memorial. They're not going to visit a memorial where they have to look over at that elevator."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-08-29-Grain%20Elevator%20Explosion-Lawsuits/id-3accda06580f4a3ebacc01e2b8f0d5d5

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LG Optimus L9 hands-on (video)

LG Optimus L9 handson

Thought LG didn't have any more to add to the L-Style series to offer the world? Behold the L9. Announced yesterday, the device made an appearance on the IFA show room floor this week, boasting a big and bright 4.7-inch IPS display that makes its brethren look downright shrimpy by comparison. In spite of the display size, the phone feels light, with an 8.9-millimeter profile.

It's important to note here that, in spite of being the king of the L-Series, it's still part of a budget lineup, and as such, the phone's body feels a bit plasticky, and the textured rear had a bit of trouble staying snapped in place in the two models (black and white) that we played with. Specwise, we're talking a 1GHz dual-core processor, 1GB of RAM inside, 4GB of storage (expandable via a microSD slot) and a 2,150mAh battery. The handset's rocking Ice Cream Sandwich (4.0.4, to be precise).

The handset's got a fairly nice bezel, with the front-facing camera on the top and a home button on the bottom, flanked by illuminating back and menu touch buttons. A larger, 5MP camera is located on the rear of the device, above the flash. Vodafone has the handset priced at €50.90 subsidized and €340 unsubsidized. Peep a video of the handset, after the break.

Continue reading LG Optimus L9 hands-on (video)

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LG Optimus L9 hands-on (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 30 Aug 2012 09:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/08/30/lg-optimus-l9-hands-on/

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Promotion For Many Small Business Owners | Web Design Box

Internet Marketing for small business is becoming a popular matter. The newest statistics of the US census reveal that in 2012 around twenty one million businesses were Non-employer Companies, in other words entrepreneurs ? one man or one woman shows. And the other 10 Million businesses had 9 or less workers.

All of these millions of smaller businesses want to expand, however they don?t know where to start with their particular small enterprise marketing. For a lot of these businesses, online marketing is the strategy to use since there isn?t any better method to concentrate on the particular niche and also clients class.

The internet keeps growing over the years and much more customers are buying or want to buy products and services on the internet than ever before.

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To learn more check this website: Small business marketing. This is a WIN-WIN situation for you. You cannot lose!

Source: http://www.webdesignbox.co.za/promotion-for-many-small-business-owners.html

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US Republicans nominate Romney as presidential candidate (reuters)

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Wednesday, August 29, 2012

China, hard times spur vigorous new push to expand Heathrow

Britain's Conservative Party wants to kickstart the economy and provide more routes to China. But Prime Minister Cameron's own coalition partners ? and many environmentalists ? are pushing back.

By Ben Quinn,?Correspondent / August 29, 2012

A British Airways jets arrives over the top of houses to land at Heathrow Airport in west London August 28.

Stefan Wermuth/Reuters

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Back in 2010, environmental activists and west London suburbanites living under the flight path of European?s busiest airport rejoiced when plans to expand Heathrow were blocked by Britain?s new coalition government.

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But as the coalition searches two years later for a way to kickstart a sluggish economy, the push for expansion is back with a vengeance ? with new pressure from within the ranks of the Conservative Party emerging as the latest existential threat to the fragile alliance with their Liberal Democrats partners.

According to campaigners for the controversial construction of a third runway at the airport, Britain is falling behind European rivals in the battle for lucrative routes to China because of constraints on Heathrow?s growth. The case was ratcheted up Wednesday by an aviation umbrella group of Members of Parliament from all main parties that claimed the restrictions were harming Britain?s economic potential.

A senior Conservative politician, who reignited the issue earlier this week with a call for Prime Minister David Cameron to show ?whether he is man or mouse," alleged the problem is so acute that the Chinese government itself is also pressing for more slots at Britain?s flagship airport.

"An immediate go-ahead for a third runway will symbolize the start of a new era, the moment the Cameron government found its sense of mission," Tim Yeo, chairman of the House of Commons energy committee, wrote in the Daily Telegraph.

Mr. Yeo, a former opponent of expansion who now argues that European Union carbon emissions caps will force airlines to use more environmentally friendly planes, said there was no direct links to three Chinese cities with 50 million inhabitants between them, Chongqing, Chengdu, and Wuhan.

Jeremy Clegg, an expert on trade relations with China based at the University of Leeds, said the Chinese-British relationship was full of potential: ?Although it does have some world class manufacturing, Britain doesn?t have the technological lead of a country like Germany, which is much admired by the Chinese because it is precisely the type of industry China wants to get into.

?That said, the Chinese are attracted toward Britain as an easy place to do business in terms such as transparency and rule of law. So if Heathrow expansion was based on the hypothesis of linking up with emerging markets like China, because they are the only growth markets, given the situation in the European Union, then it is probably the most powerful argument for that expansion.??

Yet resistance remains staunch, not least from inside the Tory Party itself. Justine Greening, the Transport secretary, remains adamantly opposed to a third runway at Heathrow, where the flight path runs over her constituency.?However, it is with his Liberal Democrat partners that the greatest potential for friction lies for Mr. Cameron.

Amid reports that Ms. Greening?s position could lead to her departure in a cabinet reshuffle next month to pave the way for a Cameron u-turn, the Liberal Democrat leader, Nick Clegg, flew to her aid Tuesday, vowing that the coalition would ?stick to? its agreed policy of blocking a third runway.

The potential loss of green-oriented voters is one consideration for consideration for Mr .Clegg.As put by John Sauven, executive director of Greenpeace UK:

?Airport expansion would lead to a rise in noise, pollution, community destruction as well as greenhouse gas emissions.?

Clegg, who needs to show that the smaller coalition party isn?t a pushover, also hinted that he may be in the mood for a morale-boosting row with the Tories when he called Tuesday for an ?emergency tax? on Britain?s wealthiest.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/wgko5XUh0rs/China-hard-times-spur-vigorous-new-push-to-expand-Heathrow

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UN chief urges host Iran to address 'serious' rights concerns

TEHRAN, Iran - The U.N. chief jolted his Iranian hosts for a nonaligned nations meeting Wednesday by pointing out "serious concerns" in Tehran's human rights record and urging co-operation with the world body to improve freedoms.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon had signalled he would not shy away from criticism of Iran during his visit to the Nonaligned Movement gathering in Tehran, but the sharp comments appeared to catch Iranian officials off guard just hours after his arrival.

"We have discussed how United Nations can work together with Iran to improve the human rights situation in Iran. We have our serious concerns on the human rights abuses and violations in this country," he told a news conference as he sat next to Iran's Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani, who frowned at the remarks.

Iran's opposition groups had urged Ban to use his appearance in Tehran as a platform to criticize Iran's ruling system over its crackdowns on political dissent, including the house arrests of opposition leaders Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mahdi Karroubi.

While in Tehran, Ban also could raise sensitive issues such as demands by U.N. nuclear inspectors for wider access to various sites, including a military base near Tehran suspected of being a proving ground for explosives experiments that could be used to test nuclear triggers. Iran denies it seeks nuclear arms, but Western nations and allies fear Tehran's uranium enrichment labs are moving close to warhead-grade material.

In Vienna, the U.N.'s nuclear agency has created a special Iran Task Force of nuclear weapons experts, intelligence analysts and other specialists focused on probing Tehran's atomic program, according to an internal document shared with The Associated Press.

Iran is seeking to use the weeklong meeting of the 120-nation Nonaligned Movement to promote its position that its nuclear program is peaceful and its uranium enrichment is within the U.N. treaty rules. The meetings are capped by a two-day summit that begins Thursday.

In advance, Ban also said he will discuss the Syria crisis with Iranian leaders, who remain staunch allies of Bashar Assad's regime. The U.N. chief called Iran a major player capable of mediating in regional conflicts, including Syria's civil war.

"Iran has a very important role to play in helping resolve the Syrian issue, reflecting the will of the Syrian people in a peaceful manner. This is one of the important issues that I'm going to discuss with the Iranian leadership," said Ban.

Ban met Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad later Wednesday, state TV reported.

Iran plans to propose the formation of a three-member nonaligned team, plus two neighbours of Syria, to help resolve the crisis there, Iran's state media quoted prominent lawmaker Alaeddin Boroujerdi as saying.

The proposed troika will include Egypt, Iran and Venezuela plus Iraq and Lebanon. Boroujerdi, who met Assad during a visit to Syria last week, said the Syrian president said he would welcome the Iranian plan.

A senior Iranian official gave details of the plan.

"Iran's proposal ... is a cease-fire and the implementation of a three-month mechanism for national reconciliation talks in this country," the official IRNA news agency quoted Deputy Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian as saying Wednesday.

Anti-regime fighters have dismissed any role for Iran in such a plan. The rebels and some others say it has little hope of succeeding. Also, the United States has rejected Iranian participation in international meetings on the Syrian crisis.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/un-chief-urges-host-iran-address-serious-rights-173018128.html

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Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Quackademic medicine versus cancer quackery: The central dogma ...

Since I seem to be on a roll the last few days discussing cancer quackery, I thought I?d just go with it at least one more day. Frequently, when I get on these rolls laying down the Insolence, both Respectful and not-so-Respectful, over antivaccine quackery I start whining about how I need to change topics, but not this time around, not this topic. It takes a lot more than what I?ve posted lately to make me feel as though I need a change of pace. Besides, for whatever reason, the blog fodder is flying at me fast and furious, whether it be the dubious testimonial I discussed yesterday, yet another deconstruction of the moral bankruptcy that is Stanislaw Burzynski, or my take on the sheer quackery that is ?naturopathic oncology.? The first rule of blogging is that you don?t talk about blogging. Oh, wait. That?s not it. I talk about blogging all the time. The first rule of blogging is: When the world is throwing easy blogging material at you, for cryin? out loud, go for it. Yeah, that?s it.

So I?m going for it.

The blog fodder this time around comes in the form of three articles that appeared in ONCOLOGY: Perspectives on Best Practices, an open-access journal about?well, oncology. All three of them are about cancer quackery. Shockingly, in the first article, by Barrie Cassileth, director of all woo integrative oncology at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, and IIan R. Yarett, actually uses the word ?quackery? in its title: Cancer Quackery: The Persistent Popularity of Useless, Irrational ?Alternative? Treatments. In it, Cassileth provides a rather standard discussion of bogus cancer treatments that almost could have been written by Orac, were it not for the complete and utter lack of snark, even the subtle snark that academics sneak into papers. She does, however, complain that quacks have appropriated the term ?complementary? in order to ?use it incorrectly.? This complaint derives from how many of these cancer quacks don?t actually advocate using their nostrums in addition to conventional therapy but rather in lieu of science-based medicine. Personally, I find this amusing, given that quackademics have no one to blame but themselves for this, given the specific modalities they have tried to ?integrate? with science-based medicine. It rather reminds me of the ?intelligent design? creationists, craving respectability and crowing to high heaven that they aren?t pseudoscientists but real ?scientists,? taking umbrage at being lumped together with fundamentalist creationists who believe that the earth was created 6,000 years ago with all animals in their current forms. No, Cassileth seems to be saying, we don?t associate with that riff-raff. They?re fundamentalist loons. We?re scientists!

I?ll give her some credit for this article, though, and why not? Cassileth lists a fairly standard bunch of quack treatments, the majority of which have been covered on this blog at one time or another, and rips into them. The litany should be familiar: laetrile, shark cartilage, Entelev/Cantron (which I recently discussed, with the comment thread afterward having swollen as of this writing to nearly 1,100 entries), various oxygen therapies (such as hyperbaric oxygen or various means of administering hydrogen peroxide, ?energy therapies,? which Cassileth admits have no evidence to support them. Given that admission, one wonders why reiki, which is a form of ?energy therapy,? is offered at MSKCC. Come to think of it, acupuncture is also a form of ?energy healing? as well, given its claim to be able to manipulate the flow of qi through the body to healing intent, and MSKCC offers acupuncture as well. That doesn?t stop Cassileth from making the dubious claim that acupuncture and other woo have ?been shown to be safe and effective as adjunctive treatments for managing pain, nausea, stress, and many other symptoms, and for supporting patient well-being in general,? whatever ?supporting patient well-being in general? means.

There are other weaknesses. For instance, no mention is made of Gerson therapy, and it is that particular form of quackery, as well as its many variants (such as the Gonzalez protocol and other treatments that loosely fall under the rubric of ?metabolic therapies? and often include such lovely interventions as coffee enemas), that is arguably the cancer quackery most heavily promoted right now; that is, unless high dose vitamin C, which never seems to stay dead no matter how many scientific stakes are driven into its heart, isn?t the most common quackery. One could only wish that, like the vampires on True Blood, such quackeries would explode into a disgusting blob of blood and tissue when the stake of science is driven through their hearts, but sadly this never seems to happen. Her omissions aside, I can?t be too hard on Cassileth. Her article is actually pretty good, by and large, if you can ignore that she is in charge of bringing quackademic medicine into one of the greatest cancer centers in the world. She also makes this statement:

Many alternative approaches to healing are premised on the concept of the mind/body connection, and specifically on the theory that patients can harness the power of their mind to heal their physical ills.[4] Many mind/body techniques, such as meditation and biofeedback, have been shown to reduce stress and promote relaxation, and are effectively and appropriately used as complementary therapies today. However, some proponents of these techniques overpromise, suggesting that emotional stress or other emotional issues can cause diseases like cancer and that correction of these deficiencies through mind-body therapies can effectively treat major illnesses. Such claims are unsupported.

Many of these ideas were promoted by a former Yale surgeon, a popular author who advocated special cancer patient support groups in his books. The importance of a positive attitude was stressed, as was the idea that disease could spring from unmet emotional needs. This belief anguished many cancer patients, who assumed responsibility for getting cancer because of an imperfect emotional status. Among alternative modalities, the mind/body approach has been especially persistent over time, possibly in part because it resonates with the American notion of rugged individualism.[4]

Of course, none of this stops MSKCC from offering ?mind-body? services. I guess it?s OK to Cassileth because she doesn?t promise that such woo will cure the cancer. OK, I?ll stop with the snark (at least the snark directed at Cassileth). She?s basically correct that there is no evidence that these therapies can impact the natural history of cancer and produce a survival benefit, and I give her props for carpet-bombing the quackery that is the German New Medicine.

Cassileth?s article was accompanied by not one, but two, additional commentaries, both of which didn?t take issue with the criticism of specific cancer quackeries, such as Entelev, but rather with her statement above about mind-body ?healing.? Neither of the commentators were happy that Cassileth had questioned the central dogma of alternative medicine, which is what I?ve been discussing the last couple of days. That central dogma is that if you wish for it hard enough your mind can heal you of anything. The corollary of this central dogma is that if you are ill it is your fault for not having the right ?intent,? attitude, and thoughts and therefore not doing the right things and/or not believing hard enough. It?s not for nothing that I have likened alternative medicine to religion or the New Age woo that is The Secret, and these authors simply reinforce that view. First up is radiation oncologist and practitioner of ?integrative oncology? Brian D. Lawenda, MD, who pens Quackery, Placebos, and Other Thoughts: An Integrative Oncologist?s Perspective.

In the first part of his article, Lawenda protests loudly, arguing that ?not all therapies categorized as ?alternative,? ?nonconventional,? or ?unconventional? are completely ineffective.? I suppose it depends on what you mean by ?completely ineffective.? Personally, when I say ?completely ineffective,? I mean ?indistinguishable from placebo.? That?s the usual definition of ?ineffective? in medical circles, and it is a description that applies to the vast majority of ?integrative oncology,? including acupuncture, therapeutic touch, reiki, and the like. In the case of acupuncture, for instance, it doesn?t matter where you stick the needles or even if you stick the needles in at all (a toothpick twirled against the skin will do as well or better). In other words, in the case of acupuncture, the effects are entirely nonspecific. Indeed, Lawenda?s claim that these therapies are being used in an ?evidence-based? manner is almost as overblown as the claims that quacks make; real ?evidence-based? use of the vast majority of these modalities would be not to use them at all. They don?t work. That doesn?t stop Lawenda from advocating placebo medicine. But first he has to remonstrate with Cassileth over her characterization of ?mind-body? medicine:

One area of controversy that comes up often in integrative oncology circles is whether or not there is an association between chronic stress and cancer-specific outcomes. Dr. Cassileth asserts that the association between chronic stress and cancer development, progression, and recurrence has not been definitively established. Those who support this view might categorize as quackery the claim that stress reduction (eg, through lifestyle changes, mind-body therapies, etc) can improve cancer-specific outcomes.

Those who believe that chronic stress and cancer are linked cite data that support this claim. In particular, there are clinical studies[7] that report improvements in cancer-specific outcomes in patients who are taught stress management techniques. Furthermore, researchers continue to identify chronic stress as a causative factor in numerous pathophysiologic processes that are known to be associated with the development, progression, and recurrence of various cancers (eg, stimulation of systemic inflammation and oxidation, impairment of immune function, increases in insulin resistance and weight gain, etc).[8]

Lawenda overstates his case massively. The evidence that improving ?attitude? improves cancer-specific survival is of shockingly low quality. There?s just no ?there? there. As I?ve said before, that?s not to say that psychotherapy and other modalities designed to improve a patient?s mood and mental state might not be useful. Certainly, they can improve quality of life, used in the proper situation. However, there just isn?t any evidence that is even mildly convincing that such modalities can improve a patient?s chances of surviving his cancer.

I also know that Lawenda is laying down pure, grade-A woo when I see him retreating into the favorite alt-med trope, ?absence of evidence is not evidence of absence? and claiming that ?many alternative therapies, once believed by conventional medical practitioners to be merely placebos, have now been shown to have proven therapeutic value (eg, acupuncture, numerous botanical extracts, meditation).? Well, no. Acupuncture has not been convincingly shown to have therapeutic value for any condition, and it?s no surprise that botanical extracts might be effective for some things; they are, after all, drugs. Adulterated drugs with lots of impurities whose potency can vary widely from lot to lot, but drugs nonetheless. He even attacks antidepressants based on more recent evidence suggesting that they might not be as effective as previously thought and in some cases might not be better than placebo, an idea ably countered by James Coyne.

Lawenda?s rebuke, however, is nothing compared to what comes next. Remember Cassileth?s dismissal of the findings of a ?Yale surgeon? who claimed that support groups improved cancer survival? Here comes that Yale surgeon! Yes, indeed. It?s Bernie Siegel, and he?s pissed, proclaiming that The Key to Reducing Quackery Lies in Healing Patients and Treating Their Experience. Of course, his carefully cultivated image of being the ultimate nice guy and caring physician can?t be endangered; I only infer his annoyance from the tone of his response. I also infer a lot from the fact that, unlike Lawenda and Cassileth, who at least include some references taken from the peer-reviewed scientific literature to support their points, Siegel cites exactly one reference, and one reference only, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn?s Cancer Ward. Lawenda cites mostly poor quality studies, but at least he tries by citing studies. Siegel, on the other hand, seems to think he is the Great and Powerful Oz (Dr. Oz or the Wizard of Oz, take your pick) and that you should just take his pronouncements on faith because he is so awesome. I will admit that Siegel probably has a point when he says that better communication could potentially reduce the incidence of cancer patients turning to quackery, but even making this reasonable point he overstates his case when he says that quackery would ?diminish greatly? if doctors would just learn to communicate better. There?s a lot more to the appeal of quackery than having a doctor who can?t communicate, much of which wouldn?t even come close to disappearing, even if every doctor turned into a Bernie Siegel clone with respect to showing incredible empathy to patients.

Siegel then dives right in, relying on the sheer force of that awesome empathy of his to rip Cassileth a new one for daring to criticize his work:

Our emotions govern our internal chemistry, and hope is therapeutic. We know that laughter enhances survival time in cancer patients, while loneliness has a negative effect. When a Yale graduate student did a study on our support group members and it showed increased survival time for the group?s members, his professor told him that couldn?t be true and made him change the control group so that everything came out equal. Doctors don?t study survival and the power of the mind.

Which is, of course, utter nonsense, leavened with more than a little conspiracy mongering. Doctors have been studying the ?power of the mind? and survival for a very long time. What Siegel doesn?t like is that they haven?t found that the mind is nearly as powerful as Siegel would like to believe. It?s a topic I?ve been writing about since the very beginning. There?s a reason for the central dogma of alternative medicine; it?s very appealing to believe that sheer force of will or thinking happy thoughts can heal us of serious diseases. Talk about the ultimate form of ?empowerment?!

Siegel then goes completely off the deep end:

The mind and energy will be therapies of the future. I know of patients who were not irradiated because the therapy machine was being repaired and no radioactive material was reinserted. The radiation therapist told me about it because he was feeling terrible. I told him he didn?t know what he was saying to me. ?You?d have to be an idiot to not know you weren?t treating people for a month?so obviously they had side effects and shrinking tumors, which was why you assumed they were being treated.? He said, ?Oh my God, you?re right.? I couldn?t get him to write an article about it. I also have patients who have no side effects because they get out of the way and let the radiation go to their tumor.

Yes, an unsubstantiated anecdote about an apparently incompetent radiation oncology tech who didn?t notice that his radiation machine wasn?t actually delivering radiation trumps evidence, apparently. (One wonders how the machine still functioned if its source wasn?t re-inserted. Most such machines have a warning light or won?t turn on if the source isn?t properly in place.) Siegel?s article is so full of alt-med tropes and a heaping? helpin? of what can best be described as pure woo. Besides recommending his own books (one of which I actually have on my shelf but have not gotten around to reading), Siegel recommends The Energy Cure: Unraveling the Mystery of Hands-On Healing by William Bengston, The Biology of Belief: Unleashing the Power of Consciousness, Matter & Miracles by Bruce Lipton, and The Psychobiology of Gene Expression by Ernest Rossi. Lipton, as you recall, is a cell biologist who abandoned ?conventional? biology after having some sort of mystical revelation about cells that led him to conclude that God must exist and that ?holistic? therapies work. I hadn?t heard of the other two, but Siegel describes Bengston thusly:

Bengston cured mice of cancer in a controlled study with the energy conducted through his hands. I was healed of an injury in the same way by healer Olga Worral many years ago. We definitely need to test potential therapies to verify whether or not they are useful, but we also have to keep an open mind to what might be possible, and we must understand that we are treating a patient?s experience and not just a disease.

It turns out that Bengston preaches exactly the sort of quackery that Cassileth quite correctly castigated, namely that energy healing can cure cancer! From his own website:

Can energy healing really cure cancer? Is it possible for you to heal someone?s terminal illness with your bare hands? Is the Western medical community ready for a fundamental change in its approach to treatment??Dr. William Bengston invites you to decide by taking a journey with him into the mystery and power of hands-on healing. Drawing on his 30 years of rigorous research, unbelievable results, and mind-bending questions, Bengston challenges us to totally rethink what we believe about our ability to heal.

As there so frequently is after a book advertisement, there are blurbs with people saying how great Bengston?s book is. Guess who gave Bengston a plug. Yes, Bernie Siegel. I must say, I had no idea that Siegel was so deep into woo. Elsewhere in his article he says he had chronic Lyme disease and was helped by homeopathic remedies. He even says that he ?knows they work? because of his ?experience of having the symptoms of the disease alleviated.? It doesn?t get much quackier than energy healing and homeopathy. They are the two most ridiculous quackeries out there, and Bernie Siegel is promoting them both.

Siegel concludes:

I was a pediatric surgeon and a general surgeon, and I know how powerful my words were to the children?and adults?who believed in me. I had no problem deceiving children into health by labeling vitamin pills as medications to prevent nausea and hair loss, or telling them the alcohol (Drug information on alcohol) sponge would numb their skin (and of course, sharing this with their parents, who helped empower their child?s belief). The mind and attitude are powerful healing forces. The mind and body do communicate, so I work with patients? dreams and drawings and have diagnosed illnesses from them. I have yet to meet a physician who was told in medical school that Carl Jung correctly diagnosed a brain tumor by interpreting a patient?s dream.

This may not seem related to the subject of quackery, but it is?because it is about how to train doctors so that they know how to provide hope and potential to patients and how to use the mind and placebo effects. Doctors? ?wordswordswords? can become ?swordswordswords? and kill or cure patients. I know a man who had cancer and needed cataract surgery so he could enjoy the life that remained to him with restored vision. His health plan denied the surgery because they expected him to die within 6 months and didn?t want to spend the money. He died in a week. The Lockerbie Bomber was released by the Scottish authorities because he was dying of cancer. He went back home to the Middle East and survived for over 3 years? and that is no coincidence.

Note the mind-body dualism (?the mind and body do communicate?). Of course they do, because the mind is the brain, and the brain is in constant communication with the body! That doesn?t mean you can think yourself healthy. Remember how I discussed some time ago the way that this increasing emphasis on placebo medicine among promoters of ?integrative medicine.? As I?ve said so many times before, the reason IM fans have taken this position is because they?re finally being forced to accept that high quality evidence shows that most alt-med nostrums rebranded as ?CAM? or ?integrative medicine? produce nonspecific effects no better than placebo. So these nonspecific effects get relabeled as the ?powerful placebo,? as proponents of ?integrating? quackery into real medicine pivot on the proverbial dime and say that?s how their favored therapies worked all along, by firing up placebo effects! It?s pure paternalism, as well, as I have discussed multiple times.

Siegel claims he?s ?unleashing the healing power? in each of us, but what he is really doing is advocating a return to the paternalistic, unquestioned, shaman-healer so common in so many societies in pre-scientific times. In ancient Egypt, physicians were also priests; both functions were one, which made sense given how little effective medicine there was. Praying to the gods for patients to get better was in most cases as good as anything those ancient physicians could do. Also notice how, to Siegel, apparently the end justifies the means. Siegel can deceive patients about vitamins and alcohol sponges because he thinks it?s all for a greater good, really believing that he is so all-powerful a shaman-healer that his words alone can have a huge effect in curing or killing patients. That?s how he appears to be justifying the deception. He needs to get a clue (and some humility) and realize that, although placebo effects are important confounders in clinical trials, it?s a huge stretch to ascribe such awesome power to their effects. What Siegel is describing is magic, not science; religion, not medicine. Thinking does not make it so.

Unfortunately, Cassileth doesn?t seem to realize that, at their core, the ?unconventional? aspects of the ?integrative medicine? that she is promoting are little or no different than what Siegel promotes. In essence, ?integrative medicine? is all about ?integrating? magical thinking into scientific medicine. Acupuncture, ?mind-body? interventions, reiki, and all the various quackademic medicine that has infiltrated medical academia relies on the same ideas, the same magical thinking, that we see on display from Bernie Siegel. Cassileth might think herself so much more rational and ?evidence-based? by attacking the most egregrious cancer quackery, but she?s only fooling herself.

Source: http://scienceblogs.com/insolence/2012/08/22/quackademic-medicine-versus-cancer-quackery/

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Predicting outbreaks of dengue fever according to climate

ScienceDaily (Aug. 22, 2012) ? Dengue fever, transmitted by the Aedes mosquito, affects hundreds of millions of people in around one hundred tropical countries and causes 25 000 deaths per year. In the absence of a vaccine, determining the factors that influence epidemics to predict them better is a real public health challenge. One scientific study, conducted in New Caledonia, demonstrates the essential role of the local climate in epidemic dynamics. IRD researchers and their New Caledonian colleagues(1) analysed epidemiological and climatological data gathered in Noumea over forty years. They highlighted the correlation between specific weather conditions and dengue fever outbreaks.

This work enabled statistical models to be drawn up explaining and predicting viral episodes. The Caledonian public health authorities have already integrated these tools into their decision-making strategies and a similar approach in other South Pacific countries is being developed, with a new collaborative regional programme.

Mainly vectored by the mosquito Aedes aegypti, dengue fever is present in one hundred or so countries in the intertropical zone. It affects one hundred million people, causing more or less severe symptoms such as fever, muscular pain, headaches, digestive disorders and even hemorrhaging, causing 25 000 deaths per year throughout the world. No vaccine or specific treatment exists to this day.

The South Pacific region is regularly the seat of dengue fever epidemics, of increasing frequency and amplitude. In New Caledonia, the last epidemic in 2009 affected 8 400 people. It is the second most affected French overseas territory. Like for other vector-borne diseases, the occurrence or not of epidemic outbreaks is the consequence of complex interactions between humans, the virus and vector mosquitoes, influenced by environmental and climatic factors. Until now, these mechanisms have remained poorly understood.

In Noumea, a reliable system of monitoring of dengue fever cases has existed for forty years. In parallel, daily meteorological measurements have been made since the 1950's. IRD scientists and their partners(1) compared these monthly, quarterly and annual meteorological and epidemiological data over 40 years. The existence of these long series enabled a statistical model to be constructed that shows the essential role of the local climate in the dynamic of epidemics in Noumea. The scientists also accurately identified the meteorological conditions that were decisive in the occurrence of epidemics.

From explanation...

In order to analyse 40 years of data, doctors, entomologists, climatologists, mathematicians and forecasters first studied the seasonal variability in the disease, setting apart epidemic from non-epidemic years. All the outbreaks were similarly distributed, with a start in January, a peak between March and May, and ending in July.

In a second phase, researchers analysed the variability in the appearance of dengue fever epidemics from one year to the next. To do so, an "explanatory" model was developed. For the first time, it revealed that the occurrence of epidemics in the greater Noumea area could be explained by the two variables of temperature and relative humidity. The same scenario has been operating over 40 years. If the temperature exceeds 32?C for more than 12 days in January, February and March -- or during the southern summer -- and humidity exceeds 95 % for less than 12 days in January, a wave of dengue fever occurs. And vice versa: when cooler summer temperatures are combined with wetter weather, an epidemic occurs in almost all cases.

... to forecasts.

Again, thanks to the long series of data, a second "predictive" model was drawn up to anticipate epidemics from one year to the next. This time, it is based on maximum temperature and relative humidity values for the months of October to December in the previous year. These results are crucial. Using the system developed, public health authorities can anticipate orders for mosquito repellent and insecticide, organise vector control, optimise treatment systems, etc.

El Ni?o and dengue fever: no direct link

Larger-scale climate variables such as El Ni?o / La Ni?a influence the local climate. The phenomenon occurs every 3 to 7 years. Contrary to belief, the study did not reveal any statistical link between epidemics and La Ni?a in New Caledonia. These results suggest that the influences of this type of climate variable on dengue fever outbreaks depend on complex geographic specificities.

From an operational point of view, the AeDenPAC programme(2), led by the New Caledonia Pasteur Institute and involving numerous IRD scientists and other partners(3), is under way. It aims at developing similar models and extending research on the entomological level in the South Pacific, in particular in French Polynesia and Fiji. This expansion will gradually feed knowledge of the impact of global warming on the dynamic of dengue fever epidemics in the Pacific.

(1) This work was conducted in partnership with Aix-Marseille University, the Noumea Hospital Centre, the New Caledonia Pasteur Institute, M?t?o France in New Caledonia, the Department of Social and Sanitary Affairs (DASS) and the Secretariat of the South Pacific (SPC).

(2) Climate / mosquito / epidemic modelling

(3) Institut Pasteur NC, IRD, Institut Louis Malard?, Secretariat of the Pacific Community, ministry for Health in Fidji and Tonga, Centre Hospitalier NC, Otago University-NZ.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Institut de Recherche pour le D?veloppement (IRD), via AlphaGalileo.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Elodie Descloux, Morgan Mangeas, Christophe Eug?ne Menkes, Matthieu Lengaigne, Anne Leroy, Temaui Tehei, Laurent Guillaumot, Magali Teurlai, Ann-Claire Gourinat, Justus Benzler, Anne Pfannstiel, Jean-Paul Grangeon, Nicolas Degallier, Xavier De Lamballerie. Climate-Based Models for Understanding and Forecasting Dengue Epidemics. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 2012; 6 (2): e1470 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0001470

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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/6WNOKrShfS0/120822091723.htm

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Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Wall St slips after S&P 500 hits four-year high

NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. stocks fell on Tuesday after the S&P 500 hit its highest level in four years as the benchmark index faced technical resistance and traders cashed in recent gains.

The S&P 500 index hit 1,426.68, its highest intraday rise since May 2008. Volume has been light, as expected in August, and only three of the past 12 sessions have seen moves of 0.25 percent or more by the S&P.

"It's not uncommon that you run into some resistance at new highs," said Jim Paulsen, chief investment officer at Wells Capital Management in Minneapolis.

"Traders sort of play for a while to see which way the market is ultimately going to resolve itself."

Stocks rose early in the session and the euro rallied to a seven-week high against the U.S. dollar, bolstered by talk that the European Central Bank will act to lower Spanish and Italian borrowing costs. Bets on action from central banks in support of their stalling economies have helped move stocks higher.

However, U.S. stocks lost momentum after the first hour as traders took profits.

The slow but steady climb over the past six weeks was partly due to better-than-expected data, including payrolls, retail sales and housing numbers that countered a previous string of disappointments.

"The U.S. economy is showing signs of picking up again," said Wells Capital's Paulsen.

Still, he said major indexes will likely stall until the end of the month. He sees equities "teetering around this high until September, then we decide if the market is indeed making a move higher or if it's going to fail."

The Federal Reserve and ECB hold separate policy meetings next month that could decide whether further stimulus to the U.S. recovery and measures to control the euro zone debt crisis are coming.

The Dow Jones industrial average fell 68.06 points, or 0.51 percent, to 13,203.58. The S&P 500 Index dropped 4.96 points, or 0.35 percent, to 1,413.17. The Nasdaq Composite lost 8.95 points, or 0.29 percent, to 3,067.26.

The CBOE Volatility Index or VIX, Wall Street's fear barometer, was up 7.4 percent at 15.05 after hitting a five-year low of 13.30 last week.

Technology stocks were among the day's underperformers.

Facebook Inc director Peter Thiel sold roughly $400 million worth of shares in the online social networking company last week, cashing out most of his stake. The sale comes as Facebook's stock lost 50 percent of its value since its IPO earlier this year. In Tuesday's session, Facebook shares fell 4.3 percent to $19.16.

Best Buy Co shares slightly pared losses after falling to $16.25 to nine-year low. The company suspended its profit outlook and share buybacks for the year. Shares closed down 1.4 percent at $17.91.

Shares of clothing retailer Urban Outfitters rose 18.2 percent to $36.98 after several brokerages raised their price targets on the stock.

After the closing bell, shares of Dell Inc fell 3.7 percent to $11.88 after the No. 2 U.S. PC maker narrowly missed revenue estimates."

(Reporting by Rodrigo Campos)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/wall-st-pares-gains-p-500-hits-four-170341083--finance.html

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Eexploring Anawaing Cove, Philippines | Easy Travels and Leisure

Anawangin Cove in Zambales, Philippines is a popular destination for camping and beach outings. A perfect location if you just want to get close to the nature or just need a quiet place to unwind and relax. Anawangin offers a lot of adventure activities for a camping travel itinerary.

Anawangin is a crescent-shaped cove lined with pine trees on its shore which gives it a different impression compared to the other tropical beach resorts in the country which are mostly lined with coconut trees. The sand is white and soft with a mixture of volcanic ashes from the last eruption of Mt. Pinatubo. The cove is complimented by the surrounding mountain rocks giving it a picturesque and poster-perfect view especially when the sunset is giving-off an orange glow that reflects to the mountain curves.

How to Get There

Anawangin Cove is located in San Antonio, Zambales, Philippines. You can take public buses from Manila to Iba, Zambales which will consume approximately 6 hours. If you prefer to travel by car, the trip will only take around 4 hours via SCTex. Upon reaching San Antonio, a 10-20 minute tricycle ride is necessary to take you to Pundaquit (a.k.a Pundakit), the jump-off point to Anawangin Cove and the nearby beaches. From Pundaquit to Anawangin, you?ll need to take a 45-minute boat ride.

Best Time to Go

Source: http://easytravelandtours.blogspot.com/2012/08/eexploring-anawaing-cove-philippines.html

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How You Can Make Back Pain A Storage ?

Back pain is quite popular, however not lots of people are unclear how you can treat it. The next post is loaded with info that will assist you learn how to effectively handle your back problems, without taking medicines or paying a lot of dough.

Stay away from heavy weightlifting, excessive process and pointless bending in case you are suffering from back discomfort. It?s not shameful to obtain someone assisting you to raise physical objects and washing about your home. There is not any point in hurting on your own by more by attempting to do too much.

Never try to ignore or ?get by? with back discomfort. A lot of people attempt to dismiss back pain and continue it. They try to walk them back, or ignore it. You could make your pain more serious in the event you shift too much. Take your time up until the pain fades.

A great technique to practice relaxing is to entirely allow your body go limp while laying. Once you are laying downward, select a system aspect or muscles and flex this part and then go on to yet another place. This centered tension and release technique will release stress and unwind the entire system.

Getting ample rest is essential. Invest just as much time since you need resting. Using a pillow for ease and comfort, curl up atop the bed and maybe search some web sites for a bit. Enable your back again plus your brain get some good appropriate pleasure. Get a couple of minutes to extend and chill out. Pay attention to your body?s aches and pains so you will know which kind of therapy your again needs.

Steer clear of using tobacco! Research has revealed that smoking cigarettes increases your likelihood of establishing back problems by 30 percent. Nicotine reduces circulation of blood, which could deplete the vitamins and minerals your spinal column has to be robust, perhaps leading to trauma.

Women that are pregnant have several issues with lower back pain. Women that are pregnant typically create very low back discomfort by inclined in the opposite direction to keep up harmony and centre of gravity due to the additional weight transported in the beginning. Massage treatment can loosen your small muscle tissues.

Again surgical procedures may be suggested from your medical professional so as to relieve your discomfort. Surgery is usually restricted to the tough situations that don?t respond to every other treatment. There are a few circumstances and accidents that will make you may have lower back pain and require you to get surgical treatment.

Make use of a compress as a way to easily ease back discomfort. Covering your rear and cutting your motion will quickly help the process of healing. Don?t place your back also tight.

Avoid stress for those who have back problems, given that tensing muscles can make it a whole lot worse. Make an attempt to loosen up so as to not become worse any irritation you presently sense, which will help prevent muscle tissue spasms. Receive an enough amount of sleep at night and utilize a warming cushion to diminish soreness, relax muscle tissue and improve blood flow to the rear.

Ensure you are resting up right. If you have poor posture you can expect to strain your back when you do not have to! In case your job requires sitting a lot of the time then obtaining a helpful and comfy chair is essential. You should use a training golf ball being a seat if you are searching for increasing your position and retaining your again as solid as you can.

When you read this article, your back again may harm, but you need to know that comfort can take place. This article?s tactics are seen to decrease discomfort inside the back, so utilize them. By implementing these pointers you can successfully control your back discomfort.

If for any reason you would like extra information on seattle massage check out Reuben K. Kleid?s site there is plenty of details not outlined in this article, find those details on Author?s blog to discover more.

Source: http://all-articles-directory.com/how-you-can-make-back-pain-a-storage-2/

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Video: Nike's Lebron James Kicks

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/48742433/

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Analysis: Afghanistan's peace hopes may rest on Taliban captive

KABUL (Reuters) - In the cloistered circles of the Taliban high command, Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar had no equal.

As military chief of the hardline Islamic movement that once ruled Afghanistan and was ousted by a U.S.-led alliance, he oversaw the campaign of ambushes and roadside bombings that proved his fighters could threaten the most advanced armies.

When the talismanic leader was caught in the Pakistani city of Karachi in 2010, some Afghan officials hoped the magnetism he forged in war would persuade his former comrades to start talking peace. Indeed, news that Islamabad had allowed Afghan officials to visit Baradar two months ago sparked speculation in both countries of the prospects for a settlement.

Instead, Pakistan's refusal to hand him over to Afghanistan symbolizes one of the biggest obstacles to negotiations: a legacy of bone-deep suspicion dividing the neighbors.

Afghanistan fears that Pakistan is only pretending to support dialogue while its intelligence agencies harbor Taliban leaders to project influence across their shared frontier.

Any move to repatriate Baradar would raise Afghan hopes that Pakistan is willing to play a genuinely constructive role and open the door to other prominent insurgents.

"Releasing Mullah Baradar would encourage other Taliban leaders to embrace reconciliation," Ismail Qasemyar, an adviser to Afghanistan's High Peace Council, told Reuters. "It would be a huge symbolic step."

Members of the council, who are charged with reaching out to insurgents, aim to visit Islamabad in the next few weeks to make a fresh plea for Pakistan to allow Baradar to return to Kabul as a guest of the Afghan government.

With the United States and its allies due to withdraw the bulk of their combat forces by the end of 2014, pressure is mounting on President Hamid Karzai to start meaningful negotiations with the Taliban and prevent violence spiraling.

But there is no guarantee Pakistan will agree to release Baradar, or that he retains enough influence to play a decisive role.

"We are fully cooperating with Afghanistan in whatever they are asking for the peace process," Pakistan Interior Minister Rehman Malik said in a recent interview.

"For developing peace in Afghanistan, we are giving every kind of help. We have given access."

He did not comment further on the subject.

The Afghan government believes Baradar is more amenable to dialogue than many of his comrades.

In the months before his arrest, Baradar authorized contacts with United Nations representatives to explore the possibility of dialogue, according to former U.N. and Taliban officials.

Afghan officials believe Pakistan detained him as part of a broader strategy to retain a veto over any eventual settlement in Afghanistan.

More cautious voices argue that negotiations will only work if Karzai broadens his strategy of lobbying prominent insurgents to defect into a wider process to address the roots of Afghanistan's conflict.

Pakistan, for its part, will have to radically rethink the terms of its long-standing relationship with the Taliban before it can consider meeting Afghan demands.

HARD WORK

Taliban folklore has it that Baradar was present on the day in 1994 when Mullah Mohammed Omar, the Taliban's leader, launched his campaign to cleanse Afghanistan of rapacious warlords by hanging one particularly loathsome militia chief from the barrel of a tank.

Their friendship bolstered Baradar's stature during the Taliban's march on Kabul and its 1996-2001 reign. The Taliban government collapsed after the United States and its allies attacked Afghanistan for harboring al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, the architect of the Sept 11, 2001 attacks in New York and Washington.

Baradar would later emerge as Mullah Omar's second-in-command, translating spiritual guidance into orders as the Taliban insurgency gathered strength.

Mullah Omar bestowed him with the nom de guerre "Baradar," which means "brother". Although a ruthless fighter, Baradar had a knack for forging compromise, another trait that appeals to mediators.

Baradar was captured in early 2010 in the Pakistani port city of Karachi in a joint operation between Pakistani intelligence officers and the CIA.

Some argue that more than two years in detention have eroded his sway over an evolving insurgency.

The Haqqani network, which has used havens in Pakistan to launch attacks on Kabul, is showing signs of growing independence from the Taliban hierarchy.

And a blistering campaign of U.S. night raids on Taliban commanders has weakened Mullah Omar's chain of command.

What does seem certain is that Baradar's return would give Karzai's outreach more credibility among Pashtuns, the community that dominates southern and eastern Afghanistan, where the insurgency is strongest.

The captive's mystique is burnished by his status as the highest-ranking Taliban commander to hail from the Popalzai, the same Pashtun sub-group as Karzai.

"If Mullah Baradar joins the government, 80 per cent of the problem with the Taliban will be solved," said Haji Obaidullah Barakzai, a lawmaker from Uruzgan, the southern province where Baradar was born.

KABUL'S SUSPICIONS

Baradar's capture after he authorized his followers to contact U.N. officials has sharpened Kabul's suspicions that Pakistan's military is intent on using its leverage over the insurgents to shape any future settlement.

Pakistan's security establishment backed the Taliban's rise in the mid-1990s as part of its policy of sponsoring Islamist militants as proxies in a struggle with nuclear rival India.

Pakistan joined the U.S. war on terror in 2001 and backed the attack on its former allies in power in Kabul, but, at the same time, maintained unofficial links with the Taliban. Many of its fighters are based in the border regions, where Pakistan's own Pashtun community lives.

Some Western diplomats in Islamabad believe Pakistan's generals are reviewing their relationship with their increasingly troublesome assets. Many of their home-grown militant groups have turned on their former masters. An embarrassing raid on an airbase outside Islamabad on Thursday was only the latest display of the threat they pose.

For now, Pakistan has chosen to hedge. The military has made some moves to facilitate dialogue while avoiding irreversible steps that might diminish its sway over the insurgents.

For example, Pakistani intelligence allowed Taliban envoys to travel to Qatar for talks with US officials late last year. Hopes that the discussions would lead to a confidence-building prisoner exchange have, however, yet to materialize.

Some Afghans detected a further shift in February, interpreting a Pakistani pledge to support dialogue as the country's first admission that it had sheltered the Taliban.

That was followed by the decision to allow Afghan officials to meet Baradar in detention.

Repatriating Baradar would require a much bigger leap of faith. Although Pakistan's relations with the Taliban are poisoned by mistrust, the army will be loathe to sacrifice control as long as Afghanistan's future remains uncertain.

"The question is what the Afghan groups who are currently enjoying the patronage of NATO will do after the withdrawal," said a Pakistani official with experience in Afghanistan. "Are the current crop of Afghan leaders simply going to melt away?"

STRATEGY UNDER FIRE

While Afghan officials portray Pakistan as a recalcitrant partner, Karzai's lack of a coherent strategy may be an even bigger problem.

The Afghan government has focused on luring individual Taliban leaders to abandon the insurgency, rather than laying the groundwork for a more comprehensive peace process that might satisfy the country's many constituencies.

"It's not enough just to bring former Taliban commanders to Kabul," said Haji Mangal Hussain, a former adviser to Karzai. "The most important factor for bringing peace is to improve the quality of the Afghan government."

With Karzai due to step down at elections due by 2014, and his administration steeped in allegations of nepotism, warlordism and corruption, many fear he lacks the legitimacy to serve as guarantor for a viable power-sharing deal.

The Taliban's traditional enemies from northern Afghanistan, who wield considerable power in Kabul, fear Karzai may betray them at the negotiating table and doubt Pakistan will ever abandon its insurgent proxies.

The Taliban is also divided. Mullah Omar, in a message for the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Fitr, assured Afghans on Thursday that he was committed to building an all-inclusive government after foreign forces leave.

Doves in the movement, who doubt their fighters can overrun Kabul, want to start talks now to spare Afghanistan the risk of a new civil war. They risk being drowned out by hardened jihadists who argue that the withdrawal of U.S.-led forces will clear the path to victory.

Against this kaleidoscope of competing factions, Karzai's focus on Baradar has a seductive simplicity. Whether he one day serves as a conduit for talks - or merely as a trophy - will depend largely on the maneuverings of generals, politicians and fighters beyond either man's control.

(Additional reporting by Ahmad Nadem in Kandahar and Mirwais Harooni in Kabul; Editing by Michael Georgy and Raju Gopalakrishnan)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/afghanistans-peace-hopes-may-rest-taliban-captive-210406695.html

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Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Detroits Historic And Spiritual Areas ? News and Society - Typepad

Regardless of the town or community you live in or visit during travels, religion is always present. Religion is among the contributing factors that divide folk but also combine them on occasion. During travels, it?s a cool place to start your journey as the feel and ambiance to it is actually unique.

Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Church

This religious landmark is situated on Gratiot Avenue in Detroit. It is currently known as the Presumption Grotto Church, which was designated as a Michigan State Important Site during 1990 and was registered on the National Register of Historical Places in 1991. The Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Church comprises a myriad of structures, including the main church, convent, cemetery, grotto and a service boiler facility.This church is a beautful example of a traditional Catholic Church and if you are interested in religious sites, is a must see.

Cass Avenue Methodist Episcopal Church

Found inside Cass Avenue in Detroit, the Cass Avenue Methodist Church was listed as one of the National Register of Historical Places in 1982 and has been appointed as a Michigan State Historical Site since 1985. The Cass Avenue Methodist Episcopal Church was established in 1880 and was given a complete refresh with the addition of another church on the side of Cass Avenue and Selden in 1883.

Christ Church Chapel

Found in a suburban community in Detroit, Christ Church Chapel is a religious facility that's located on Grosse Pointe Road in Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan. It was allotted as a Michigan State Significant Site in 1992 and has been enrolled on the Nation's Register of Significant Places since 1993. This Neo-Gothic non secular facility is made in a Latin cross configuration with a 50-ft tower at one side.

St. Mary?s Church Complex Historic District

This important district is situated in the junction of Elm Avenue and North Monroe Street in Monroe Town. This consequential non secular place has remained untouched from when it was completed in 1839 till 1903 when it was expanded. The complex consists of four facilities.

Congregation Shaarey Zedek

This spiritual place is classed as a conservative synagogue located on Bell Road, in one of the suburbs of Detroit, named Southfield. The congregation was established in 1861, during which time Jews were fleeing from the Temple Beth El. The facility was a serious part of the Conservative United Synagogue of America in 1913.

Karen Helman has been fascinated by Detroit Religious Landmarks for a number of years. She has written op-eds and editorial pieces for many online publications. For the details about landmarks in Detroit please visit her site.


Tags: Detroit Churches, Detroit Landmarks, Detroit Religious Landmarks, Religious Places

Source: http://newsandsociety.woodriverhall.com/uncategorized/detroits-historic-and-spiritual-areas/

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Source: http://sarnoffstjolanda.typepad.com/blog/2012/08/detroits-historic-and-spiritual-areas-news-and-society.html

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