Monday, December 31, 2012

Hydrogen peroxide vapor enhances hospital disinfection of superbugs

Hydrogen peroxide vapor enhances hospital disinfection of superbugs [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 31-Dec-2012
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Contact: David March
dmarch1@jhmi.edu
410-955-1534
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Johns Hopkins to begin decontaminating isolation rooms with robotic, vapor-dispersing devices

Infection control experts at The Johns Hopkins Hospital have found that a combination of robot-like devices that disperse a bleaching agent into the air and then detoxify the disinfecting chemical are highly effective at killing and preventing the spread of multiple-drug-resistant bacteria, or so-called hospital superbugs.

A study report on the use of hydrogen peroxide vaporizers -- first deployed in several Singapore hospitals during the 2002 outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, and later stocked by several U.S. government agencies in case of an anthrax attack - is to be published Jan. 1 in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases.

In the study, the Johns Hopkins team placed the devices in single hospital rooms after routine cleaning to disperse a thin film of the bleaching hydrogen peroxide across all exposed hospital equipment surfaces, as well as on room floors and walls. Results showed that the enhanced cleaning reduced by 64 percent the number of patients who later became contaminated with any of the most common drug-resistant organisms. Moreover, researchers found that protection from infection was conferred on patients regardless of whether the previous room occupant was infected with drug-resistant bacteria or not.

"Hydrogen peroxide vapor, as spread around patients' rooms by these devices, represents a major technological advance in preventing the spread of dangerous bacteria inside hospitals and, especially, from one patient occupant to the next, even though sick patients were never in the same room at the same time," says infectious disease specialist and study senior investigator Trish Perl, M.D., M.Sc.

Of special note, researchers say, was that enhanced cleaning with the vapor reduced by 80 percent a patient's chances of becoming colonized by a particularly aggressive and hard-to-treat bacterium, vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE).

In what is believed to be the first head-to-head comparison between traditional hand-cleaning and mopping with bleaching agents and robotic vaporizers, researchers routinely tested patients and their surroundings not only for VRE, but also for the more common methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA, and lesser-known bacteria, including Clostridium difficile and Acinetobacter baumannii.

Some 6,350 patient admissions to JHH were closely tracked as part of the two-and-a-half-year analysis, as patients moved into and out of 180 private hospital rooms. Almost half the rooms received enhanced cleaning with hydrogen peroxide vapor in between patients, while the rest did not. Overall, multiple-drug-resistant organisms were found on room surfaces in 21 percent of rooms tested, but mostly in rooms that did not undergo enhanced cleaning.

Perl says that patients bringing in or picking up drug-resistant organisms while undergoing treatment in hospitals is a persistent and growing problem, and previous research has shown that patients who stay in a hospital room previously occupied by an infected patient are at greater risk of becoming infected.

"Our study results are evidence that technological solutions, when combined with standard cleaning, can effectively and systematically decontaminate patients' rooms and augment other behavioral practices, such as strict hospital staff compliance with hand-washing and bathing patients in disinfecting chlorhexidine when they are first admitted to the hospital," says Perl, senior hospital epidemiologist for the Johns Hopkins Health System and a professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

"Our goal is to improve all hospital infection control practices, including cleaning and disinfection, as well as behavioral and environmental practices, to the point where preventing the spread of these multiple-drug-resistant organisms also minimizes the chances of patients becoming infected and improves their chances of recovery," says Perl.

The paired robot-like devices, each about the size of a washing machine and weighing nearly 60 pounds, as well as supplies used in the study, were provided by their manufacturer, Bioquell Inc. of Horsham, Pa.

After the room has been cleaned, the vents are covered and the two devices are placed inside. The sliding door is closed, and the room is sealed. Then, the larger of the two devices disperses hydrogen peroxide into the room, leaving a very tiny, almost invisible layer (only 2 microns to 6 microns in thickness) on all exposed surfaces, including keyboards and monitors, as well as tables and chairs.

Because hydrogen peroxide can be toxic to humans if ingested or corrosive if left on the skin for too long, the second, smaller device is activated to break down the bleach into its component water and oxygen parts. The combined operation takes the devices about an hour and a half to complete.

"What is so exciting about this new method of infection control is that the devices are easy to use and hospital staff embrace it very quickly," says surgeon and study co-investigator Pamela Lipsett, M.D., M.H.P.E. Lipsett, a professor and director of surgical and critical care fellowship training at Johns Hopkins, says that during the study and before room cleanings, staff were "wheeling in" other pieces of equipment so these, too, could be decontaminated by the hydrogen peroxide vapor.

As a result of the study and the researchers' recommendation, JHH has purchased two of the Bioquell decontaminating units, which cost more than $40,000 per pair. The devices, already in use at some 20 other hospitals across the country, will be used at Johns Hopkins to decontaminate rooms typically housing high-risk patients under strict isolation precautions because of severe infection with a multiple-drug-resistant organism.

Researchers say they next plan to study the devices' effectiveness at decontaminating the outside packaging of unused but potentially exposed hospital supplies, which are typically discarded even though their seals remain intact. The research team also wants to coordinate study testing among other hospitals to validate their Johns Hopkins findings. Larger and longer studies may also be planned, to precisely measure and determine how well the devices work against the spread of each hospital superbug. The current study had only sufficient numbers to statistically validate the paired unit's effectiveness against VRE.

###

In addition to Perl and Lipsett, other Johns Hopkins University investigators involved in this study were study lead investigator Catherine Passaretti, M.D.; Nicholas Reich, Ph.D.; Jessica Meyers, M.P.H.; John Shepard, M.B.A.; and Karen Carroll, M.D. Additional study assistance was provided by Jonathan Otter, at Bioquell Inc., and Tracy Ross, at the University of Massachusetts, in Amherst.

For additional information, please go to:
http://cid.oxfordjournals.org/
http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/doctors/results/directory/profile/0008777/Patricia-M-Perl-MD
http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/surgery/faculty/Lipsett
http://www.bioquell.com/products/bioquell-q-10/


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Hydrogen peroxide vapor enhances hospital disinfection of superbugs [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 31-Dec-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: David March
dmarch1@jhmi.edu
410-955-1534
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Johns Hopkins to begin decontaminating isolation rooms with robotic, vapor-dispersing devices

Infection control experts at The Johns Hopkins Hospital have found that a combination of robot-like devices that disperse a bleaching agent into the air and then detoxify the disinfecting chemical are highly effective at killing and preventing the spread of multiple-drug-resistant bacteria, or so-called hospital superbugs.

A study report on the use of hydrogen peroxide vaporizers -- first deployed in several Singapore hospitals during the 2002 outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, and later stocked by several U.S. government agencies in case of an anthrax attack - is to be published Jan. 1 in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases.

In the study, the Johns Hopkins team placed the devices in single hospital rooms after routine cleaning to disperse a thin film of the bleaching hydrogen peroxide across all exposed hospital equipment surfaces, as well as on room floors and walls. Results showed that the enhanced cleaning reduced by 64 percent the number of patients who later became contaminated with any of the most common drug-resistant organisms. Moreover, researchers found that protection from infection was conferred on patients regardless of whether the previous room occupant was infected with drug-resistant bacteria or not.

"Hydrogen peroxide vapor, as spread around patients' rooms by these devices, represents a major technological advance in preventing the spread of dangerous bacteria inside hospitals and, especially, from one patient occupant to the next, even though sick patients were never in the same room at the same time," says infectious disease specialist and study senior investigator Trish Perl, M.D., M.Sc.

Of special note, researchers say, was that enhanced cleaning with the vapor reduced by 80 percent a patient's chances of becoming colonized by a particularly aggressive and hard-to-treat bacterium, vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE).

In what is believed to be the first head-to-head comparison between traditional hand-cleaning and mopping with bleaching agents and robotic vaporizers, researchers routinely tested patients and their surroundings not only for VRE, but also for the more common methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA, and lesser-known bacteria, including Clostridium difficile and Acinetobacter baumannii.

Some 6,350 patient admissions to JHH were closely tracked as part of the two-and-a-half-year analysis, as patients moved into and out of 180 private hospital rooms. Almost half the rooms received enhanced cleaning with hydrogen peroxide vapor in between patients, while the rest did not. Overall, multiple-drug-resistant organisms were found on room surfaces in 21 percent of rooms tested, but mostly in rooms that did not undergo enhanced cleaning.

Perl says that patients bringing in or picking up drug-resistant organisms while undergoing treatment in hospitals is a persistent and growing problem, and previous research has shown that patients who stay in a hospital room previously occupied by an infected patient are at greater risk of becoming infected.

"Our study results are evidence that technological solutions, when combined with standard cleaning, can effectively and systematically decontaminate patients' rooms and augment other behavioral practices, such as strict hospital staff compliance with hand-washing and bathing patients in disinfecting chlorhexidine when they are first admitted to the hospital," says Perl, senior hospital epidemiologist for the Johns Hopkins Health System and a professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

"Our goal is to improve all hospital infection control practices, including cleaning and disinfection, as well as behavioral and environmental practices, to the point where preventing the spread of these multiple-drug-resistant organisms also minimizes the chances of patients becoming infected and improves their chances of recovery," says Perl.

The paired robot-like devices, each about the size of a washing machine and weighing nearly 60 pounds, as well as supplies used in the study, were provided by their manufacturer, Bioquell Inc. of Horsham, Pa.

After the room has been cleaned, the vents are covered and the two devices are placed inside. The sliding door is closed, and the room is sealed. Then, the larger of the two devices disperses hydrogen peroxide into the room, leaving a very tiny, almost invisible layer (only 2 microns to 6 microns in thickness) on all exposed surfaces, including keyboards and monitors, as well as tables and chairs.

Because hydrogen peroxide can be toxic to humans if ingested or corrosive if left on the skin for too long, the second, smaller device is activated to break down the bleach into its component water and oxygen parts. The combined operation takes the devices about an hour and a half to complete.

"What is so exciting about this new method of infection control is that the devices are easy to use and hospital staff embrace it very quickly," says surgeon and study co-investigator Pamela Lipsett, M.D., M.H.P.E. Lipsett, a professor and director of surgical and critical care fellowship training at Johns Hopkins, says that during the study and before room cleanings, staff were "wheeling in" other pieces of equipment so these, too, could be decontaminated by the hydrogen peroxide vapor.

As a result of the study and the researchers' recommendation, JHH has purchased two of the Bioquell decontaminating units, which cost more than $40,000 per pair. The devices, already in use at some 20 other hospitals across the country, will be used at Johns Hopkins to decontaminate rooms typically housing high-risk patients under strict isolation precautions because of severe infection with a multiple-drug-resistant organism.

Researchers say they next plan to study the devices' effectiveness at decontaminating the outside packaging of unused but potentially exposed hospital supplies, which are typically discarded even though their seals remain intact. The research team also wants to coordinate study testing among other hospitals to validate their Johns Hopkins findings. Larger and longer studies may also be planned, to precisely measure and determine how well the devices work against the spread of each hospital superbug. The current study had only sufficient numbers to statistically validate the paired unit's effectiveness against VRE.

###

In addition to Perl and Lipsett, other Johns Hopkins University investigators involved in this study were study lead investigator Catherine Passaretti, M.D.; Nicholas Reich, Ph.D.; Jessica Meyers, M.P.H.; John Shepard, M.B.A.; and Karen Carroll, M.D. Additional study assistance was provided by Jonathan Otter, at Bioquell Inc., and Tracy Ross, at the University of Massachusetts, in Amherst.

For additional information, please go to:
http://cid.oxfordjournals.org/
http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/doctors/results/directory/profile/0008777/Patricia-M-Perl-MD
http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/surgery/faculty/Lipsett
http://www.bioquell.com/products/bioquell-q-10/


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-12/jhm-hpv123112.php

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Charlie Sheen Apologizes for Bar-Opening Homophobic Slur

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Using Car Batteries as an Emergency Welder

Using Car Batteries as an Emergency WelderUsing Car Batteries as an Emergency WelderIf you're ever driving through rough terrain and break an important part such as a drag link or tie rod, you may be stuck until help arrives. If you were unable to summon help you could weld the part together with heavy-gauge jumper cables, two automotive batteries, and a welding rod.

YouTube user engineer775 shows in the video above how to setup an emergency welding rig by connecting two 12v car batteries in series (wiring them into a single 24v battery), connecting one side of a set of jumper cables to the positive and negative terminal not wired in series. The other end of the jumper cables will connect to the welding rod and the other to the metal workpiece. Touch the welding rod to the joint that needs to be connected to weld. You'll also want leather gloves and a welding helmet if you ever do this.

The problem with this technique is that you have no real control over the amperage generated by the batteries. This will vary depending on if you wire 2 batteries (24v) or 3 batteries (36v) together. Keep in mind that we are not endorsing this technique, especially for those who have no welding experience, but if you're stuck in the boonies with no cell phone signal you might like knowing how it can be accomplished. That said, if I were in the habit of going off road alone I'd probably add a couple of welding rods, an extra charged battery, two sets of jumper cables, and a cheap welding helmet to my vehicle emergency kit just in case.

Bug out Tip...Welding using car batteries | YouTube

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/uxgsQkLgE_g/using-car-batteries-as-an-emergency-welder

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How many words to say? The perennial challenge in public speaking

Many speakers can?t work out how many words they can say in the time they?ve got. Whilst there is no substitute for practice, don?t bank on more than 140 words per minute.

An entrepreneur friend of mine was recently on a global trade tour. With a group of his fellow countrymen he was visiting a load of European countries to sell his great new idea. At each event each member of the group was supposed to stand up, give a two minute elevator pitch and sit down. Every single time, one guy would get up and speak for quarter of an hour, dominated the time available and no-one else got a look in. Needless to say he wasn?t the most popular delegate on the trip.

We?ve all been there. A speaker?waffles on for three times as long as anyone anticipates. Sometimes other people miss out on speaking, or they miss their train home. Always it tires the audience.?Over the last few years as an observer of public speaking I?ve seen a lot of speakers overrun. Occasionally a speaker keeps going on?because they like the sound of their own voice. Mostly, it?s borne out of lack of confidence in the speaker themselves.

The greatest fear of any novice public speaker is running out of material. Not having anything to say in front of audience. To be frozen, silent and exposed. As a consequence novice speakers try to pack more into their speeches than they can possibly hope to say in the time available. Experienced speakers do it too, when they?re in front of new audiences that make them nervous.

The answer of course is to plan to say less. But how much less? That?s the tricky part, because it will depend on a wide range of different things, including the density of the content (does the audience have a lot to take in?) and pauses you are inserting for dramatic effect, but here are some helpful tips I?ve picked up along the way.

Since we all?speak at different rates, so there?s no substitute for practice at home.

When performing in front of an audience, I find most speeches take 15% longer than they do with the mirror. That?s a combination of additional pauses for effect, laughter, and allowing the audience to take the content in.

If you don?t have time to practice, years of writing my own speeches and reading other people?s suggests most people can say around 140 words?a minute clearly, so that?s about 1,000 words in a seven minute speech. (Having said that, one of my favourite speaking blogs, six minutes, analysed a series of TED talks by leading figures and found the average speaking rate was 163 words per minute, with a range of 133-188. If you ask me, many of them would have been a lot better if they?d slowed down http://sixminutes.dlugan.com/speaking-rate/)

Finally, remember that when it comes to speaking, your audience are very unlikely to be more engaged with the subject than you are and the more enthusiastic the speaker the more they want to cram in. If you think it is about the right length, it is probably too long. If you think it is too long, it definitely is. No-one ever condemned a speaker with the words ?that presentation was too short?.

Happy speaking!

George

______________________

Working or living in the London Victoria area? Want to know more about becoming a better public speaker? Visit London Corinthians on the 2nd, 4th and 5th Thursdays @ 7.30pm.

Find out more about us on our website:?http://www.londoncorinthians.co.uk/. Like us on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/LondonCorinthians?Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/LonCorTM

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Source: http://londoncorinthians.wordpress.com/2012/12/29/how-many-words-to-say-the-perennial-challenge-in-public-speaking/

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Sunday, December 30, 2012

Don't Miss a Beat: Be Heart Healthy

Valentine?s Day might set your heart aflutter, but the real reason to celebrate hearts in February is because it?s American Heart Month.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in the United States. One in every three deaths is from heart disease and stroke; in other words, 2,200 people die each day from heart conditions.

?If you?re having chest discomfort, rest for a prolonged period of time (15 minutes or more), [and] call 911 for an ambulance,? says George Fehrenbacher, M.D., F.A.C, co-medical director of cardiology with Sutter Roseville Medical Center. ?A heart attack could be occurring. You need to take care of that right away. Time delay can make the difference between living or dying.?

IN THE KNOW

High blood pressure, high cholesterol or a family history of heart problems could mean you?re at risk for a heart attack or other heart problems. ?The term angina reflects the pain a person gets when not enough blood supply gets to the heart,? says Dr. Fehrenbacher, explaining that angina usually occurs after exercise or exertion. ?It can be a discomfort, but not necessarily always a pain, that manifests as chest tightness and can spread to the lower jaw or down both arms.?

MEN VS. WOMEN

While heart disease affects both men and women, the signs can be different. Men frequently have classic symptoms such as pain across the chest, pain in the left arm and sweating. Women, too, can have those symptoms but they can also experience others, including pain across the shoulder blades, nausea, heartburn, pain in both arms, and a decrease in exercise tolerance. ?Women don?t often present with standard angina in the chest,? says Michael Kirchner, M.D., an interventional cardiologist with Mercy Medical Group. ?Sometimes women have shortness of breath or palpitations.?

Women over age 50 and men over age 40 are at an increased risk for heart and vascular problems. ?We?re trying to make people realize this is a disease that begins in childhood and manifests in adulthood,? says Mary Ann Bauman, M.D., national physician spokesperson for the American Heart Association?s (AHA) Go Red For Women movement, who notes that heart disease kills more women than the top three cancers combined.

The AHA?s Impact Goal, to be achieved by 2020, is to improve the cardiovascular health of all Americans by 20 percent, while reducing deaths from cardiovascular diseases and stroke by 20 percent.

LIFESTYLE CHANGES

?The majority of risk factors are changeable or modifiable,? Dr. Kirchner explains. Whether your vices are consuming too much salt, not exercising enough or not checking your cholesterol, you need to reexamine your heart health priorities. ?If you have bad habits, you can really change them,? Dr. Bauman says. ?But the first step is being aware.? That means going to your doctor for regular checkups, knowing your blood pressure and cholesterol readings, and being mindful of a family history of heart problems.

?Prevent heart problems by engaging in a very healthy lifestyle,? says Dr. Fehrenbacher, who suggests eating healthy, exercising and not smoking. ?The majority of young people under [age] 60 that we see at Sutter Roseville who have heart attacks are smokers,? Dr. Fehrenbacher says. Even if it?s tempting to simply take pills to control your blood pressure and cholesterol, you don?t necessarily always need medicine to treat your heart. ?Diet, weight loss and exercise are always the first approach,? Dr. Fehrenbacher says.

GET MOVING

Exercise is essential for heart health. ?Put exercise on your calendar, so that you?ll do it,? Dr. Bauman says. ?Exercise shouldn?t be, ?Will I?? or ?Won?t I?? You just do it.? Dr. Fehrenbacher, who runs every morning before work, agrees that exercise should be a part of your daily routine. ?Set time aside for it like you?d do for anything else,? he says. ?Have it as a part of your life, rather than a task to do.? Exercise by doing what you enjoy, such as running on the treadmill, swimming, rowing, hiking or biking.

?I?d recommend exercising three times a week, if not more, for 45 minutes at a minimum,? says Dr. Fehrenbacher, noting that a workout should include a five-minute warm-up and a five-minute cool down. ?You really need to get your heart rate to a sustained fashion to gain aerobic fitness.? Even if you can?t do long workouts at first, it?s important to get started. ?You don?t have to be perfect,? Dr. Bauman says. ?You just have to be making steps.?

One thing to avoid? ?Heavy weight lifting is not good for the heart,? says Dr. Fehrenbacher, who recommends toning muscles with increased repetitions of lighter weights, rather than heavy weightlifting such as bench pressing.

EAT SMART

?Diet is a very important part of modification of risks,? says Dr. Kirchner, who recommends the DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) diet, which has the same principles of the Mediterranean diet (find out more about the DASH diet at nhlbi.nih.gov/health/health-topics/topics/dash). It?s a lifestyle change?not a one-time diet. ?It?s probably the best validated diet,? he says, noting that patients should eat a diet that?s high in fiber as well as fruits and vegetables, but low in trans and saturated fat. You can even have a glass of wine. ?If you?re a light drinker, there?s less risk,? Dr. Kirchner says. ?One standard serving of alcohol per day for women [and] one or two for men may be cardio protective.?

Stay heart healthy by keeping your weight at a manageable level, reducing salt intake, reading food labels and cutting down on red meat consumption. ?We?re lucky and blessed to [live] in a place where food is grown,? Dr. Kirchner says. ?Go to a farmers? market and buy things cost effectively. Eating more fruits and vegetables will positively affect your risk.? From eating well to exercising often, small steps can yield big health rewards. ?


Satran(c)FamilyHealth&Wellness

Satran(c)FamilyHealth&Wellness-2

A MOTHER?S HEART:?HOW LAURA SATRAN IS GETTING HEART HEALTHY

Imagine being only 40 years old and having chronic chest pain. You?d probably think it was stress or even heartburn?not a major red flag.

?I was teaching,? says Folsom resident Laura Satran. ?I was walking to my classroom and thought I was having a heart attack.? The incident, which started in March 2011, and was followed by 20 to 30 others, prompted Satran to go to her doctor. While she wasn?t overweight, a smoker or aware of any family history of heart disease, she knew something was wrong. The problem? The left coronary artery, also known as the ?widow maker? wasn?t sending blood to her heart. ?When that shuts off, you die,? she says.

The day after her diagnosis, June 8, 2011, Satran had a triple bypass. The procedure took place at the Sutter Heart and Vascular Institute of Sacramento; she was hospitalized for nine days.

?It really came as a surprise,? says Satran, noting she never did have a heart attack but found out from her cardiologist that she had high blood pressure and high cholesterol. ?I?m really thankful,? she says. ?Now that I have educated myself on the issue, I know heart disease is the number one killer of women.?

Since her surgery, Satran has made changes. ?My life is drastically different now,? she says, explaining how she exercises regularly with Pilates and yoga, eats healthier and is taking a ?calmer approach? to life. Every day, she takes aspirin, supplements, and medications for blood pressure and cholesterol. She also meets with her cardiologist and does regular blood work. The former teacher, who is married and a mother to two girls, ages 8 and 11, says her family is living a healthier lifestyle too by exercising more and eating better.

The survivor?s advice for others? ?You need to listen to your body,? she says. ?Heart disease doesn?t discriminate based on age or gender. It could be anybody at any stage in your life.? ?

Article by Kristen Castillo?? Family Health & Wellness Magazine published by?Style Media Group.

Article appears in the January/February 2013 Issue of Family Health & Wellness Magazine.

Subscribe to the Family Health & Wellness?Magazine Blog!

Source: http://familyhw.com/2012/12/dont-miss-a-beat-be-heart-healthy/

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Stomach bug knocks Nadal from Australian Open

BARCELONA, Spain (AP) ? Just when Rafael Nadal had recovered from a knee injury, a stomach virus has delayed his return to tennis by a couple of months.

Nadal announced Friday he will miss next month's Australian Open and probably won't play again until the end of February. The Spaniard said he needs time to recover from the virus that already prevented him from coming back this week at Abu Dhabi.

Nadal has been sidelined since June with a knee injury, which forced him to miss the London Olympics and U.S. Open. He had planned to rejoin the ATP tour at the Qatar Open in Doha next month before the Jan. 14-27 Australian Open, but pulled out of both.

"We just hope he gets better quickly and we see him back on the tour as soon as possible," Australian Open tournament director Craig Tiley said. "Tennis fans across the world have been missing him."

While he is expected to recover from the virus in time for the year's first Grand Slam tournament, Nadal and his team said he wouldn't have the proper preparation for a five-set event.

Nadal stressed that his decision had nothing to do with the tendinitis in his left knee. That injury prompted him to take a break following a second-round loss to then 100th-ranked Lukas Rosol at Wimbledon in June.

"My knee is much better and the rehabilitation process has gone well as predicted by the doctors," Nadal said in a statement from his hometown of Manacor on the island of Mallorca. "But this virus didn't allow me to practice this past week and therefore I am sorry to announce that I will not play in Doha and the Australian Open."

The former No. 1 hopes to return at a tournament in Acapulco, Mexico, starting Feb. 27. He left open the possibility of playing at an earlier tournament if his recovery went well.

"As my team and doctors say, the safest thing to do is to do things well and this virus has delayed my plans of playing these weeks," Nadal said. "I always said that my return to competition will be when I am in the right conditions to play and after all this time away from the courts I'd rather not accelerate the comeback and prefer to do things well."

Nadal's doctor, Angel Ruiz-Cotorro, said in the same statement that the player needed at least a week to recover from the virus. That ruled him out for the Qatar Open, which starts Jan. 2.

Nadal's coach and uncle, Toni Nadal, said going straight to a five-set tournament after being sidelined so long was "not appropriate."

"It is simply not conceivable that his first event is a best-of-five sets event," he said in a statement. "He wouldn't be ready for that."

Nadal's knee injury prevented the 11-time Grand Slam winner from defending his Olympic singles gold medal at last summer's games, where he was supposed to be Spain's flag-bearer in the opening ceremony. He also had to pull out of the U.S. Open and Spain's Davis Cup final against the Czech Republic, which his teammates lost without him.

Nadal, ranked No. 4, won the Australian Open in 2009. Last year, he lost to top-ranked Novak Djokovic in a title match that lasted 5 hours, 53 minutes, the longest recorded Grand Slam final.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/stomach-bug-knocks-nadal-australian-open-153854711--spt.html

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Saturday, December 29, 2012

Rare tornado damages nursery in Watsonville

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NCAA football championship game to remain in Frisco for three more years

The NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision title game will make its home in Frisco for three more years, the NCAA announced recently.

At a press conference for this seasons game, which will take place in the city for the third consecutive year, Damani Leech, NCAA director of championships and alliances, revealed the championship will remain in Frisco until 2016.

Three factors were considered when deciding whether or not to come back to Frisco, Leech said: the atmosphere of the event, the quality of the facility and the experience of the student-athletes participating in the game.

The city of Frisco and Team Frisco have delivered in spades on all three regards, Leech said. For that reason, it gives me great pleasure to announce well be coming back here for the championship game for three more years through the year 2016.

After the announcement, Leech said the decision to keep the game in Frisco was an easy decision given the partnership the NCAAs had with the city and organizing committee.

As we evaluated our criteria on whether to bid [the game] out or renegotiate with Frisco, we decided we really want to stay here, he said. The stadium, for one, is absolutely fantastic. Everything from the quality of the field to the stadiums size which is really appropriate for our game is great. The community is also big reason were bringing the game back, too.

Prior to coming to Frisco in 2011, the FCS title game had spent the previous 13 years in Chattanooga, Tenn. Leech said the majority of FCS programs are based in the eastern United States, which was the only concern the NCAA had about moving the game to Frisco.

When the NCAA changed the layoff from the semifinals to the finals from one week to three weeks, however, the decision to move the game to Frisco was an easy one, Leech said.

Once that structure was changed, we knew it was plenty of time for fans to schedule their travel arrangements, he said.

This years game is projected to have an economic impact of more than $5.9 million on the region, the city announced.

Frisco Mayor Maher Maso said the citys wanted to make the game a long-term arrangement with the NCAA since it first agreed to a deal with the organization four years ago.

After we signed the first agreement, we started talking about what was next, he said. Every step leading to this announcement has been very positive, and the NCAA has been a great partner. The negotiations never ended, and they wont end now we want this to be the home of the [title game] for a very, very long time.

While the games return to Frisco is being celebrated by city officials, Maso said the NCAAs decision will benefit more than just Frisco.

I want to really stress that this is not just about Frisco its a regional thing. If you ask our neighboring cities like Plano, theyll tell you their hotels are full, too, he said. We view this as a regional win; everyone benefits from it. This game means a lot to the Frisco community and our region.

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Source: http://www.friscoenterprise.com/articles/2012/12/29/celina_record/news/525.txt

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Hammocks Trading Company restaurant review, Sandy Springs

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In our Internet-driven age of information saturation, being a critic can be tricky.

To remain completely devoid of preconceptions after reading first-responder blog posts or crowd-sourced reviews often requires conscious effort, which is why I always try to avoid over researching potentially reviewable restaurants. Now more than ever, objectivity is a skill. Walking in the door with inflated expectations is often unfair to the chef, while believing every online nitpicker can make a mediocre meal pleasantly surprising.

When I decided to try Hammocks Trading Company in Sandy Springs, I had no expectations to overcome, knowing nothing about the restaurant or the chef. I knew it was seafood, but that?s it.

I had no idea that executive chef and partner William Sigley spent seven years in Las Vegas working under the likes of Todd English and Wolfgang Puck before moving to Atlanta to lead the kitchens of Aquanox, Aja, and Bone?s. Nor was I

AJC Dining Team member Jon Watson writes about popular eats.

AJC Dining Team member Jon Watson writes about popular eats.

aware that co-owner and front-of-the-house manager Jason Sheetz was once general manager of Twist and area director of other Here 2 Serve restaurants such as Prime and Goldfish. I was a blank slate.

As I first enter the stand-alone building on Roswell Road, however, the snap judgments begin. Wood-paneled walls of white and pastel blue evoke memories of every Gulf Coast beach condo I?ve rented, punctuated by the namesake hammocks scattered across the ceiling. The feel is coastal Carolina beach shack, where a round or two of Jimmy Buffet tunes is moments away from erupting out of a hidden jukebox.

But as we sit for our first pre-meal cocktail, where I expect overly sweet margaritas, instead I find sips of an eye-poppingly delicious Horse?s Neck ($8). I find myself ordering a second round of the crisp bourbon and ginger beer libation, enjoying an acidic kick of the ginger-lime syrup. Following that up with the swarthy El Diablo ($8), a smoky blend of mezcal, lime, creme de cassis and ginger beer, and I?m realizing that there is more to this place than I first suspected.

The cuisine is primarily coastal seafood, with Baja influences, and the heavy focus on small plates makes this a meal great for sharing with friends. A much more casual menu than he?s crafted at previous restaurants, Sigley?s experience in fine dining shines through in finesse and balanced flavors.

Many of the expected standbys make the menu, like honkin? peel and eat shrimp ( $7/half-dozen) and steamed oysters ($7/half-dozen), but few true beach dives offer something as subtle as Sigley?s spicy and sour pickled shrimp atop cornmeal fried green tomato ($6.50).

Credit: Becky Stein

Credit: Becky Stein

Bivalve fans can leave with a full stomach and a pile of half shells, as I didn?t find a single oyster I didn?t enjoy. Like all the seafood I taste here, the freshness is obvious while we slurp down a dozen raw ($13). But the grilled oysters with simple melted compound barbecue butter ($15/dozen) can turn a raw-only enthusiast like myself into a convert.

But while I enjoy our bowl of steamed mussels ($7.50) well enough, I?m left wishing for a more developed white wine and garlic broth than what arrives. The flavors are there but fall a little flat for my liking. Perhaps if the ?grilled bread? was more of a buttery charred sponge of baguette or ciabatta instead of the thin, crunchy wafers that accompany the dish, the under seasoned broth would be less of an issue. The shortcoming of the mussels stand out even more prominently next to Sigley?s wonderfully unrefined but deeply flavorful bowl of chef?s fish soup ($15.50). Each spoonful goes down quickly, with the rich shellfish broth stealing the show.

Some dishes stay true to the Southern coastal cuisine, such as a bowl of thick shrimp and crab gumbo ($6.50), and others blend those flavors with a touch of California. A south coast ceviche, with vinegary hunks of scallop, shrimp and fish, accented with mango, cilantro, red onion and fresh jalapeno, is one part Baja, one part Charleston. And Sigley adds some very successful sophistication to a plate of perfectly cooked, buttery scallops

Credit: Becky Stein

Credit: Becky Stein

atop butternut squash drizzled with black truffle and an apple cider reduction. This remains the biggest crowd pleaser of my visits.

In some ways, Hammocks presents a conundrum. On the surface, you have a casual, reasonably priced seafood kitchen, a place to relax with friends and enjoy the familiar dishes of the Southern coast. But, on the other, Sigley laces his menu with several pleasant surprises, and more than a few mouthfuls that showcase his depth of skill to the point where they almost seem out of place here.

Even in his weakest showings, Sigley?s worst dishes here are pretty decent, with the majority of the menu consistently better than most in its class, peppered with flashes of brilliance. Sure, there are certainly better overall plates of refined seafood to be had in the city if you are looking for splurge, but if it is a laid-back and affordable seafood feast you are after, Hammocks is worth a drive.

HAMMOCKS TRADING COMPANY 7285 Roswell Road, Sandy Springs, 770-395-9592 3stars5 Food: Coastal seafood with California influences Service: Friendly, attentive and engaging Best dishes: Sea scallops, chef?s fish soup, spicy pickled shrimp Vegetarian selections: a few soups and salads, but a pescetarian?s paradise Credit cards: American Express, Discover, Mastercard and Visa Hours: 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Sundays-Mondays, 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays; bar open late Children: welcome, and they offer a $5 kids menu Parking: pretty tight, may spill over into the neighboring lots Reservations: yes Wheelchair access: yes Smoking: no Noise level: medium to loud, particularly with the live music and active bar scene on weekends Patio: yes Takeout: yes

ratings_key_febUSE

Source: http://blogs.ajc.com/food-and-more/2012/12/27/hammocks-trading-company-restaurant-review-sandy-springs/?cxntfid=blogs_food_and_more

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Friday, December 28, 2012

Animal rights group to pay circus $9.3 million in elephant dispute

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A major animal welfare group has agreed to pay $9.3 million to the owners of Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus to settle a lawsuit brought in response to now-dismissed legal claims of mistreated elephants.

The settlement, announced by the parties on Friday, removes the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, from litigation by Ringling Bros. against the Humane Society, the Animal Welfare Institute and a former elephant handler for the circus.

The ASPCA and others originally filed suit in 2000 against Feld Entertainment, producer of the circus, accusing the Virginia-based company of mistreating the Asian elephants that perform in its shows.

The case, which cited the Endangered Species Act, was initially dismissed.

But an appellate court allowed the former elephant handler, Tom Rider, to pursue an individual claim that he was emotionally injured by the company's treatment of its elephants. Rider was responsible for watching over and feeding the elephants while working for the circus as a "barn man" between 1997 and 1999.

Following a trial in 2009, a District of Columbia district court judge ruled in favor of Feld Entertainment, finding that Rider had overstated his love of elephants and was not a sufficiently credible plaintiff for the case to proceed.

The judge declared Rider to be essentially a "paid plaintiff," finding that his only source of income during the previous eight years had been the animal-welfare groups involved in the case and media companies producing reports about it.

Feld Entertainment, in turn, sued the various animal welfare groups and Rider, accusing them of abuse of process, malicious prosecution and violation of federal racketeering laws through unfounded litigation.

ASPCA President Ed Sayres said his group decided it was in its best interest to settle the dispute and that the agreement was not an admission of wrongdoing.

"We are glad to put this matter behind us so we can focus most effectively on our life-saving work, preventing cruelty and improving the welfare of animals," he said in a statement, noting that the courts never ruled on "the merits of the elephant abuse allegations."

Kenneth Feld, chairman of Feld Entertainment, which says its shows are seen by 30 million people a year, called the original litigation an attempt to destroy a family-owned business.

"Animal activists have been attacking our family, our company, and our employees for decades because they oppose animals in circuses," he said in a statement. "This settlement is a vindication ... for the dedicated men and women who spend their lives working and caring for all the animals with Ringling Bros."

The circus currently has 45 elephants, most of which were born in captivity, and has met or exceeded legal requirements regarding the animals' welfare, company spokesman Steve Payne said.

(Writing and reporting by Jonathan Allen; Editing by Steve Gorman and Bill Trott)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/animal-rights-group-pay-circus-9-3-million-013231394.html

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Stamped Concrete Can Improve Your Homes Curb Appeal | The ...

Improving the look and beauty of your home does not mean that you have to use inferior or expensive materials. In fact, one of the most inexpensive, yet durable building material is stamped concrete. Concrete is well known for being versatile, durable and inexpensive. Plus, it can also be stamped with attractive designs to make it one of the most decorative building materials as well.

Stamped concrete is perfect for decks, patios and flooring both in and outside the home. Here are just a few reasons why you should choose stamped concrete over other common building materials to help improve the look of your house.decorative concrete

Stability

Wooden decks are strong, but concrete is much stronger, allowing it to handle heavy weights such as hot tubs with ease. Unlike wooden decks which can splinter and get hot under sunlight, stamped concrete decks will stay cool and never harm your bare feet. Plus, stamped concrete does not get slippery when wet either.

Maintenance

One of the best reasons to choose stamped concrete is its durability and low maintenance. Wooden decks last roughly fifteen years if you maintain it on a regular basis. That means annual waterproofing and frequent checks of the supporting structure to insure it is not sagging. Plus, insects are very attracted to wood which makes them highly vulnerable to ants, certain variety of bees and most damaging of all, termites.

With stamped concrete decks all you need is the occasional water sealant application every few years and that is it. Insects do not care for concrete at all, plus all you need to do is sweep it occasionally to keep it clean of dirt and debris or you can use the water hose after it has been sealed for a more thorough cleaning effort.

Versatility

Concrete is a very malleable material as well, meaning it is perfect for stamping attractive designs as well as being used in a number of ways around the home. Here are just a few ways that people use stamped concrete both in and outside their home.

-?????? Decks

-?????? Sidewalks

-?????? Driveways

-?????? Patios

-?????? Wrap Around Porches and more

Having attractive designs stamped into concrete can improve the look of your home as well as add your own sense of style. There are literally thousands of designs to choose from which means you can add your own personal touch to common areas around your home. From short walkways to large pool decks and patios, stamped concrete can reflect your own personal taste that runs through how you decorate your own home. Tying together both the inside and outside of your residence.

Price

Concrete is one of the least expensive building materials, being made from common rocks and used for thousands of years in all types of structures. Compared to wood for example, concrete is not only less expensive, it will last for generations with little maintenance.

All in all, if you are thinking about adding a new deck, walkway, wrap around porch or other type of flooring. Then you want to consider stamped concrete as your material of choice.

Decorative Cement Colorado Springs

Decorative Cement Colorado Springs

About the Author: Flat and Fancy, Inc. creates decorative concrete in Colorado Springs, Castle Rock, and the surrounding areas in Colorado. To learn more about stamped and decorative Colorado Springs concrete visit the website.

Comments

Source: http://www.theupperdeck.com/stamped-concrete/

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Thursday, December 27, 2012

Ben Affleck: NOT Running For Office

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/12/ben-affleck-not-running-for-office/

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Neiman\'s Blog ? Secular research proves that Gay Marriage/Family ...

neiman?????December 27, 2012

Considering so many western countries are moving rapidly to force Gay Marriage on their citizens, despite much opposition, it is interesting that the liberal leaders ignore the independent data and only subscribe to biased, pro-gay, liberal data and then insist it is a matter of equality. They insist gays have an equal right to marriage, even though they are not in any shape, manner or form qualified for such a role.

It is well known that gay families are in all ways deviant, their children by large percentages live a perverse lifestyle, more often than in other families, choosing homosexuality. They are living in families wherein sexual deviants are often present, besides their gay family members. The children are not growing up with two-parent, male-female role models and cannot relate to such relationships, causing them much harm.

Well, gay marriage will not be stopped, it is an institution the Devil uses to destroy marriage and family and undermine societies, especially in attacking the Christian Church, forcing them into silence that evil may reign on earth. Not one liberal will examine the scientific studies about the harm of homosexuality and gay marriage, as they are closed minded ? Christ must be defeated and that war is fought in the family, destroy the family and you destroy the Church.

Equal Marriage is ?fundamentally flawed? says new in-depth study

A new study of extensive world-wide research published today concludes that government plans to introduce same sex marriage (SSM) legislation in the near future are based on false premises and a deeply flawed understanding of both conventional marriage and gay relationships.

?The long-term impact of such legislation on our children?s up-bringing, on our health and welfare and on our liberties enshrined in law has not been acknowledged by SSM proponents,? says author R S Harris, ?nor in its rush has the government encouraged proper debate around these vital issues.?

?Our report is unashamedly academic and educational,? said AM?s Chris Sugden, ?but it is full of hard-hitting facts and evidence against gay marriage that SSM proponents dare not face and try to avoid.?

The report concludes:

* The concept of ?equal marriage? is fundamentally flawed as it presupposes a questionable notion of ?equality? and ignores the essential and defining components of conventional marriage.

* Gay marriage falsely judges parenting roles as interchangeable.

* Same-sex marriage wrongly assumes that the benefits of marriage are automatically transferable to same-sex couples who ?enter? the same institution.

* There is no evidence that same-sex couples will benefit from the ?commitment device? invoked by marriage.

* Gay marriage introduces a disturbing, unproven and socially risky new norm into society, that children do not need both a mother and father for optimal development, when all the evidence points the other way.

* Same-sex parenting studies are fundamentally flawed in their sample size and methodology when measured against commonly accepted social science standards.

* When same-sex couples create children through IVF, it is a grave injustice to the rights of children, as they are unable to know and be cared for by one or both of their natural parents.

* In jurisdictions where same-sex marriage is already legal, this holds the status of legal fiction.

* If ?love and commitment? are the sole criteria for marriage then alarming consequences ensue, such as the validation of incestuous relationships, as well as recognition of polygamous, polyamorous relationships, as has already begun to occur in countries with SSM.

* Fear of causing offence makes society tread silently around disturbing medical data from both the UK and the US that, like smoking, homosexual activity is intrinsically unhealthy. For instance unlike the vaginal lining, the rectal lining is unable to withstand penetrative activity without medical damage. The active promotion of a gay lifestyle in schools that SSM marriage inevitably entails is medically harmful for our children, especially boys, and costly to the health service.

* Dissent from the new government-promoted orthodoxy regarding family life, sexual ethics and marriage is now treated with the same uncompromising intolerance that the US Senate McCarthy Committee once treated those suspected of supporting communism.

The report ?Is there a Case for Same-Sex Marriage?? is available in hard copy from TLB Direct, PO Box 3837, Swindon, SN6 9DS, telephone 01793 861040, info@vfjuk.org. As an e-book it will be available for purchase from Wednesday 12th December.

Available from Amazon download here http://www.amazon.co.uk/Same-Sex-Questions-Eligibility-Consequences-ebook/dp /B00AMPHMGS

Source: http://neiman.sayanythingblog.com/2012/12/27/secular-research-proves-that-gay-marriagefamily-are-not-equal-to-heterosexual-marriage-and-is-harmful-to-childrensociety/

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Iraq Sunni rallies gather steam

RAMADI, Iraq (Reuters) - Thousands of protesters from Iraq's Sunni Muslim minority kept up a week-old blockade on a key highway on Thursday and readied mass rallies for Friday to demand concessions from Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki.

Protests flared last week after troops loyal to Maliki, who is from the Shi'ite majority, detained bodyguards of his finance minister, a Sunni. Many Sunnis, whose community dominated Iraq until the fall of Saddam Hussein, accuse Maliki of refusing to share power and of favoring Shi'ite, non-Arab neighbor Iran.

A year after U.S. troops left, sectarian friction, as well as tension over land and oil between Arabs and ethnic Kurds, threaten renewed unrest and are hampering efforts to repair the damage of years of violence and exploit Iraq's energy riches.

"The people want to bring down the regime," chanted some of about 2,000 demonstrators in the Sunni city of Ramadi - an echo of those used abroad during last year's "Arab Spring" and still a rallying cry for mainly Sunni rebels in neighboring Syria.

Some flew the old Iraqi flag, introduced by Saddam's Baath party and bearing three stars. It was replaced in 2008. Earlier in the week, Syria's rebel flag was also flown at the protests.

The main highway at Ramadi, 100 km (60 miles) west of Baghdad, was barricaded for a fifth day, disrupting transit of government supplies along a key trade route to and from Jordan and Syria. Protesters were, however, letting most trucks, carrying private goods, pass along another road through Ramadi.

There was also a small protest in the northern city of Mosul. Activists, who want changes to laws on terrorism that they say penalize Sunnis, plan bigger rallies on Friday, the traditional day of rest - and protest - in the Muslim world.

"If the government does not deal seriously with the people's demands, we will take our battle to the gates of Baghdad," said Sheikh Ali Hatem Sulaiman, head of the Dulaimi tribe, which dominates Ramadi and the sprawling desert province of Anbar.

Recalling the role the Anbar tribes played in first fighting the U.S. occupation and then allying with U.S. forces and the Baghdad government to contain al Qaeda fighters in the region, the sheikh warned Maliki's administration that Sunnis might resort to violence - though it is unclear how ready they are:

"Just as we fought al-Qaeda and the Americans, we will fight the government inside Baghdad," he said.

Should Friday's protests provide a mass show of force, it may add to concerns that the increasingly sectarian Syrian civil war, where majority Sunnis are battling a ruler backed by Iran, will push Iraq back to the Sunni-Shi'ite slaughter of 2005-07.

Al Qaeda fighters appear to be regrouping in Anbar and to be joining rebel ranks across the border in Syria.

While demands so far focus on the anti-terrorism laws which Sunnis say are being used against them, one lecturer in law at Baghdad University said Sunnis might be emboldened to call for regional autonomy in Anbar and other provinces in the northwest where they are in a majority - a status similar to that of the Kurds, who won Western-backed autonomy from Saddam in 1991.

"I'm seeing greater determination to defy Maliki and if their demands are not met, the call to have their own region will be an inevitable consequence," said Ahmed Younis. "The Kurdish region could become a model for Sunnis in Anbar."

SECTARIAN SLANT

Sunni complaints against Maliki grew louder a week ago when, just hours after Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd seen as a steadying influence, was flown abroad for medical care, troops arrested bodyguards for Finance Minister Rafaie al-Esawi.

For many it recalled how Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi, a Sunni, was forced to flee into exile a year ago, just when U.S. troops had withdrawn. Hashemi, sentenced to death in absentia, told al-Hayat newspaper on Thursday that it was "fresh evidence of a plot to exclude Sunni Arabs from the political process".

Maliki has sought to divide his rivals and strengthen alliances in Iraq's complex political landscape before provincial elections next year and a parliamentary vote in 2014.

A face-off between the Iraqi army and Kurdish forces over disputed oilfields in the north has been seen as a possible way of rallying Sunni Arab support behind the prime minister.

Shi'ite rivals to Maliki, notably cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, have also looked to broader alliance, notably by voicing support for the protesters' grievances in Anbar this week.

But anti-Shi'ite rhetoric among them limits the chances for cooperation: "They lost a lot of sympathy by using these sectarian slogans," lawmaker Hakim al-Zamili, a Sadr ally, told Reuters. "I don't expect many Maliki opponents to join them".

An analyst at the Iraq Institute for Strategic Studies also doubted the protests would broaden greatly to threaten Maliki: "We are talking about demands that have a certain geography," said Yahya Qubaisi. "They are not national demands."

(Additional reporting by Raheem Salman and Ahmed Rasheed in Baghdad; Writing by Isabel Coles; Editing by Alastair Macdonald)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/iraq-sunni-rallies-gather-steam-192458773.html

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Grounded Kingfisher lacks funding plan -India minister

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Grounded Indian carrier Kingfisher Airlines has failed to present regulators with a clear funding plan under a proposal to get it flying again, the country's aviation minister said on Wednesday.

The airline, owned by liquor tycoon Vijay Mallya and suspended in October over unpaid debts and salaries, submitted a plan on Monday to the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) to resume a limited service.

According to local media reports, Kingfisher's parent company, UB Group, offered to inject 6.5 billion rupees ($118.3 million) into the carrier - a key condition for getting it airborne again.

But Aviation Minister Ajit Singh told reporters on Wednesday that UB "did not say they are going to give anything" to Kingfisher, which has estimated debts of $2.5 billion.

He did not specify if the proposal, to resume operations with five planes, had been rejected. But he noted that the airline owed money to banks, staff, airports, and tax authorities.

All those stakeholders needed to be convinced the relaunch plan was viable before the DGCA allowed the airline to fly again, Singh said.

Kingfisher, which has been trying unsuccessfully to raise fresh cash for more than a year, is hoping to tap Etihad Airways as an investor.

The Gulf carrier, which is seeking to widen operations in India and other Asian markets, is in the final stages of talks to buy part of either Kingfisher or Indian rival Jet Airways , an Indian government official said last week.

Last month, Diageo Plc bought a majority stake in United Spirits , also a UB Group company, for $2.1 billion. UB did not specify if part of that money would be injected into Kingfisher.

Kingfisher shares erased intraday gains of as much as 3.8 percent on Wednesday to end flat on the day.

($1 = 54.9650 Indian rupees)

(Reporting by Anurag Kotoky; Editing by Rafael Nam, John Stonestreet)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/grounded-kingfisher-lacks-funding-plan-india-minister-114152919--sector.html

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Faced with gun-toting drug smugglers, Arizona ranchers demand security at the border

Wave after wave of Mexican drug and immigrant smugglers are crossing into the U.S., passing through the Arizona border where nearby ranchers say they feel unprotected by their own government. NBC's Mark Potter reports.

By Mark Potter, NBC News correspondent

ARIVACA, Ariz. --? Just before nightfall, 73-year-old rancher Jim Chilton hikes quickly up and down the hills on his rugged cattle-grazing land south of Tucson, escorting two U.S. Border Patrol agents.??

Watch the story tonight, Dec. 26, on "NBC Nightly News"

He wants to show them the disturbing discovery he made earlier in the day: a drug-smugglers' camp on his private property.? Stacked together under a stand of trees are blankets, jackets, food, water, binoculars and bales of marijuana from Mexico wrapped in burlap. The smugglers, themselves, are nowhere in sight and are believed to have fled the area, which is about 10 miles north of the Mexican border.

Rancher Jim Chilton shows what's left of a drug smugglers camp on his ranch.

"The druggers outrageously use my land at will," said Chilton, who frequently finds evidence of smugglers on his land -- well-worn trails, cut fences, discarded water bottles, clothing and shoes. His home has been burglarized twice and he is constantly on the lookout for armed smuggling groups while he and his employees round up cows on his remote land.

"Can you imagine riding your horse through here on your own land and running into a guy with an AK-47 and 20 or 30 guys behind him dressed in camouflage and carrying drugs?," he asked.

Hidden cameras in southern Arizona captured footage of armed drug smugglers in 2012.

Like living ?in a no-man?s land?

The land where Chilton raises his cattle covers 50,000 acres south of the small town of Arivaca, Ariz.? About five miles of his property runs along the international border, where all that separates Mexico from the United States in most areas there is a four-strand barbed-wire fence. Chilton owns some of the land outright, but leases most it from the state and federal governments for cattle grazing.

Mark Potter / NBC News

Ranchers Jim and Sue Chilton in Arivaca, Ariz., say drug smugglers use their land frequently, and their home has been burglarized twice.

He and his wife, Sue Chilton, complain they feel caught in the middle between the Mexican drug and immigrant smugglers and the United States Border Patrol, which the Chiltons and other ranchers accuse of concentrating most of its patrols and checkpoints miles north of the border, far beyond where the ranchers live and work.

"It's like living in a no-man's land. The Border Patrol doesn't really protect us, they try to arrest people north of us," said Chilton.? "I think the druggers should be stopped at the United States border. They shouldn't be allowed into this country. The Border Patrol should secure the border at the border."

Ranchers Jim and Sue Chilton live on the U.S.-Mexico border where drug smugglers constantly walk across their property.

Jeffrey Self, who heads the U.S. Customs and Border Protection joint field command in Arizona, said it is not fair to characterize the area as a "no-man's land."? He conceded, though, that Arizona ranchers are correct when they report Mexican drug and immigrant smugglers crossing their land.

"Yes, there is traffic out on those ranch lands. Communities continue to be impacted to a certain extent,? he said.? ?But you can't discount the fact that gains have been made over the course of the last few years.?

Jeffrey Self, head of the U.S. Customs and Border Protection joint field command in Arizona, says a lot of gains have been made at border protection, but acknowledges more is needed.

With 5,500 Border Patrol agents assigned to Arizona, double the amount stationed there in 2004, Self argued that much more territory is being patrolled now than in the past.? And he said daily surveillance flights and advances in camera and sensor technology have also helped dramatically reduce the number of illegal border crossings.?

"If you look back to 2000?there were 610,000 aliens arrested in Arizona,? Self said.? ?Just look at last year, we came in at 119,000."?

Over the past decade, however, there has been a dramatic rise in the amount of illegal drugs smuggled from Mexico into Arizona.? The Border Patrol there seized about one million pounds of marijuana during each of the last several years -- about four times the amount seized in 2000. Other illicit drugs, such as heroin and meth, are also entering Arizona in greater quantities than ever before.

?He came out screaming?

For neighboring rancher David Beckham the problem is even more severe.? Earlier this year he made the painful decision to move himself, his wife and three boys away from their ranch, which sits about 12 miles north of the Mexican border.

Arizona rancher David Beckham says drug smugglers crossing his land forced him to move his family.

"It's not safe, it?s not safe for my kids," he said.? The Beckhams have had numerous run-ins on their land with Mexican smugglers.

Their cattle fences are frequently cut and paths heading north from Mexico cross their property.? Beckham says a smuggler even fired shots at him while he walked his land with a U.S. Border Patrol agent.? Several illegal border crossers have also approached his house at night--one even reaching his hand into their bathroom window.

"Several years ago, one of my children was taking a shower and had a gentleman reach into the shower while he was in there, and he came out screaming, absolutely refusing to take a shower for the next couple months."

The Beckhams, like the Chiltons, scoff at the Obama administration?s claims the U.S.-Mexican border is safer than ever.?

"It's a joke, they can believe what they want. They can live in candy land," said Beckham. "You can't have a safe and secure country without a safe and secure border, and we don't have it. We don't."

Sue Chilton says she believes a U.S. government decision to not to heavily patrol right along the border is, in effect, creating a free-access zone for Mexican smugglers.

"We have, without any reason or logic to it, decided to cede as much as 15 or 20 miles of the United States to the cartels, and we live in that section that has been ceded," she said.? "They have lookouts in the mountains within a mile of our house."

Several advocacy groups concerned about border security have placed motion-activated hidden cameras near the Chilton's ranch and elsewhere in southern Arizona.? Their videos, many of them shot recently, confirm the ranchers' complaints, revealing wave after wave of drug and immigrant smuggling groups, sometimes heavily armed, crossing U.S. land miles north of the Mexican border.?

"First, it's a threat to our life," said Chilton. "Second, it's a threat to our livelihood."

Border Patrol: agents more thorough than ever

As to the complaint the Border Patrol places most of its patrols and checkpoints miles north of the border fence, Jeffrey Self of the Customs and Border Protection?s joint field command in Arizona said agents are assigned where they will be most effective in apprehending smugglers and illegal immigrants.?

"I would get less out of putting those agents on the line than having them operate those checkpoints," He said.??

Still, many agents do patrol the border fence, he said, and are "in and around those ranchers every day, 365 days a year."? Serious problems stemming from distance and budgets, however, do hamper some daily Border Patrol operations.? Agents stationed in Tucson have to drive as many as two hours a day just to reach parts of the remote and rugged border.? And a spokesperson confirmed that a Border Patrol FOB (Forward Operating Base), built west of the Chilton ranch, is currently unmanned because there isn't enough money to pay agents' overtime fees. The FOB was built to house agents day and night right at the border near Sasabe, Ariz., and to reduce the current drive times.??

Nevertheless, Self said, his agents are doing a better, more thorough job than ever.?

"Is there still traffic coming across [ranchers?] property?? Absolutely.? Do we want them to feel safe in their homes?? Absolutely.? We're going to work toward that effort."

Drug smugglers move through Arizona in this footage captured by hidden cameras in 2012.

Ranchers describe smugglers as ?desperate?

The Chiltons, Beckhams and other ranchers in southern Arizona give high marks to the Border Patrol agents, themselves, respecting the dangerous work they do and appreciating their willingness to help property owners in need.?

The complaint they have is with where those agents are assigned.? The ranchers also believe, as do many of the agents, themselves, that smugglers crossing the border now are more heavily armed and confrontational than in years past.

"They seem to be a lot more desperate.? The people coming across now are different, they are not friendly," said Beckham.

Surveying her ranchland, Sue Chilton described what happens when smugglers walk close to their house at night:? "We turn out the lights, Jim gets his guns and we sit somewhere in the dark in the middle of the house where we are not close to our window and wait for the action to be finished."

Her husband, Jim, who comes from several generations of ranchers, said he has never seen the border as dangerous as it is now.

"It's outrageous. I'm a citizen of the United States.? I expect to be protected like everybody else," he said.? "The border is not secure, it is worse than it's ever been."

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Source: http://dailynightly.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/12/26/16047580-faced-with-gun-toting-drug-smugglers-arizona-ranchers-demand-security-at-the-border?lite

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Pennsylvania State Buildings To Close Due To Inclement Weather

HARRISBURG, Pa. (CBS) ? The Office of Administration has announced that non-essential employees should leave work two hours early due to the weather.

Officials say that non-essential workers under the governor?s jurisdiction who work in the Philadelphia State Office Buildings, Harrisburg area, Capital Complex, Pittsburgh, Reading and Scranton are to leave; other non-essential employees with receive instructions from their agencies.

Essential employees will continue to work as scheduled.

Source: http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2012/12/26/pennsylvania-state-buildings-closed-due-to-inclement-weather/

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