Sunday, September 30, 2012

How do I find and buy a short sale house? - Zillow Real Estate Advice

A local real estate agent can help you locate available short sale properties for sale in the areas you are interested in.
The process of purchasing the short sale is similar to a regular sale initially.? Once a home is found that you want to place an offer on you make the offer with earnest money deposit and a prequalification.? Once the home owner accepts the offer the offer gets submitted to the bank for approval.? This is the step that makes it so different from a regular sale.? The process for the final approval can be weeks to many, many months.? It is a process that requires tremendous patience and understanding that there may be hurdles along the way.? However, if you are not in a hurry to move short sales can be great options.
If you need help finding a local agent let me know.
Good luck!

Stacey

Source: http://www.zillow.com/advice-thread/How-do-I-find-and-buy-a-short-sale-house/462015/

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Buffett's kids use dad's ideas to invest in giving

(AP) ? As they work to give away part of Warren Buffett's roughly $47 billion fortune, his three children have adopted an approach that looks remarkably similar to their father's technique for making all that money.

Like Buffett, each relies on tiny staffs. And just like their father invests only in businesses he understands, they restrict their giving to their targeted projects.

Warren Buffett doesn't direct how the foundations created by Susie, Howard and Peter Buffett spend the estimated $2.6 billion in Berkshire Hathaway stock they'll receive, but his children seem to have absorbed his philosophy.

"I think the only pressure I feel from him is making sure we're smart about how we spend the money," said Howard Buffett. "He's had no influence on where we give money, but he's had a big influence on how we go about it."

Buffett's children have focused on different topics, reflecting their divergent interests.

Howard Buffett is helping farmers in impoverished nations produce more to reduce world hunger. Susie Buffett is strengthening early childhood education and looking for ways to reduce teen pregnancy. And Peter Buffett wants to empower women and girls worldwide through education, collaboration and economic development to end violence against women.

"We're given this amazing opportunity to try and make change where we can," Peter Buffett said. "And being our father's children, we don't think small."

The Buffett children have all been running foundations their parents set up for them since the late 1990s, but they had to dramatically increase their giving after 2006 when Warren Buffett announced his overall giving plan and the children received their first annual gift of stock worth roughly $65 million to each of them.

They'll have to ramp up their giving again because Buffett's annual gifts of Berkshire Hathaway stock will increase to roughly $100 million to $125 million to each child next summer.

Although his children's foundations will each eventually receive stock worth about $2.6 billion, their charitable work is still overshadowed by their dad's main pledge to give the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation stock worth more than $44 billion.

Warren Buffett is also giving nearly $4.4 billion worth of stock to the Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation, named for the investor's first wife, who died in 2004. That organization promotes women's reproductive health and tries to limit the spread of nuclear weapons.

All three younger Buffetts said they're glad their father encouraged them to take risks, so they wouldn't be afraid to tackle difficult issues.

The Buffett children also said they are glad their parents had the foresight to set up separate foundations for each of them, so they could all go their own way.

Howard Buffett regularly travels to poverty-stricken parts of the world to talk with farmers and check up on projects his foundation has funded, but the 57-year-old often doesn't tell his dad where he's going until after he returns to avoid worrying him about the dangers of destinations like the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Howard Buffett, who raises corn and soybeans in Illinois, likes to get a close look at the challenges those farmers he's trying to help face. He said when he's travelling he's reminded of how his mother would try to help anyone in need she encountered.

"It's very hard for me to walk into those circumstances and not try to do something," he said.

In his giving, Howard Buffett tries to focus on programs that can be continued after the initial grant ends, so he doesn't support introducing expensive hybrid seeds and irrigation in places where farmers can't afford them.

The elder Buffett manages one of the world's largest conglomerates with a tiny staff of two dozen at its Omaha headquarters, and Howard, Susie and Peter run their foundations with staffs less than half that size.

Peter Buffett, 54, said the three children also have applied their father's belief in limiting his investments to areas he understands.

"You want to be as focused on an end goal as you can be," Peter Buffett said. "In a very practical way, it helps you say no."

Peter Buffett, who is a musician and composer, is working on leveling the playing field for women and girls worldwide through a variety of programs. He hopes that if girls, particularly in impoverished areas, can get access to more resources and education they'll be ready to play a larger role in their communities and decision making.

Peter Buffett's NoVo Foundation also support programs to help U.S. schools teach kids social and emotional skills and sound decision-making.

Susie Buffett said she enjoys trying to tackle messy, human problems that aren't easy to solve, much like her mom did.

"That comes directly from my childhood. It is what I watched my mother do," said Susie Buffett, 59. "She had me in the car with her at a very early age in the housing projects and deep in the community. She was very involved personally. It was not a check-writing thing. It was her being there."

Susie Buffett was always interested in education, but she decided to focus her giving on early childhood education after asking Omaha's schools superintendent where she could make the biggest difference.

Because Susie Buffett is the only one of Warren's children living in Omaha, she also uses her Sherwood Foundation to support Omaha nonprofits that help make the city a better place and help low-income neighborhoods.

Warren Buffett's decision to increase the amount of money he is giving his children's foundations indicates he supports their work, and he praised their philanthropy.

"Everything has impressed me," Buffett said "They're each doing things they have a special interest in which they have some special abilities too. And they work very hard at it."

___

Follow Josh Funk online at www.twitter.com/funkwrite

___

Online:

Berkshire Hathaway Inc.: http://www.berkshirehathaway.com

Sherwood Foundation: http://www.sherwoodfoundation.org

Howard G. Buffett Foundation: http://www.thehowardgbuffettfoundation.org

NoVo Foundation: http://novofoundation.org

Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation: http://www.stbfoundation.org

Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation: http://www.gatesfoundation.org

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-09-29-Buffett's%20Benevolence/id-f89abf24e1474e8fbfbd40424af734cf

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Privatization - Brazil - Country watch: Petrobras forges closer UK ties, Anadarko sale, oil workers strike

The CEO of Brazil's Petrobras (NYSE: PBR), Maria das Gra?as Foster, has flagged closer cooperation with the UK energy sector after meeting with Britis...


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Source: http://member.bnamericas.com/news/privatization/country-watch-petrobras-forges-closer-uk-ties-anadarko-sale-oil-workers-strike

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Saturday, September 29, 2012

U.S. plan for emergency Egypt aid hits roadblock

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Obama administration notified Congress on Friday that it planned to transfer $450 million to Egypt to help the country's new government, but the move was quickly blocked by a skeptical lawmaker who said she saw no immediate need for the cash infusion.

Representative Kay Granger, the Texas Republican who chairs the House of Representatives appropriations subcommittee for foreign operations, said the administration's $450 bailout proposal for Egypt was premature.

"This proposal comes to Congress at a point when the U.S. - Egypt relationship has never been under more scrutiny, and rightly so," Granger said.

"I am not convinced of the urgent need for this assistance, and I cannot support it at this time," she said, adding that she had put a hold on the funds.

Granger's action reflects unease among some U.S. lawmakers over the new Islamist government that has taken the reins in Egypt after a pro-democracy uprising overthrew longtime U.S. ally Hosni Mubarak last year.

The Obama administration has nevertheless vowed to push forward with a $1 billion aid package for Cairo, a point reinforced by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton this week when she met Islamist President Mohamed Mursi on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly meeting in New York.

The U.S. assistance proposal had languished during Egypt's 18 months of political turmoil. The country now faces a severe economic crisis including worsening balance of payments problems and an exodus of foreign investors that has left local banks shouldering much of the lending to the state.

The United States was a close ally of Egypt under Mubarak and gives $1.3 billion in military aid a year to Egypt plus other assistance.

Egypt was among the countries swept by violent anti-American protests over an anti-Islam video made in California, and some U.S. lawmakers have raised questions about the future of U.S. assistance, particularly given sharp budget constraints at home.

The Obama administration has argued that it is essential to buttress Egypt, the most populous Arab country and the first to sign a peace agreement with U.S. ally Israel.

Egypt has requested a $4.8 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), a move the United States supports. Other countries are slowly making good on promises of assistance.

Saudi Arabia in June transferred $1.5 billion as direct budget support, approved $430 million in project aid and pledged a $750 million credit line to import oil products. Qatar has also promised $2 billion in support.

(Editing by Warren Strobel and Toni Reinhold)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-plan-emergency-egypt-aid-hits-roadblock-221141994.html

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Daqo New Energy Spins Off Its Module Business - Business Review ...

CHONGQING, China, Sept. 29, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Daqo New Energy Corp. (NYSE: DQ) ("Daqo New Energy" or the "Company"), a leading polysilicon manufacturer based in China, today announced that it has sold Nanjing Daqo New Energy Co., Ltd., the entity that operates the Company's module business, to Daqo Group for a consideration of?RMB 65.6 million. Daqo Group is one of the largest private electrical equipment manufacturers in China and an affiliate of the Company. Daqo Group's shareholders in aggregate beneficially own over a majority of the Company's total outstanding ordinary shares.

The transaction has been approved by the Company's audit committee, which is composed entirely of independent directors. The Company had conducted a public auction of Nanjing Daqo New Energy Co., Ltd. through Nanjing Asset and Equity Exchange before it determined that the terms of the sale of the module business to Daqo Group are fair to the Company.

"We are pleased to complete the spin-off of the module business and to be able to focus our resource and attention on our core polysilicon and wafer business," commented Dr. Gongda Yao, chief executive officer of Daqo New Energy.

About Daqo New Energy Corp.

Daqo New Energy Corp. (NYSE: DQ) is a leading polysilicon manufacturer based in China. Daqo New Energy primarily manufactures and sells high-quality polysilicon to photovoltaic product manufacturers. It also manufactures and sells photovoltaic wafers. For more information about Daqo New Energy, please visit www.dqsolar.com.

For further information, please contact:

Daqo New Energy Corp.
Kevin He, Investor Relations
+86-23-6486-6556
Kevin.he@daqo.com

?

?

?

SOURCE Chongqing Daqo New Energy Co., Ltd.

Source: http://www.businessreviewusa.com/press_releases/daqo-new-energy-spins-off-its-module-business

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Friday, September 28, 2012

Intel previews tablets powered by its new chip

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ? Intel previewed a wave of tablet computers powered by a microprocessor that the company redesigned to make a bigger dent in the rapidly growing mobile market.

An assortment of major computer vendors made the tablets that were shown Thursday in San Francisco. All the devices depend on Intel Corp.'s new processor and Windows 8, a dramatic overhaul of the widely used operating system made by Microsoft Corp.

The tablets won't go on sale until October 26 when Windows 8 is released. The prices for the various machines will be revealed during the next few weeks.

Intel held the event in an attempt to prove it's adapting to the market upheaval caused by the increasing popularity of smartphones and tablets such as Apple Inc.'s iPad.

The shift to mobile devices poses a threat to Intel because its previous chip designs weren't well suited for the needs of smartphones and mobile devices. As a result, Intel's sales are now falling as demand for its personal-computer microprocessors tapers off.

Intel's new tablet chip, code named "Clover Trail" while it was in development, is called the Atom Z2760. It boasts a dual-processing feature that makes tablets run faster and with low power consumption so the battery life of a device should last 10 hours while it's showing video or performing other tasks.

The chips that Intel makes for PC devour more power, making them ill-equipped for tablets that are often used for long stretches without a recharge. That's one of the main reasons Apple and other tablet makers have shunned Intel's chips.

Like Intel, PC makers are counting on Windows 8 to give them a slice of a market that so far has been dominated by the iPad. Most of the other tablets that are siphoning sales from the iPad are running on Android, a free operating system made by Google Inc.

Windows 8 presents applications in a mosaic of tiles to allow for touch-screen navigation and highlight real-time information from the Internet. The revamped operating system also can be adjusted to work on traditional laptop and desktop computers with keyboards. That versatility is meant to appeal to office workers and other people who want to use their machines to create content, as well as consume it.

To cater to that market, some tablet makers are designed hybrid machines that include a keyboard that can be untethered from the display screen.

Erik Reid, an executive in Intel's mobile and communications group who orchestrated Thursday's showcase, described Windows 8 as a breakthrough that "offers and incredible and exciting opportunity to drive new innovation in the marketplace."

The flattery came after Bloomberg News reported Intel CEO Paul Otellini's apparent misgivings about the new operating system. In a meeting earlier this week with Intel employees in Taiwan, Otellini said he believes Microsoft is releasing Windows 8 before all the bugs are fixed, according to Bloomberg, which quoted an unnamed person who heard the remarks.

The manufacturers who have built tablets and hybrid machines running on Intel's new chip include Hewlett-Packard Co., Dell Inc., Lenovo Group, Asustek Computer Inc. and Samsung Electronics Co.

Intel shares gained 44 cents Thursday to close at $23.09.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/intel-previews-tablets-powered-chip-214618217--finance.html

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Clinton urges 'cool heads' in China-Japan dispute

NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton urged China and Japan on Thursday to let "cool heads" prevail in a festering dispute over a cluster of islands in the East China Sea that has soured ties between Asia's two largest economies.

Clinton met Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi on the sidelines of this week's U.N. General Assembly meeting in New York and said it was important to ratchet down tensions over the islands, known as the Diaoyu islands in China and the Senkaku Islands in Japan, a senior State Department official said.

"The secretary ... again urged that cooler heads prevail, that Japan and China engage in dialogue to calm the waters," the official told reporters.

"We believe that Japan and China have the resources, have the restraint, have the ability to work on this directly and take tensions down, and that is our message to both sides," the official said.

Yang, however, used a portion of China's annual address to the U.N. General Assembly on Thursday night to forcefully restate Beijing's stance that the islands had belonged to China from ancient times and were seized in 1895 after Japan defeated the Qing Dynasty in a war.

The top Chinese diplomat also condemned the Japanese government's purchase of the islands from their private owner, earlier this month, a step that sparked protests across China and prompted Beijing to curb bilateral trade and tourism.

"The moves taken by Japan are totally illegal and invalid," Yang said of the purchase, which Tokyo says was done to dampen down the dispute by preventing the islands' use by Japanese activists.

"They can in no way change the historical fact that Japan stole the Diaoyudao and affiliated islands and that China has sovereignty over them," Yang told the General Assembly. Diayudao is what China calls the main island in the cluster.

He urged Tokyo to resolve the issue through negotiations.

A Chinese Foreign Ministry statement on Yang's meeting with Clinton quoted him as saying Japan "must abandon its illusions, face up to reality and earnestly correct its errors."

Clinton was due to meet Japanese Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba and South Korean Foreign Minister Kim Sung-hwan in a three-way meeting on Friday. Japan and South Korea, two close U.S. allies, have also seen their relationship rocked in recent months by maritime territorial disputes.

In hourlong talks on the sidelines of the United Nations on Tuesday, Japan's Gemba urged China to exercise restraint over the dispute. Japanese diplomats described the meeting as "tense," as Gemba endured a stern lecture from China's Yang.

The islands - located in waters thought to be rich in natural gas deposits - have been administered by Japan since 1895, but China has declared them "sacred territory," and Taiwan has also asserted its own sovereignty over the area.

ESCALATION RISK

Tokyo and Beijing have traded increasingly sharp words in the dispute, which has seen both countries send patrol boats in a game of cat-and-mouse in the waters near the disputed islands, raising concerns that an unintended collision or other incident could escalate into a broader clash.

The United States has said repeatedly it takes no position on the sovereignty dispute, but believes it is important for China and Japan to work out their differences peacefully.

In her meeting with Yang, Clinton also touched on territorial disputes in the South China Sea that have set Beijing against a number of its Southeast Asian neighbors, including the Philippines, a close U.S. ally.

China has resisted calls by the United States and some Southeast Asian countries to agree on a multilateral framework to settle the disputes, preferring to engage with each of the other less powerful claimants individually.

The U.S. official said Clinton welcomed moves by China to restart informal meetings with members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, or ASEAN, most recently in Cambodia two weeks ago, as a sign of progress.

"We expect these meetings are going to continue in the lead-up to the East Asia Summit in November," the official said. "This is precisely what the secretary has been advocating, that they restart a dialogue."

Clinton met later with a delegation of ASEAN ministers, who were guardedly upbeat about China's latest moves, a second U.S. official said.

"We are going to have to wait and see over the course of the next several weeks, but we have obviously encouraged the process to grow and deepen," the official told reporters.

Clinton and her Chinese counterpart also discussed North Korea, which remains locked in a dispute with the international community over its nuclear program, as well as the possible next steps as the world's major powers confront Tehran over its own nuclear ambitions, the official said.

Clinton also raised the issue of Syria, where China has joined Russia in blocking U.S.-led moves within the U.N. Security Council to take tough measures against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad as his government engages in a bloody struggle against armed rebels.

(Additional reporting By Paul Eckert; Editing by Todd Eastham and Peter Cooney)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/clinton-urges-cool-heads-china-japan-island-dispute-000112874.html

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AT&T Shoved a Touchscreen in Its Latest LTE MiFi Hotspot Because, Hey, Why Not! [Mobile]

Wanna know the quickest way to make any mobile product more tantalizing? Give it a touchscreen! And that's exactly what AT&T and Novatel did with the 4G LTE MiFi Liberate, packing the finger-friendly tech into a form factor that looks like a Magic Trackpad. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/ErB25nW2zgg/att-shoved-a-touchscreen-in-its-latest-lte-mifi-hotspot-because-hey-why-not

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Egypt's Morsi assumes major role in Mideast

UNITED NATIONS (AP) ? Egypt's new President Mohammed Morsi assigned himself the heavyweight's role in the Middle East on Wednesday, declaring in his first speech to the United Nations that the civil war raging in Syria is the "tragedy of the age" and must be brought to an end.

In a wide-ranging address that touched on all major issues confronting the region, Morsi also decried Israeli settlement-building on territory Palestinians claim for a future state and condemned a film produced in the United States that denigrates Islam's Prophet Muhammad.

He urged all U.N. member nations to join in an effort to end what he called "the catastrophe in Syria" that pits the regime of Bashar Assad against opposition forces trying to end 40 years of dictatorship. More than 30,000 people have been killed in the 18-month conflict.

Morsi has called for Assad to step down and said Wednesday that "the bloodshed in Syria and the humanitarian crisis that has unfolded must be stopped."

Morsi, an Islamist and key member of the once-banned Muslim Brotherhood, opened his remarks to the U.N. General Assembly by celebrating himself as Egypt's first democratically elected leader who was swept into office after what he called a "great, peaceful revolution" that overthrew Hosni Mubarak.

He then quickly inserted himself into the thorniest issues in the Middle East, demanding that the United Nations grant membership to the Palestinians, with or without a peace agreement with Israel.

"The fruits of dignity and freedom must not remain far from the Palestinian people," he said, adding that it was "shameful" that U.N. resolutions are not enforced.

The Palestinians are expected to again ask for U.N. recognition and formally make application to the world body in November, after the U.S. presidential election. President Barack Obama said when the Palestinians sought recognition last year that Washington would block the move until there was a peace deal with Israel. The focus of Israeli-Palestinian negotiations, which have been on hold for four years, is a two-state solution that would formally grant the Palestinians the rights of an independent country.

In his bid to end the violence in Syria, Morsi has invited Turkey, Iran and Saudi Arabia to join a contact group, though the Saudis have not yet participated and the fighting in Syria continues unabated. While Morsi wants Assad to step aside, he said Wednesday that he opposes any foreign military intervention.

The U.N. Security Council, which could call for intervention or global sanctions against Syria, is deadlocked because Russia, Assad's main protector, and China have blocked a series of resolutions brought by Western governments.

Morsi also denounced as an obscenity the anti-Islam video that portrays the Prophet Muhammad as a womanizer, a child molester and a fraud, insisting that freedom of expression does not allow for attacks on any religion.

He also condemned the violence that swept Muslim countries last week in reaction to the video. At least 51 people were killed, including the U.S. ambassador to Libya and three other Americans targeted in an attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi.

"Egypt respects freedom of expression. One that is not used to incite hatred against anyone. One that is not directed toward one specific religion or culture. A freedom of expression that tackles extremism and violence. Not the freedom of expression that deepens ignorance and disregards others," Morsi said.

He appeared to have been responding to Obama's General Assembly speech Tuesday in which the U.S. leader again condemned the video but sternly defended the U.S. Constitution's free speech guarantees.

In Cairo, Egyptians watched Morsi's speech closely for signs of how he would conduct his presidency. Sahar Abdel-Mohsen, a 31-year architect, praised Morsi's condemnation of the Assad regime, but questioned his assertions about free speech.

"How can he talk about freedom of expression when there are many protesters in detention in Egypt, including minors, and when people are locked up for the so-called contempt of religion?" she said.

The head of the Arab League, meanwhile, called for the international community to criminalize blasphemy, warning that insults to religion pose a serious threat to global peace and security.

Nabil Elaraby's comments to a special session of the U.N. Security Council put him at direct odds with the United States and its Western allies, which are resolutely opposed to restrictions on freedom of expression. However, Elaraby said that if the West has criminalized acts that result in bodily harm, it must also criminalize acts that cause "psychological and spiritual harm."

Earlier Wednesday, Iranian leader Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, known for past fiery denunciations of the United States and Israel, spoke at length about his vision for a new world order without the "hegemony of arrogance."

Of Israel, he cited what he termed the "continued threat by the uncivilized Zionists to resort to military action against our great nation."

The U.S. delegation boycotted Ahmadinejad's speech in response to the "paranoid theories and repulsive slurs against Israel" included in a separate address delivered by the Iranian president on Monday.

"It's particularly unfortunate that Mr. Ahmadinejad will have the platform of the U.N. General Assembly on Yom Kippur, which is why the United States has decided not to attend," Erin Pelton, spokeswoman for the U.S. Mission to the U.N., said in a statement.

Thousands of protesters in yellow vests emblazoned with photos of Iranian dissidents they said were killed by the Iranian regime gathered outside U.N. headquarters during the Iranian leader's speech. Speakers included former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-NY, and former Rep. Patrick Kennedy, D-R.I.

Deputy Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast was threatened by members of the protest crowd as he walked near the United Nations. He was confronted by the angry mob, said New York police spokesman Paul Browne. The diplomat flagged down police officers, who helped him get to a safe spot. Browne said the threats were believed to have been verbal.

In his speech on Wednesday, Ahmadinejad did not refer to Iran's nuclear program. Israel and Western nations contend that Tehran is using what it insists is a peaceful nuclear program as a cover for developing the ability to build atomic weapons.

Tough sanctions have been imposed on Iran as punishment for its failure to cooperate with the U.N. nuclear watchdog agency to prove the peaceful nature of its drive to enrich uranium to levels that could be used to build a nuclear weapon.

Israel has threatened a military strike against Iranian nuclear installations, but Obama insists there is still time to solve the dispute through diplomacy. He has vowed, however, to stop Tehran from obtaining a nuclear arsenal.

Outside the U.N., Alex Mohammed, 40, a restaurant manager from Chicago, stood next to a mock jail cell with a noose next to it, and a cartoon of Ahmadinejad standing under a series of hanged Iranians' legs and the inscription: "We don't have political prisoners in Iran ? anymore."

"It's getting worse in Iran, because the dictator is taking away more freedoms, including freedom of speech, and jailing journalists," said Mohammed, who has family in Tehran.

___

Associated Press writers Maggie Fick and Sarah El Deeb in Cairo, Verena Dobnik in New York, and David Stringer and Ron DePasquale at the United Nations contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egypts-morsi-assumes-major-role-mideast-224446969.html

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Apple CEO Tim Cook apologizes for lousy iPhone Maps app

6 hrs.

After a week filled with complaints about the new Maps app found in iOS 6, the latest version of Apple's mobile operating system, the?company's CEO, Tim Cook, has issued an apology to customers along with a list of alternative apps.

A link to the apology appears on the?Apple website, plainly labeled as "[a] letter to our customers regarding Maps."

Cook begins the note by explaining that while Apple strives to "make world-class products that deliver the best experience possible," it "fell short on this commitment" with the launch of its new Maps app.

"We are extremely sorry for the frustration this has caused our customers and we are doing everything we can to make Maps better," Cook writes?before explaining that the reason a new version of Maps needed to be created was so that Apple could offer its customer features such as turn-by-turn directions, voice integration, and so on. "The more our customers use our Maps the better it will get and we greatly appreciate all of the feedback we have received from you," he adds.

While Apple's improving its own Maps app, you can use something else, Cook suggests. "You can try alternatives by downloading map apps from the App Store like Bing, MapQuest and Waze, or use Google or Nokia maps by going to their websites and creating an icon on your home screen to their web app."

One can only imagine how much it pains Cook to suggest that the over 100 million folks who are using iOS 6 at this time should just try a product made by Apple's competitors for a while.

Want more tech news?or interesting?links? You'll get plenty of both if you keep up with Rosa Golijan, the writer of this post, by following her on?Twitter, subscribing to her?Facebook?posts,?or circling her?on?Google+.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/gadgetbox/apple-ceo-tim-cook-apologizes-lousy-iphone-maps-app-6162210

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The Social Construction of Scientific Knowledge: The New AAP ...

The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recently released a revised policy statement regarding male circumcision. Unlike previous policies on the issue, this one got a lot of media attention, probably because male circumcision itself has been in the news more than usual. The past few years have seen increasing mobilization against male circumcision (for example, intactivists (the term activists fighting for genital integrity have given themselves) tried to ban the practice in the city of San Francisco last year, though the attempt was unsuccessful). And the surgery gained some global attention this year after a German court ruled that it constituted grievous bodily harm against a minor. Many national governments and religious groups/leaders spoke out against the court ruling, the court?s decision has caused many to think a bit more about neonatal circumcision.

This is the context in which the AAP released its new policy. While its actual recommendations and findings are interesting, I am particularly intrigued by the new methodology of the literature review that forms the policy?s foundation. The AAP policy in 1999 derived from a literature review of the available studies on circumcision?its risks, benefits, complication rates, and even a little bit of the ethics surrounding the procedure. The new statement does the same thing, and though it covers more topics (for example, there has been a lot of recent research about circumcision as a possible HIV preventative, which was not part of the 1999 review), it explicitly limits the scope of the literature review in a new way.

This year?s policy draws only on English-language, peer-reviewed, scientific articles; specifically, it includes ?all meta-analyses; all randomized controlled trials; and all case-control, prospective and retrospective cohort, and cross-sectional studies?Case reports, case series, ecological studies, reviews, and opinions were excluded from the review? (e761). Additionally, literature was rated ?using the American Heart Association?s template for evidence evaluation? (e761); articles rated as excellent, good, fair, or poor were included, while anything deemed ?unsatisfactory? was excluded. In 1999, the AAP did not explicitly delimit the scope of the literature review. In fact, it drew some of its conclusions from surveys and case reports, evidence which would now either be totally excluded or carry less weight.

I appreciate that the AAP now makes the scope of the literature review explicit. In any research, we make determinations about what to include or exclude; it is important to be clear about how you arrived at particular conclusions, and part of being clear is defining how you select your sources. However, I also see something problematic in this schema. By narrowing the focus to a specific subset of scientific studies, the AAP is making a statement about what counts as objective, scientific evidence or what counts as expert knowledge on the topic of circumcision. Specifically, it establishes ?male circumcision? solidly in the realm of Western science, knowable only through a positivist, medical lens. While it is very important to establish medical, scientific evidence about certain risk, benefits, complications, and methods of circumcision, circumcision is always already a cultural practice. This is true when it is done for clearly religious or cultural reasons, AND when it is done in a routine, medical setting. By excluding research that does not meet the narrowly defined evidence evaluation guidelines, the Task Force cannot adequately assess the many dimensions of the practice.

In fact, much of the public debate surrounding circumcision has little to do with the science of circumcision; rather, it involves philosophical claims about the integrity of the body and the centrality of human rights, the roles of religion and identity in people?s lives, the value of tradition and technology. Even the science of circumcision as a medical practice is inextricably tied to social issues?the desire to discipline and control the body, the aesthetics (rooted in specific ideals about the gendered body) that inevitably weave themselves into surgical procedures (like the surgeries to ?correct? ?abnormal? genitalia). By giving the literature review the veneer of objectivity and scientific authority, the AAP insulates the policy from the complexity of real life, where circumcision?s purported health benefits clash with human values and sexualities, where circumcision?s purported risks intermingle with religious identities and economic realities. When it comes to penises (and genitals more generally), things are messy, and that is ok. It?s about time that doctors, and their professional associations, come to terms with the mess.

?

Further Reading

David, Matthew. 2008. Sociological Knowledge and Scientific Knowledge. Sociology Compass 2(1): 337-351.

Gollaher, David L. 1994. From Ritual to Science: The Medical Transformation of Circumcision in America. Journal of Social History 28(1): 5-36.

Source: http://thesocietypages.org/sociologylens/2012/09/27/the-social-construction-of-scientific-knowledge-the-new-aap-policy-on-male-circumcision/

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Thursday, September 27, 2012

Victim 1 in Jerry Sandusky trial has book deal

FILE - This June 22, 2012 file photo shows former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky arriving at the Centre County Courthouse in Bellefonte, Pa. A key witness _ Victim 1 _ against Sandusky has a book deal and will soon reveal his identity. Ballantine Bantem Dell announced Thursday, Sept. 27, 2012, that the book is coming out Oct. 23. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)

FILE - This June 22, 2012 file photo shows former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky arriving at the Centre County Courthouse in Bellefonte, Pa. A key witness _ Victim 1 _ against Sandusky has a book deal and will soon reveal his identity. Ballantine Bantem Dell announced Thursday, Sept. 27, 2012, that the book is coming out Oct. 23. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)

NEW YORK (AP) ? A key witness against convicted child molester and former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky, known in court papers as Victim 1, has a book deal and will soon reveal his identity, a publisher announced Thursday.

Ballantine Bantam Dell said that "Silent No More: Victim (hash)1's Fight for Justice Against Jerry Sandusky," is coming out Oct. 23. The memoir will be co-written by the victim's mother and psychologist and "will share how he survived years of shame and secrecy, harassment and accusation, before reporting Sandusky's actions to the authorities, and will offer a hopeful and inspiring message for victims of abuse," Ballantine announced.

Victim 1, now 18, will reveal his identity on the day of the book's release in an interview with ABC's Chris Cuomo.

Financial terms for the book were not disclosed. But Ballantine, an imprint of Random House Inc., plans a donation to a charity for victims of child abuse.

Victim 1 first alerted authorities in 2008 and helped launch the investigation leading to Sandusky's conviction in June on 45 counts of child sexual abuse. Prosecutors said some of the assaults took place on the Penn State campus. Sandusky is scheduled to be sentenced next month and is likely to receive a sentence that will keep him in prison for life.

Victim 1 testified for the prosecution that Sandusky approached him through a summer camp for youth sponsored by The Second Mile, a charity for at-risk youth that the former coach had founded. Their initial contacts consisted of football games and swimming, and Sandusky would attend the boy's wrestling tournaments.

Physical contact began with a hand on his leg in the car, Victim 1 said, and he began spending nights at the Sandusky home in State College, about 30 miles from his own home in Lock Haven.

Kissing and back rubbing during those overnight visits, when he was in his early teens, progressed to oral sex, he testified, sobbing. He said Sandusky eventually told him: "It's your turn."

"I don't how to explain it, I froze," he said. "My mind is telling me to move but I couldn't do it, I couldn't move."

He told jurors his own behavior worsened, going from a well-behaved child to fights with relatives and bed wetting. His grades deteriorated. After Victim 1 began trying to avoid Sandusky, he asked his mother about websites for child molesters, "to see if Jerry was on there," he testified.

His mother set up a meeting with school guidance counselors, a process that led to the opening of a police investigation and produced criminal charges against Sandusky in November. Messages seeking comment left Thursday for Victim 1's civil lawyers, Slade McLaughlin and Michael Boni, were not immediately returned.

___

Associated Press Writer Mark Scolforo in Harrisburg, Pa., contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-09-27-Books-Sandusky%20Victim/id-77449ea9e2a34d6b99a8faa5e053e406

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Rowling leaves door ajar to return to Potter "world"

NEW YORK/LONDON (Reuters) - Harry's still finished, but don't rule out any return to the Potter world.

Although J.K. Rowling's first novel tailored for adults is being released this week, she says her next book will likely be a children's book, and in the future she may pen a story related to the Harry Potter universe.

"I think it very likely that the next thing I publish will be for kids. I have a children's book that I really like, it's for slightly younger children than the Potter books," Rowling told the BBC in a television interview broadcast on Wednesday.

In one of a handful of appearances to promote "The Casual Vacancy," which hits bookstores worldwide on Thursday, Rowling told the BBC: "Truly, where Harry's story is concerned, I'm done.

Yet the 47-year-old best-selling British author did not rule out a Potter spin-off, while she was adamant it would never be for commercial reasons. The seven "Harry Potter" books have sold more than 450 million books worldwide.

"I have always left the door ajar because I'm not that cruel. If I had a fabulous idea that came out of that world, because I loved writing it, I would do it," she told the BBC.

"But I've got to have a great idea, I don't want to go mechanically into that world and pick up odds and ends and glue them together and say 'Here we go, we can sell this'. It would make a mockery of what those books were to me."

Were that great idea to come, she said: "I probably would do it. I'm very averse to the prequel/sequel idea. I've never seen it work well in either literature or film. That's a personal preference."

Rowling, who started her writing career as a financially struggling, single mother, said while there was clearly "an appetite for eight, nine, ten," Potter novels, she knew she only had enough plot for seven books about Harry's magical adventures.

"To go further would have been money for old rope. Couldn't do it. And that's largely why I slapped on that epilogue (in the final "Harry Potter" novel). (It) says he's leading a quiet life, and he's earned it. He's done," she said of the boy wizard.

POTTER DIRECTOR'S CUT, TEEN OCD

Rowling said she would have liked more time to work on some of the books.

"I had to write on the run and there were times when it was really tough. And I read them, and I think 'Oh God, maybe I'll go back and do a director's cut". I don't know," she said in BBC interview.

"But you know what?" she added. "I'm proud I was writing under the conditions under which I was writing. No one will ever know how tough it was at times."

In a separate interview with ABC's "Nightline", Rowling revealed that she had signs of obsessive-compulsive behavior when she was a teenager, and that one of the characters in "The Casual Vacancy" was drawn from her own experiences.

"These are things I know from the inside," she said in the interview, some of which was aired on "Good Morning America" on Wednesday. "When I was in my teens, I had issues with OCD ... checking things, it's very common, double checking, triple checking, it's an anxiety disorder."

Rowling has spoken openly in the past about dealing with depression, which she estimated she had not had to deal with for more than a decade.

She credited Harry Potter with helping. "Forget the money," she said; it gave her self-respect. "Harry gave me a job that I loved to do more than anything else," she told ABC.

(Additional reporting by Mike Collett-White in London, editing by Jill Serjeant and Gunna Dickson)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rowling-leaves-door-ajar-return-potter-world-195925362.html

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McDowell carries on Irish tradition in Ryder Cup

Europe's Graeme McDowell answers a question during a news conference for the Ryder Cup PGA golf tournament Tuesday, Sept. 25, 2012, at the Medinah Country Club in Medinah, Ill. (AP Photo/Chris Carlson)

Europe's Graeme McDowell answers a question during a news conference for the Ryder Cup PGA golf tournament Tuesday, Sept. 25, 2012, at the Medinah Country Club in Medinah, Ill. (AP Photo/Chris Carlson)

Europe's Ian Poulter, left to right, Martin Kaymer and Graeme McDowell pose for a photo at the Ryder Cup PGA golf tournament Tuesday, Sept. 25, 2012, at the Medinah Country Club in Medinah, Ill. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

Europe's Graeme McDowell points to his sandwich as he walks off the sixth tee at the Ryder Cup PGA golf tournament Tuesday, Sept. 25, 2012, at the Medinah Country Club in Medinah, Ill. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

Europe's Rory McIlroy and Graeme McDowell putt at the Ryder Cup PGA golf tournament Tuesday, Sept. 25, 2012, at the Medinah Country Club in Medinah, Ill. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

(AP) ? Graeme McDowell knew it was a mistake as soon as he glanced up at the scoreboard.

That comfortable lead Europe had taken into the singles matches two years ago was gone, erased in a flurry of American birdies. Instead of coasting into the victory party as he'd expected as the 12th man out, the Ryder Cup ? to say nothing of Europe's pride and honor ? was in McDowell's hands.

"Those last seven holes, I've never been so nervous in my life," McDowell recalled Tuesday. "Coming down the stretch that day was some of the toughest golf I had ever played in my life, and some of the most nerve-racking golf. Myself and Hunter Mahan, someone was going to be the hero and someone was going to be the villain that day.

"Thankfully I was able to get the job done."

Of course he did. When the Ryder Cup is on the line, the Irish usually do.

McDowell delivered the winning point at Celtic Manor with a 15-foot birdie on the 16th hole, joining Darren Clarke, Paul McGinley, Philip Walton and Christy O'Connor Jr. as Irish heroes on one of the biggest stages in golf.

Don't be surprised if that Irish luck holds this week, too. Though European captain Jose Maria Olazabal refused to give any hints about his lineup, it's almost certain McDowell will be playing with world No. 1 Rory McIlroy, his good friend and fellow Northern Irishman, when the Ryder Cup begins Friday at Medinah Country Club.

Paired together two years ago, the two were 1-1-1 in team matches.

"He's one of our main men," Olazabal said of McDowell. "He loves this competition, and I think it brings out the best in him. He's a very gutsy player. It doesn't matter if he's not striking the ball well, he will fight until the very end. He will fight for every shot, for every inch. And we saw that in the past."

Not just from McDowell, either.

Back in 2006, it was Clarke who carried the Europeans. Playing just six weeks after his wife, Heather, died of breast cancer, Clarke gave the Europeans an emotional charge the Americans never came close to answering. He won all three of his matches, and the Europeans routed the U.S. 18 ?-9 ? for their third straight victory.

Four years before that, McGinley made a spectacular save on 18 to snatch a halve from Furyk and take the cup from the Americans. After McGinley had pulled even with a 12-footer on 17, Furyk was only 3 feet away from a certain par ? after a beautiful bunker shot. McGinley, meanwhile, missed the green ? badly. But he made a gorgeous pitch to about 8 feet, and sank the putt for the halve.

Back in 1995, the little-known Walton had lost what would be his only other Ryder Cup match, in Saturday morning foursomes. He would go 3-up on Jay Haas with three holes left in singles, only to lose 16 and 17. But Haas was in trouble off the 18th tee, and Walton two-putted for a bogey and the point Europe needed to win the cup, kickstarting its current dominance. The Europeans have won six of the last eight Ryder Cups.

And in 1989, O'Connor ? a captain's pick ? upset Fred Couples by making two birdies on the last three holes. One of the most celebrated shots in Irish golf was O'Connor hitting 2-iron from 229 yards to about 4 feet for birdie. It shook Couples so badly that he missed the green with a 9-iron, and it was key to Europe retaining the cup.

"The Ryder Cup's become such a big deal, I think people love it as a spectacle," McDowell said. "The aftermath (in 2010) and the 17th green when everyone swamped that green, it was something like I've never seen in golf before, and cool to be part of."

McDowell was hardly an unknown at Celtic Manor. He'd been unflappable in winning the U.S. Open just three months earlier, barely blinking as he withstood charges by Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson and Ernie Els at Pebble Beach. He wasn't a Ryder Cup rookie, either, going 2-1-1 at Valhalla.

But it was his performance in Wales that transformed the 33-year-old ? on and off the course.

"Winning the U.S. Open, there was sort of an aftermath of congratulations from everyone. I think that lasted a few weeks," McDowell said. "But the Ryder Cup was something a bit different because that was enjoyed by European fans, the European Tour, anyone that calls themselves European. I think I certainly got recognized more for that putt at the Ryder Cup than I did for my U.S. Open. There's no doubt about that, certainly in Europe."

McDowell hasn't won a tournament since 2010 but he's never far from the conversation, either. He's made all but four cuts in 22 starts on the PGA and European tours this year, and has five top-five finishes. He settled for second at the U.S. Open after missing a 25-footer to force a playoff, and was fifth at the British after blowing up with a final-round 75.

If Olazabal sends him out last again in singles, McDowell will be ready to deliver again.

"Where will I play on Sunday? Who knows?" he said. "Part of me would love that opportunity again ? part of me would love it, part of me would hate it. I'll take whatever comes."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-09-26-GLF-Ryder-Cup/id-688116191ca448219e4849e35a923d1d

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Apple?s Siri Patent Application Hints At Apps Becoming A Backround Service Layer

apple-siriApple has filed a sizeable 51-page patent application continuation with the USPTO according to AppleInsider, which covers Siri in general terms, described broadly as an "Intelligent Automated Assistant." The filing includes screenshots of Siri pre-Apple acquisition, and generally describes in detail the system however many hundreds of millions of iOS device users are already using. But it also sketches a system in which Siri is much more in the driver seat, handling the task of finding the right app for the right job while the user just makes his or her needs known.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/mZc9dnmItMc/

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Oil drops on questions about Europe's crisis

The price of oil fell 2 percent Wednesday as protests in Greece and Spain offer visible reminders that Europe is still struggling to resolve its debt crisis.

Benchmark oil fell $1.78 to $89.60 per barrel in New York. The price has fallen nearly $10 in less than 2 weeks.

The protests in Europe are occurring ahead of spending cuts and tax hikes designed to help those countries control debt. Such austerity measures crimp the need for oil and oil byproducts like gasoline and diesel.

Slower growth in Europe also hurts the economies of China and the U.S. Factories in those countries use less oil as they make fewer products for export to Europe.

Oil did get a short-lived bump from the latest report on U.S. supplies. The government said supplies fell last week by 2.4 million barrels. Analysts had expected an increase of 1.5 million barrels. Oil rose back above $90 immediately after the report but then resumed heading lower.

Meanwhile, AAA says the national average price for gasoline fell about half a cent overnight to $3.805 per gallon. That's up about 30 cents from a year ago.

In London, Brent crude fell $1.90 to $108.55 per barrel.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-09-26-Oil%20Prices/id-97a2f32d972c433488da991e3827442f

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Japanese Classic Car Show. 'Movie Stars' | Crank and Piston Car ...

Thursday, September 27th, 2012??//??James Gent??//??Lifestyle??//??

From B?s?zoku style to the Californian look, this year?s Japanese Classic Car Show has it all. The diverse styling of the cars on display means that there really is something to suit everyone but sometimes all it takes is a completely standard old Toyota to stop you in your tracks.

The Toyota 2000GT is considered the first Japanese supercar and was responsible for waking the world up to the nation?s automotive industry. They are also undeniably gorgeous, and two pristine examples (both red) are present at this year?s JCCS. Consequently, much drooling ensued.

The 2000GT forced manufacturers, such as Porsche, to step up their game after setting multiple speed and endurance records in racing. It also competed in the Sports Car Club of America (SCCA) production series in the United States with two factory backed cars, prepared by Carrol Shelby. They came third and fourth in their first and only season before Toyota pulled the plug, leaving many to wonder what might have been.

With super model good looks and certified racing credentials, what?s not to like about the 2000GT? Well, apart from the price tag, since one of these beauties will set you back more than a bucketful of freshly plucked kidneys on ice.

Source: http://www.crankandpiston.com/lifestyle/japanese-classic-car-show-movie-stars/

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Transferring Vehicles to a Revocable Living Trust : North Carolina ...

The use of revocable living trusts to avoid probate is common in North Carolina.? However, one type of property that is rarely transferred to a living trust is automobiles, since doing so involves a trip to the local DMV office and paying to change the title.? The title fee is $40, and a highway use tax of 3% of the value of the vehicle must also be paid.? What the title agents often don't know, however, is that the use tax is capped at $40 for transfers to a living trust.? See N.C.G.S. Section 105-187.6(b)(2).? There is no use tax at all for transfers to a living trust in which the owner is the sole beneficiary, but this situation is not as common. N.C.G.S. Section 105-187.6(a)(11).

Here's link to the page on DMV's website that references transfers to a trust.

Given North Carolina's low threshold for requiring full probate - $20,000 for single decedents, and $30,000 for married decedents, it often makes sense to take the time and pay the $80 to transfer vehicles to your living trust.? This is especially true if the vehicle is particularly valuable or you plan or keeping it a long time.? It could save time, trouble and expense for your loved ones.

Source: http://www.ncestateplanningblog.com/2012/09/articles/estate-planning/transferring-vehicles-to-a-revocable-living-trust/

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Daniel Radcliffe Parties with Irish Soccer Champions

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/09/daniel-radcliffe-parties-with-irish-soccer-champions/

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Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Pregnant and just start snoring? You may have hypertension ...

If you're pregnant and you (or your other half) notice you've started to snore, you might want to talk to your doctor.? You could be at greater risk of getting high blood pressure and preeclampsia , according to a new study in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology. Preeclampsia, left untreated, can be life-threatening to the mother and unborn child.??It usually starts after the fifth month of pregnancy and?causes a pregnant woman's blood pressure to go up and the presence of protein in the mother's urine.? This can significantly?affect the placenta?and the mother's liver, kidney and brain. Preeclampsia can cause seizures and is the second leading cause of death in pregnant women in the United States. It's also a leading cause of fetal complications including premature birth, low birth weight and stillbirth.? There is no cure short of delivering the baby. The study, conducted by the University of Michigan, was the largest of its kind and the first to show that women who begin snoring after they become pregnant have a greater risk of getting high blood pressure and face significant risk to their cardiovascular health, says?lead author Louise O'Brien, an associate professor at the University of Michigan's Sleep Disorders Center. "What we found was that snoring during pregnancy was indeed strongly associated with gestational hypertension and preeclampsia," O'Brien told CNN. "That was after we had accounted for other known risk factors. What was a novelty about this study was that we looked at women who have been snoring before they got pregnant and women who developed snoring during their pregnancy.? It was actually the women who started snoring after they became pregnant that were at highest risk of high blood pressure problems." More than 1,700 pregnant women participated in the study.? They were recruited in their last trimester ? 28 weeks and up.? O'Brien says 25% of them started snoring frequently once pregnant, doubling their risk of high blood pressure compared to women who don't snore.? Nine percent reported chronic snoring. Chronic snoring ? snoring three to four nights a week ? is an indication of a sleep disorder.? O'Brien says these women can be treated for "sleep disordered breathing" by using a continuous positive airway pressure machine, or CPAP. ? The machine is worn during sleep and pushes out mild air pressure to help keep the person's airways open. O'Brien has a new study underway to determine whether using a CPAP?decreases hypertension in pregnant women.? But she says while more than one-third of these pregnant women were snoring by their last trimester, not all of them will have sleep apnea.? There are a number of things pregnant women can and should do. 'Women should mention frequent snoring to their doctor," O'Brien said. "The problem is many women don't mention sleep problems to their obstetrician and conversely obstetricians don't ask their patients about sleep problems either." O'Brien reminds expectant mothers that how you?sleep is also important.? Snoring is much more common when people lay on their back, which most pregnant women don't do.? For pregnant women, side sleeping is better ? preferably the left side, she says, because the weight of the uterus presses down on some of the vessels that bring the blood back to the lungs. Her message for physicians? "If they have a patient who has gestational hypertension or preeclampsia and they ask them if they snore frequently and the answer is yes, those are the patients who may benefit from a more thorough sleep apnea workup." The takeaway of this study is simple, says O'Brien: "If we can highlight the importance of snoring in pregnant women and we can encourage obstetricians?to ask their patients about snoring, it is important not just to ask at the initial visit but also continue to ask as the pregnancy progresses.? I think this study also reinforces the fact that we need to look at treatment intervention trials to see if we can improve maternal hypertension by treating any underlying sleep apnea." Filed under: Conditions , Empowered Patient , Hypertension , Pregnancy , Women?s Health Tagged: Saundra Young ? CNN Medical Senior Producer

View original post here:?
Pregnant and just start snoring? You may have hypertension

Source: http://healthxpert.org/pregnant-and-just-start-snoring-you-may-have-hypertension/

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How Well Do You Take Criticism? | Madame Noire | Black Women's ...

New York sidewalks and city buses are crowded, and if you?re lucky enough, you get to stand hip to hip with a woman on her phone, who is going off on her boyfriend/husband/lover about whatever ways he?s wronged her or whatever ways he?s messed up. ?No matter what the topic, one thing is painfully apparent?some women LOVE to dish it out. As proud women of color, we?ve learned to defend our own honor and when we can, we avidly state our dissatisfaction when we?re not comfortable with something. It?s a learned trait from our mothers, grandmothers or aunts who won?t let anyone disrespect them or treat them with any less regard than they actually deserve. We even do this within our relationships, vocal about what displeases us because in addition to offensiveness, it?s been instilled in us that honesty is key?particularly in terms of relationships. And in a way, it is. But if we as black women can openly share our opinions and disappointments with our men, how good are we at taking criticism back?

As a general policy, I like to be open and honest in all of my relationships. Because passive aggressiveness isn?t my forte, I try to verbalize concerns immediately, and if I have a problem communicating things vocally, I write people letters. Yeah, you read right. I?m just that anxious to get my point across. But, when the script is flipped, and it?s time for others to weigh in on me and my behaviors, I tend to get defensive or my feelings get hurt. That isn?t to say that I can?t take criticism, but like most women, my need to share my opinion doesn?t necessarily come from a place of anger or disrespect (unless intending to illicit a certain response), but a need to be heard, which is why it can be hurtful to hear a strong negative reaction from my partner. This is particularly true of relationships where the man?s opinions and emotions steer the relationship.

Moreover, offhand commentary can be heard as criticisms. Statements such as, ?That dress looks tighter on you than it did before? or ?You?re wearing a lot of makeup? can rouse anger because women assume that men, like us, lace our statements with underlining meanings. The two statements above could be heard as ?You?re fat? and ?You look like a clown? if you think too hard about it. Because men don?t usually communicate as effectively as women, women often search their statements for answers ?finding criticism where there isn?t, and also, women tend to work in duality. When we share thoughts, more often than not, our words have multiple agendas, whereas men tend to be more literal. But, the matter of ?if we can take it? is still in need of an answer; and for me, that answer is yes. Women (women of color in particular) have a history of absorbing criticism; and historically, we weren?t always able to share our opinions/concerns. Men have gained the role of the insensitive partner and women have more recently earned the role of the nag because of this history. For the sake of relationships, however, women and men have to learn to be more receptive to our partner?s thoughts and opinions without feeling defensive or hurt, because ideally, whatever concerns are being addressed, it?s for the betterment of the relationship.

More on Madame Noire!

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Source: http://madamenoire.com/218052/we-need-to-talk-like-to-criticize-your-man-well-how-good-are-you-at-taking-criticism/

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Meek School faculty contribute to New Encyclopedia of Southern ...

Two Meek School faculty members have articles in the recently released?New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture volume on the media.

Professor Joseph Atkins contributed an article on how the press has?covered labor in the South historically and today. Dr. Kathleen?Wickham wrote a biography on Clarion-Ledger investigative reporter Jerry Mitchell. In both cases?the entries represent the research interests of Atkins and Wickham.

Atkins, a professor of journalism, writes on labor issues in the South?and is the author of ?Covering for the Bosses: Labor and the Southern?Press?

Wickham, an associate professor, has previously written a book on how?The Clarion-Ledger won a Pulitzer Prize in 1983 for its coverage of?education reform legislation. She is currently working on a book about?the reporters who were on campus during the1962 integration crisis.

A review in Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly said the?volume?s strength is in its ?expansiveness? and that is ?an?irreplaceable reference tool? for scholars conducting research on?media figures.? The reviewer cites Wickham as one of the media?scholars worth noting, along with E. Culpepper Clark of the University?of Georgia and Michael Fuhlhage and Lucila Vargas of UNC-Chapel Hill.

The volume contains more than 130 articles and 40 thematic essays. The?encyclopedia is a project of the Center for Southern Studies at Ole?Miss.

Source: http://meek.olemiss.edu/2012/09/26/meek-school-faculty-contribute-to-new-encyclopedia-of-southern-culture/

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