Monday, October 29, 2012

Japan PM signals election can wait, defies opposition

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan's Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda made clear on Monday he was in no rush to go to the polls, speaking of the risk of a "political vacuum" in a speech likely to anger an opposition that has urged him to keep a promise to call an election soon.

The ruling Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) swept to power in 2009 and holds a slim majority in the powerful lower house of parliament, but the opposition's domination of the upper house has it allowed it to block crucial budget deficit funding legislation.

The opposition Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) is using the issue to press Noda into calling an early election, at a time when opinion polls show Noda is likely to lose any vote.

But the prime minister showed no sign of being cowed when he delivered a policy speech at the opening of an extra parliament session called primarily to pass a bill needed to fund a 38.3 trillion yen ($474 billion) deficit.

"In order to fulfill my responsibility for tomorrow, I cannot abandon jobs halfway to their completion," Noda told the lower house. "We shouldn't create at will a political vacuum that would cause policies to stall."

Speaking on the eve of a review of monetary policy by the Bank of Japan, Noda also vowed to work with the central bank more closely to support the economy, using terms employed in the past to pressure the central bank into easing policy.

Noda's cabinet approved a $5.3 billion fiscal stimulus plan last week that economists said was too small to have much impact, and piled more pressure on the BOJ, which is expected to boost monetary stimulus steps at Tuesday's meeting.

Unless Noda wins opposition backing for the funding bill Japan's government could run out of money by the end of November, but there were scant signs that the opposition was ready to cooperate.

Noda had promised in August to call an election "soon" in order to secure opposition votes for another key piece of legislation - his signature sales tax increase plan designed to shore up state finances saddled by swelling social security costs.

But he has been coy on exactly when he will call the election for the lower house, which must be held by August next year.

Analysts believe he is unlikely to do so in the near future given his party's poor ratings in opinion polls.

"Noda wants to delay the day of reckoning as long as possible," said political commentator Harumi Arima. "Who would call an election now knowing that over 100 parliament seats would be lost, putting the party on the brink of collapse?"

Noda will wait until next summer to hold general elections together with upper house polls due in July, Arima added.

BRINKMANSHIP

In a sign of the opposition's deepening frustration, the upper house, which it controls, has refused to hold a session on Noda's speech following a non-binding censure motion against him passed by the chamber in the last parliament session.

The current session is due to last until November 30, and if the deficit funding bill is not passed by then the government could be pushed over a "fiscal cliff", and forced into draconian spending cuts and push the economy back into recession.

That prospect has drawn close scrutiny from ratings agencies Moody's Investors Service and Standard & Poor's.

The brinkmanship over the bond bill would backfire on the opposition rather than Noda, Arima said, as the prime minister could benefit from public criticism of his rivals' spoiling tactics and eventually pass the bill with some tweaks, without needing to call a general election.

"No government can manage the current public finances without the bill," Noda said, appealing for opposition support.

"If the situation is left as it is, administrative services could stall, which would seriously affect people's livelihoods and thwart efforts to revive the economy."

In the speech, largely summarising government policy, Noda vowed to tackle deflation and the yen's excessive strength, which is hurting the export-reliant country.

He also reiterated his resolve to protect Japanese territory and waters, an apparent reference to recent rows with China and South Korea over separate groups of disputed islets.

"Achieving relationships of trust with surrounding countries such as China, South Korea and Russia, with a comprehensive view, strengthens the foundations on which Japan and the whole region enjoy peace and prosperity," Noda said. "It is one of the grave responsibilities a country has to fulfill."

Noda said he would promote free trade deals such as the U.S.-led Trans-Pacific Partnership and others including one involving Japan, China and South Korea, with the aim of realising a Free Trade Area of the Asia-Pacific, while protecting national interests.

He also reiterated the government's vague promise to try to ditch nuclear power in the 2030s while promoting green energy, following the radiation crisis at the Fukushima nuclear plant triggered by last year's massive earthquake and tsunami. ($1 = 80.1650 Japanese yen)

(Editing by Tomasz Janowski/ Michael Watson and Simon Cameron-Moore)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/japan-pm-signals-election-wait-defies-opposition-051358809--business.html

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Thursday, October 25, 2012

Va. attorney general to probe voter fraud claim

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Will Windows 8 crack the surface?

3 hrs.

Firm sales numbers for Microsoft's Windows 8 and its new Surface tablet will not be available for three months, but it may be clear long before then if it has a hit on its hands.

"We can definitely gauge it by chatter," said Emily Chan, an analyst at Bernstein Research. "There is a slight learning curve, so I don't think we will see that big pop that iPad saw."

Microsoft is desperate for the new-look, touch-friendly Windows 8 to grip customers' imaginations, as it looks to regain ground lost to Apple and Google in mobile computing and shake up the moribund PC market.

Perhaps more important is its new own-brand tablet called the Surface, available only through its own stores and website, which will challenge Apple's iPad head on.

"I'd want to know the sales???and return rate???of the Surface," said Sarah Rotman Epps at tech research firm Forrester. "But those numbers will be hard to get since Microsoft is the only retailer."

Early reviews of the Surface have been mixed, generally praising the slick hardware, but faulting battery life and the limited software and applications available.

Some worry that the first Surface model, which runs on a stripped-down version of Windows 8 called RT that is not compatible with old Windows programs, will cause some confusion and dissatisfaction among customers.

The three models for sale on Microsoft's U.S. website are already on back order, suggesting strong demand, but it is not known how many Surfaces Microsoft has manufactured.

"The fact it's back ordered is indicative that there's consumer interest," said Michael Gartenberg, an analyst at tech research firm Gartner. "How Microsoft introduces it, evangelizes it and explains it will determine long term success."

Microsoft has not said if it will reveal sales figures for Windows 8 or of the Surface before its next scheduled earnings on Jan.?24. The company tends to trumpet good news and stay silent otherwise.

After the launch of Windows 7 three years ago, CEO Steve Ballmer waited only a month to announce strong sales. A year later, he waited only 10 days to report record-breaking sales of the Kinect, the motion-sensing add-on for the Xbox. But Microsoft has never shared the sales of Windows-powered phones, which have a lowly 3 percent of the market.

If Ballmer stays silent about Windows 8 sales, it might indicate a less than stellar performance.

"I would definitely take it a sign that it's not super, super strong, but I won't take it as something negative," said Chan at Bernstein, who is expecting 8.3 million Surface sales by the middle of next year.

That averages out at about 1 million a month, a third the rate of the iPad, which notched up its first million sales in 28 days and has now sold more than 100 million units, averaging about 3.2 million a month.

Gartner forecasts that Surface and other tablets running Windows RT will sell about 2.3 million units this year and 9.3 million next year, grabbing about 2 percent and 5 percent of the worldwide tablet market, respectively.

Door-busters

Retail activity will be closely watched. Microsoft will have more than 60 brick and mortar stores open for the release of Windows 8 on Friday, half of them 'pop-up' stores that will stay open for the holiday shopping season.

Third-party retailers are cautiously optimistic.

"We have seen pretty good response to our pre-orders for Windows 8," said Best Buy spokesman Jeff Haydock. "Quite honestly, I don't know what to expect from Friday. I don't know if there will be lines or not. My sense is it will take some time for people to kind of come into the stores and check it out."

Best Buy may give some color on how PC sales are going when it reports earnings on Nov. 20.

Wal-Mart Stores Inc, the No. 1 U.S. retailer, said U.S. pre-orders for Windows 8 PCs "have been better than expected."

Online retailers Amazon.com Inc, Newegg and TigerDirect have been silent on Windows 8 pre-orders.

The full impact of PC sales on retailers will not be evident until chains report same-store sales for November.

Quick reaction

One early indicator of Windows 8's success will be the contents of the online Windows Store. Microsoft has had a harder time drumming up interest among developers for Windows 8, given the risk that there will be fewer users than competing platforms.

Microsoft will not disclose numbers, but there are expected to be 5,000 or so third-party apps available to U.S. users, in comparison with the iPad's 275,000. Some big names such as Facebook will be missing.

In social media, the tenor of comments on the Twitter hashtags #Windows8 and #Surface will give an indication of their reception after Ballmer unveils them both on Thursday.

Many users likely will be shocked by the new design, which dispenses with the Start button and features square tiles for apps.

"Public reaction to the new UI will depend how well Microsoft explains why 'different' is better and teaches how the new experience works," said Gartenberg. "That all starts on Thursday."

By the numbers

The ultimate test for Windows 8 will be PC sales.

Industry trackers are expecting a bump for PC sales in the last two months of the year, but not enough to rescue the whole year, which is forecast to dip for the first time since 2001.

Some analysts had expected an uptick in production of laptops ahead of the Windows 8 launch, but PC makers facing an uncertain global economy have been wary about committing.

Chip maker Intel, which is a good gauge of future PC demand due to its position early in the production process, expects the PC business to grow at only half the normal seasonal rate in the fourth quarter.

Chief Executive Paul Otellini recently told analysts he expects to have a better understanding of the success of Windows 8 in 90 days.

Stephen Baker, an analyst at retail research firm NPD Group, is expecting a 10 percent jump in PC sales for November and December over last year, but said comparisons will be difficult given a profusion of new devices and the volatility of year-ago data.

Fourth-quarter PC shipment numbers from research firms Gartner and IDC will not be published until early January, although analysts say PC makers might start to drop hints about demand before then.

"There will likely be many milestones, but very few will ultimately be decisive. The key point is will PC sales continue to shrink or will they experience a boost," said Al Hilwa at research firm IDC. "We can probably begin to properly judge that with some ambiguity in January."

(Additional reporting By Dhanya Skariachan in New York, Jessica Wohl in Chicago and Noel Randewich in San Francisco. Editing by Andre Grenon)?

(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2012. Check for restrictions at:?http://about.reuters.com/fulllegal.asp?

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/will-windows-8-crack-surface-1C6670946

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Why Prospective College Students Should Be Using Net Price Calculators

While the average published tuition prices at colleges and universities have increased since the 2007-2008 school year, the average student has not shouldered the brunt of the rising costs, a new study has found.

The average in-state student at a four year public college is paying about $440 more in today's dollars for tuition and fees in the 2012-2013 school year than students did in 2007-2008, according to estimates in the College Board's "Trends in College Pricing 2012" study, released yesterday. And for students at private colleges, which tend to be more expensive, the average net price for tuition and fees decreased by $490 in inflation-adjusted dollars.

[See which colleges are cutting or freezing tuition.]

Grant aid from the federal government, state governments, and institutions themselves, in addition to education tax benefits, helped to absorb some of the tuition increases, according to the report's calculations and estimates.

Though average published in-state tuition jumped from $6,810 in 2007-2008 to $8,660 this year at four year publics, aid such as Pell grants and tax benefits helped to keep the increase in average net price for tuition and fees relatively small when comparing the two time periods. (The study notes, however, that federal aid was "unusually large" from 2008-2009 to 2010-2011, and that net tuition price has increased annually since.)

At private schools, published tuition rose from an average of $25,760 to $29,060 over the five years but was accompanied by more institutional aid--demonstrating that sticker prices don't always tell the full story to prospective students and their parents.

"Although it is generally the published prices that make headlines, it is the net prices paid by individual students that matter most for college access and affordability," write study authors Jennifer Ma and Sandy Baum.

[Find out how to pay for college.]

As the report notes, not every student will be charged the average net price for tuition. According to the College Board, about one third of students pay a school's published tuition price in full. Prospective college students and their parents can estimate their own cost of college by using net price calculators--tools which, by federal mandate, every college is required to post online.

"It's important that families look at what's been happening to average net prices; but they also, for those close to college age, should look at specific institutions and apply their own financial situation to see what their expected net price will be," College Board author Ma recommends.

The calculators require time, knowledge of family finances, and, often, some paperwork as families work to ballpark total costs. While the College Board statistics cited above focus solely on net tuition and fees, college net price calculators take into account the total cost of college for one year, including room, board, and other expenses, when creating individual estimates.

[See what else you need to know about using the calculators.]

Net price calculators aren't always easy to find. In a random sample of 50 colleges, about 25 percent of schools did not include a way to access the calculator on their financial aid websites, according to "Adding It All Up 2012: Are College Net Price Calculators Easy to Find, Use, and Compare?," a report from The Institute for College Access and Success (TICAS).

"Net price calculators are one of several new tools that can help bring more transparency to the process of deciding where to apply and how to pay for it, but you need to know they're out there and be able to find and use them easily," notes Lauren Asher, president of TICAS.

Still, with a little digging, students and parents should be able to find most colleges' net price calculators to begin experimenting. U.S. News has collated the net price calculators of the top 300 colleges to help launch your investigation.

Trying to fund your education? Get tips and more in the U.S. News Paying for College center.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/why-prospective-college-students-using-net-price-calculators-153124889.html

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East Forsyth football player recovering from neck injury

KERNERSVILLE, N.C. ? An area high school football player is recovering from a neck injury he sustained during last week?s game.?

Tre Simpson, a senior at East Forsyth High School, was injured Friday night when he went for a tackle in the third quarter of the game against Northwest Guilford.?

?It was supposed to be a big night, but not for that reason,? Simpson?s coach, Todd Willert, told FOX8?s Lindsey Eaton.?

Instead of tackling his opponent, Simpson collided with a teammate.?

?I was about to go tackle him and he passed me a little bit, and all I remember is hitting somebody and passing out,? Simpson said.?

Simpson?s mother said she didn?t actually see the play.?

?When I looked along the line to see his number and I didn?t see it, then I was like, ?Oh my God it?s got to be Tre, but he?s not moving? ? and that just made my heart drop,? Simpson?s mother said.?

Trainers rushed from the sidelines to Simpson?s aid.?

?I couldn?t feel (anything) at first,? Simpson said.? ?They said they tried to give me a squeeze and touch me everywhere and I couldn?t feel anything.? My body was pretty much numb.?

Tuesday marks Simpson?s first day back at school since he was hurt.? While his injury is not expected to leave behind permanent damage, he will be sidelined and in a neck brace for the next game.? If results from an MRI this week are positive, he could possibly be allowed on the field for a playoff game.?

Source: http://lewisville-clemmons.myfox8.com/news/news/79988-east-forsyth-football-player-recovering-neck-injury

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Wednesday, October 24, 2012

EM ASIA FX-Corp earnings, Spain woes weigh on Asia FX; China PMI supports

* Ringgit tries to break 3.0570/dlr support

* Won dips, but exporters, offshore funds cut downside

* Sing dlr up after China flash PMI

(Adds text, updates prices)

By Jongwoo Cheon

SINGAPORE, Oct 24 (Reuters) - Most emerging Asian currencies

eased on Wednesday as investors trimmed risky assets after news

of weak corporate earnings and higher Spanish borrowing costs,

although regional units recovered much of losses after

encouraging China's manufacturing survey.

The Malaysian ringgit tried to weaken past a chart

support and the Philippine peso eased as interbank

speculators added dollar holdings.

Both currencies and their peers including the South Korean

won were off their session lows after the China HSBC

Flash Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) rose to a

three-month high of 49.1, reducing worries of a hard landing in

the world's second-largest economy.

The survey, as well as Australia's higher-than-expected

inflation data, powered the Australian dollar and the

Singapore dollar. Asian shares trimmed their initial

slides.

"The Flash PMI confirmed again that the China economy is

bottoming out. If China shows more improvement, Asian currencies

will stay firm in the medium and longer term," said Yuna Park, a

currency and bond analyst at Dongbu Securities in Seoul.

"But in the short-term, Asian currencies may see some

corrections on rising risk-off sentiment due to Spain and

intervention possibilities. Their valuations appeared a bit too

high," Park added.

Other analysts and dealers said emerging Asian currencies

are unlikely to extend gains on sustained worries that a

sluggish global economy may keep biting into worldwide corporate

performance.

Concerns over the Spanish debt problems also persisted with

the country's bond yields up in the wake of credit rating

downgrade of five Spain's regions by Moody's Investors Service.

"There remains a sufficient layer of uncertainty to keep

dollar/Asia supported, given also that some Asian currencies

such as the won have risen fairly significantly already," said

Emmanuel Ng, a foreign exchange strategist at OCBC Bank in

Singapore, referring to worries about Spain and global growth.

On Tuesday, the won hit a near one-year high against the

dollar and touched its strongest in more than six months versus

the yen.

Investors also stayed cautious over possible intervention by

Asian foreign exchange authorities to stem their currency's

appreciation.

Hong Kong's central bank stepped into the currency market

twice on Tuesday as the local currency hit the top end of its

trading range.

RINGGIT

The ringgit hovered near the kijun line at 3.0570 per dollar

on the daily Ichimoku chart, which the currency had been closing

stronger than since late July.

Earlier, the Malaysian currency weakened to 3.0645, but

recovered some of the loss after the encouraging China Flash

PMI.

Still, investors hesitated to add more bullish bets on the

local currency as risk appetite weakened, dealers said.

"Markets were digesting the China PMI, but overnight news

such as weak U.S. corporate earnings was pretty bearish for

risk," said a Malaysian bank dealer in Kuala Lumpur.

"It may be still prudent to hold long dollar positions. I

will not short dollar/ringgit here," he added.

PHILIPPINE PESO

The Philippine peso eased in thin trading on weaker regional

stocks, although it cut some of initial slide after the China

flash PMI.

Investors were reluctant to build up aggressive positions

before the central bank's policy meeting on Thursday when it is

expected to cut its policy interest rate, but some dealers were

looking to buy the peso on dips.

"With the better China flash PMI data, we may have seen the

top of dollar/peso for now. Traders saw its uptick as a chance

to add or reinstate dollar-short positions," said a European

bank dealer in Manila.

The dealer expected the peso to head to 41.30 per dollar,

although the level is unlikely to be breached due to possible

intervention.

WON

The won turned higher as exporters' demand for settlements

and economic indicators from China and Australia forced

investors to reduce dollar holdings. Offshore funds also joined

bids for the local unit.

The South Korean currency started local trade weaker at

1,106.0 per dollar with risk sentiment hurt by dismal U.S.

earnings.

"Few wanted to hold dollar-long positions during the local

trade. It looks better to buy the won on dips, given that

exporters are waiting to dump dollars," said a foreign bank

dealer in Seoul.

TAIWAN DOLLAR

The Taiwan dollar gained slightly on the main

exchange in subdued trading from Tuesday's close, which dealers

said the central bank weakened at the last minute of trading as

usual.

The island's currency, however, edged weaker on the smaller

market as disappointing U.S. corporate earnings

dented risk appetite.

On the smaller market, the Taiwan dollar was at 29.274

versus the greenback, slightly weaker than the previous close of

29.271.

CURRENCIES VS U.S. DOLLAR

Change on the day at 0650 GMT

Currency Latest bid Previous day Pct Move

Japan yen 79.77 79.86 +0.11

Sing dlr 1.2228 1.2252 +0.20

Taiwan dlr 29.274 29.328 +0.18

Korean won 1103.30 1103.10 -0.02

Baht 30.75 30.73 -0.07

Peso 41.37 41.32 -0.12

Rupiah 9610.00 9605.00 -0.05

Rupee 53.73 53.74 +0.02

Ringgit 3.0560 3.0530 -0.10

Yuan 6.2489 6.2480 -0.01

Change so far in 2012

Currency Latest bid End prev year Pct Move

Japan yen 79.77 76.92 -3.57

Sing dlr 1.2228 1.2969 +6.06

Taiwan dlr 29.274 30.290 +3.47

Korean won 1103.30 1151.80 +4.40

Baht 30.75 31.55 +2.60

Peso 41.37 43.84 +5.98

Rupiah 9610.00 9060.00 -5.72

Rupee 53.73 53.08 -1.21

Ringgit 3.0560 3.1685 +3.68

Yuan 6.2489 6.2940 +0.72

(Additional reporting by Lee Kyoung-ho in SEOUL, Jeanny Kao in

TAIPEI and IFR Markets' Catherine Tan; Editing by Eric Meijer)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/em-asia-fx-corp-earnings-spain-woes-weigh-071951282--finance.html

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Military plans new hypersonic flight after failure

(AP) ? The U.S. military said Wednesday it is planning another unmanned hypersonic flight in the wake of a failed attempt.

The flight, scheduled for next spring or summer, would be the fourth test of the experimental X-51A Waverider designed to reach Mach 6, or 3,600 mph, after being dropped by a B-52 bomber.

The Air Force has been studying hypersonic technologies with the hopes of deploying fast strikes around the globe.

Two months ago, a problem with a control fin during the third flight caused an X-51A to lose balance and crash off the Southern California coast.

Though the aircraft successfully detached from the B-52 and ignited its rocket booster to fly to Mach 4.8, it became unstable and did not activate its exotic scramjet engine ? considered the key feature of the test.

An investigation ruled out software or power failures. Signs point to a "random vibration issue," though more work is needed to pinpoint the exact cause, said program manager Charlie Brink at the Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio.

None of flights so far has reached the intended goal of six times the speed of sound. During the first flight in 2010, an X-51A flew near Mach 5 for three minutes. A test flight last year ended prematurely with an X-51A unsuccessfully trying to restart its engine.

Brink said he expected the military to continue hypersonic flight research after next year's final flight but did not get into specifics.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2012-10-24-X-51-Hypersonic%20Flight/id-b3a0d6a0a8944dc39c3a1b73337c27df

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Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Ellen DeGeneres to receive top humor prize in DC

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Jane Lynch and John Leguizamo are joining a lineup that includes Jimmy Kimmel and Kristin Chenoweth to honor Ellen DeGeneres with the nation's top humor prize in Washington.

The Kennedy Center is awarding DeGeneres the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor on Monday night. The show will be broadcast Oct. 30 on PBS stations.

Star entertainers will deliver tribute performances to salute DeGeneres, 54. The lineup includes Jason Mraz, John Krasinski and Sean Hayes.

When she first heard she was receiving the same honor that Bill Cosby, Tina Fey and Will Ferrell won in recent years, DeGeneres joked, "It really makes me wonder ... why didn't I get this sooner?"

DeGeneres began her career as a comedy club emcee in her native New Orleans. In 1986 after she performed on Johnny Carson's show, he invited her over to his desk chat. She was the first female comedian to receive that invitation from Carson.

Turning to acting, DeGeneres landed sitcoms on Fox and ABC, eventually starring in "Ellen" from 1994 to 1998. She broke new ground and a taboo in 1997 when she came out publicly as a lesbian and her TV persona then became the first lead character on prime-time TV to reveal she was gay. A record 46 million viewers watched the episode.

The show began to tank, though, and was canceled a year later. The feeling of rejection was enough to send DeGeneres into a depression. Still, "Ellen" paved the way for future shows to feature gay characters, from "Will and Grace" to "Modern Family."

DeGeneres came back with a CBS sitcom, movie roles and even a stint as an "American Idol" judge. Forbes magazine has ranked her as the 47th most powerful woman in the world and estimated her earnings at $53 million last year.

Her hit talk show that debuted in 2003 is now in its 10th season. Among other achievements, that's where she eventually persuaded President Barack Obama to dance.

"She's brilliantly shined a light on society, and that's what Mark Twain did," said Cappy McGarr, an executive producer for the Mark Twain Prize show, when the award was announced in May.

The prize honors comedians in Mark Twain's tradition of satire and social commentary. Past winners include Steve Martin, Lily Tomlin and Whoopi Goldberg.

___

Follow Brett Zongker on Twitter at https://twitter.com/DCArtBeat

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ellen-degeneres-receive-top-humor-prize-dc-061631514.html

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The Note's Must-Reads for Monday October 22, 2012

The Note's Must-Reads are a round-up of today's political headlines and stories from ABC News and the top U.S. newspapers. Posted Monday through Friday right here at www.abcnews.com

Compiled by ABC News' Carrie Halperin, Jayce Henderson and Amanda VanAllen

THE FINAL STRETCH

ABC News' Shushannah Walshe: " Paul Ryan Tells Iowa Rally Victory is 'Within Our Grasp'" Outside of a Bass Pro Shop on his first campaign swing in western Iowa, Republican vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan told voters victory "is within our grasp." "We can do this," Ryan said, on a perfectly sunny day. "We can get this country back on the right track. Let's look back at this moment as when we did it. We need your help." LINK

The New York Times' Trip Gabriel: " Campaign Boils Down to Door-to-Door Voter Drives" In Florida, which wrote the book on battleground states in 2000, "it's going to be hand-to-hand combat all the way down," a senior adviser to the Romney campaign, Brett Doster, said over the weekend. When Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. visited Orlando on Saturday, he skipped a public rally in favor of dropping in on a campaign office, where he urged volunteers to canvass their neighborhoods - "the thing that matters the most." LINK

TONIGHT'S DEBATE The Boston Globe's Callum Borchers: " Focus on Iran in presidential debate run-up" The Obama and Romney campaigns jousted over the president's leadership on Iranian sanctions on Sunday, a day before the candidates focus on foreign policy in their final debate, but both sides were cautious when discussing a reported agreement between the United States and Iran to hold one-on-one talks about nuclear development. The White House has denied that a deal is in place for bilateral negotiations, and the two campaigns appeared unsure whether endorsing the meetings would project diplomacy or na?vet?. LINK

The Washington Post's Anne Gearan and David A. Fahrenthold: " In final debate, Obama and Romney to offer differing views of America's role in the world" It sounded weeks ago like a mismatch. The final presidential debate would focus on foreign policy - a sitting president who'd overseen the death of Osama bin Laden pitted against a one-term governor, so new to diplomatic thinking that he'd managed to offend a good chunk of Britain during a brief trip this summer. LINK

Politico's Jim Vandehei and Mike Allen: " Mitt Romney's toughest debate" Mitt Romney has a clear-eyed and self-aware view of his chances in the final debate Monday, according to top advisers: It will be almost impossible to win, since the debate is focused exclusively on foreign policy, a strength for President Barack Obama. This view isn't merely about expectations-setting. Romney's top advisers authentically worry that the swing voters they need to woo care little about foreign affairs right now. LINK

NEWSPAPER ENDORSEMENTS The Hill's Jennifer Martinez: " Romney picks up endorsements from Ohio, Fla. Newspapers" Two regional newspapers in key swing states endorsed GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney on Sunday. The Tampa Tribune in Florida and The Columbus Dispatch in Ohio both threw their support behind the former Massachusetts governor. LINK

The Los Angeles Times' Endorsement: " Obama for president" When he was elected president in 2008, Barack Obama was untried and untested. Just four years out of the Illinois state Senate, he had not yet proved himself as either a manager or a leader. He had emerged from relative obscurity as the result of a single convention speech and was voted into office only a few years later on a tidal wave of hope, breezing past several opponents with far more experience and far clearer claims on the job. LINK

POLLING The New York Daily News' Glenn Blain: " President Obama, still reeling from his crushing defeat in the first debate, is in a dead heat with Mitt Romney, a new poll has found" The race for the White House appears to be a dead heat. An NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll released Sunday showed President Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney tied at 47% with barely two weeks to go before Election Day. LINK

The Washington Times' Stephan Dinan: " Obama leads in latest poll as Romney loses bounce" Mitt Romney's first debate bounce has evaporated and President Obama once again has taken a slim lead in The Washington Times/Zogby Poll released Sunday night - though the survey showed Mr. Romney's backers are far more energized about him than the president's backers are about their candidate. LINK

The Wall Street Journal's Neil King Jr.: " Dead Heat for Romney, Obama" Mitt Romney has strengthened his image as the candidate best able to boost the economy and has fought President Barack Obama to a near-draw on who can best serve as commander in chief, helping turn the 2012 election into a tie among likely voters, a new nationwide poll shows. The Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll found Mr. Obama retaining a strong advantage among women voters and Hispanics. He also ranked ahead of Mr. Romney on social issues and personal qualities, with voters seeing him as the more compassionate and likable candidate. LINK

FUNDRAISING USA Today's Fredreka Schouten and Christopher Schnaars: " Party fundraising gives Republicans overall money lead" Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney, the Republican Party and a constellation of outside GOP groups entered the final campaign stretch with a nearly $46 million cash advantage for the last-minute advertising and get-out-the-vote push in this nail-biter election, a USA TODAY analysis of new campaign reports shows.The candidates and political parties collectively have raised close to $2 billion through the end of September, giving Romney and President Obama ample cash to devote legions of staffers to swing states. Both men and their allies readied a fresh round of advertising over the weekend ahead of Monday's third and final debate in Boca Raton, Fla. LINK

Bloomberg's Greg Giroux and Jonathan D. Salant: " Romney's September Campaign Fundraising Trailed Obama's" President Barack Obama's re-election committee again raised more money than Republican nominee Mitt Romney last month, though the challenger and his allies - including super-political action committees - entered October with more combined money to spend. Romney, the Republican National Committee and super-PACs Restore Our Future and American Crossroads began the final full month of the 2012 campaign with $178 million to spend, compared with $111 million for Obama, the Democratic National Committee and the super-PAC Priorities USA Action, according to reports filed with the Federal Election Commission. The DNC's coffer included $10.5 million it borrowed. LINK

BOOKMARKS The Note: LINK The Must-Reads Online: LINK Top Line Webcast (12noon EST M-F): LINK ABC News Politics: LINK The Political Punch (Jake Tapper): LINK George's Bottom Line (George Stephanopoulos): LINK Follow ABC News on Twitter: LINK ABC News Mobile: LINK ABC News app on your iPhone/iPod Touch/iPad: LINK

Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/notes-must-reads-monday-october-22-2012-070911007--abc-news-politics.html

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Ex-Employee of Charity Jailed for ID Theft Targeting Donors ...

October 22, 2012, 10:21 am

A former clerk of the United Jewish Appeal-Federation who sold donors? personal financial data to an identity-theft ring was sentenced Friday to at least six years in prison, reports the New York Post.

Tracey Nelson, 25, admitted to grand larceny as part of a plea deal. Investigators said she photocopied hundreds of checks and provided credit-card numbers to accomplices during her three-year tenure with the Manhattan-based charity, which ended in August 2011 when the scam came to light.

Charges are pending against several other alleged members of the 55-person identity theft ring, some of whom also had positions that gave them access to wealthy individuals? financial data, including a car salesman and an employee with a property-management firm. Prosecutors said that no individuals suffered financial damage but that banks and credit-card companies lost more than $2-million reimbursing victims for fraudulent transactions.

This entry was posted in News-updates. Bookmark the permalink.

Source: http://philanthropy.com/blogs/philanthropytoday/ex-employee-of-charity-jailed-for-id-theft-targeting-donors/56130

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Justin Bieber Surprises (Healing) Hailey Roser, Cancer Patient ...

by: Kaitlin Cubria on | in Celebrity News |

Facebook (Healing Hailey)

Justin Bieber?s no stranger to the do-gooder department; he recently dedicated his performance of ?One Less Lonely Girl? to his fan, Avalanna Routh?(aka Mrs. Bieber), who passed away from a rare brain cancer; visited 18-year-old bone cancer patient Crystal Montgomery; now, he?s a hero to 5-year-old Hailey Charlotte Roser, who was also diagnosed with a rare form of childhood brain cancer back in August of this year.

After Hailey?s diagnosis, her parents began campaigning for?Healing Hailey on Facebook and Twitter, asking for support during their daughter?s time of need (which has since collected over $15,000 in donations!). One of the requests included Hailey meeting her idol, Justin Bieber. Her mom, Sabrina, purchased tickets to his concert for Hailey?s 5th birthday, but said ?she knew that the odds of her daughter making the show were slim.?

Quickly, #JustinVisitHailey became a hashtag on Twitter, as students at?Holmen High School in Wisconsin began petitioning (via video and Twitter) for Justin to meet the young girl while he was in the area.?One of Healing Hailey?s followers even called in to TMZ Live?to spread awareness of the social media campaign. And guess what. It all worked! The TMZ-ers informed Justin?s manager,?Scooter Braun, about the aforementioned online events. Scooter then devised a surprise for the little Belieber and organized a ?5-minute pow wow backstage? with Justin before his performance in Milwaukee last night. See the picture above!

What do you think about Hailey?s story? Leave your thoughts in the comments below and/or join the conversation on our new Justin Bieber message board!

Tagged: Justin Bieber, News

Source: http://www.teen.com/2012/10/22/news/celebrity-news/justin-bieber-healing-hailey-roser-cancer-patient-visit/

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Dealing With Death | The Arkansas Traveler

About 1,800 people die each?year in Washington County. Six hundred have already died in 2012, and Roger Morris, the Washington County Coroner expects about two-hundred more deaths this year than in the past ten years. More people die at night and in the winter than any other time because it?s easier to give up during the early hours of the morning, when everyone else is asleep and no one is thinking about the dying, except Morris.

The Washington County Coroner is a full time position, even before he was officially declared that in 2009. Morris deals with all the deaths that happen in Washington County. That includes unattended deaths, nursing home deaths, hospital deaths, homicides, suicides, car accidents and prison deaths. On a daily basis Morris will get ?one or two calls when it?s slow, and midnight to five it?s nothing to get nine to 15 calls.? He doesn?t sleep, there?s no time, people are always dying. He works more than 80 hours a week, of which half is spent with the dead, and he is always on call. Our first meeting was delayed three hours because he was getting his first sleep of the week, on a Thursday.

But Morris is used to the sleep deprivation, though he?s not used to the medical ailments like high blood pressure, and the early onset of gray hairs that come along with the job. After ten years as the county coroner and a certified embalmer for 27 years, his insomnia comes from dedication to the job rather than nightmares that might come from dealing with the dead, not the open-casket-style presentation of the dead, the newly dead.

Morris is good. He can tell if a death seems suspicious because of his experience. His father was the coroner of Madison County. Morris said he remembers watching his father pull a body out of a bushhog when he was five while he sat on the ground Indian style.

Morris? son Hayden is interested too, but he wants his son to focus more in the FBI crime scene field. Hayden is comfortable around the dead like Morris was at his age. ?I was embalming a body one time in our funeral home and Hayden, who was about seven, was sitting on a chair and he asked ?Daddy, what are you doing to that man??? And Morris has also found a way to use his job for teaching lessons to Hayden. His son kept running across the highway without looking. One day at the grocery store Hayden found pictures of a decapitated man that Morris had photographed from a crime scene. ?What happened to him?? Hayden asked. ?He didn?t look before crossing the road.?

In his office in the Washington County South Campus, right across from the county jail, he reenacted a scene from the night before. He stood behind his office chair. A lady had been found dead in her recliner the night before. He mimed checking for any irregularities. He opened where her hypothetical eyes were, shined a flashlight in them. He looked for broken blood vessels in the lower eyelid?a sign of asphyxiation, ?I didn?t see anything, they were as clear as yours or mine.? The pupils were bilateral, so it wasn?t a stroke.? ?Her body temperature was high, so she had just died, and she showed no signs of struggle on her palms and feet.? When I came back to his office later that day he had 11 bottles of prescription medicine scattered around his desk that were confiscated from the woman?s home. He looked up and smiled. Turns out Metamorphin is medication for Type 2 diabetes and ?that individual had not been taking hers.? With the case closed, Morris gets to declare the death a ?natural cause.?

Whenever Morris goes to a crime scene, he?s got a checklist to determine cause of death. ?We look for signs of lividity because if the police say the body was on its face and stomach, but there is lividity is on their back, it means they?ve been moved.? Lividity occurs whenever the heart stops pumping blood through the body. The stagnant blood will settle with gravity or around pressure points and the skin will take shape of the surface it?s on. After that he checks for knots and bruising, signs of struggle, then heads to the medicine cabinet because that will usually indicate their cause of death.

Morris shut off the lights to show me how to clear a crime scene. Wednesday was a very sunny day and there is a large window on one wall, so he didn?t achieve the dramatic effect we were both hoping for. Morris turned on a flashlight, but decided to go find some better batteries for it. His digressions keep him moving. If he stopped for a moment he would probably fall asleep. He came back and showed me one area at a time on the floor. ?This is why we never turn the lights on at a crime scene. You see a lot more with a flashlight.? The brain takes in everything through the sensory register. It discards things that don?t seem important, but in a crime scene everything is important. He sipped from his 24 oz. Diet Mountain Dew, one of 12 he will drink in a day, and sat down. ?You find a lot more that way.?

The eyes start to dry out four to six hours after death, but until that point, a licensed eye inoculator, like Morris, can take them from the body for organ donation. ?It?s actually pretty neat,? he said. But to donate most other organs, you have to be on life support. Except the skin. Morris explained that hospitals use lots of skin grafts, so having a surplus is important. They don?t take it all though, he drew a line across his wrist with his finger, ?they cut off your hands here.? He pointed at his collarbone area, they leave that skin too. But everything else is used. He described the replacement of PVC pipe to restructure the arm if the radius and ulna are removed for donation, but wished he knew the medical term for PVC pipe.

Morris became animated when he talked about the postmortem stages of the body, talking fast, as one does when passionate for his job. He explained that after 12 hours, rigor mortis sets in. He clenched his fist and tried to open it to no avail. The joints become stiff in the phalanges, Morris said, and after two days it will recede. But then there is skin-slippage. Morris pointed at his knuckles. ?Any skin that holds moisture will begin skin slipping first, think of it as a blister.? He drew a line back to his forearm. That?s how far the skin stretches after day three. From then on it is decomposition.

Some of the bodies in Washington County aren?t found for a couple of weeks if the deceased has no relatives. ?We put a chemical agent in them called STOP about an ounce in and it will kill every maggot in there. It?s cleared by the Arkansas state law for toxicology reports.? But the only thing that stops actual ?decomp,? as Morris calls it, is refrigeration.

?We keep our cooler right above freezing at 40 degrees,? said Randall Gallaway, one of the deputy coroners. ?It?s the optimum temperature to preserve a body.?

The refrigerator is in the back, behind the three offices in the modern architecture style building. It?s spotless, something that remains a priority for Morris because of airborne diseases that bodies can emit during decomposition. The lab is a vast square room. A large metal gurney is the only thing on the floor. Biohazard signs adorn the walls and tabletops like artwork. There are two industrial sinks and no windows. Morris turns off the lights leaving only the ultraviolet light above the gurney to arrange the space. Morris uses this to find particles on clothing and also to see if there are any strangulation marks. The blood disappears from the skin when it has been stressed, so he can see marks that might not appear for hours.

The cooler holds the blood for toxicology and the bodies that are waiting for Morris? transport to Little Rock, or waiting to be claimed by family members. ?One body we?ve had for over a year,? he said, but time is running out. The coroners office cremates unclaimed bodies when they can?t locate family members. Morris pulled out a drawer I had thought was another file cabinet. Four boxes bearing four names were cluttered on the left side. ?Four bodies in 10 years isn?t so bad if you ask me,? he said. Sometimes families come out of the woodwork after a while to claim the body. The deceased has already been cremated with the Coroner?s budget. Cremations cost between $900 and $1,500, Morris said. ?All we can do is hope they reimburse us for the costs.?

To objectively balance dealing with the dead, Morris uses jargon through his thick southern drawl. He calls the bodies ?individuals,? not by their names, he says the acronyms for organizations, calls death certificates ?DC?s?, tells me that they always use a Form 7 to close a case. A Form 7 is the coroner?s consent to destroy tissues gathered for investigation. But through all this formality, he remembers the names of most of the deaths he?s investigated and recalls in detail the crime scenes.

He has had to embalm his grandmother and visit crime scenes of his close friends. ?Every body is the same.? After death they become his job. They no longer have personalities and to Morris, a body is a body. But he?s not allowed to investigate the scenes of people he knows because it would be a conflict of interest. ?I wish I could though, because I do the job right.?

A death certificate categorizes five ways to die: accident, homicide, suicide, natural, and unknown. Morris signs off every death certificate in the county. The only way Morris classifies a death as a suicide is when there is a note. An accident has to be a car accident, slipping and falling, or death because of a past injury. Natural is strokes, heart attacks, and usually infant deaths. Unknown deaths are always sent to Little Rock for an autopsy. And ?you know pretty quickly when it?s a homicide.?

Morris can amend the death certificates if new evidence arises. Last Thursday Gary Conner came to the office looking for the file of McDowell. Conner also recalls every death in the same vivid description that Morris does. ?His autopsy came back undetermined because he was so badly decomposed, we had to ID him from his dental records? he said. ?It was September 2010 I believe.? McDowell?s friend had a journal that Conner said ?reflects distinct suicidal ideologies.? One Wednesday, Morris said he would get to change the death certificate to ?suicide.?

There aren?t many homicides in Fayetteville, but Morris said there have been more this year, than last year within the same months. If doors are locked or the body is up against a door then it ?s probably not homicide.

?Death has its own smell.? Morris claims that people emit the smell right before they die, if they are already dying. And he?s found a comfort in death. ?Every time someone dies, usually within a month a baby in that family is born. I call them guardian angels.?

Most people couldn?t handle Morris? job because of the smells, the horrific homicide scenes, the overtime and the taboo of the last moments of death.

But to Morris the taboo can?t exist. It?s 80 hours of his week, but the afterlife is still unexplainable to him. There is an explanation for the reasons people die. Morris is Baptist. ?I believe in God, but I also believe in facts,? said Morris, and I believe I?m going to heaven. ?I see a lot of peaceful deaths. Dying in your sleep isn?t such a bad way to go.?

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Source: http://www.uatrav.com/2012/10/21/dealing-with-death/

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Thursday, October 18, 2012

Climate Change 'Footprint' Cited in Disaster Loss Trends | Climate ...

North America has seen the world?s sharpest increase in the number of natural catastrophes during the past 32 years, a trend that in some respects is linked to manmade global warming, according to a report released Wednesday?from the global reinsurance giant Munich Re. The study, which has not undergone scientific peer review, examined natural disaster losses between 1980 and 2011, finding that weather-related loss events in North America ?nearly quintupled? during the period, compared to just an increase factor of two in Europe, for example.

2012 has, so far, had the most extreme weather on record in the lower 48 states, according to the Climate Extremes Index.
Click to enlarge the image.
Credit: NOAA/NCDC.

The insured losses during the period was a whopping $510 billion. The largest loss event was Hurricane Katrina in 2005, which was the costliest natural disaster ever recorded in North America, and killed 1,322 people, the report said.

The new and most controversial finding in the report is that the upward trend in weather-related disaster losses is being driven in part by manmade global warming, since previous studies have shown that socioeconomic factors, such as population growth and urban sprawl, are behind this trend.

At the same time, however, studies have increasingly found that global warming is already making certain types of extreme weather events, such as heat waves and precipitation extremes, more likely to occur and more severe.

The study, which Munich Re described as being aimed partly at galvanizing action on global warming, discusses ties between global warming and thunderstorm-related losses, which peaked in 2011. That year there was $26 billion in insured property losses from thunderstorm-related hazards, such as hail, strong winds, and tornadoes. The study concludes that both urban sprawl and climate change are drivers of the increased thunderstorm costs.

?A detailed analysis . . . indicates that the observed changes closely match the pattern of change in meteorological conditions necessary for the formation of large thunderstorm cells. Thus it is quite probable that changing climate conditions are the drivers,? Munich Re stated in a press release.

Thanks to large-scale heat waves and a massive drought, 2012 has been the most extreme weather year on record in the lower 48 states, as measured by the National Climatic Data Center?s Climate Extremes. Munich Re?s press release notes that the loss potential of drought and heat ?are often underestimated? since they affect society more gradually than storms do.

Peter Hoppe, who heads up Munich Re?s Geo Risks Research Group, called the thunderstorm loss findings and other evidence in the report ?an initial climate change footprint in our U.S. loss data from the last four decades.?

Footage of the tornado that struck Tuscaloosa, Ala. in 2011.

?Previously there had not been such a strong chain of evidence,? he said in a press release. ?If the first effects of climate change are already perceptible, all alerts and measures against it have become even more pressing,? he said.

Studies of how global warming might affect severe thunderstorms and the tornadoes they can spawn have shown that a warmer world might lead to more thunderstorm activity, but fewer tornadoes, as the atmosphere becomes more unstable while wind shear, a crucial ingredient in tornado formation, declines. Researchers who have examined severe thunderstorm characteristics have not found significant global warming-related trends to date, in part because of problems in historical data sets.

However, Roger Pielke Jr. of the University of Colorado at Boulder, who is one of the leading researchers on hurricane and severe thunderstorm-related disaster loss trends, said that peer reviewed studies contradict Munich Re?s findings, which he called ?speculative at best.?

For example, a forthcoming study coauthored by Pielke shows no upward trend of tornado losses in the U.S. since 1950, after adjusting for population growth and other factors. In fact, the study finds that normalized tornado damage has declined during the period.

Time series of billion dollar disasters in the U.S.
Credit: NOAA/NCDC

?The signal of human-caused climate change has not yet been detected in disaster loss data. Even so, humans affect the climate and a range of actions are worth considering in response. But the importance of climate change should not lead to a deviation from standards of scientific integrity,? Pielke said in an email conversation. He criticized Munich Re for including advocacy of climate adaptation and mitigation in the report and not submitting it for publication in a peer-reviewed scientific journal, saying that their actions have created the impression that they ?have interests well beyond an accurate reporting of the science.?

The executive summary of the Munich Re report does state that socioeconomic factors will continue to be the main driver of disaster loss trends, even with the effects of global warming. "Viewed from an insurance perspective, the two combined result in increase loss levels, which will need to be reflected in increased, risk-adequate premiums," the summary said.

Climate change is a particularly acute challenge to insurance companies, which currently do not take climate change-related hazard trends into account when determining the cost of premiums. A recent report from Ceres, a nonprofit group that advocates for sustainable business practices, called attention to the threat that extreme weather events pose to the sustainability of the insurance industry, warning that some may face existential risks due to outsized exposure to climate change-related risks.

"Ceres has not had a chance to review the full report, but we support its general thesis that climate change is contributing to more extreme weather becoming the new normal, and that insurers and policymakers must wake up to this reality," Ceres spokesman Peyton Fleming said of the Munich Re report.

Munich Re, along with other insurers, has long pushed for the insurance industry to take an active role in encouraging society to take action to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions that are contributing to global warming.

Related Content
With Extreme Weather, Will Insurers Come to the Rescue?
Texas Tops States Ravaged By Extreme Weather in 2011
2011's Record Number of Billion Dollar Weather and Climate Disasters
Climate Extremes Index on Rise, As Climate Attitudes Shift
New Study Ties Hurricane Strength to Global Warming

Source: http://www.climatecentral.org/news/munich-re-cites-climate-change-footprint-in-disaster-loss-trends-15128

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Monday, October 15, 2012

Buddhist monks march in Myanmar to thwart Islamic office plan

YANGON (Reuters) - Thousands of Buddhist monks marched in Myanmar's two biggest cities on Monday to protest against efforts by the world's biggest Islamic body to help Rohingya Muslims involved in deadly communal clashes four months ago.

The monks, a potent political force in the predominantly Buddhist country, denounced plans by the 57-member Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) to set up a liaison office in northwest Rakhine state, where violence erupted in June between ethnic Buddhist Rakhines and Rohingyas.

Just hours after the monks dispersed, President Thein Sein's office announced it would not permit an OIC representation in Myanmar. It was not immediately clear if the announcement was linked to the protests or had been planned in advance.

"The government will not allow the opening of an OIC office as it is not in accordance with the desire of people," said a statement posted on its website.

The monks were joined by ordinary citizens in Yangon and Mandalay. Some carried placards with the words "get out OIC", and "no OIC" and said they would hold demonstrations until the government agreed to their demands.

Despite being one of Asia's most ethnically diverse countries, there is entrenched ill-feeling in Myanmar towards the estimated 800,000 Rohingyas, most of whom live in abject conditions.

Accused of being illegal immigrants and usually referred to as Bengalis because of their South Asian origin, the Rohingyas are not recognized as citizens by Myanmar.

"The OIC is only for Bengalis, not for us," said monk Pyin Nyar Nanda at one of the rallies.

Anger and fear still smoulder between Rohingyas and ethnic Rakhine Buddhists after the spree of arson and machete attacks that killed at least 77 people and displaced tens of thousands.

A delegation from the OIC visited Rakhine state last month after several Muslim countries voiced concern about the welfare of the Rohingyas, whom the United Nations has described as "virtually friendless".

In a report in August, the New York-based Human Rights Watch said it had found evidence of "state-sponsored persecution and discrimination" against the Rohingyas in the weeks after the violence, claims that the government strongly rejected.

While all sides of the political spectrum have called for calm, the issue has become a hot political issue for Nobel laureate and lawmaker Aung San Suu Kyi. She has faced international criticism for failing to speak out in defense of the Rohingyas, who are denied the same rights as Burmese.

During the trouble, many Rohingyas tried to flee in rickety boats to neighboring Bangladesh, which also refuses to recognize them. Most were turned back by security forces.

The government had earlier indicated it would consider allowing the OIC to open a temporary office in the Rakhine capital, Sittwe, where aid groups and journalists say the two communities remain deeply divided.

(Reporting by Thu Rein Hlaing; Writing by Martin Petty; Editing by Alan Raybould)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/buddhist-monks-march-myanmar-thwart-islamic-office-plan-111808133.html

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Sitting for protracted periods increases risk of diabetes, heart disease and death - study

Sitting for protracted periods increases risk of diabetes, heart disease and death study [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 14-Oct-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: University of Leicester Press Office
pressoffice@le.ac.uk
44-011-625-22415
University of Leicester

Sitting around compromises health of people- even if they meet typical physical activity guidelines

A new study led by the University of Leicester, in association with colleagues at Loughborough University, has discovered that sitting for long periods increases your risk of diabetes, heart disease and death.

The study, which combined the results of 18 studies and included a total of 794,577 participants, was led by Dr. Emma Wilmot, a research fellow in the Diabetes Research Group at the University of Leicester. It was done in collaboration with colleagues from the newly established National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Leicester-Loughborough Diet, Lifestyle and Physical Activity Biomedical Research Unit and was published in Diabetologia, the journal of the European Association of the Study of Diabetes.

According to the study, those who sit for long periods have a two fold increase in their risk of diabetes, heart disease and death. Importantly, associations were independent of the amount of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity undertaken, suggesting that even if an individual meets typical physical activity guidelines, their health may still be compromised if they sit for long periods of time throughout the day.

Dr Wilmot, a Clinical Research Fellow in Diabetes and Endocrinology based at the Leicester Diabetes Centre, Leicester General Hospital, said: "The average adult spends 50-70% of their time sitting so the findings of this study have far reaching implications. By simply limiting the time that we spend sitting, we may be able to reduce our risk of diabetes, heart disease and death".

"Our study also showed that the most consistent associations were between sitting and diabetes. This is an important message because people with risk factors for diabetes, such as the obese, those of South Asian ethnic origin, or those with a family history of diabetes, may be able to help reduce their future risk of diabetes by limiting the time spent sitting. "

Professor Stuart Biddle, of Loughborough University, and a co-investigator on the study, said: "There are many ways we can reduce our sitting time, such as breaking up long periods at the computer at work by placing our laptop on a filing cabinet. We can have standing meetings, we can walk during the lunch break, and we can look to reduce TV viewing in the evenings by seeking out less sedentary behaviours."

Professor Melanie Davies, Professor of Diabetes Medicine at the University of Leicester and honorary consultant at University Hospitals of Leicester is a co-investigator and Director of the NIHR Leicester-Loughborough Diet, Lifestyle and Physical Activity Biomedical Research Unit. She said:

"This paper has a very important message for the public but also for health care professionals - namely that being sedentary is common and dangerous for our long term health, particularly for diabetes and cardiovascular disease, and that this link appears to be over and above other lifestyle factors such as our diet and physical activity."

###

NOTES TO NEWSDESK:

For more information contact:

Dr. Emma Wilmot, University of Leicester 07834279911

Professor Stuart Biddle, Loughborough University: 07971539544

The National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) is funded by the Department of Health to improve the health and wealth of the nation through research. Since its establishment in April 2006, the NIHR has transformed research in the NHS. It has increased the volume of applied health research for the benefit of patients and the public, driven faster translation of basic science discoveries into tangible benefits for patients and the economy, and developed and supported the people who conduct and contribute to applied health research. The NIHR plays a key role in the Government's strategy for economic growth, attracting investment by the life-sciences industries through its world-class infrastructure for health research. Together, the NIHR people, programmes, centres of excellence and systems represent the most integrated health research system in the world. For further information, visit the NIHR website.

This news release describes independent research funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR). The views expressed are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the NHS, the NIHR or the Department of Health.



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Sitting for protracted periods increases risk of diabetes, heart disease and death study [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 14-Oct-2012
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Contact: University of Leicester Press Office
pressoffice@le.ac.uk
44-011-625-22415
University of Leicester

Sitting around compromises health of people- even if they meet typical physical activity guidelines

A new study led by the University of Leicester, in association with colleagues at Loughborough University, has discovered that sitting for long periods increases your risk of diabetes, heart disease and death.

The study, which combined the results of 18 studies and included a total of 794,577 participants, was led by Dr. Emma Wilmot, a research fellow in the Diabetes Research Group at the University of Leicester. It was done in collaboration with colleagues from the newly established National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Leicester-Loughborough Diet, Lifestyle and Physical Activity Biomedical Research Unit and was published in Diabetologia, the journal of the European Association of the Study of Diabetes.

According to the study, those who sit for long periods have a two fold increase in their risk of diabetes, heart disease and death. Importantly, associations were independent of the amount of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity undertaken, suggesting that even if an individual meets typical physical activity guidelines, their health may still be compromised if they sit for long periods of time throughout the day.

Dr Wilmot, a Clinical Research Fellow in Diabetes and Endocrinology based at the Leicester Diabetes Centre, Leicester General Hospital, said: "The average adult spends 50-70% of their time sitting so the findings of this study have far reaching implications. By simply limiting the time that we spend sitting, we may be able to reduce our risk of diabetes, heart disease and death".

"Our study also showed that the most consistent associations were between sitting and diabetes. This is an important message because people with risk factors for diabetes, such as the obese, those of South Asian ethnic origin, or those with a family history of diabetes, may be able to help reduce their future risk of diabetes by limiting the time spent sitting. "

Professor Stuart Biddle, of Loughborough University, and a co-investigator on the study, said: "There are many ways we can reduce our sitting time, such as breaking up long periods at the computer at work by placing our laptop on a filing cabinet. We can have standing meetings, we can walk during the lunch break, and we can look to reduce TV viewing in the evenings by seeking out less sedentary behaviours."

Professor Melanie Davies, Professor of Diabetes Medicine at the University of Leicester and honorary consultant at University Hospitals of Leicester is a co-investigator and Director of the NIHR Leicester-Loughborough Diet, Lifestyle and Physical Activity Biomedical Research Unit. She said:

"This paper has a very important message for the public but also for health care professionals - namely that being sedentary is common and dangerous for our long term health, particularly for diabetes and cardiovascular disease, and that this link appears to be over and above other lifestyle factors such as our diet and physical activity."

###

NOTES TO NEWSDESK:

For more information contact:

Dr. Emma Wilmot, University of Leicester 07834279911

Professor Stuart Biddle, Loughborough University: 07971539544

The National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) is funded by the Department of Health to improve the health and wealth of the nation through research. Since its establishment in April 2006, the NIHR has transformed research in the NHS. It has increased the volume of applied health research for the benefit of patients and the public, driven faster translation of basic science discoveries into tangible benefits for patients and the economy, and developed and supported the people who conduct and contribute to applied health research. The NIHR plays a key role in the Government's strategy for economic growth, attracting investment by the life-sciences industries through its world-class infrastructure for health research. Together, the NIHR people, programmes, centres of excellence and systems represent the most integrated health research system in the world. For further information, visit the NIHR website.

This news release describes independent research funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR). The views expressed are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the NHS, the NIHR or the Department of Health.



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

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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/2012-10/uol-sfp101112.php

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