Thursday, May 31, 2012

US Army internal medicine residents receive awards from American College of Physicians

US Army internal medicine residents receive awards from American College of Physicians [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 30-May-2012
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Contact: Zina Poletz (on behalf of the U.S. Army Medical Department)
zpoletz@webershandwick.com
612-719-2024
Weber Shandwick Worldwide

FORT KNOX, Ky., May 30, 2012 Last month, U.S. Army medical residents and their program directors from around the country attended the American College of Physicians' (ACP) annual meeting to present their research, compete in national medical student abstract competitions and share their perspective as military officers with civilian peers. Three Army medical residents earned national awards for their research.

"The ACP annual meeting is a valuable setting where Army internal medicine physicians can come together to collaborate and share best practices with civilian colleagues," explained Col. Jeanne Tofferi, M.D., MPH, FACP, internal medicine consultant to the Army Surgeon General. "The Army actively encourages professional development and leadership opportunities for our medical residents, and these national awards speak to their high caliber. The research and presentation skills they honed at this year's ACP annual meeting will help them become even better clinicians."

During the annual meeting, residents participated in the Associates and Medical Student Abstract Competitions, which included clinical vignette and poster competitions. Already winners of their local chapter competitions, the following Army residents earned national ACP awards:

  • Capt. Richard Wayne Hilliard, Jr., D.O., William Beaumont Army Medical Center (El Paso, Texas) won the ACP National Association Abstract Competition for his presentation, "Atypical Presentation of Recurrent Adrenal Cell Carcinoma."
  • Capt. Johnny Dias, D.O., Walter Reed National Military Medical Center (Bethesda, Md.) for his poster, "Comparison of Aerosolized Swallowed Fluticasone to Esomeprazole for the Treatment of Eosinophilic Esophagitis."
  • Capt. Hillary Thomas, M.D., San Antonio Military Medical Center (San Antonio, Texas) for her poster, "Effects of Illicit Drug Use on Clinical Outcome of Heart Failure."

The ACP divides abstracts into four categories for the competition: clinical vignette, basic research, clinical research and quality improvement - patient safety.

"The ACP's Internal Medicine meeting is a valuable opportunity to meet and learn from both military and civilian peers," said Capt. Johnny Dias, D.O., an internal medicine resident at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. "The loan repayment, bonuses and benefits are great, but the chance to provide medical care for our Soldiers is a unique experience within the Army."

###

The American College of Physicians is the largest medical specialty organization and second-largest physician group in the United States with 132,000 members, including internists, subspecialists, medical students, residents, Fellows and Masters.

About the U.S. Army Medical Department

One of the largest health care networks in the world, Army Health Care offers more than 90 professional health care career paths more than any other military service. The U.S. Army's F. Edward Hbert Armed Forces Health Professions Scholarship Program is one of the most comprehensive health scholarships available today, and covers the complete cost of tuition, school fees and books, a monthly stipend of more than $2,000, as well as a $20,000 signing bonus for select areas of practice. Practicing physicians and health professionals can join the Army Reserve at any time in their career up to age 60. For more information, visit www.healthcare.goarmy.com.


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US Army internal medicine residents receive awards from American College of Physicians [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 30-May-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Zina Poletz (on behalf of the U.S. Army Medical Department)
zpoletz@webershandwick.com
612-719-2024
Weber Shandwick Worldwide

FORT KNOX, Ky., May 30, 2012 Last month, U.S. Army medical residents and their program directors from around the country attended the American College of Physicians' (ACP) annual meeting to present their research, compete in national medical student abstract competitions and share their perspective as military officers with civilian peers. Three Army medical residents earned national awards for their research.

"The ACP annual meeting is a valuable setting where Army internal medicine physicians can come together to collaborate and share best practices with civilian colleagues," explained Col. Jeanne Tofferi, M.D., MPH, FACP, internal medicine consultant to the Army Surgeon General. "The Army actively encourages professional development and leadership opportunities for our medical residents, and these national awards speak to their high caliber. The research and presentation skills they honed at this year's ACP annual meeting will help them become even better clinicians."

During the annual meeting, residents participated in the Associates and Medical Student Abstract Competitions, which included clinical vignette and poster competitions. Already winners of their local chapter competitions, the following Army residents earned national ACP awards:

  • Capt. Richard Wayne Hilliard, Jr., D.O., William Beaumont Army Medical Center (El Paso, Texas) won the ACP National Association Abstract Competition for his presentation, "Atypical Presentation of Recurrent Adrenal Cell Carcinoma."
  • Capt. Johnny Dias, D.O., Walter Reed National Military Medical Center (Bethesda, Md.) for his poster, "Comparison of Aerosolized Swallowed Fluticasone to Esomeprazole for the Treatment of Eosinophilic Esophagitis."
  • Capt. Hillary Thomas, M.D., San Antonio Military Medical Center (San Antonio, Texas) for her poster, "Effects of Illicit Drug Use on Clinical Outcome of Heart Failure."

The ACP divides abstracts into four categories for the competition: clinical vignette, basic research, clinical research and quality improvement - patient safety.

"The ACP's Internal Medicine meeting is a valuable opportunity to meet and learn from both military and civilian peers," said Capt. Johnny Dias, D.O., an internal medicine resident at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. "The loan repayment, bonuses and benefits are great, but the chance to provide medical care for our Soldiers is a unique experience within the Army."

###

The American College of Physicians is the largest medical specialty organization and second-largest physician group in the United States with 132,000 members, including internists, subspecialists, medical students, residents, Fellows and Masters.

About the U.S. Army Medical Department

One of the largest health care networks in the world, Army Health Care offers more than 90 professional health care career paths more than any other military service. The U.S. Army's F. Edward Hbert Armed Forces Health Professions Scholarship Program is one of the most comprehensive health scholarships available today, and covers the complete cost of tuition, school fees and books, a monthly stipend of more than $2,000, as well as a $20,000 signing bonus for select areas of practice. Practicing physicians and health professionals can join the Army Reserve at any time in their career up to age 60. For more information, visit www.healthcare.goarmy.com.


[ 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.


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Chemists Outrun Laws in War on Synthetic Drugs

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Chemists Outrun Laws in War on Synthetic Drugs
Synthetic mimics of marijuana, dissociative drugs and stimulants -- such as the "bath salts" allegedly consumed by Randy Eugene, the Florida man shot after a horrific face-eating assault -- are growing in popularity and hard to control. Every time a compound is banned, overseas chemists synthesize a new version tweaked just enough to evade a law's letter.

Source: Wired
Posted on: Wednesday, May 30, 2012, 9:12am
Views: 16

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Militants deny link to Pakistani doctor in bin Laden case

DERA ISMAIL KHAN/PESHAWAR, Pakistan (Reuters) - Deepening the mystery in a case that is straining Islamabad's relations with Washington, a Pakistani militant group said on Thursday it never had ties to a doctor who helped the CIA find Osama bin Laden, even though he was jailed for aiding them.

Last week, after Dr Shakil Afridi was convicted by a court in the Khyber tribal region near the Afghan border, Pakistani officials said the decision was based on treason charges for helping the CIA and conspiring against the state.

After that announcement rankled the United States, Pakistani officials said the doctor had a history of womanizing, sexual harassment and assault and stealing, allegations that could not be independently confirmed.

A court document released on Wednesday stated that Afridi was imprisoned for 33 years for supporting the Lashkar-e-Islam (LI) militant group.

"There is no truth to this. We want to get him ourselves. If we get hold of him, we are going to punish him according to sharia law," Abdul Rasheed, an LI commander, told Reuters.

Rasheed said Afridi was a bad doctor who had mistreated people and that was why the militants wanted to punish him.

"He is a traitor, an enemy of Islam, a greedy blackmailer."

The comments are likely to raise new questions about Afridi's case, which has come to symbolize the strains in the alliance between Pakistan and the United States. U.S. officials hail Afridi as a hero who helped the CIA track down bin Laden.

The al Qaeda chief was killed by U.S. Navy SEALs in a raid in the Pakistani garrison town of Abbottabad in May last year.

U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta suggested Afridi's sentence would hurt efforts to repair ties damaged by several events, including the unilateral raid that killed bin Laden.

Pakistani officials describe bin Laden's long presence in Abbottabad as a security lapse and reject suggestion that members of the military or intelligence services were complicit in hiding him there

U.S.-Pakistan cooperation is critical for weakening the Taliban insurgency in neighboring Afghanistan.

Failure to do so could hurt President Barack Obama's re-election bid. The United States and Pakistan are deadlocked in talks over re-opening supply routes through Pakistan to NATO troops in Afghanistan - closed by Islamabad after a NATO cross-border air attack killed 24 Pakistani soldiers last year.

In Washington, government sources said the United States was making strenuous efforts to win Afridi's release from jail.

LED BY FORMER BUS DRIVER

Citing intelligence reports, the court document states that Afridi was "in league" with LI, providing it with funding and medical treatment for its leaders. It noted his "love" for the group's leader, Mangal Bagh, a former bus driver turned warlord.

LI is a relatively small militant group based in Khyber, one of seven ethnic Pashtun tribal districts along the border that have never come under full government control.

It is not allied with any of the other major militant groups operating in nuclear-armed Pakistan.

U.S. officials often describe Pakistan as an unreliable partner in the war on militancy and demand tougher action against militant groups. Critics also say the judicial system has failed to take decisive action. Convictions for terrorism are rare, with appeals dragging on for years.

Pakistan security forces face an array of militant groups which sometimes battle each other, but often share the goal of toppling the government and imposing shariah law.

LI had several bloody clashes with the al-Qaeda linked Pakistani Taliban, seen as the biggest security threat to Pakistan, one of the most unstable countries in the world.

Former and current Pakistani security and intelligence officials say Afridi was a poorly qualified doctor.

LI, which made similar accusations, could be attacked by other militant organizations if it is seen as having cooperated with Afridi, who is in his late 40s.

"We punished him three years ago after people complained about him. He conducted improper surgeries, sold poor quality medicines and blackmailed people," said Rasheed.

"We caught him, fined him and distributed that money to the affected people. His surgeries had disabled many people. The government is inept so it never acted against him."

Afridi was tried in a tribal administration court, under laws which do not carry the death penalty. Some analysts said the decision was made to appease the United States.

The Pakistani Taliban had a similar interpretation.

"Shakil Afridi is a traitor, and the only punishment for a traitor is death. Pakistan's rulers are afraid of America, so they are not sentencing him to death," Pakistani Taliban spokesman Ehsanullah Ehsan told Reuters.

"Dr. Shakil Afridi caused the martyrdom of Osama bin Laden, who was a hero of Islam. If the Taliban get their hands on Shakil Afridi, we will cut him to pieces."

Afridi is in solitary confinement because authorities at the prison in the northwestern city of Peshawar fear militants or others may try to kill him.

"It is, therefore, necessary that under the present circumstances, the doctor should be given maximum security. He should be made secure," said his lawyer Samiullah Afridi.

(Additional reporting by Mark Hosenball in Washington; Writing by Michael Georgy; Editing by Ron Popeski)

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Wordless Wednesday: Best of Friends ~ Family, Parenting, Reviews ...

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JPMorgan restructures unit that had $2 billion loss: report

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Motorola: a brief history

A snapshot of the last several years in Motorola's history shows a company in flux, culminating last week, when the smartphone manufacturer's sale to Google was finally given the green light. After undergoing governmental scrutiny from the US, China and the EU, the move, priced at around $12.5 billion, seems a logical fit, given the phone maker's push toward a portfolio built nearly exclusively around the search giant's mobile operating system. Of course, it's hard to imagine such a transaction taking place, had the Mobility wing not been spun off from Motorola a year and a half prior.

These are the latest events for a company that has undergone a fair amount of change in its 80-plus-year existence. It's a long and fascinating story -- one likely hazy at best for those who can only remember as far back as the original RAZR or StarTAC. So, before the company embarks on the next chapter of its history, let's take a quick look back, after the break.

Continue reading Motorola: a brief history

Motorola: a brief history originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 May 2012 08:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Australia expels Syrian diplomats, says other countries will too

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After 25 years, World No Tobacco Day is making an impact

After 25 years, World No Tobacco Day is making an impact [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 29-May-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Tim Parsons
tmparson@jhsph.edu
410-955-7619
Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health

May 31 marks the 25th anniversary of World No Tobacco Day, but does the day really inspire anyone to think about quitting smoking? Yes it does, according to a new study led by investigators from the Informatics Program at Children's Hospital Boston and Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. For the study, the research team monitored news promoting cessation and Internet search queries indicative of cessation for six years in seven Latin American nations. Cessation news coverage and Internet search queries for cessation peaked on World No Tobacco Day, increasing as much as 83 percent and 84 percent compared to a typical day, respectively. Their findings appear in the May/June issue of Journal of Medical Internet Research.

"After 25 years we didn't know if World No Tobacco Day was having a significant public health impact," said John W. Ayers, lead author of the study, Children's Hospital faculty member and recent graduate of the Bloomberg School of Public Health. "Frankly, given the proliferation of awareness days, we were surprised to find large spikes pointing to interest in cessation."

Senior analyst and Bloomberg doctoral candidate Benjamin Althouse noted, "We generally think of New Year's Day as the peak time when media encourages quitting and smokers want to quit. World No Tobacco Day spikes, however, often outsized New Year's increases, like a second-chance quitting resolution."

"People who live in low-and middle-income countries comprise a majority of the deaths from the global tobacco epidemic. Our study provides initial evidence that World No Tobacco Day encourages cessation awareness and cessation interest in these countries," said Joanna Cohen, PhD, who leads the Bloomberg School'sInstitute for Global Tobacco Control. "The majority of smokers do want to quit, and World No Tobacco Day is an effective reminder and inspiration."

"Almost 6 million people die each year from tobacco including 600,000 from second-hand smoke. Anything that helps people quit tobacco is a life-saver," said Douglas Bettcher, director of WHO's Tobacco Free Initiative. "This research encourages all of us to continue the long fight against tobacco. But we should never let down our guard against the tobacco industry's devious tactics to undo the public health gains we have been able to make."

The authors note these increases have potentially large health implications. Jon-Patrick Allem, study coauthor and USC Keck Medicine affiliate said, "To otherwise achieve these kinds of increases, countries would have to raise cigarette taxes 2.8 percent every year; this is likely undoable year in and year out, unlike the way World No Tobacco Day delivers.

Daniel Ford, professor of Epidemiology at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and Kurt Ribisl, professor of Public Heath at UNC's Gillings Global School of Public Health, also contributed to the published report.

###

The research was supported by the Institute for Global Tobacco Control with funding from the Bloomberg Initiative to Reduce Tobacco Use.


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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.


After 25 years, World No Tobacco Day is making an impact [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 29-May-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Tim Parsons
tmparson@jhsph.edu
410-955-7619
Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health

May 31 marks the 25th anniversary of World No Tobacco Day, but does the day really inspire anyone to think about quitting smoking? Yes it does, according to a new study led by investigators from the Informatics Program at Children's Hospital Boston and Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. For the study, the research team monitored news promoting cessation and Internet search queries indicative of cessation for six years in seven Latin American nations. Cessation news coverage and Internet search queries for cessation peaked on World No Tobacco Day, increasing as much as 83 percent and 84 percent compared to a typical day, respectively. Their findings appear in the May/June issue of Journal of Medical Internet Research.

"After 25 years we didn't know if World No Tobacco Day was having a significant public health impact," said John W. Ayers, lead author of the study, Children's Hospital faculty member and recent graduate of the Bloomberg School of Public Health. "Frankly, given the proliferation of awareness days, we were surprised to find large spikes pointing to interest in cessation."

Senior analyst and Bloomberg doctoral candidate Benjamin Althouse noted, "We generally think of New Year's Day as the peak time when media encourages quitting and smokers want to quit. World No Tobacco Day spikes, however, often outsized New Year's increases, like a second-chance quitting resolution."

"People who live in low-and middle-income countries comprise a majority of the deaths from the global tobacco epidemic. Our study provides initial evidence that World No Tobacco Day encourages cessation awareness and cessation interest in these countries," said Joanna Cohen, PhD, who leads the Bloomberg School'sInstitute for Global Tobacco Control. "The majority of smokers do want to quit, and World No Tobacco Day is an effective reminder and inspiration."

"Almost 6 million people die each year from tobacco including 600,000 from second-hand smoke. Anything that helps people quit tobacco is a life-saver," said Douglas Bettcher, director of WHO's Tobacco Free Initiative. "This research encourages all of us to continue the long fight against tobacco. But we should never let down our guard against the tobacco industry's devious tactics to undo the public health gains we have been able to make."

The authors note these increases have potentially large health implications. Jon-Patrick Allem, study coauthor and USC Keck Medicine affiliate said, "To otherwise achieve these kinds of increases, countries would have to raise cigarette taxes 2.8 percent every year; this is likely undoable year in and year out, unlike the way World No Tobacco Day delivers.

Daniel Ford, professor of Epidemiology at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and Kurt Ribisl, professor of Public Heath at UNC's Gillings Global School of Public Health, also contributed to the published report.

###

The research was supported by the Institute for Global Tobacco Control with funding from the Bloomberg Initiative to Reduce Tobacco Use.


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India: Forest Rights Of Indigenous People In India

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Yuvraj Dilip Patil, 2012

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In India, the indigenous peoples are predominantly composed of the large and diverse tribal populations scattered across several States. In Indian languages, there is no exact equivalent for the ?tribe?, but close synonymous are vanavasis (Forest dwellers) or adivasi (Original inhabitants).

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Indigenous forest people use their land in many different ways ? for ?shing, hunting, shifting agriculture, the gathering of wild forest products and other activities. For them, the forest is the very basis of survival and its resources have to be harvested in a sustainable manner. But when traditional life styles change and, for example, industrial logging or mining takes place, over use of resources can lead to con?ict.

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Objective

1. To critically analyze the Laws relating to protection of rights of forest dwellers.

2. To study the role of Indian Judiciary relating to forest rights.

3. To analyse the hardship faced by the indigenous people.

4. To make the recommendation for the management of forest Land & rights of forest dwellers over the forest Land.

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SSRN Working Paper Series External link

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John Torode launches 15th Annual Manchester Food and Drink ...

Celebrity chef and television favourite John Torode was in Manchester to launch the 15th annual Manchester Food and Drink Festival and announce that Metrolink is the event?s official travel partner for the third year running.

John is appearing at the festival in September and was on hand to help mark the official countdown to the event.? Arriving in the city, the Masterchef host took a scenic trip on an iconic yellow tram and it was announced that Metrolink would once again be the official travel partner to the festival, providing the vital link between events for Manchester foodies.

Celebrating its 15th year, the Manchester Food and Drink Festival takes place from 21 September to 8 October.? A raft of exciting events, activities and tastings are planned including an exclusive Metrolink Masterclass and Q&A with John Torode which will take place in the Live Cookery Theatre as part of the Festival Hub on Albert Square on 29 September.? Full details will be announced soon.

The Festival Hub, the main festival outdoor site on Albert Square, looks set to provide the most exciting food and drink adventure ever, extending over three weekends due to popularity with a super-sized local ales festival, craft beers bar, Pub on the Hub, Pop Up Wine Bar, Cider Carnival, Oktoberfest, cocktail bar, Independent Producers Fair, Manchester Cook Off, communal, long-table banquets, Live Cookery Theatre, and the biggest street food festival the region has ever seen!

Plus there?ll be the Big Indie Wine Fest, Whisky Festival and a programme of restaurant events for the mammoth 17 days. The event, as usual, will be topped off with the MFDF Gala Dinner and Awards (8 October) ? the glamorous finale to the festival, where the region?s food and drink heroes are rewarded in glittering style.

Commenting on the festival, John Torode said: ?I have heard great things about the Manchester Food and Drink Festival and am delighted to be taking part in this year?s event.? Manchester has a fantastic foodie reputation and I?m looking forward to sampling the best that the city has to offer.?

As the official travel partner of the festival again this year, Metrolink provides the vital link for galloping gourmets looking to connect between events across the city centre and surrounding areas of Eccles, Altrincham, Chorlton, Bury and Oldham.? With Metrolink, festival-goers can leave the car at home and travel quickly, safely and easily between venues, enjoying the best that the festival has to offer.

Philip Purdy, TfGM?s Metrolink Director, says: ?Metrolink continues to be at the heart of the city and we?re proud to once again show our support for the Manchester Food and Drink Festival.? It?s been a pleasure showing John around the city on the tram and we look forward to welcoming him back for his Masterclass in September.?

Siobhan Hanley, MFDF Director, said: ?We are so excited about this year?s landmark ?big fifteen? festival. The event and its thousands of fans deserve a birthday party to be proud of and that?s what they?re going to get ? with the UK?s best chefs, restaurants, brewers and producers providing the food! We?re delighted to welcome Metrolink back as our official travel partners. They are a crucial supporter in making the festival happen, and in connecting the huge number of participating venues and customers ? what the festival is all about!?.

For full details of the events planned to celebrate this year?s Manchester Food and Drink Festival, please visit www.foodanddrinkfestival.com.? For further information on Metrolink, please visit www.metrolink.co.uk.

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Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Remembering the Sullivan Family

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The Five Sullivan Brothers. Photo courtesy the National Archives and Records Administration.Outside the Five Sullivan Brothers Iowa Veterans Museum, Waterloo, Iowa.

On Memorial Day, it seems only fitting to remember the family most famous for its personal loss during a war. This family happens to be from my hometown.

As a native of Waterloo, Iowa, I grew up hearing the name of the ?Five Sullivan Brothers? just because we had a convention center named in their honor. It wasn?t until years later I realized why. Perhaps you already know the story?these five brothers enlisted in the Navy after the attack on Pearl Harbor with just one condition. They wanted to be able to serve together.

They were granted their request, and served together until they all died together, as well, when the U.S.S. Juneau was torpedoed by the Japanese and sunk in November 1942. Suddenly the Sullivan family of Waterloo, Iowa, was given the unwelcome distinction of bearing the largest single loss for a military family in history, a distinction they retain to this day.

In 2008, Waterloo opened the Sullivan Brothers Iowa Veterans Museum in their honor, just one portion of which lets visitors walk through a replica of the Sullivan home and flip through a scrapbook of their family photos and newspaper articles. It?s an intimate family atmosphere with a crackling radio program in the background. So even though my co-author, Karen Whiting, was writing the World War 2 stories for our book, she let me write this one contribution from my own hometown: Carrying On. (Read the excerpt here and find it on August 3 in the book.)

If you?re interested in the full story of the Sullivans, check out the book We Band of Brothers: The Sullivans and World War 2, or the movie, The Fighting Sullivans, made in 1944.

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Spurs strike first in West finals, win 19th in row

SAN ANTONIO (AP) ? Gregg Popovich wanted some "nasty." The San Antonio Spurs obliged, and they've now tied NBA history.

Not to mention left the Oklahoma City Thunder agonizing about what could have been.

Manu Ginobili scored a playoff-high 26 points and the Spurs won their 19th in a row to tie the NBA record for longest winning streak kept alive in the playoffs, beating the Thunder 101-98 in the Western Conference finals opener on Sunday night.

Obeying orders snarled by their coach in a fourth-quarter timeout to play "nasty," the Spurs erased a nine-point deficit that stunned the Thunder, who had looked on their way to finally kicking the perception that they're the underdog.

Kevin Durant led the Thunder with 27 points. Russell Westbrook had 17.

"I talked to them about they've got to get a little bit uglier, get a little more nasty, play with more fiber and take it to these guys," Popovich said. "Meaning you have to drive it, you have to shoot it."

And when they started doing just that, the Thunder couldn't keep up.

The 2001 Lakers are the only other team to carry a winning streak this long in the playoffs ? and they did so on their way to a championship.

Game 2 is Tuesday night.

The Spurs matched the fourth-longest streak in NBA history, and with one more will become just the fourth team to surpass 20.

Tim Duncan had 16 points and 11 rebounds, and Tony Parker shook off a dismal start to finish with 18 points. But it was Ginobili who steered the Spurs to strike first in a highly anticipated matchup of the West's top two teams for practically the entire regular season.

"They got us on our heels. We were not aggressive," Ginobili said. "And in the second half, we did have it."

On the other end, Oklahoma City's own Big Three struggled to find its shot early before awakening in the second half. Yet Westbrook still finished just 6 of 15 and took a nasty, face-first spill late in the fourth that had the entire Thunder bench crossing the court to check on their All-Star point guard underneath the opposite basket.

Westbrook appeared to favor his left leg when he got up, but he never left the game.

It was a tantalizingly close near-upset for the young Thunder, who were ousted in the Western Conference finals a year ago and were in position for home-court advantage throughout the playoffs until being overtaken by the Spurs in the final month of the season.

But it was a fittingly close opener for two franchises with so many similarities.

That includes Thunder general manager Sam Presti ? the architect of the Thunder's rapid turnaround from a 23-win season to consecutive Western Conference finals in just four years ? getting his big break in the NBA as intern in San Antonio.

And the Thunder didn't even need their own Big Three to keep things close.

Durant, Westbrook and Harden at one point through the second quarter were 5 of 21 ? a typically ominous stat line for a trio that had been responsible for nearly 70 percent of Oklahoma City's points through the playoffs so far. But for all the talk about San Antonio's superior bench, it was the Thunder's reserves who picked up the slack.

None more so than Derek Fisher, whose famous game-winner for the Lakers on this same court in the 2004 playoffs has made "0.4 seconds" a phrase that needs no further explanation to the Spurs. Eight years later, and the oldest player in this series at 37, Fisher already met his playoff average at halftime and finished with 13 points.

Gary Neal added 12 points and was the only other Spurs player in double figures.

Harden lost in the first round of his matchup with Ginobili, who's also a lefty and a former Sixth Man of the Year winner. Harden finished with 19 points on 7-of-17 shooting but started by missing nine of his first dozen shots.

Tipping off another conference finals couldn't happen soon enough for Oklahoma City. With nothing to do but prepare for the Spurs all week ? and be asked about the Spurs ? the Thunder grew weary of questions about being perceived underdogs. About not having the same championship pedigree. About how they'll possibly stop a team rolling through one of the 10 longest winning streaks in NBA history.

So repetitive were the questions that Durant, visibly annoyed, suggested earlier this week that someone instead ask how the Thunder are going "to come at" the Spurs. That didn't stop Oklahoma City from facing more of the same at shootaround Sunday morning, when Thunder coach Scott Brooks tried quashing again the idea his team was somehow intimidated.

"They're not going to be in awe. They're going to have respect for them," Brooks said. "We know we can beat them."

They left still having to prove it.

Notes: Spurs C DeJuan Blair has given the Thunder fits in his three NBA seasons, including 22 points on them in a March win. But San Antonio's starting center for practically the entire season didn't play for the third consecutive playoff game. "The game will tell us what's appropriate and what's not," Popovich said before tipoff. ...Just because a Boston-Oklahoma City matchup in still possible in the NBA finals doesn't mean center Kendrick Perkins is hopeful about facing his old team. "I really don't care," Perkins said of the Celtics advancing. ...Gov. Rick Perry took in his first Spurs game this year, sitting courtside next to Spurs owner Peter Holt, a major donor to the former Republican presidential candidate.

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BBC iPlayer reaching Windows Phone within 'weeks,' will catch up with Sherlock on your Lumia

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We've see BBC iPlayer reach many devices over time, but it's been conspicuously absent on Windows Phone. Nokia has stepped into give us some relief, and it's now promising that a port of the TV catch-up service will be ready for your Lumia 800 "in weeks." Good news no doubt, although Nokia's encyclopedic knowledge of British TV streaming is also dashing hopes of using the Sky Go mobile app on Windows Phone anytime soon: the same Nokia rep doesn't see Sky being ready for a "good few months" at the earliest. As such, you'll have no problems keeping up with Doctor Who and Sherlock when they're airing, but we wouldn't count on watching live football matches for awhile.

BBC iPlayer reaching Windows Phone within 'weeks,' will catch up with Sherlock on your Lumia originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 28 May 2012 01:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Palestinian Airlines resumes flights after 7 years

MARKA AIRBASE, Jordan (AP) ? Palestinian Airlines is back in the skies after being grounded for seven years by the deepening enmities of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Once hailed as a symbol of Palestinian statehood dreams, the carrier is a tiny operation, with just two 48-seat turboprop planes, two weekly flights and a borrowed hub in Egypt.

But Palestinians say just being on the map again is what matters.

"My hands were shaking when I bought the ticket ... and it said the name of the carrier is Palestinian Airlines," said recent passenger Zuhair Mohammed, a 38-year-old teacher from Gaza.

The 15-year-old airline's fortunes have been closely tied to the quest for a Palestinian state.

In the late 1990s, when Palestinians appeared on the verge of a statehood deal with Israel, Palestinian Airlines operated from Gaza International Airport, flew tens of thousands of passengers a year to Middle Eastern destinations and planned to expand to Europe.

Those ambitions were crushed by the outbreak of a Palestinian uprising against Israeli occupation in September 2000, following the collapse of U.S.-led peace talks. Over the next year, Israeli troops destroyed the Gaza airport, and Palestinian Airlines was forced to move its base to El-Arish, an Egyptian coastal resort about 60 kilometers from Gaza.

Seven years ago, the airline stopped flying altogether after its reservoir of passengers dried up. It had mainly served Gazans who, starting in 2005, could no longer reach El-Arish because of increasingly frequent Israeli closures of Gaza's borders.

The closures accompanied an Israeli troop withdrawal from Gaza in 2005 and intensified with the capture of an Israeli soldier by Gaza militants a year later and the violent takeover of Gaza by the Islamic militant Hamas in 2007.

Until last year, the vast majority of Gaza's 1.7 million residents were locked inside the territory, in part because Egypt went along with Israel and largely kept its Rafah border terminal with Gaza closed.

After the ouster of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in 2011, Rafah gradually reopened and Gazans are now able to travel, though restrictions remain, particularly for men under 40, who need Egyptian security clearance.

Palestinian Airlines once again had potential customers. On May 9 it resumed operations, starting with biweekly flights between El-Arish and Marka Airbase in the Jordanian capital of Amman. The new route means Gazans no longer have to travel to Cairo, some 350 kilometers (215 miles) from their territory, to board planes.

Mustafa Abu Dan, a Palestinian civil servant, on Sunday bought four tickets at a Gaza City travel agency for a flight to Amman. He said he's pleased to be saving time and money, but he worried that Gazans and their travel plans will always vulnerable to political upheaval.

"Rafah is the only gate for us to the world now, but still it's linked to the political developments in Egypt," said Abu Dan, 32. "I voice my hope to have our own airport again so we can travel without problems, like others."

In one of the many political twists of Palestine air travel, the carrier is owned by the Palestinian Authority, the West Bank-based political rival of Gaza's Hamas rulers.

Gaza and the West Bank lie on opposite sides of Israel, which has banned virtually all movement between the two territories. Palestinians hope that one day they will be united into a state, with east Jerusalem as its capital. All three were captured by Israel in the 1967 Mideast War.

The West Bank does not have an airport, and Israel is unlikely to approve Palestinian Authority plans to build one, citing security concerns. West Bank residents have to fly from neighboring Jordan.

Palestinian Airlines operates two Fokker 50 turboprop planes, remnants of the original fleet that also included a since-retired Boeing 727. The Fokkers were donated by the Netherlands and the 727 by Saudi Arabia.

During the years of idleness, Palestinian Airlines leased one of the Fokkers to an Egyptian carrier, Memphis, whose logo is still painted on the plane. The other plane is marked by black, red and green stripes on the tail, the colors of the Palestinian flag.

On Sunday, the Amman-El-Arish flight carried 27 passengers, and 44 were booked on the return trip later in the day. The flight takes an hour and 35 minutes, more than double the time needed for the direct route over Israel. The airline does not have permission to cross Israeli air space, said regional director Azmi Samaan.

Airline officials said flights to Saudi Arabia for Muslim pilgrims from Gaza are set to begin later this week, and routes to the United Arab Emirates and Turkey are being planned.

The airline hopes it will eventually turn a profit, but for now national pride and making life easier for the Gazans are more important, said Samaan.

"We want the Palestinian flag to continue flying," he said in an interview at Marka Airbase. "This is part of the independent state, to have an airline, no matter what it will cost us."

He acknowledged that the airline also represents the many setbacks over the years for Palestinian statehood hopes. When Gaza's airport was inaugurated in 1998, thousands cheered it as a milestone toward independence.

This time around, flights resumed with little fanfare.

Samaan said it's better than not flying at all.

"At least, we are there," he said. "We are in the market."

___

Barzak reported from Gaza City.

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The science of why you love coffee ? Living ? Bangor Daily News ...

A generation ago, most Americans recognized two kinds of coffee: regular and decaf. Now we?re concerned about every last detail ? from the beans? country of origin and whether they are organic, have been shade-grown and traded fairly to the degree of roasting and how much pressure was applied during brewing. Yet for all of this connoisseurism, how much do we understand about the science of coffee?

Get ready to know your joe.

?Coffee?s main attributes are bitterness, acidity and body, also known as mouth-feel,? according to Ronald Pegg, a food science professor at the University of Georgia who teaches an introductory course on coffee. ?The key is to get these three attributes in balance.?

As coffee makes its way from tree to mug, producers must keep this balance in mind. It?s not an easy task, because coffee contains more than 1,000 chemical compounds, according to research by Thomas Hofmann of the Technical University of Munich and Oliver Frank of the University of Muenster.

Consider the first element, the bean. There are 70 species of coffee, but two dominate the market: coffea arabica, the more common variety native to Ethiopia, and coffea canephora, also known as coffea robusta, a more disease-resistant plant. Arabica is almost universally acknowledged as the superior variety, although blends often contain robusta because it?s cheaper and adds a strong bitterness that some coffee drinkers enjoy in small doses.

There are several chemical differences between the two varieties. Arabica has 60 percent more fat than robusta ? and taste-testers typically favor coffee made from beans with more fat. Fat also helps during the production process because it creates a more even roast. Arabica beans also have a higher concentration of sugar.

To understand why a sugary bean makes a better brew, we have to consider roasting.

Freshly picked coffee beans have virtually no flavor. Roasting is what makes coffee palatable. The roasting process triggers a long list of chemical reactions. One is caramelization, the breaking-down of sugar, which contributes to coffee?s brown color. Roasting also creates compounds that contribute to coffee?s unique flavor and aroma, including diacetyl, which adds a butterscotch flavor, and furans, which contribute a nutlike taste.

Roasting also generates what are known as Maillard reactions. Named after the French chemist Louis Camille Maillard, these complex reactions occur when heat is applied to amino acids in the presence of sugars. Like caramelization, they are responsible for browning and for the production of hundreds of chemicals that, in combination, give unique flavors to cooked meats, baked breads, dark beers, toast and coffee. Since arabica beans have about twice as much sugar as the robusta variety, the roasting process generates a fuller and more complex variety of Maillard reactions in them than it does in robusta, making for a more interesting taste in the coffee.

Roasting is a touchy business, though. High heat can also overproduce bitter compounds and ruin the drink. For many years, food scientists believed that caffeine was the main source of bitterness in coffee. While it?s true that pure caffeine has a bitter flavor, it?s present in such low proportions in an average cup of coffee that it contributes only a small amount of flavor.

In fact, coffee bitterness is attributable to a family of chemicals known as chlorogenic acids, which are also present in tea, peaches and prunes. Chlorogenic acids aren?t bitter themselves, but, when roasted, they transform into two related chemicals ? lactones and phenylindanes. Lactones give a pleasant, soft bitterness. Phenylindanes are more powerful and harsh, and are present in higher concentration in dark roasts.

Getting the roast right is still more art than science. Expert coffee roasters must constantly pull sample beans out from the heat to check the color and aroma. These markers are actually proxies for the concentration of lactones and phenylindanes. Food scientists are working on ways to make the process more scientific. One day, perhaps, instead of asking your barista for medium roast or dark roast, you?ll ask for a precise balance of lactones and phenylindanes. (And you thought coffee orders couldn?t get any more complicated.)

Just as there is science to bean selection and roasting, there?s also a little bit of science in brewing and drinking coffee.

How much of the coffee ends up in the cup depends on the brewing method chosen. Percolators and drip machines are extremely inefficient at transferring chemicals from bean to beverage. The final result is only about 1.3 percent coffee; the rest is water. That?s okay if you like a coffee with mild flavor and body, but many find that extraction rate rather weak. French-press (or plunger pot) coffee is similarly mild, but it is high in oil content, providing a body that some drinkers prefer. (French-press enthusiasts should be advised that those oils may elevate cholesterol levels.) On the other end of the spectrum are espresso machines, which force the coffee compounds into the water. Espresso is more than 5 percent coffee bean. These differences affect not only flavor but also the perception of body and mouth-feel.

No matter which brewing method you select, drink your joe immediately. As hot coffee sits, those lactones break down into acids. The pH of brewed coffee can drop 15 percent in an hour or so, throwing off the acidity-bitterness-body balance so crucial to a good cup of coffee.

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Talk 2 Brazil interview with Merel Wagner, International Business ...

Merel Wagner, obtained a BA in European Studies and she is about to graduate with an MSc. in International Business from the University of Maastricht, the Netherlands.

With living and study experiences in the Netherlands, Turkey, South Africa and Canada, and with travel experience through many parts of the world Merel is glad to say that she is an open, communicative and engaged individual.

Listen to the interview:?PLAY?or?DOWNLOAD

Especially during her dissertation project on the influence of cultural differences on knowledge transfer between Dutch and Brazilian companies, Merel?s interest in the Brazilian business world grew. Therefore, her intentions are to continue studying Brazil on a professional level as an emerging market researcher or business facilitator.

In case people wish to contact me, they could do so at?annemerelwagner@gmail.com

More?About Merel

Merel on?LinkedIn

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Jessica Sanchez: Screwed Over by New American Idol Contract


Jessica Sanchez picked the wrong year to finish second on American Idol.

In the wake of this singer's loss to Phillip Phillips, an Associated Press report took a look into changes made to the season 11 contract for all contestants.

It states that this year's runner-up is only entitled to a "developmental" deal with 19 Recordings, something that could net Sanchez between $30,000-$60,000, depending on the number of single's commissioned by the label. This marks the first time in history the second-place finisher has not been awarded a guaranteed album and $175,000 advance.

Jessica Sanchez Photograph

Yes, Jessica could still see that figure if 19 Records does order a CD; and she'll also bank $50,000 for all future Idol-sponsored public appearances.

But why the change in guarantees?

Because ratings for American Idol are down; a majority of albums from show finalists have not done well; and because the music industry overall has changed: in 2011, nearly 1.3 billion singles were purchased, while only 331 million albums were moved.

Phillips, meanwhile, received $300,000 and an album contract for winning.

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Help To Cure The Yips | Content for Reprint

Author: RoseannaLeaton | Total views: 396 Comments: 0
Word Count: 611 Date:

Every golfer dreads the Yips. We don't like to see anyone who is suffering from this issue let alone contemplate having it ourselves.?? Although the Yips are more commonly associated with putting, they can be experienced in any part of the golf game, because no matter what shot you are about to play you always have time to think.

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Yes, I know the Yips happen automatically without you having to think about them. But they only happen to a person when they are in a situation where there has been time to think.?

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In tennis the Yips only occur to a player when they are about to serve the ball.? They don't tend to surface in the rest of the game of tennis, as their response at that time is reactive as opposed to proactive. The Yips are also seen more prevalently in darts, snooker and pool as once again the player has time to think.?

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The Yips usually start because of over-thinking and then fear unconsciously takes over.? The Yips then take a grip as an unconscious pattern of behavior.? You no longer have to think about them and they just happen.?

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That said, it's also pretty difficult for someone who suffers from the Yips to not think about them!? A golfer with the Yips inevitably finds him or herself brooding fearfully about what will happen the next time they take whatever club it is out of their bag.? And then almost as soon as they set up to the ball the Yips just happen.? And the more you try to stop them from happening the worse they get.

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When seeking to cure the Yips it is important to appreciate how they began and in which part of the mind they are now triggered.? The Yips are quite definitely a physical, nervous reaction to the situation. It is an automatic reaction that just happens no matter how hard you try to stop it.?

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Your conscious mind alone will therefore not be able to overcome this affliction.? Your subconscious mind is where this automatic reaction is triggered.? Somehow you need to be able to change the wiring within the subconscious so that it sends a different signal to the nerves and muscles in your arms and hands.

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Psycho Neuro Physiological Programming (PNPP) is what is needed.? You need to get into your subconscious mind to send different messages throughout your neurotransmitters so that a different physiological reaction is triggered and experienced.? Hypnosis allows access to your subconscious mind and this opens the door to allow such programming to take place.

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In reality a cure for the Yips has to encompass both mental and physical spheres, as The Yips are a result of the interaction between the two that has become automated as an instinctive reaction to particular situations.? Hypnosis and PNPP used together cover all aspects of the Yips from cause to end result and thus the automated reaction that is called the Yips can be cured.

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Roseanna Leaton, avid golfer and specialist in golf hypnosis mp3s, author of the GolferWithin golf mind training system and developer of PNPP to cure the Yips.

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P.S.? Discover how to focus your golf mind and develop better feel and technique through clear focus.? Check out my website now.

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Improve your golf focus with mental golf training from http://www.GolferWithin.com. Discover how you can cure the Yips with Roseanna?s help.

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1: It's Golfing Galore in St. George, Utah

If you are an avid golfer, then you have probably heard of St. George, Utah. It's one of the premier places to play these days, or even retire in style.

2: How To Choose The Right Golf Tournament Format

There are many formats that have become popular for golf tournaments. In this article we go over the most popular formats.

3: Five Decisions To Make Before Opening A Driving Range

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4: Simple Steps To Hitting A Hybrid Golf Club

Now here's a golf tip that has been asked a lot on the golf message boards and golf blogs.How do you hit a hybrid golf club?The hybrid or utility golf club has been a big hit in the golf community for

5: How To Drive A Golf Ball Farther More Consistently

Learning how to hit the driver can be a significant challenge. Discover some useful golf driving tips to help you learn how to become a better golfer.

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