Sunday, February 10, 2013

Microsoft?s 128GB Surface Pro Sells Out At MS Online Store Just Hours After Launch

surfaceproleftMicrosoft's 128GB Surface Pro has sold out in the online Microsoft Store in the U.S., just a few hours after going on sale today, February 9. The 64GB version is still available as of this writing, and the Surface Pro is still likely in stock at physical retail locations like Best Buy, where it also went on sale today, although checking the stock levels via their online tool reports the Surface Pro as "Unavailable" across the board.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/lf-xs2-pfGU/

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Tunisia: President's party quits government

Moncef Marzouki, President of Tunisia, shows his "Liberty passport" he was given as he was living in exile in France years ago and was forbidden to return his native country, during a statement at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, eastern France, Wednesday, Feb.6, 2013. Marzouki, who is from a secular party in the governing coalition, was in Strasbourg addressing the European Parliament and said the assassination was a threat against all of Tunisia. Chokri Belaid, a Tunisian opposition leader critical of the Islamist-led government and violence by radical Muslims was shot to death Wednesday _ the first political assassination in post-revolutionary Tunisia. (AP Photo/Christian Lutz)

Moncef Marzouki, President of Tunisia, shows his "Liberty passport" he was given as he was living in exile in France years ago and was forbidden to return his native country, during a statement at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, eastern France, Wednesday, Feb.6, 2013. Marzouki, who is from a secular party in the governing coalition, was in Strasbourg addressing the European Parliament and said the assassination was a threat against all of Tunisia. Chokri Belaid, a Tunisian opposition leader critical of the Islamist-led government and violence by radical Muslims was shot to death Wednesday _ the first political assassination in post-revolutionary Tunisia. (AP Photo/Christian Lutz)

Activists of the Islamic Party's Ennahda as they wave is flags during a demonstration in Tunis Saturday Feb 9, 2013. Several thousand supporters of Tunisia's ruling moderate Islamist party rallied in the capital in a pro-government demonstration Saturday, a day after the funeral of an assassinated opposition politician. The ruling Ennahda party had called for a show of support for the constitutional assembly, whose work on a new constitution suffered a severe setback after the killing of Chokri Belaid on Feb. 6, 2013 when leftist parties withdrew their participation. Protesters hurled insults at France, accusing the former colonial ruler of interfering in the North African country's politics. ( AP Photo/Hassene Dridi)

Protesters gather during a demonstration in Tunis Saturday Feb 9, 2013. Several thousand supporters of Tunisia's ruling moderate Islamist party rallied in the capital in a pro-government demonstration Saturday, a day after the funeral of an assassinated opposition politician. The ruling Ennahda party had called for a show of support for the constitutional assembly, whose work on a new constitution suffered a severe setback after the killing of Chokri Belaid on Feb. 6, 2013 when leftist parties withdrew their participation. Protesters hurled insults at France, accusing the former colonial ruler of interfering in the North African country's politics. ( AP Photo/Hassene Dridi)

(AP) ? Tunisia's political crisis entered a new phase Sunday with an announcement that Cabinet ministers of the president's own party are quitting the governing coalition, which could force the ruling Islamists to compromise with the opposition.

Two years ago Tunisia threw off decades of dictatorship, sparking the Arab Spring uprisings across North Africa. But it is now facing its worst political crisis since then following the assassination of a prominent opposition figure last week.

Many blamed the government's negligence, if not complicity, for the assassination, and days of rioting followed that have only just subsided. A political solution to the crisis remains elusive and the question remains whether Tunisia can avoid the kind of political chaos wracking its neighbors.

Veteran observers of Tunisia's political scene caution that the nation's well-earned reputation as a stable bastion of moderation risks being put to the test, if the ruling Ennahda party of moderate Islamists mishandles its response to Wednesday's assassination of opposition politician Chokri Belaid.

"Tunisians can live without food, but they can't live without stability and calm," said Ali Dkhil, a Tunis-based journalist and long-time political observer.

The killing of Belaid ? who carried out the shooting remains unknown ? was the culmination of months of deadlock between the opposition and the governing coalition of the moderate Islamist Ennahda Party and two secular parties.

Belaid, as well as many others in the opposition, alleged that the Islamists were relying on hired thugs to harass political figures they disagreed with, and negotiations to expand the ruling coalition had hit a deadlock.

The coalition's failure to stem the country's economic crisis and stop the often-violent rise of hardline Salafi Muslims had also drawn fierce criticism, prompting the call to broaden the governing coalition.

Following the assassination, Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali offered the compromise long sought by the opposition and said he would form a government of technocrats unconnected to political parties, to see the country through the crisis and to new elections. However, his party rejected his plan, saying they had been elected by the people and should continue to rule ? highlighting the divisions not just between the government and the opposition, but within the governing party itself.

The announcement Sunday that Tunisian President Moncef Marzouki's secular party is quitting the coalition government in anger at Ennahda's handling of the country's crisis might in the end actually strengthen officials such as Jebali seeking a compromise, said North Africa analyst Riccardo Fabiani of the London-based Eurasia Group.

"Now Ennahda no longer has a government coalition to kick out Jebali," Fabiani said, adding that as the other parties quit the coalition, that leaves the technocratic option as the only alternative. "Now Jebali has the upper hand. He's even stronger."

Fabiani warned, however, that Ennahda, which he called "the most moderate Islamic party in the Arab world," might radicalize if it is pushed out of power and does poorly in upcoming elections.

"Ennahda has moderated, but if they're out of government the hardliners of the party could play a different game," he said. "This could stir up increased tension on the street and lead to more violence."

Since its election, Ennahda has worked with other secular parties and compromised with the opposition on issues such as not enshrining Islamic law in the constitution currently being written. Now, however, there are growing signs of divisions within the party and fears that the hardline elements might be backing the groups carrying out violence.

"We're at an impasse," said Moncef Nasri, a Tunis writer and journalist. "All parties have to cooperate to create a clear path out of this very serious situation." But he said he is confident that Tunisia will pull back from the brink, as it has done repeatedly in the years since its so-called Jasmine Revolution.

"It's because of our history, our cosmopolitan culture," Nasri said. "Tunisia has always welcomed people from all faiths and cultures."

After three days of street violence, the capital Tunis was relatively quiet Sunday, under the watchful eye of riot police.

The assassination of Belaid unleashed pockets of pillaging and unrest on Saturday, including an attack by 80 youths armed with stones and clubs on a police station and a second security post in Zaghouan, 25 miles (40 kilometers) west of Tunis, the official TAP news agency reported. To the south, in the town of Kebili, 60 people, mainly youths, attacked the governing Ennahda party offices. The extent of that damage was not immediately known.

________

Associated Press reporters Oleg Cetinic and Bouazza ben Bouazza in Tunis contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-02-10-Tunisia-Crisis/id-dc011003a1074af1abf69259e1c808f9

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Lebanon may need camps for flood of Syrian refugees: U.N.

BEIRUT (Reuters) - Lebanon should consider setting up transit centers to absorb the waves of refugees fleeing neighboring Syria and may have to establish formal refugee camps if the influx continues, a United Nations refugee official said.

The tiny and fragile Mediterranean state already hosts 260,000 refugees - equivalent to 6.5 percent of its population - and has sought to absorb them in homes and communities, fearing large camps of Sunni Muslim Syrians could inflame sectarian tensions still smouldering from its own 1975-1990 civil war.

But the accelerating exodus from Syria's bloodshed means that the number of Syrians seeking help in Lebanon is growing by 3,000 a day, leaving authorities and the UNHCR refugee agency struggling to provide for them.

"We have this very tiny country ... a quarter of the size of Switzerland, with a population of 4 million people, taking in 260,000 refugees," UNHCR representative in Lebanon Ninette Kelley told Reuters late on Friday.

"I think what we need to start doing is to prepare for an eventuality whereby we may not be able to find enough shelter and accommodation given the current level of demand."

"We have advised the government that it may be a time to start having at least two transit sites," she said, where refugees could be offered temporary food and shelter before other accommodation is found. "As a start, that would be a good thing."

UNHCR has also made contingency plans to establish formal refugee camps if the mass influx continues, though that would have to be with Lebanese government permission, she said.

"We do plan for camps. We pre-position stocks, we make sure we have done assessments and that we are ready to go in that eventuality," she said in an interview at UNHCR headquarters in southern Beirut.

FUND NOT ENOUGH

Reluctance to set up refugee camps stems in part from historic sensitivities over the waves of Palestinian refugees who fled from Israel, some of whom became central players in Lebanon's destructive civil war.

The issue also highlights the country's current political divide. Some of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's Lebanese foes openly called for camps to be set up, hoping it would highlight the scale of his crackdown on the nearly two-year-old uprising in which an estimated 60,000 people have been killed.

The government of Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati, dominated by Assad allies including Hezbollah, preferred to support aid efforts to house the refugees in homes and schools in their own Sunni Muslim communities.

Aid workers say that the political concerns constrained their ability to help during the first year of the conflict, particularly in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley, where pockets of Christians, pro-Hezbollah Shi'ite Muslims and Sunni Muslim supporters of the armed Syrian rebels live close by.

They are still struggling. A report by the French aid group Medecins Sans Frontieres said half the refugees in Lebanon were not receiving sufficient medical care and many more were living in inadequate winter shelter.

UNHCR has increased registration of new refugees to 40,000 a month, but even that may not keep pace with new arrivals and its capacity is stretched to the limit.

Kelley said that despite last month's U.N. conference in Kuwait, when $1.5 billion was pledged for Syrian humanitarian aid, U.N. operations inside Lebanon had so far only received 15 percent of their funding requirements.

"Our problem right now is we simply don't have enough funds to do 100 percent coverage of registered refugees and all the new arrivals," she said.

(Editing by Mark Trevelyan)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lebanon-may-camps-flood-syrian-refugees-u-n-102707484.html

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Breaking Cat: Feline Dresses Up Like Walter White

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/02/breaking-cat-feline-dresses-up-like-walter-white/

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Saturday, February 9, 2013

Nuggets win ninth straight, beat Cavaliers 111-103

CLEVELAND (AP) ? Denver coach George Karl thinks it's about time people started taking notice of his team.

Given the fact the Nuggets are the NBA's longest active winning streak, Karl has good reason to feel that way.

Danilo Gallinari scored 19 points, Kenneth Faried added 17 and Denver won their ninth straight game with a 111-103 victory over the Cleveland Cavaliers on Saturday night.

Although the Nuggets have the fourth-best record in the Western Conference, no Denver player was selected for next Sunday's All-Star Game, a fact Karl is quick to point out.

"We're going to try and shock the world and become the first team to win a championship without an All-Star," he said.

The Nuggets, who have won 15 of 17, are on their longest winning streak since posting 10 straight victories from March 30-April 15, 2005. San Antonio had an 11-game streak snapped Friday night.

Kyrie Irving led Cleveland with 26 points, but was plagued by foul trouble. The All-Star guard picked up his fourth foul with 5:20 remaining in the third quarter and went to the bench with the Nuggets leading 72-61. Irving returned to start the fourth quarter with Denver ahead 84-73. He scored 12 points in the period, but Cleveland's rally fell short.

Irving was down on the court briefly after taking a knee to the thigh in the fourth quarter, but said following the game he was OK.

The loss ended Cleveland's three-game winning streak that matched a season high. The Cavaliers haven't won four games in a row since March 17-24, 2010, which was LeBron James' final season with the franchise.

"We ran into a team playing very good basketball," Cleveland coach Byron Scott said. "I'm not disappointed in our effort. Tonight, they were a better team."

Denver, which began a four-game road trip, is scheduled to play in Boston on Sunday. The Nuggets planned to fly into Boston following Saturday's game. The team reserved hotel rooms in Cleveland in case their plans were changed thanks to the massive snowstorm that hit the Northeast this weekend.

Denver showed its depth by placing eight players in double figures.

"There are only about 10 true superstars in the NBA, I think, but I believe Andre Iguodala, Ty Lawson, Andre Miller, and Kenneth Faried are in the next 40 players," Karl said.

Alonzo Gee scored 20 points for Cleveland with 16 coming in the first quarter.

The Nuggets built a 14-point lead in the fourth quarter. The Cavaliers cut the gap to 105-99 with 1:40 remaining, but Gallinari's two free throws and Faried's dunk put the game away.

The Nuggets, who were off Friday while the Cavaliers beat Orlando at home, looked like the fresher team. Denver outscored Cleveland 19-5 in fast-break points. The Nuggets also had 62 points in the paint compared to 32 for the Cavaliers.

"The starters and the bench were lacking a bit of energy," Irving said. "We were a step behind and they outplayed us."

The game featured physical play by both teams, particularly in the second half. Cavaliers center Tyler Zeller was given a technical foul in the third quarter for shoving Nuggets center JaVale McGee while Faried and Cleveland forward Tristan Thompson got tangled up on a couple of occasions.

"It was my kind of game tonight," Faried said.

Karl had to be restrained by his assistants for going after the officials in the third quarter. Karl was angry about a foul call that went against his team.

Denver took a quick 8-0 lead, but Gee, who had scored 14 points his last two games combined, kept Cleveland in the game by scoring 15 of the Cavaliers' first 17 points.

Cleveland led 46-41 late in the second quarter, but Denver finished the half on a 17-6 run. The Nuggets scored the last six points of the half over the final 41.9 seconds to take a 58-52 lead into the locker room. Irving picked up two fouls in a span of 20 seconds late in the quarter, giving him three for the half.

Faried appeared to injure his knee in the first quarter, but still had 13 points and five rebounds in the half.

"I'm a warrior," he said. "I'm going to play tomorrow. Definitely, I'm playing."

Iguodala scored 14 points for the Nuggets, while McGee added 13. Lawson had 11 points while Miller, Kosta Koufos and Corey Brewer scored 10 apiece.

NOTES: Denver, which came in as the worst free-throw shooting team in the league (69.1 percent), made 25 of 34 shots from the line. ... The Nuggets are 11-15 away from home. ... The Cavaliers continue their seven-game homestand Monday against Minnesota. Cleveland, which defeated Orlando on Friday, played home games on back-to-back nights for the only time this season. ... Cleveland is 11-12 since Dec. 22.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nuggets-win-ninth-straight-beat-cavaliers-111-103-030331003--spt.html

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How to Make Dry Ice at Home

Dry ice is amazing stuff, especially in the kitchen—think ice cream or booze—but getting hold of it can be tricky. No problem! Here's how to make your own. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/r9htHmB5nio/how-to-make-dry-ice-at-home

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Catholic bishops say Obama offer on contraceptive coverage falls short

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Roman Catholic leaders on Thursday said the Obama administration did not go far enough toward their issues in the offer of compromise offered last week over health care coverage of contraceptives for employees of faith-based institutions.

"The February 1 notice of proposed rulemaking ... shows some movement by the administration but falls short of addressing U.S. bishops' concerns," the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops said in a statement.

"We have been assured by the administration that we will not have to refer, pay for, or negotiate for the mandated coverage. We remain eager for the administration to fulfill that pledge," said Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York, president of the conference.

The proposals announced by the administration on February 1 would guarantee that employees at religious nonprofits, including certain faith-affiliated universities and hospitals, would get access to birth control coverage without out-of-pocket costs through separate plans, with insurers picking up the tab.

The new rules followed months of protests and legal action by groups representing Roman Catholics, Protestant Evangelicals and some private employers.

"It appears that the government would require all employees in our ?accommodated' ministries to have the illicit coverage ?they may not opt out, nor even opt out for their children ? under a separate policy," Dolan said.

(Reporting by Ros Krasny; Editing by Jackie Frank)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/catholic-bishops-obama-offer-contraceptive-coverage-falls-short-195827396--finance.html

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Using Twitter to predict the influence of lifestyle on health

Feb. 8, 2013 ? Researchers at the University of Rochester showed last year how Twitter can be used to predict how likely it is for a Twitter user to become sick. They have now used Twitter to model how other factors -- social status, exposure to pollution, interpersonal interaction and others -- influence health.

"If you want to know, down to the individual level, how many people are sick in a population, you would have to survey the population, which is costly and time-consuming," said Adam Sadilek, postdoctoral researcher at the University of Rochester. "Twitter and the technology we have developed allow us to do this passively, quickly and inexpensively; we can listen in to what people are saying and mine this data to make predictions."

Sadilek also explained that many tweets are geo-tagged, which means they carry GPS information that shows exactly where the user was when he or she tweeted.

Collating all this information allows the researchers to map out, in space and in time, what people said in their tweets, but also where they were and when they were there. By following thousands of users as they tweet and go about their lives, researchers also could estimate interactions between two users and between users and their environment.

In a paper to be presented on Feb. 8 at the International Conference on Web Searching and Data Mining in Rome, Italy, Sadilek will show how their new model accounts for many of the factors that affect health and how it can complement traditional studies in life sciences. Using tweets collected in New York City over a period of a month, they looked at factors like how often a person takes the subway, goes to the gym or a particular restaurant, proximity to a pollution source and their online social status. They looked at 70 factors in total. They then looked at whether these had a positive, negative or neutral impact on the users' health.

Some of their results are perhaps not surprising; for example, pollution sources seem to have a negative effect on health. However, this is the first time this impact has been extracted from the online behavior of a large online population. The paper also reveals a broader pattern, where virtually any activity that involves human contact leads to significantly increased health risks. For example, even people who regularly go to the gym get sick marginally more often than less active individuals. However, people who merely talk about going to the gym, but actually never go (verified based on their GPS), get sick significantly more often. This shows that there are interesting confounding factors that can now be studied at scale.

The technology that Sadilek and his colleague Professor Henry Kautz have developed has led to a web application called GermTracker. The application color-codes users (from red to green) according to their health by mining information from their tweets for 10 cities worldwide. Using the GPS data encoded in the tweets the app can then place people on a map, which allows anyone using the application to see their distribution.

"This app can be used by people to make personal decisions about their health. For example, they might want to avoid a subway station if it's full of sick people," Sadilek suggested. "It could also be used in conjunction with other methods by governments or local authorities to try to understand outbursts of the flu."

It is now flu season and as the number of people with the flu across the U.S. increases, so do the number of people monitoring GermTracker. On some days in January 10,000 people visited the http://fount.in website where the app is hosted.

The model that Sadilek and his colleagues developed is based on machine-learning. At the heart of their work is how they are training an algorithm to distinguish between tweets that suggest the person tweeting is sick and those that don't.

"It's like teaching a baby a new language," Sadilek said. He explained that they first generated a training set of data, 5,000 tweets that had been manually categorized and from which the algorithm can start to distinguish what words and phrases are associated with someone being sick. He added, "We need the algorithm to understand that someone who tweets 'I'm sick and have been in bed all day' should be characterized as sick, but 'I'm sick of driving around in this traffic' shouldn't be."

The application is also improving the algorithm. Every time someone goes onto the application and clicks on one of the colored dots that represent the tweeting users, they can see the specific tweet that led someone to be classified in a specific way. The application asks you to assess the tweet yourself and say whether you agree with the classification or not. This gets fed back into the algorithm, which continues to learn from its mistakes.

The authors have recently started two collaborations with researchers at the University of Rochester Medical Center. "In one effort, we are planning to link Twitter predictions to clinical influenza studies," said co-author Kautz, chair of the University's computer science department. "In another effort, we are working with faculty in the Department of Psychiatry and the School of Nursing on extending these techniques to monitor and measure factors impacting depression and other psychological disorders."

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/computers_math/information_technology/~3/Q1cjfcPzOIo/130208110041.htm

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Friday, February 8, 2013

Track your weight loss with Monitor Your Weight for iPhone and iPad

It's Fitness Month here at iMore and Mobile Nations and for many of us, that means weight loss. For the past couple weeks, I've been on the hunt for an app dedicated to tracking my weight, and it was no easy task. Before the iPhone 5, Weightbot was my go to weight-tracking app, but since Tapbots has not updated Weightbot to support the iPhone 5, I'm ready to move on to an app that does. After searching high and low, I've settled on Monitor Your Weight.

The two main features that drew me to Monitor Your Weight are, of course, iPhone 5 support, and the fact that it is primarily a weight tracker. There are so many apps out there that also track your calorie intake, activities, and other things, but since I'm not interested in keeping track of those things, it's unnecessary clutter.

On the main tab of Monitor Your Weight, you'll find all the details surrounding your weight including your starting weight and BMI, your target weight and BMI, your current weight, how much progress you've made toward your goal, and more. There is also a button at the bottom of your details card to quickly enter your current weight. For each entry, you can select your weight out to one decimal place, the date, and add any notes that you may find relevant to that entry.

To get a visual representation of your progress, Monitor Your Weight includes a Graph tab that displays your entries as a line graph. You can view the graph with current data, as a summary over the past month, or view the entire timeline beginning from your start date and ending at your target date. In addition, the graphs display two separate dotted lines: the green one represents the rate at which you should lose weight to reach your goal in the time you specified, and the yellow line is a regression line based on your actual progress and predicts when you can expect to reach your goal if you continue losing weight at your current rate.

To view a simple list of all your entries, visit the History tab. You can also easily edit or delete any entries that may have been a mistake.

Monitor Your Weight supports multiple users and the Settings tab is where you go to set them up. For each user, you enter their name, birthday, height, gender, body frame (small, medium, large), and a start weight and date. Monitor Your Weight will then calculate your ideal weight and an appropriate target date to go with it. If you don't agree with Monitor Your Weight's results, you can change them to what you want. You can also choose from nine different theme colors for each user.

To keep your information backed-up and synced between devices, Monitor Your Weight has an in-app purchase available for $0.99 for synchronization. It's not made clear when you purchase it for the first time, but if you plan on using both the iPhone and iPad versions of Track Your Weight, you'll have to buy the in-app upgrade for both versions.

The good

  • Multiple user support
  • Automatically calculates ideal weight and target date based on age, height, gender and body frame
  • Kilos, Pounds, Stones, Meters or Feet
  • Calculates BMI
  • Includes detailed summary statistics and graphs to track your progress
  • Option to set a PIN
  • Icon badge displays the number of units you have left to lose or the number of units lost
  • Ability to export data via email
  • Support for AchieveMint, Wahoo Scale, and Withings Scale
  • iPhone 5 support

The bad

  • Boring looking interface
  • No landscape support on iPhone, including graph views
  • Must purchase synchronization for each version

The bottom line

Although Monitor Your Weight isn't the most beautiful app I've ever seen, it does a great job of tracking your weightless progress. There is a surprisingly small number of apps available that are dedicated to weight-tracking and support the iPhone. Monitor Your Weight was the best one I could find.

Also, don't forget to enter all our Fitness Month contests! Lots of great prizes up for grabs!



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/91xhkbTUKXo/story01.htm

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Thursday, February 7, 2013

Biogen pays Elan $3.25 billion to take over MS drug

DUBLIN (Reuters) - Biogen Idec is to take full ownership of blockbuster multiple sclerosis drug Tysabri after agreeing to pay Irish partner Elan $3.25 billion plus future royalties on sales of the drug.

Irish drugmaker Elan, which has co-marketed the drug with the larger U.S. company for 12 years, said it would receive a royalty of 12 percent of Tysabri global net sales for the first 12 months after the restructuring closes.

A tiered royalty structure will kick in after that, it said, with Elan receiving 18 percent on up to $2 billion of global net sales and 25 percent on any sales over that amount.

Sales of Tysabri, which provides Elan with almost all of its revenue, rose 8 percent to $1.6 billion last year. A filing last month for approval to sell the drug as a first-line treatment for could boost sales further.

"The restructuring of this business collaboration provides Elan with significant strategic flexibility ... The risk of one asset and a single collaborator was not ideal," Elan chief executive Kelly Martin said in a statement.

"We are enthusiastic about the market opportunities around the globe and remain flexible and creative about the manner in which we would participate in those opportunities."

The deal boosts Biogen's MS business at a crucial time for the U.S. biotech company, which hopes to win approval soon for a new pill to treat the debilitating neurological disease.

Its oral drug BG-12, to be sold under the brand name Tecfidera, is expected to become a leading treatment for MS after its planned second quarter introduction.

Biogen will be able to offer BG-12 alongside Tysabri and another MS treatment called Avonex, both of which are given by injection, providing a range of treatment options for patients.

Rivals in the MS space include Novartis, Teva, Merck KGaA and Bayer.

(Reporting by Padraic Halpin and Ben Hirschler; Editing by Hans-Juergen Peters)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/biogen-pays-elan-3-25-billion-over-ms-074509606--finance.html

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Yemen demands Iran halts support for insurgents

SANAA (Reuters) - Yemen's president has asked his Iranian counterpart to stop backing armed groups on its soil after coastguards seized a consignment of missiles and rockets believed sent by the Islamic Republic, a government official said on Thursday.

Iran has denied any connection to the weapons, found aboard a vessel off the coast on January 23 in an operation coordinated with the U.S. Navy.

But government official Abdel-Rashid Abdel Hafez said President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi had contacted Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, to demand Tehran stop smuggling in weapons.

Hafez gave no further details of the message.

"This is the most dangerous arms shipment being smuggled to Yemen," Yemeni Deputy Interior Minister Abdel-Rahman Hanash told Reuters.

"It contained anti-aircraft missiles, C4 high explosives materials which only a few countries in the Middle East possess."

Yemen, a majority Sunni Muslim country, said last week the vessel had been loaded in Iran.

Officials in Washington have said the shipment was believed to have been from Shi'ite Muslim Iran and destined for insurgents, likely to be Shi'ite Houthis mainly based in northern Yemen.

Yemeni state television on Wednesday showed Interior Minister Abdul Qader Qahtan and National Security Board head Ali al-Ahmadi inspecting the weapons including 122 mm Katyusha rockets, anti-aircraft Strella 1 and 2 missiles, RPG launchers, explosives materials and Iranian-made night vision goggles.

Hanash said that while the investigation into the shipment was still under way, it was certain that the weapons were destined for an insurgent group. He did not name the group.

A source at Hadi's office said the arms were destined for Houthi rebels.

STRAINED TIES

The discovery of the shipment will likely further sour ties between Tehran and Sanaa, already strained over charges that Iran was working with separatists in the south and Houthi rebels in the north to further destabilize Yemen as it tries to rebuild after two years of political upheaval.

Yemen said in July it had rounded up a spy ring led by a former commander in Iran's Revolutionary Guard, according to the state news agency Saba.

Washington also believes Iran was working with Yemeni insurgents to expand its influence at the expense of Yemen's Gulf Arab neighbors, according to comments by the U.S. envoy to Sanaa published in the pan-Arab al-Hayat newspaper last year.

Iran has denied interfering in Yemen, a U.S. ally in its fight against al Qaeda militants.

The Houthi movement, named after the tribe of its leader, says it represents the claims of Zaydi Shi'ite Muslims who ruled Yemen for more than 1,000 years. Most Iranians follow a different Shi'ite sect but Yemeni officials say Houthis have traveled to Iran's seminary city of Qom for indoctrination.

Houthis have survived repeated government attempts to crush them. They fought a brief war with Saudi Arabia in 2009 after their conflict with Yemeni forces spilled across the border.

(Reporting by Mohammed Ghobari Writing by Sami Aboudi; Editing by William Maclean and Oliver Holmes)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/yemen-demands-iran-halts-support-insurgents-131809500.html

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Browns release DE Frostee Rucker

(AP) ? The Browns' switch on defense started with Frostee Rucker being shifted out the door.

Rucker was released by Cleveland on Tuesday, the first major move as the Browns change from a 4-3 defense to a multi-front system under new coach Rob Chudzinski and coordinator Ray Horton.

A top free-agent signing by Cleveland last year, Rucker started all 16 games and finished with 48 tackles and four sacks in his one season with the Browns. Rucker made $6 million last season and $2 million of his $2.5 million contract for 2013 would have been guaranteed if he was still on the roster Wednesday, according to a report by TheSidelineView.com.

The 29-year-old Rucker spent six seasons with Cincinnati before signing last March with Cleveland. He established himself as a leader in the Browns' locker room and Rucker was a staunch supporter of coach Pat Shurmur and general manager Tom Heckert, who were both fired after the Browns went 5-11 last season.

Last week, Chudzinski and Horton, who spent the past two seasons with Arizona, said the Browns hope to have an aggressive defense next season. Horton tried to downplay concerns about the team changing schemes, saying several times that he was simply looking for "big men that can run and little men that can hit."

Apparently, the 6-foot-3, 280-pound Rucker did not fit into either of those groups.

The Bengals selected Rucker, who played at Southern Caliornia, in the third round (No. 91 overall) of the 2006 draft.

Rucker's departure could signal the beginning of a busy offseason for the Browns, the first one under new owner Jimmy Haslam. At the Super Bowl last week, Haslam said the Browns would be active in free agency if the moves made sense.

"I think we'll be selective in what we do in free agency, but if there's some talent out there that matches our needs and it's at the right dollar level, then, I think we'll probably make some moves," he said. "I don't think you'll see us making any big, splashy, high-priced moves because I think we've said all along, we're going to build through the draft."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-02-05-FBN-Browns-Rucker/id-01f0cc89304740aba4e1f1177442a725

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Tired in Vienna? Nap for a price at new studio

In this picture taken Tuesday, Feb. 5, 2013 a woman rests at the Reflexia studio in Vienna, Austria. One sleepy little side street in Vienna just got sleepier. Tucked away behind a Gothic church and surrounded by Renaissance-era houses, the new studio is offering deal-makers, movers and shakers and foot-sore tourists respite at a price ? a half-hour power nap for 11 euros (US dollar 15). (AP Photo/Hans Punz)

In this picture taken Tuesday, Feb. 5, 2013 a woman rests at the Reflexia studio in Vienna, Austria. One sleepy little side street in Vienna just got sleepier. Tucked away behind a Gothic church and surrounded by Renaissance-era houses, the new studio is offering deal-makers, movers and shakers and foot-sore tourists respite at a price ? a half-hour power nap for 11 euros (US dollar 15). (AP Photo/Hans Punz)

In this picture taken Tuesday, Feb. 5, 2013, a small buffet waits for customers at the Reflexia studio in Vienna, Austria. One sleepy little side street in Vienna just got sleepier. Tucked away behind a Gothic church and surrounded by Renaissance-era houses, the new studio is offering deal-makers, movers and shakers and foot-sore tourists respite at a price ? a half-hour power nap for 11 euros (US dollar 15). (AP Photo/Hans Punz)

This picture taken Tuesday, Feb. 5, 2013, shows one of the rest rooms at the Reflexia Studio in Vienna, Austria. One sleepy little side street in Vienna just got sleepier. Tucked away behind a Gothic church and surrounded by Renaissance-era houses, the new studio is offering deal-makers, movers and shakers and foot-sore tourists respite at a price ? a half-hour power nap for 11 euros (US dollar 15). (AP Photo/Hans Punz)

This picture taken Tuesday, Feb. 5, 2013, shows the entrance to the Reflexia Studio in Vienna, Austria. One sleepy little side street in Vienna just got sleepier. Tucked away behind a Gothic church and surrounded by Renaissance-era houses, the new studio is offering deal-makers, movers and shakers and foot-sore tourists respite at a price ? a half-hour power nap for 11 euros (US dollar 15). (AP Photo/Hans Punz)

This picture taken Tuesday, Feb. 5, 2013, shows one of the rest rooms at the Reflexia Studio in Vienna, Austria. One sleepy little side street in Vienna just got sleepier. Tucked away behind a Gothic church and surrounded by Renaissance-era houses, the new studio is offering deal-makers, movers and shakers and foot-sore tourists respite at a price ? a half-hour power nap for 11 euros (US dollar 15). (AP Photo/Hans Punz)

(AP) ? One sleepy little side street in Vienna just got sleepier.

Tucked behind a Gothic church and surrounded by Renaissance-era houses, a new studio is offering deal-makers, movers and shakers and foot-sore tourists respite at a price: a half-hour power nap for 11 euros ($15).

But Reflexia is more than just a place for shut-eye. The establishment's massive arches and thick walls built centuries ago act as if they were made specifically to protect from the outside world, and visitors who cross its threshold are offered soft mood music; a heaping plate of prosciutto with chunky bread; coffee, tea and soft drinks, and a wake-up that is personal ? and gentle.

"People know sleep as a need but not as a product," owner Peter Schurin says. "Our task is to change that in some ways."

Schurin describes his establishment as "a fitness center for the spirit," and his business model might be well-timed, even if the Austrian capital is anything but an edgy city that never sleeps.

Most stores here are closed on Sundays. On Fridays, the work day ends at 3 p.m., or earlier, judging from the traffic jams clogging the main arteries out of the city of 1.8 million. In fact, Vienna regularly tops Mercier surveys as the world's most livable city in part because of its outsized calm factor.

At the same time, Austria's status in Europe as an "Island of the Blessed" is being eroded by the kind of work-related stress common to other Western societies.

A study last year involving doctors, unions and employers estimated that stress-related illnesses are costing Austria's economy 7 billion euros ? almost $9.5 billion a year ? in treatment and absences of its 3.7-million strong work force. Michael Musalek, head of Vienna's Anton Proksch medical institute, says the number of burn-out victims "is steadily growing."

Enter Schurin and his establishment.

Services at Reflexia range in cost and substance. The 11-euro, half-hour cat nap takes place in a dim room where black leather loungers are separated by Japanese folding screens; a one-hour snooze in a private chamber can be purchased for 40 euros ($60).

Those who can't sleep can play computer games, grab a book off the club room's shelf or just sit back and relax with a drink and a bite for 6 euros ($8) an hour.

The only thing missing so far? Sleepy customers.

On Tuesday, a day after the grand opening, candles were burning and the Italian ham was waiting ? but the couches were empty except for one.

On it was Gundula Schatz, who described herself as both a client and a prospective partner looking to offer yoga courses at the establishment. Asked how her couch felt, she replied "like in seventh heaven!"

Schurin says he's patient.

"While we were still building with all the mess and dust, people passed by and saw the word 'sleep' ... and turned to me and said, 'Can I sleep here?' And I said 'Yes, but please wait until we're open.'

"Austrians are cautious people," he added. "It takes them a while to get used to new ideas."

But the concept left at least one passer-by cold Tuesday.

"I sleep on the job," said Rolf Bachler, when asked if he was in need of a power-nap.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-02-06-Austria-Sleep%20in%20the%20City/id-e749637e18c8401491e46518de1f5024

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Wednesday, February 6, 2013

FBI releases Alaska killer's handwritten notes

FILE - This undated file photo provided by the FBI shows Israel Keyes. Israel Keyes showed no remorse as he detailed how he'd abducted and killed an 18-year-old woman, then demanded ransom, pretending she was alive. Keyes showed no remorse as he detailed how he'd abducted and the killed 18-year-old barista Samantha Koenig, then demanded ransom, pretending she was alive. His confession cracked the case, but prosecutors questioning him soon realized there was more, he has killed before. Before divulging more details, Keyes committed suicide in his cell. (AP Photo/FBI, File)

FILE - This undated file photo provided by the FBI shows Israel Keyes. Israel Keyes showed no remorse as he detailed how he'd abducted and killed an 18-year-old woman, then demanded ransom, pretending she was alive. Keyes showed no remorse as he detailed how he'd abducted and the killed 18-year-old barista Samantha Koenig, then demanded ransom, pretending she was alive. His confession cracked the case, but prosecutors questioning him soon realized there was more, he has killed before. Before divulging more details, Keyes committed suicide in his cell. (AP Photo/FBI, File)

ADVANCE FOR SUNDAY, JAN. 27 - FILE - This undated file photo provided by the FBI shows Israel Keyes. Israel Keyes showed no remorse as he detailed how he'd abducted and killed an 18-year-old woman, then demanded ransom, pretending she was alive. Keyes showed no remorse as he detailed how he'd abducted and the killed 18-year-old barista Samantha Koenig, then demanded ransom, pretending she was alive. His confession cracked the case, but prosecutors questioning him soon realized there was more, he has killed before. Before divulging more details, Keyes committed suicide in his cell. (AP Photo/FBI, File)

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) ? The FBI has released handwritten notes found beneath the body of confessed Alaska serial killer Israel Keyes, but says the writings offer no investigative clues or names of victims.

Keyes died Dec. 2 in an Anchorage jail cell after he slit his wrist with the blade of a disposable razor that was embedded in a pencil. He also strangled himself with a bedsheet.

He was awaiting trial in the 2012 slaying of an 18-year-old Anchorage barista. Keyes confessed to killings in Alaska and Vermont and alluded to other possible victims in other states.

FBI special agent Mary Rook says Keyes' notes were written on a yellow legal pad. They were too bloody to read immediately but were sent to the FBI laboratory in Virginia and restored.

The notes appear to include poetry and about violence and deception.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-02-06-US-Alaska-Serial-Killer/id-7934641152ef4642a89013746f4806cd

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Home and Family : Responsible Fatherhood - A Unique And ...

Published Tuesday February 05 2013

Something happened the other day that made me feel uneasy. Yet I shouldn't have felt that way!

My wife had left for work and I was hanging the washing out to dry. A neighbour from down the way was in his backyard doing the same. 'Good day for drying', he called. 'Let's hope the rain stays away.'

I had to think about what made me uneasy. Then it hit me. Two men hanging out the washing!

When I was a kid that would never have happened. That was women's work, after all!

And that made me think about the changing role of men and fatherhood.

Change is seldom easy, hence the deeply buried sense of unease - even in someone like me who considers himself an enlightened individual!

The image of fatherhood has changed very much in recent years, hasn't it?

We've come a long way from the distant, unemotional, patriarch figure. The god-like master who provided for his family, but didn't expect to be troubled by family issues!

After World War II there was a definite shift. Men became much more involved in the play and leisure areas of family life.

Maybe this was due to the separation caused by the war and consequent feelings of vulnerability. But men still didn't get involved in household chores!

Today we see a much more enlightened image of the male as a co-parent, getting involved in all aspects of family life and pulling his weight in the home.

Or do we? . . .

Are we really there yet? Some men are moving in the right direction. Others need a gentle push!

Perhaps they need encouragement more than anything.

Young boys tend to see their dads as role models and often absorb, even unconsciously, their dads attitudes and habits. So if some of today's dads haven't witnessed and experienced the input of an involved father, the role may not come easily to them.

And yet a dad's involvement in family life has so much benefit both for the children, the mother and the dad himself.

By pulling their weight with the household chores Dads give a good example to their kids AND they help ease the burden on an all too often over-burdened Mum.

By getting involved in play and educational activities Dads can help build that vital relationship on which confidence depends: their own confidence as parents and the confidence of their kids

  • to explore and discover their talents and abilities
  • to learn the boundaries within which they must operate
  • to absorb the values of the person in charge of them
So much to be gained, for all parties involved!

So if Dad is a rather reluctant participant in family matters, remember that as well as a firm push he may need lots of encouragement.

After all, the role may not come easily since hundreds of years on non-involvement are in his genes.

Let's all look forward to the day when hanging up the laundry is no big deal for a Dad!

Happy parenting.


About the author: Frank McGinty's writes motivational books for both parents and teenagers. If you want to develop your parenting skills and encourage your kids to be all they can be, visit his web pages,

http://www .frank-mcginty.com/peace-formula.html AND http://www.f rank-mcginty.com/for-parents.html

Author: Frank McGinty

Source: http://isgreenteahavecaffeines.com/284891-Responsible-Fatherhood-A-Unique-And-Irreplaceable-Role.html

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Zaily Carmona and Dami?n Mill?n | Amway Achieve Magazine

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Diamond

Enjoying the Journey ? When Dami?n and Zaily Mill?n were first introduced to the AMWAY? Business Opportunity, they were both excited by the potential it offered. Dami?n came to this country with only an eighth-grade education and had been working as a truck driver for 10 years.

The couple knew that achieving the lifestyle they dreamed of would take more than what they were earning at the time. ?I remember when I was just 9 years old, thinking, I want to go to the United States and become a millionaire!? laughs Zaily.

For the first time, she began thinking maybe that wasn?t such a far-fetched goal.

Dami?n says he realized right away that he would have to change. ?In order to succeed, I had to undergo a process of personal growth. I needed to read self-improvement books and gain confidence,? he explains.

Once he did become more confident, there was no stopping them. ?I remember a period of about two months when we didn?t sleep much at all because we were so excited about what we were doing,? he says. ?I said to Zaily, ?This is it, my love! This is what we?ve been looking for!??

They worked at it every day and every success they had fueled their dreams. ?Life is too beautiful to just sit and do nothing,? says Zaily. ?We knew we could reach Diamond if we didn?t let any obstacles get in our way.?

?It?s all about having the right attitude, having the humility to know you can?t do it on your own,? says Dami?n. ?What is wonderful about this business is that you always have someone who?s gone ahead of you, guiding you along the way.?

Whether talking with people about the products or the business opportunity, we focus on what they need, not what we want to offer them. ? Dami?n Mill?n

They say they always encourage people to enjoy the journey instead of looking at it as something to suffer through. And instead of being discouraged when they heard the word ?no,? they were inspired to find others who, like them, could see the potential this business offered. ?You can?t let anything stop you. You have to have a burning desire in your heart to reach your goals and be an example for others,? advises Dami?n.

He says achieving Diamond was like graduating from a university: ?We had our title, we received our recognition, which is so important in this business. But it is not our final destination ? it?s just one more step in our journey.?

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The average monthly Gross Income for ?active? IBOs was $202.

Approximately 46% of all IBOs were active.

U.S. IBOs were considered ?active? in months in 2010 when they attempted to make a retail sale, or presented the Amway IBO Compensation Plan, or received bonus money, or attended an Amway or IBO meeting. ?Gross Income? means the amount received from retail sales, minus the cost of goods sold, plus monthly bonuses and cash incentives. It excludes all annual bonuses and cash incentives, and all non-cash awards. There may be significant business expenses, mostly discretionary, that may be greater in relation to income in the first years of operation.

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Source: http://www.achievemagazine.com/zaily-carmona-damian-millan

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Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Bruno Mars: 'When I Was Your Man' Video Premiere ... - Just Jared

Check out the official video premiere for Bruno Mars? latest single ?When I Was Your Man?!

The video was co-directed by the 27-year-old singer and Cameron Duddy, who previously directed the video?s for Bruno?s songs ?Locked Out of Heaven,? ?The Lazy Song,? and ?The Other Side?.

PHOTOS: Check out the latest pics of Bruno Mars

Bruno sits behind a piano and belts out the heartbreaking ballad in the retro-themed video.

WHAT DO YOU THINK of the video for Bruno Mars? ?When I Was Your Man??


Bruno Mars ? ?When I Was Your Man?

Like Just Jared on Facebook

Source: http://www.justjared.com/2013/02/05/bruno-mars-when-i-was-your-man-video-premiere/

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Stock market has worst day this year; Dow off 129

The stock market is closing out its worst day so far this year, bringing the Dow average back below 14,000.

The drop, which erased 129 points from the Dow Jones industrial average, came on the first trading day after the index closed above 14,000 for the first time since the financial crisis.

The Dow ended at 13,880 Monday, down 0.9 percent.

Other indexes fell slightly more. The Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 17 points to end at 1,495, a loss of 1.2 percent.

Technology stocks fell more than other sectors, pulling the Nasdaq lower. The technology-heavy index fell almost 48 points, or 1.5 percent, to 3,131.

Falling stocks outnumbered rising ones nearly four to one on the New York Stock Exchange. Volume was average, 3.4 billion shares.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/stock-market-worst-day-dow-off-129-211726397--finance.html

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5 Health Facts Everyone Should Know about Alcohol | Leisure ...

5 Health Facts Everyone Should Know about Alcohol
Article by emaxhealth.com, Recommended by Taylor Biblo, Wellness Outreach Team

According to a recent issue of Consumer Reports on Health, scientific research tells us that drinking alcohol is good for us, bad for us?and?in some cases, somewhere in between. To make sure that you are making the right health decisions while drinking, see what Consumer Reports on Health has to say with their ?5 truths about alcohol? summarized below:

Recommendations by the American Heart Association and other agencies state that moderate drinking for men should be no more than 2 drinks per day; but for women, it?s only 1 drink per day. The reason behind this is physiological. The male body contains more water than the female body, which means that men dilute consumed alcohol a little better than women do. Therefore, given the same amount of alcohol, men will have a lower blood alcohol concentration and therefore can take on that one extra drink.


For men, binge drinking is defined as consuming 5 or more drinks in a 2-hour period (for women it?s 4 or more drinks in 2 hours). While it may seem to be safer to abstain from alcohol for a period and then ?let loose? on a weekend night, the effects of binging over regular consumption is actually more harmful to your health. Not only does binge drinking put a person at risk of an unintended accident or regretful act that would not have happened during moderate drinking, but it also places undue stress on the heart and blood vessels. According to Consumer Reports on Health, people who binge drink have higher rates of high blood pressure and are 56% more likely to suffer a stroke than non- or moderate-drinkers?even in the absence of coronary artery disease.

According to the National Cancer Institute, the more alcohol you drink the higher is your risk of developing cancer of the mouth, esophagus, larynx, liver and breast. Comparing heavy drinkers (4 or more drinks per day) to moderate drinkers (1-2 per day), heavy drinkers have a 5?fold increase in the risk of developing head and neck cancers, and a higher risk of pancreatic, colorectal and breast cancer. For the less heavy drinker, only an overall moderate rise in risk links several cancers to drinking.

The oft-repeated news is that red wine is good for your health. However, as it turns out in one study, it doesn?t have to be alcoholic red wine to gain any benefits. The study compared the effects of an ounce of gin, 10 ounces of red wine and 10 ounces of non-alcoholic red wine on blood pressure in a study consisting of 67 men ages 55 to 75 who were all at a high risk for cardiovascular disease. Looking at the effect the drinks had on blood pressure, the researchers found that as expected, drinking gin for 4 weeks gave no benefit for decreasing blood pressure. Red wine decreased blood pressure somewhat, but not enough to be statistically significant. Non-alcoholic red wine, however, did result in a statistically significant decrease in blood pressure. The researchers attribute the non-alcoholic red wine blood pressure reducing abilities to the antioxidant polyphenols found in grape skins.

We?ve heard it time and time again, and it?s printed clearly on the warning labels of many non-prescription meds such as cough syrups and pain relievers??Don?t take with alcohol while pregnant or while operating heavy machinery such as driving a fork lift as it may make you drowsy and do something stupid like drink while pregnant and take a spin on a forklift.? But what about other types of meds like prescription meds for treating diabetes or irritable bowel syndrome? Is it okay to wash a pill down with a bottle of beer or glass of wine at the dinner table? In short?NO! While you may get away with doing that with some meds, many could result in a life-threatening situation. When in doubt about how your meds may interact with alcohol, always consult with your physician first.

Source: http://blog.leisurefitness.com/2013/02/5-health-facts-everyone-should-know-about-alcohol/

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Lesbian widow pushes for equal military benefits

Photo courtesy Tracy Johnson

Donna Johnson, left, and Tracy Johnson at their home in Raeford, N.C., in 2012.

By Bill Briggs, NBC News contributor

When her spouse was killed in Afghanistan, Tracy Johnson drove across town to her mother-in-law?s house???clutching her marriage certificate???so she could hear the Army?s formal notification. No one from the military came to her door.

She later watched as the American flag that cloaked the coffin of her spouse, Donna Johnson, was offered, not to her, but to Donna Johnson?s mother ? the next of kin, as U.S. law stipulates. She was denied death benefits, she said, that are standard issue to heterosexual spouses of service members who die in action: free health care, tuition assistance, and monthly indemnity compensation of about $1,200.

And then there was the ring. On Valentine?s Day 2012, Tracy Johnson placed that band on her wife's finger during their marriage ceremony in Washington, D.C. Last October, as Johnson escorted her wife's body home from Dover Air Force Base, the Army asked Johnson to carry the wedding ring, designated as a ?personal effect.? After arriving in Fayetteville, N.C., Johnson was obliged, by a federal statute, to deliver the ring to an Army officer who then provided it to Donna Johnson?s mother who, in turn, gave it back to Tracy Johnson. She wears it on her finger today.

?I?m not considered ?family? (by the military). I?m not considered a spouse and I?m damn sure not considered a widow, by definition,? said Johnson, an Army National Guard staff sergeant who served in Iraq. ?We didn?t marry for any of those benefits. We married out of love.

?And I?m not standing up here, whining: ?Woe is me.? We were adults, big girls, and we knew what we were getting ourselves into. But it doesn?t mean I have to stand idly by and see all this happen to somebody else who?s in a same-sex marriage (in the military).?

Johnson's experiences were mandated by the Defense of Marriage Act, or DOMA, which defines marriage as the legal union of one man and one woman. The 1996 law ? followed by the Department of Defense and all federal agencies???bars same-sex military spouses from benefits made available to the heterosexual spouses of service members: dental and medical insurance, discounted military housing, and military ID cards, which allow spouses to visit on-base commissaries, child-care facilities and movie theaters.

Under DOMA, military leaders were not allowed to officially acknowledge Johnson, who believes she may be the first same-sex spouse to lose a partner to combat following the 2011 repeal?of ?Don?t Ask Don?t Tell? (DADT)???the policy that kept gays from openly serving in the armed forces. (Donna Johnson?s mother specifically asked Tracy Johnson to accompany the body home, allowing her a seat on the plane.) The only federal employee who openly referred to the dead soldier as Johnson's ?wife,? was President Barack Obama, who sent Johnson a letter of condolence, she said.

On Thursday, Obama's?nominee for secretary of defense, former Sen. Chuck Hagel, told congressional members during a confirmation hearing that he is "fully committed ... to doing everything possible under current law to provide equal benefits to the families of all our service members."

Furthermore, during his inauguration address on Jan. 21, Obama spoke broadly of gay rights, saying: "Our journey is not complete until our gay brothers and sisters are treated like anyone else under the law."

Battle for equality
For now, current law stipulates that, following the military death of a same-sex spouse, the branches first must notify the ?primary next-of-kin????in Donna Johnson?s case, her parents. If U.S. troops list a same-sex spouse on their emergency-contact forms, that spouse eventually will receive word from the military???after the blood family is told.?

?It is not like, though, it?s a day or 'x' number of weeks later. It would be almost immediately,? said Nathan Christensen, a Pentagon spokesman. ?They (branch officers) would talk to primary next-of-kin first and relay the information. And then, whoever the (other designated person is), they would call them very soon thereafter. So we?re talking minutes or hours as opposed to days, weeks or months.

?DOMA is still the law we uphold. Even though that (DADT) repeal has been taken care of, there are certain benefits that are not applicable across the force,? Christensen added.

But pressure is mounting on the Pentagon and?the White House to change that notification policy???and the other gaps in same-sex spousal benefits???by writing an executive order or a DOD-wide regulation.

Same-sex advocacy groups described the Jan. 25 electionof same-sex wife Ashley Broadway as Fort Bragg?s 2013 ?spouse of the year? as a mandate to the military to figure out a way to override DOMA. That same day, White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said Obama is contemplating how benefits could be administratively extended to the spouses of gay service members, the Washington Blade reported.

'Just like all the other Army wives'
?No military spouse should have to hear second-hand that something has happened to their service member,? said Stephen Peters, president of the American Military Partner Association (AMPA), a Washington, D.C.-based support network for lesbian and gay military families.?

"No military spouse should have to watch the flag that is draped over the coffin of his or her service member folded and handed to anyone else,? added Peters, whose husband, Marine Corps Maj. Alasdair Mackay, returned safely in January from a one-year deployment to Afghanistan. ?Our families live through the daily fear of worrying about having something happen to their service member while they?re deployed. But we do it without access to the same supports and benefits that other military families get. Our service members, they go to war for our country for equality, yet their families are treated as if they aren?t important, as if they are somehow second class.?

Courtesy of Stephen Peters

Marine Corps Maj. Alasdair Mackay and Stephen Peters were married in New York City during Christmas 2011 before Mackay deployed to Afghanistan.

The AMPA asserts that Tracy Johnson was the first ? and only, to date???same-sex spouse to lose a military wife or husband in combat. It's possible, however, that another same-sex spouse suffered that type of tragedy before DADT was rescinded and when members were not open about their sexual orientation???even if they were legally married.?

Tracy Johnson was not listed on the emergency notification form that service members fill out, she said. Because DADT had been revoked, Donna Johnson assumed that Tracy would receive the same benefits that are granted to all military spouses???for example, being the first person to be notified by the military should a wife or husband die in combat, Johnson said.?

"Donna didn't even realize she had to put me down. She thought I was automatically extended that benefit as her wife???just like all the other Army wives who are the first ones to notified," she said.

'What's right is right'
The point is moot???even if Tracy Johnson was listed, due to DOMA she still would not have been the first person that military officials would have visited in the hours after Donna Johnson was killed.?

In June, the U.S. Supreme Court is expected to rule on the constitutionality of DOMA.

Near Fort Bragg, N.C., Johnson holds tight to a fine philosophical line ? honoring her wife and the Army while questioning the law. She describes how individual Army members privately treated her ?with respect and compassion?, giving her an American flag???though not the same flag atop the coffin???during a private ceremony before Donna Johnson?s funeral. She lauds Donna Johnson?s family for supporting her, insisting that she sit with them in the front row during the memorial service.

But Donna Johnson?s mother, Sandra, is not so charitable with her summary of the events.

?Tracy?s unit supports her, her family supports her, and she was given support by the community itself. Why can?t the federal family be supportive?? Sandra Johnson asked. ?I know: It?s the law. But what?s fair is fair. What?s right is right.

?The family is already going through grief. You don?t keep putting a knife in the wound and make it deeper. She?s dead, she?s gone, she can?t be brought back. So why are you treating this family, and treating Tracy, with this indignation??

Related:?Spouses club relents, says lesbian Army wife can be 'full member'

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/30/16774806-whats-right-is-right-widowed-lesbian-pushes-for-equal-military-benefits?lite

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