Saturday, March 31, 2012

Pa. trial shows church abuse allegations strategy

PHILADELPHIA (AP) ? The long, typed letter fantasizes about a seventh-grader's body, and asks if the boy wants to try various sex acts.

"You are soooo cute. I have been thinking about you for a long time. ... You're the cutest in our grade," the author wrote in a rare G-rated line.

But the anonymous author was not a classmate at the boy's Catholic school in northeast Philadelphia. It was a parish priest. One with a cache of gay pornography and sadomasochistic videos in the rectory.

Files show the letter-writing priest was sent to a church-run treatment center for priests, where staff concluded he did not have "a pathological interest in children or adults." Doctors racked the letter up to a single fantasy. And they believed him when he said he hadn't sent it ? or acted out with children.

"Cardinal Bevilacqua is granting him a health leave, and that should be the announcement to the (St. Anselm's) parish," reads a December 1995 memo, found in secret personnel files at the Archdiocese of Philadelphia.

The memo, along with the priest's letter, aired in court this week in a landmark criminal trial in Philadelphia. Accused is Monsignor William Lynn, the first U.S. church official charged with child endangerment for allegedly leaving predator-priests in ministry, and conspiring with others to cover up the festering problem.

Prosecutors call the archdiocese of 1.5 million Catholics "an unindicted co-conspirator."

Defense lawyers counter that Lynn took orders from the archbishop during his 12-year run as secretary for clergy, when he supervised about 900 priests. Lynn, 61, faces years in prison if convicted.

By August 1996, the priest had been released, and reassigned to a far suburb. Lynn recommended that he return to full ministry, with no limits on his work with children. Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua, who died this year, approved the plan, initializing Lynn's memo with his ornate "AB."

The priest's therapy notes ? describing the "release of guilt" he felt after childhood whippings by his father and his "compulsive" interest in pornography and masturbation ? were shipped to "File 3," archdiocesan code for the locked, secret archives room.

"That kind of information coming out through these trials, regardless of the verdict, is of enormous significance, for the church and also for our understanding of how sexual abuse was handled in institutions outside the church. ... That includes schools and prisons and youth groups and sports teams," said Timothy Lytton, an Albany Law School professor who wrote a book on the priest-abuse crisis.

The Catholic church is far from alone in protecting predators, he said, but its hierarchical nature gives authorities a long paper trail.

Philadelphia prosecutors have been investigating the archdiocese for 10 years, since the priest-abuse scandal exploded in Boston. Around the country, about 500 Roman Catholic priests have been convicted of child sex abuse, and dioceses have paid out more than $1 billion to victims.

Yet there's never been a man in Lynn's shoes.

When he took over the headquarters job in 1992, after serving as dean of the Philadelphia seminary, Lynn combed through the secret files. He drew up a list of 35 accused, still-active priests, and noted whether the accuser could still sue. In keeping with church protocol, he deemed priests 'guilty' only if they had admitted the account.

Lynn gave the list to Bevilacqua, but memos show the late cardinal had it shredded. A copy was nonetheless found in a safe at the archdiocese in 2006.

Lytton noted that church leaders like Bevilacqua and his contemporaries, including Cardinal Bernard Law and Los Angeles Cardinal Roger Mahoney, courageously fought for civil rights, immigrants and the underprivileged, yet somehow failed society's most vulnerable.

"They were so focused on how to help the priests. In many cases, they lost sight of the children, and that's partly because I don't think they could appreciate the damage done to the children or the family structure. They're not fathers. And they don't have children," Lytton said.

Phil Gaughan never told anyone what a priest allegedly did to him until he had a son of his own. Then he saw someone innocently hug his toddler. His grief erupted.

"That's when I decided to tell," Gaughan, 32, said Friday. He told his family their beloved priest had molested him throughout high school, when he worked weekends at their northeast Philadelphia church.

"Nobody would have believed it (then)," said Gaughan, who sued the archdiocese last year. "I couldn't leave, or I'd lose my job. I was basically trapped in the back of the church with him."

The Associated Press generally does not identify people alleging sexual abuse, but Gaughan wants his name used in hopes of helping sex-abuse victims.

He said he was molested from 1993 to 1997. Two brothers confronted the same priest with decades-old allegations in 1994. The priest wanted to apologize, but Lynn ? and church therapists ? advised against it on legal grounds, according to the 2005 grand jury report. At least three other men, including a Philadelphia policeman, filed other complaints before Gaughan called the archdiocese last year.

Gaughan, now a portrait photographer in Delaware, accepts that Lynn didn't act alone. But he calls him "a big part" of the problem.

"There's a responsibility that comes with that job title," said Gaughan, who hopes to attend some of the trial. "It's a step in the right direction."

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Home Improvement and Home Remodeling Can Be Fun! ? Small ...

March 30th, 2012 by admin Leave a reply ?

Home improvement and home remodeling can be a fun but daunting task. You may feel bored with the same house that you have had for twenty years or just want to make some changes to a brand new home. While it can be stressful thinking about color coordinating walls and furniture, picking out the right tiles to fit in the bathroom, and putting up new light fixtures, view it as an exciting project and it might not be that bad after all.

Remodeling your house is really an art form and you have to have an artist?s eye to figure out what you are going to do. Maybe you want to remodel your kitchen, which is a huge task, or maybe you just want to do some touch up work to one of your bathrooms. If it is remodeling your kitchen that you are interested in, you may want to think about how you want to remodel it. You can pick out new counter surface material, such as marble. You can?t go wrong with marble even though it may be a little pricy. You should budget out how much you are willing to spend on remodeling your house. You can also coordinate appliances in the kitchen. Maybe you will want everything to be black or silver. Do you want to have a stainless steel sink? And what about the cupboards? All of these questions need to be taken into consideration.

If you are interested in redoing your living room you should consider the following. What sort of new furniture do you want? Do you want to keep it simple or more busy? What sort of colors do you want to work with? Do you want art on the walls or sculptures placed anywhere? You need to think about the placement of the furniture and how it makes you feel. It might be fun to pick out a color for the walls. You may also want to put up some new light fixtures and curtains for the windows.

Now to the bathroom. Bathrooms can be fun to design. They can be small but exciting to work with. You may want to consider if you want just a bathub, bathtub and shower, or just a stand alone shower. You can get one or two sinks. It is fun to pick out towels and shower curtains to match the color of your bathroom. You may also want to pick out a theme or color, for instance an aquatic theme or just go for a certain color and work with that.

Redoing your bedroom can also be fun. You may want to get a new bed and linens, maybe paint your walls certain color, get a new desk and chair for your homework or officework. Depending on how big your bedroom is, you can add more furniture, like artwork or bookshelves, or even a small sofa.

There is so much involved with home improvement and home remodeling. It is possible to just remodel one room, but if you have the money and are getting tired of the same old thing, making improvements on your house can make you happy in the long run.

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The Rock, Superstars meet the press during International Media Day

All WWE programming, talent names, images, likenesses, slogans, wrestling moves, trademarks, logos and copyrights are the exclusive property of WWE, Inc. and its subsidiaries. All other trademarks, logos and copyrights are the property of their respective owners. ? 2012 WWE, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This website is based in the United States. By submitting personal information to this website you consent to your information being maintained in the U.S., subject to applicable U.S. laws. U.S. law may be different than the law of your home country. WrestleMania XXIX (NY/NJ) logo TM & ? 2012 WWE. All Rights Reserved. The Empire State Building design is a registered trademark and used with permission by ESBC.

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Marine general faces battle with cancer - Marine Corps News | News ...

http://www.marinecorpstimes.com/news/2012/03/marine-corps-general-robert-milstead-prostate-cancer-032912w/


By Dan Lamothe - Staff writer
Posted : Thursday Mar 29, 2012 7:12:50 EDT

MARINE CORPS BASE QUANTICO, Va. ? In the midst of planning a complicated drawdown in forces, the Marine Corps? three-star manpower chief received startling news: He had cancer.

Not just any cancer, either. Lt. Gen. Robert Milstead, deputy commandant of manpower and reserve affairs, was diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer that could spread and kill him if it wasn?t treated quickly. He received the news in January after a battery of tests that began in November with his annual physical, he said. The score on his prostate-specific antigen blood test, or PSA, had increased in the previous year, raising the prospect that something was wrong.

?Once they told me ?you?ve got cancer,? I said ?whoa,? ? Milstead said. ?The C-word can be intimidating. The range of options goes from denial to acceptance, and I think I was able to jump pretty quickly up to, ?OK, I?ve got cancer. How am I going to deal with this?? ?

Milstead, 60, is far from alone. One in six men will get prostate cancer, and one in 33 will die from it, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Recovery frequently depends on a key factor that worked in Milstead?s favor: early detection.

The general described his emotional diagnosis and recovery during an interview here March 21, just weeks after undergoing surgery Feb. 28 to remove his prostate, a gland that is part of the male reproductive system. He did so hoping to raise awareness about the benefits of annual physicals and regular screening. He?d sought the latter because both his father and paternal grandfather also had been treated for the disease.

?This is a huge fraternity,? he said. ?You?ve got a better chance as a man of getting prostate cancer than you do as a female of getting breast cancer. It?s not a club I ever wanted to join, but I?m a card-carrying member now.?

The toughest days

Milstead, a career helicopter pilot, acknowledged it weighed on him when his PSA score raised flags. Initially, he was given medication in case he had an infection, but after several weeks, his PSA number had spiked again. His doctor suggested a biopsy be conducted at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center Bethesda, Md.

?I?m like, ?Oh man. Nothing good ever happens in the urology department. Nobody is smiling up there. It?s all old people, and it?s plumbing,? ? he said, describing his misgivings at the time.

Four of the 12 samples tested came back positive for cancer, he said. The aggressiveness of prostate cancer is measured with the Gleason Scale, which assigns a score of 2 to minor cases and 10 to the most severe. Milstead?s score was 9.

Treatment can include full removal of the gland, radiation or hormone therapy, said Milstead?s surgeon, Army Lt. Col. Stephen Brassell. Given the aggressiveness of the cancer and the general?s physical fitness and relative youth, it was determined that surgery was the best option.

?At first I wasn?t totally in denial, but I was saying, ?Well, maybe there?s other ways of dealing with this other than cutting it out,? because there are all the post-operative challenges of your plumbing and hydraulics and all those sorts of things,? Milstead said. ?But when you?re dealing with cancer, everything changes. This was no kidding, varsity-level stuff.?

The most difficult part was breaking the news to family, he said. When the biopsy results were completed, his wife, Suzanne, was in Oakland, Calif., visiting their oldest child, Christy Buckham, 32, and her newborn girl, Mia. He waited about a week to join his wife and break the news in person.

?Those eight or nine days,? he said, ?were some of the toughest of my life.?

Milstead said he was impressed with the medical care at Walter Reed, and has relied on Suzanne, his four children and his Catholic faith for perspective. He has started to work partial days, and jokingly referred to a catheter removed two weeks after surgery as ?evil incarnate.?

The general also has received encouragement from other Marines who had prostate cancer, including Col. Bradley Shumaker, the executive assistant to Lt. Gen. Richard Tryon, deputy commandant for plans, policies and operations.

Shumaker, who had his prostate removed Jan. 31, said senior officers frequently prefer to keep their personal lives private, focusing instead on junior Marines. By speaking out, Milstead will encourage others to get screening and know their family medical history, the colonel said.

?It doesn?t surprise me that someone like him would come forward and say, ?Hey, this happened to me,? ? Shumaker said. ?It?s putting a face to the story and letting others know that it?s survivable, but it needs to be identified and treated ? not ignored.?

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Source: http://www.marinecorpstimes.com/news/2012/03/marine-corps-general-robert-milstead-prostate-cancer-032912w/

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Friday, March 30, 2012

Pesticide-dosed bees lose future royalty, way home

Low doses of insecticides can lead to fewer queens, shrinking colonies

Web edition : Thursday, March 29th, 2012

What does not kill them does not in fact make them stronger when it comes to bees and pesticides. Two unusual studies with free-flying bumblebees and honeybees find that survivable exposure to certain pesticides can lead to delayed downturns in bee royalty and a subtle erosion of workforces.

Pesticides appear as a suspect in widespread declines, sometimes subtle and sometimes dramatic, of the bees and other animals that pollinate crops and wild plants. And in one of the most dramatic still unsolved mysteries in those declines ? why honeybee colonies suddenly collapse ? one leading hypothesis combines chronic pesticide exposure with other stressors such as disease.

Both of the new studies, appearing online March 29 in Science, test the risks of foraging on flowers treated with common insect killers from the nicotine-inspired class called neonicotinoids. These pesticides course through the whole plant, killing aphids and a range of other nibbling and sipping pests, but also work their way into the nectar and pollen that bees collect.

To simulate pesticide exposures that bumblebees might encounter when a field of canola blooms, entomologist Dave Goulson, of the University of Stirling in Scotland, and his colleagues fed 50 Bombus terrestris lab colonies nonfatal doses of the pesticide imidacloprid. After two weeks of eating spiked pollen and sugar water, bees were set outside and allowed to forage around the Stirling campus at will. By season?s end, the pesticide-dosed colonies were an average of 8 percent to 12 percent smaller than 25 unexposed neighbor colonies.

More noticeably, the contaminated colonies managed to produce only about two young queens each. The other colonies averaged about 14. Pitiful production of new young queens bodes ill for bumblebees because all other colony members die at the end of the growing season. Young queens represent each group?s sole hopes for making new colonies the next year.

Ecotoxicologist David Fischer of Bayer CropScience, which markets imidacloprid products, notes that earlier research (with constrained rather than free-flying bees) did not find a drop in young queens. Goulson isn?t surprised that his bumblebees showed more of an impact. ?Navigation isn?t important when you live in a box,? he says.

A drop in pollinator reproduction is the kind of finding that can get the attention of agencies regulating pesticide use, says Jeffery Pettis, research leader of the U.S. Department of Agriculture?s bee labs who works in Beltsville, Md. Worldwide, growers commonly use five neonicotinoid pesticides for flowering crops. Amid these and previous studies, concerns are growing that usage rules may need to be tightened.

Goulson?s study ranks as the first test in bumblebees of pesticide side effects under natural field conditions, says Guy Smagghe of Ghent University in Belgium, who also works with these bees. Goulson notes that although bumblebees don?t get the press that honeybees do, many wildflowers depend on them, as do such crops as tomatoes and peppers.

For honeybees, earlier tests have raised the possibility that chronic, nonfatal exposure to neonicotinoids impairs learning, memory and other capacities that bees need for good flower hunting. To set up a test with bees flying freely outdoors, a research team in France (with substantial graduate student labor) used dental cement to fasten electronic identifiers onto more than 600 individual bees. Feeding bees low doses of the pesticide thiamethoxam in sugar water provided a realistic exposure, says coauthor Micka?l Henry of the French National Institute for Agricultural Research in Avignon.

After sipping the pesticide-tainted solution, the honeybees were moved up to a kilometer from their hives and released to find their way home. Researchers challenged bees with both familiar territory and landscapes the bees had never seen. Automated counters at hives logged the returnees.

By comparing the homing success of dosed versus untreated hives, researchers concluded that pesticides doubled the risk on any given day that a forager would not make it home. Computer simulations suggest that the population drop substantially weakens a colony, Henry says.

Honeybee research on whether pesticide exposure interferes with daily foraging could be relevant to other species, Goulson says. ?If that is also happening in bumblebees, which is a reasonable guess, that could precisely explain our results.? If exposed bumblebees aren?t as good at bringing home food, then colonies might not grow or reproduce as well.

Bayer CropScience?s Fischer, based in Research Triangle Park, N.C., questions the realism of the dosage. Researchers essentially fed bees all at one time the amount of pesticide they might encounter over a whole day.

For common pesticides now on the market, ?there are obviously big question marks as to whether the safety testing that was done on these was really adequate,? Goulson says. Chronic effects may not show up without tests of free-ranging bees confronting real-world problems.

The new studies help to start filling in gaps in the research, but there?s even less known about the multitude of pollinating bees that don?t live in colonies, says entomologist Mace Vaughan in Portland, Ore., with the Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation. Most wild bees living around farms are solitary and thus especially vulnerable. ?If an individual bee is lost, she cannot be replaced and her reproduction stops,? he says.


Found in: Environment and Life

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/339548/title/Pesticide-dosed_bees_lose_future_royalty,_way_home

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Pesticides hit queen bee numbers

Some of the world's most commonly used pesticides are killing bees by damaging their ability to navigate and reducing numbers of queens, research suggests.

Scientific groups in the UK and France studied the effects of neonicotinoids, which are used in more than 100 nations on farm crops and in gardens.

The UK team found the pesticides caused an 85% drop in queen production.

Writing in the journal Science, the groups note that bee declines in many countries are reducing crop yields.

In the UK alone, pollination is calculated to be worth about ?430m to the national economy.

And the US is among countries where a succession of local populations has crashed, a syndrome known as Colony Collapse Disorder.

Many causes have been suggested, including diseases, parasites, reduction in the range of flowers growing wild in the countryside, pesticides, or a combination of them all.

The neonicotinoids investigated in the two Science papers are used on crops such as cereals, oilseed rape and sunflowers.

Often the chemical is applied to seeds before planting. As the plant grows, the pesticide is contained in every part of it, deterring insect pests such as aphids.

But it also enters the pollen and nectar, which is how it can affect bees.

Dave Goulson from the UK's University of Stirling and colleagues studied the impact of the neonicotinoid imidacloprid on bumblebees.

They let bees from some colonies feed on pollen and sugar water containing levels of imidacloprid typically found in the wild, while others received a natural diet.

Then they placed the colonies out in the field.

'Severely compromised'

After six weeks, colonies exposed to the pesticide were lighter than the others, suggesting that workers had brought back less food to the hive.

But the most dramatic effect was on queen production. The naturally-fed hives produced around 14 queens each - those exposed to the pesticide, just two.

"I wouldn't say this proves neonicotinoids are the sole cause of the problems bees face," said Dr Goulson, "but it does suggest they're likely to be one of the causes, and possibly a significant one.

"The use of these pesticides is so widespread that most bee colonies in areas of arable farming are likely to be exposed to them, so there is potential for them to be playing a significant role in suppression of bee populations on a pretty staggering scale."

The French research group investigated the impact of a different neonicotinoid, thiamethoxam, on the number of bees able to make it back to the colony after release.

Using tiny tags attached to the bees' backs, they showed that significantly fewer insects came back if they had previously been exposed to levels of thiamethoxam that they might encounter on farms.

Calculations showed the impairment was bad enough that the capacity of colonies survive could be severely compromised.

"What we found is that actually if colonies are exposed to pesticides, the population might decline to a point that would put them at risk of collapse due to other stressors," said lead scientist Mickael Henry from the French National Insitute for Agricultural Research (Inra) in Avignon.

Dr Henry told BBC News that it was time for authorities to re-design the safety tests that pesticides have to pass.

"To date, the tests mostly require that the doses found in nature do not kill bees," he said.

"But those authorisation processes ignore possible consequences for the behaviour of bees, and we hope the people in charge will be more careful."

Worldwide business

Neonicotinoids are a multi-billion dollar business worldwide. Even though some countries have banned them partially, a complete global prohibition, as some environmental groups advocate, might be impossible.

May Berenbaum, head of entomology at the University of Illinois and one of the leading US experts on CCD, said the chemicals should be used more carefully.

"There is no question that neonicotinoids are being used recklessly, for want of a better word," she said.

"Fifty years of experience should have taught us that overuse of a single class of compounds is an inherently unsustainable practice, and that pre-treating seeds when pest problems might not even be present is collossally unwise.

"But neonicotinoids could be banned everywhere in the world, and honeybees would still have problems with pathogens, parasites, habitat degradation and overuse of just about every other class of chemical pesticide."

At EU level, the Agriculture and Rural Development Committee has asked the European Commission to increase research and produce an action plan to conserve bees.

"When the action plan is produced, we are ready to give member states a deadline to use or not use a specific pesticide - until then it is up to individual states," said Paolo de Castro MEP, the committee's chairman.

In the UK context, Dr Goulson added, it would certainly be worth re-considering neonicotinoid use in gardens.

"Personally I would ban insecticides completely in gardens," he said.

"There are very few serious insect pests in Britain as far as gardening's concerned, it's too cold; and if roses have a few aphids on, then tough, it's not a big deal."

His research team now plans to expand their study to other bee species, while Dr Henry's group will try to discover exactly how thiamethoxam does its damage.

Follow Richard on Twitter

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/science-environment-17535769

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Thursday, March 29, 2012

[OOC] Dark Nightmares

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Alicia Silverstone chews son's food for him

Alberto E. Rodriguez / Getty Images

Alicia Silverstone in 2011.

By Gael Fashingbauer Cooper

Many parents post videos of themselves feeding their young children. But actress Alicia Silverstone went one step further.?A video, posted to YouTube on March 20, shows her feeding her now?11-month-old son, Bear Blu, by chewing food and passing it directly into his mouth from hers.

The "Clueless" star also posted the video on her site, "The Kind Life,"?which is an offshoot of her bestselling vegan cookbook, "The Kind Diet."

"I just had a delicious breakfast of miso soup, collards and radish steamed and drizzled with flax oil, cast iron mochi with nori wrapped outside, and some grated daikon," Silverstone wrote.?"I fed Bear the mochi and a tiny bit of veggies from the soup ... from my mouth to his. It?s his favorite ... and mine. He literally crawls across the room to attack my mouth if I?m eating. This video was taken about a month or 2 ago when he was a bit wobbly. Now he is grabbing my mouth to get the food!"

Not everyone reacted positively to Silverstone's method of feeding her son.

"She's an adorable mother, with a cute kid? but this video is still weird as hell," said one comment on?YouTube.

But on Silverstone's site, reader Kate Kelly posted, "Alicia, I had never thought of this before but it's the cutest way of feeding your baby! I have a 7 month old and I think I will try this method ... she is always trying to lick my mouth anyways might as well give her a reward!"

Fox News asked?medical and nutritional experts what they thought of the feeding method. "It doesn't seem like a hygenic practice," one doctor told the site.

?

What do you think of Silverstone's way of feeding her son? Tell us on Facebook.?

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Source: http://todayentertainment.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/03/27/10888045-alicia-silverstone-chews-her-sons-food-for-him

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Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Poor colonoscopy prep hides pre-cancerous polyps

Poor colonoscopy prep hides pre-cancerous polyps [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 27-Mar-2012
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Contact: Jim Dryden
jdryden@wustl.edu
314-286-0110
Washington University School of Medicine

What happens on the day before a colonoscopy may be just as important as the colon-screening test itself.

Gastroenterologists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have found that when patients don't adequately prep for the test by cleansing their colons, doctors often can't see potentially dangerous pre-cancerous lesions.

Reporting in the journal Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, the researchers say that doctors often missed at least one pre-cancerous growth in about one-third of patients who did not properly prepare for their colonoscopy. Those polyps and other markers of cancer risk were only discovered months later when patients had their next colonoscopy.

Although several studies have found that up to a quarter of colonoscopy patients don't prepare adequately for the test, the new study is the first to point out the potential consequences of poor bowel preparation in outpatients at average risk.

"Because so many of the patients had a follow-up screening less than a year after the initial test, we strongly suspect that most of the pre-cancerous growths found during the second colonoscopy already were present at the time of the initial test," says first author Reena Chokshi, MD, a gastroenterology fellow at Washington University.

The researchers say their findings suggest that if a physician is having difficulty seeing the colon due to inadequate bowel prep, the colonoscopy should be stopped and rescheduled.

"We often can detect preparation problems during the first few minutes of the procedure," Chokshi says. "And based on this study, we would say that rather than subjecting a patient to the potential risks of a full colonoscopy when we may not be able to detect polyps, or other pre-cancerous growths called adenomas, it may be better to bring that patient back as soon as possible for a repeat procedure with better bowel preparation."

On the day before a colonoscopy exam, people are asked to stop eating solid food and to consume only clear liquids. Later in the day and the next morning, patients drink bowel-cleansing mixtures to empty the colon prior to the examination.

The test itself usually takes less than an hour, and patients are sedated during that time. Using a tiny camera, doctors are able to look at the walls of the colon in an attempt to detect polyps and other pre-cancerous growths. Once detected, those growths can be removed during the course of the colonoscopy. Patients often must miss two days of work: the day of preparation and the day of the test. Recently, the outpatient endoscopy center at Washington University and Barnes-Jewish Hospital in St. Louis has begun screening patients on Saturday mornings to reduce the number of vacation days some patients have to use.

"Many patients say that the bowel preparation before the colonoscopy is the worst part of having the test, but it's also very important because in order to see polyps or cancers, we really have to be able to clearly see the entire wall of the colon," says senior author Jean S. Wang, MD, PhD, assistant professor of medicine in the Division of Gastroenterology. "Inadequate preparation makes that very difficult for a physician."

The researchers retrospectively studied patients who had an average risk of colon cancer and got screening colonoscopies in the outpatient endoscopy center. Individuals with a history of inflammatory bowel disease, a family history of colorectal cancer or a medical history of colon polyps were not included in the study.

In the five-year span between 2004-09, 373 patients at the center were identified as having inadequate bowel preparation. Of the 133 patients who later had a second colonoscopy during the study period, 33.8 percent had at least one pre-cancerous adenoma detected in that repeat screening. And almost one in five of that group were considered to be at high risk for colon cancer because they either had more than three adenomas detected, or the test discovered at least one large lesion.

In fact, the researchers found that 18 percent of the patients who had a second colonoscopy would have been given different recommendations if their polyps and adenomas had been detected during the initial screening, such as more frequent colonoscopies to monitor the development of growths in the colon.

"It generally takes several years for an adenoma to become cancerous," Chokshi says. "But it's hard to know where in that sequence a particular adenoma is when we detect it. So it certainly is possible that any lesion we miss during a colonoscopy could develop into a malignancy before a person's next colonoscopy, especially if it doesn't happen until 10 years later."

###

Chokshi RV, Hovis CD, Hollander T, Early DS Wang JS. Prevalence of missed adenomas in patients with inadequate bowel preparation on screening colonoscopy. Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, vol. 75, 2012 [Epub. ahead of print]. 10.1016/j.gie.2012.01.005

Washington University School of Medicine's 2,100 employed and volunteer faculty physicians also are the medical staff of Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children's hospitals. The School of Medicine is one of the leading medical research, teaching and patient care institutions in the nation, currently ranked sixth in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. Through its affiliations with Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children's hospitals, the School of Medicine is linked to BJC HealthCare.



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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.


Poor colonoscopy prep hides pre-cancerous polyps [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 27-Mar-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Jim Dryden
jdryden@wustl.edu
314-286-0110
Washington University School of Medicine

What happens on the day before a colonoscopy may be just as important as the colon-screening test itself.

Gastroenterologists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have found that when patients don't adequately prep for the test by cleansing their colons, doctors often can't see potentially dangerous pre-cancerous lesions.

Reporting in the journal Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, the researchers say that doctors often missed at least one pre-cancerous growth in about one-third of patients who did not properly prepare for their colonoscopy. Those polyps and other markers of cancer risk were only discovered months later when patients had their next colonoscopy.

Although several studies have found that up to a quarter of colonoscopy patients don't prepare adequately for the test, the new study is the first to point out the potential consequences of poor bowel preparation in outpatients at average risk.

"Because so many of the patients had a follow-up screening less than a year after the initial test, we strongly suspect that most of the pre-cancerous growths found during the second colonoscopy already were present at the time of the initial test," says first author Reena Chokshi, MD, a gastroenterology fellow at Washington University.

The researchers say their findings suggest that if a physician is having difficulty seeing the colon due to inadequate bowel prep, the colonoscopy should be stopped and rescheduled.

"We often can detect preparation problems during the first few minutes of the procedure," Chokshi says. "And based on this study, we would say that rather than subjecting a patient to the potential risks of a full colonoscopy when we may not be able to detect polyps, or other pre-cancerous growths called adenomas, it may be better to bring that patient back as soon as possible for a repeat procedure with better bowel preparation."

On the day before a colonoscopy exam, people are asked to stop eating solid food and to consume only clear liquids. Later in the day and the next morning, patients drink bowel-cleansing mixtures to empty the colon prior to the examination.

The test itself usually takes less than an hour, and patients are sedated during that time. Using a tiny camera, doctors are able to look at the walls of the colon in an attempt to detect polyps and other pre-cancerous growths. Once detected, those growths can be removed during the course of the colonoscopy. Patients often must miss two days of work: the day of preparation and the day of the test. Recently, the outpatient endoscopy center at Washington University and Barnes-Jewish Hospital in St. Louis has begun screening patients on Saturday mornings to reduce the number of vacation days some patients have to use.

"Many patients say that the bowel preparation before the colonoscopy is the worst part of having the test, but it's also very important because in order to see polyps or cancers, we really have to be able to clearly see the entire wall of the colon," says senior author Jean S. Wang, MD, PhD, assistant professor of medicine in the Division of Gastroenterology. "Inadequate preparation makes that very difficult for a physician."

The researchers retrospectively studied patients who had an average risk of colon cancer and got screening colonoscopies in the outpatient endoscopy center. Individuals with a history of inflammatory bowel disease, a family history of colorectal cancer or a medical history of colon polyps were not included in the study.

In the five-year span between 2004-09, 373 patients at the center were identified as having inadequate bowel preparation. Of the 133 patients who later had a second colonoscopy during the study period, 33.8 percent had at least one pre-cancerous adenoma detected in that repeat screening. And almost one in five of that group were considered to be at high risk for colon cancer because they either had more than three adenomas detected, or the test discovered at least one large lesion.

In fact, the researchers found that 18 percent of the patients who had a second colonoscopy would have been given different recommendations if their polyps and adenomas had been detected during the initial screening, such as more frequent colonoscopies to monitor the development of growths in the colon.

"It generally takes several years for an adenoma to become cancerous," Chokshi says. "But it's hard to know where in that sequence a particular adenoma is when we detect it. So it certainly is possible that any lesion we miss during a colonoscopy could develop into a malignancy before a person's next colonoscopy, especially if it doesn't happen until 10 years later."

###

Chokshi RV, Hovis CD, Hollander T, Early DS Wang JS. Prevalence of missed adenomas in patients with inadequate bowel preparation on screening colonoscopy. Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, vol. 75, 2012 [Epub. ahead of print]. 10.1016/j.gie.2012.01.005

Washington University School of Medicine's 2,100 employed and volunteer faculty physicians also are the medical staff of Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children's hospitals. The School of Medicine is one of the leading medical research, teaching and patient care institutions in the nation, currently ranked sixth in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. Through its affiliations with Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children's hospitals, the School of Medicine is linked to BJC HealthCare.



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


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-03/wuso-pcp032712.php

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Real leadership lessons from Steve Jobs

By msnbc.com staff

Walter Isaacson, the biographer of Apple?s co-founder and late CEO Steve Jobs, appeared on CNBC Monday to discuss his article in April?s edition of Harvard Business Review.

Titled ?The Real Leadership Lessons of Steve Jobs,? the article looks at Jobs? career and how he made Apple one of the most valuable companies in the world. In it, Isaacson asserts that Jobs ?belongs in the pantheon of America?s great innovators, along with Thomas Edison, Henry Ford, and Walt Disney.?

?His salient ability is he could drive people to do extraordinary things,? Isaacson told CNBC.

Source: http://bottomline.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/03/26/10868776-real-leadership-lessons-from-steve-jobs

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Loyalty Service Swipely Adds Analytics And Targeted Campaigns

swipelySwipely, the startup led by TellMe Founder Angus Davis, is doubling down on its credit card-based loyalty strategy. The company first launched as a way to share your credit card purchases with your friends, but when that idea (as deployed by Swipely and others) failed to take off, Swipely shifted its focus to helping merchants with their loyalty programs. Today, it's launching the Main Street Marketing Manager, which includes the existing loyalty tools as well as more detailed analytics and a way to launch campaigns that target lapsed customers.

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

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U.S. seeks missile-defense shields for Asia, Mideast

[ [ [['Afghan security forces and police killed three', 3]], 'http://yhoo.it/H9BcJE', '[Related: Bales\' wife on his alleged shooting: \'He would not do that\']', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['looking for fireworks between the opposing camps', 16]], 'http://yhoo.it/GSvEsj', '[RELATED:\?It?s going to be a circus\?: Activists begin protests outside Supreme Court]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['entirely respectable way to put off the searing constitutional controversy', 8]], 'http://yhoo.it/GE6jSh', '[RELATED: Obama\?s health care law passed 2 years ago, but where are we now\?]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['Witnesses said the gunman pulled up on a black scooter', 7]], 'http://yhoo.it/GzwOIW', '[Related: New York police tighten security at Jewish sites]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['test Zimmerman for alcohol or drugs', 11]], 'http://yhoo.it/Gzn6VF', '[Related: White House says Trayvon Martin is local issue]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['entirely respectable way to put off the searing constitutional controversy', 12]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/tea-party-activists-defy-rain-to-rip-obama-health-care-law-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/4/31/431f2f4f7ed388d5bc5557b0a76267fa.jpeg', '450', ' ', 'Reuters/Jonathan Ernst', ], [ [['associated with such a small earthquake', 4]], 'http://yhoo.it/GTco9z', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/0/b4/0b493c1a47b6e3f97f8f48a2b251d7d4.jpeg', '630', ' ', 'AP Photo/Carrie Antlfinger', ], [ [['Fox News host Geraldo Rivera sparked outrage', 3]], 'http://yhoo.it/GKMVTk', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/2/7c/27c7367bc512d233ae1790b320a5e92c.jpeg', '630', ' ', 'AP Photo/John Minchillo', ], [ [['The charges signed against Bales include', 1]], 'http://yhoo.it/wZT5zV', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/7/a0/7a07c51b2aa0f39b1a23355046d13870.jpeg', '512', ' ', 'AP Photo/DVIDS\, Spc\. Ryan Hallock\, File', ], [ [['George Zimmerman, if I had a son', 6]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/thousands-protest-fla-teen-death-1332387124-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/os/152/2012/03/22/d761a49f3fcc99080a0f6a70670053cd-jpg_150905.jpg', '500', ' ', 'AP Photo/John Minchillo', ], [ [['Mohamed Merah', 10], ['prosecutor Francois Molins', 5]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/four-dead-in-french-jewish-school-shooting-1332173151-slideshow', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/cv/ip/ap/default/120321/2012_03_21t151508z_425380421_gm1e83l1sqs01_rtrmadp_3_france_shootings_raid.jpg', '630', ' ', 'REUTERS/Jean-Paul Pelissier', ], [ [['Shortly after he wrapped up his victory remarks', 2]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/4-straight-romney-wins-washington-gop-caucus-1330835515-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/3/e9/3e9b0082c3c3111dcc19e3527ae94cc7.jpeg', '500', ' ', 'AP Photo/Steven Senne', ], [ [['best understands the problems of average Americans', 2]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/4-straight-romney-wins-washington-gop-caucus-1330835515-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/3/e9/3e9b0082c3c3111dcc19e3527ae94cc7.jpeg', '500', ' ', 'AP Photo/Steven Senne', ], [ [['Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery', 7]], 'http://yhoo.it/GB2RVy', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/os/152/2012/03/20/photo-1332257995646-4-0-jpg_171722.jpg', '630', ' ', 'AFP', ], [ [['xxxxxxxxxxxx', 11]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/russian-grannies-win-bid-to-sing-at-eurovision-1331223625-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/1/56/156d92f2760dcd3e75bcd649a8b85fcf.jpeg', '500', ' ', 'AP', ] ]

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-seeks-missile-defense-shields-asia-mideast-020814165.html

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Delicate dance for Pope Benedict in Cuba

Pope Benedict arrives in Cuba, 14 years after Pope John Paul's visit to the island. The Pope's visit is expected to help strengthen ties with the Cuban Catholic Church.??NBC's Mark Potter reports.

By Mark Potter , NBC News correspondent

HAVANA, Cuba ? At the historic San Francisco de Paula church, in a working-class neighborhood of Havana, Auxiliary Bishop Alfredo Petit recently walked the long hallways where priests, nuns and lay workers were busy caring for some of Cuba's elderly and infirm and also operating an orphanage. Outside the church is a sign welcoming the?pope: "Bienvenido a Cuba Benedicto XVI."

Petit hopes during the pontiff's three-day visit to the island his messages will provide an important boost for the Cuban Catholic Church and perhaps even inspire some gradual changes in Cuban society.? "I don't know what the words will be, but I think they will suggest more respect for human dignity,? he said.

Since the Cuban revolution in 1959, the Catholic Church has struggled to raise its public profile here. For decades, under the Marxist government of Fidel Castro, the church was ostracized and believers were punished. The country was officially declared atheist until the government loosened that description in the 1990's.


But, with Fidel Castro out of power now and his younger brother, Raul, in charge, the church has become much more accepted by the government. Recently, Cuban Cardinal Jamie Ortega negotiated the release of more than 100 political prisoners, although he was criticized by human rights activists after most of the?prisoners were sent into exile.

NBC analyst George Weigel discusses Pope Benedict's trip to Cuba and that Vatican's firm anti-communism stance.

"The church has now been accepted as a legitimate and important interlocutor of the government on sensitive topics like freeing political prisoners, the conditions of those in prison, the treatment of dissidents," said Jorge Dominguez, a professor at Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government.? "This is a wholly unprecedented role for the Roman Catholic in Cuba for the past half century."

With funds and supplies donated from overseas, the church also provides much-needed social services now as the government struggles to reshape Cuba's troubled economy. Church-run food banks and retirement homes along with medicine distribution centers have become lifelines many of Cuba's extremely poor.

"It is very convenient for the government that the church will engage in activities providing for people in need," said Juan Clark, a Miami Dade College professor emeritus and an expert on the Cuban Church.

Still, tensions remain over the issues of religious and personal freedoms.

Last year, the church convinced state security to stop harassing the "Ladies in White," a church-based dissident group. However, two weekends ago, three-dozen members of the group were detained during a protest march in Havana. Ironically, 13 other dissidents who recently sought sanctuary in a Havana basilica were turned over by church officials to police, sparking accusations the church may have actually grown too close to Cuban leaders.

Pope Benedict is now urging Cuba to find new alternatives to Marxism ? patiently and peacefully ? as the Catholic Church maintains a delicate relationship with the Communist government here.?

The pope?s first stop on Monday will be Santiago de Cuba, the island's second city where he will celebrate a large open-air mass. On Tuesday, he visits the town of El Cobre, home to a tiny wooden statue of Our Lady of Charity, a symbol revered by all Cubans ? Catholic and non-Catholic alike.

Later that day he flies to Havana for what is expected to be a meeting with both Raul and Fidel Castro. On Wednesday morning he will celebrate another mass in Havana before departing the country.

Source: http://worldblog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/03/26/10870203-delicate-dance-between-catholic-church-and-cubas-communist-government

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Monday, March 26, 2012

French gunman's brother suspected of complicity

PARIS (Reuters) - The brother of an al Qaeda-inspired gunman shot dead by French police was placed under investigation on Sunday for suspected complicity in a killing spree that has made security a central election issue, with President Nicolas Sarkozy scenting an advantage.

Sarkozy, buoyed by a rise in opinion polls four weeks from the first round of a presidential vote, renewed hostilities with rival Francois Hollande over the weekend, saying the Socialist front runner was unfit to protect France's security interests.

Both men are seeking to adjust to - and in Sarkozy's case to capitalize on - the bloody drama in which Mohamed Merah killed three Jewish children, a rabbi and three soldiers before he was killed by police snipers after a marathon siege and a gunbattle.

After four days of police questioning, prosecutors said that Abdelkader Merah, the killer's older brother, was being placed under investigation on suspicion of complicity and would remain in detention for the duration of a inquiry that could last months before a decision to send him to trial or drop the case.

Abdelkader, 29, was arrested at dawn on Wednesday as elite police commandos surrounded the apartment of brother Mohamed in the southwestern city of Toulouse.

He was transferred to domestic intelligence headquarters in western Paris on Saturday along with his woman partner, who was released without charge shortly before dawn on Sunday.

Mohamed Merah, 23, a French citizen of Algerian origin, was killed by a police sniper as he jumped from the balcony of his lodgings, pistol firing, after a standoff of more than 30 hours and a gunbattle inside his three-room apartment.

He did not appear to have acted as part of a fundamentalist network, according to domestic intelligence chief Bernard Squarcini, but investigators want to establish whether he was swayed or given practical help by his brother Abdelkader.

Abdelkader, public prosecutor Francois Molins has said, was already known to security services for helping smuggle Jihadist militants into Iraq in 2007.

"Police inquiries have produced serious and matching pointers that suggest his (Abdelkader's) participation as an accomplice in crimes relating to a terrorist enterprise is plausible," the Paris prosecutor's office said in a statement.

It listed suspected offences of complicity in assassination and in robbery, and colluding with criminals planning terrorist enterprises.

Abdelkader said during a preliminary police interrogation he was proud of his brother's lethal exploits, and he also admitted to involvement in the March 6 robbery of a high-powered scooter his brother used in all three attacks, police sources say.

But his lawyer, Anne-Sophie Laguens, told journalists on Sunday: "He never said he was proud of his brother's acts and firmly condemns them."

Francois Molins, the prosecutor leading the case, has said police had found explosives in a car Abdelkader owned.

Abdelkader was known to have studied the Koran in Egypt in 2010 and French police had in the past found links between the brothers and a radical Islamist group based in southern France led by a Syrian-born Frenchman dubbed "The White Emir" by French media because of his fair hair and beard.

ELECTION BATTLES RENEWED

With the opening round of a two-round election just a month away, Sarkozy kept the focus at the weekend on security, a theme that, after gatecrashing the agenda last week, may help him in his re-election quest if it sticks as a voter worry.

Three-quarters of French voters said in a poll published on Saturday they approved Sarkozy's handling of the crisis. The president has promised new laws to criminally punish people who consult militant website or do indoctrination stints in places such as Pakistan and Afghanistan, which Mohamed Merah visited.

At a rally on the outskirts of Paris on Saturday, Sarkozy took a stab at Hollande's reluctance to back his proposed laws.

"He can cry foul, fiddle around, hesitate, skirt the issues and alter the finer points. He can refuse to vote for laws that I am proposing to protect France and the French people. But let me tell you that these laws will be adopted if the French choose to place their trust in me," he said.

Hollande, reduced to a bystander last week while Sarkozy reverted from campaigner to the role of president at the height of the killings crisis, struck back during a visit to the French island of Corsica off the southern coast, which has a long and violent history of racketeering and separatist struggles.

"Here's a place which has been subjected to violence and assassinations over the past five years. There are 20 homicides a year and he (Nicolas Sarkozy) sees fit to give us lessons about security and the law?" Hollande asked.

"The law needs to be applied, not reinvented every time according to the circumstances of the time. It's a question of halting splash announcements and giving the police and justice system the resources they need," he said.

Sarkozy has drawn level with Hollande in opinion polls and now even leads him in some surveys of voter plans for the first round of voting on April 22, when people can choose between 10 candidates, including the two big contenders.

All polls still show him losing the second-round runoff to Hollande, against whom he launched a personal attack during a conversation with a journalist that was reported at the weekend.

Philippe Ridet, a journalist who wrote a book about the 2007 victory, said in a magazine article that Sarkozy had taken him aside one time to say: "I am going to win and I am even going to tell you why. He's not good and it's starting to show. Hollande is useless. Useless, you understand."

(Additional reporting by Catherine Bremer and Gerard Bon in Paris and Saud Mehsud and Hafiz Wazier in Pakistan; Editing by Alistair Lyon)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/french-gunmans-brother-suspected-complicity-130450290.html

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Sunday, March 25, 2012

RSS Feed Search Engine - Real-Time Search Powered by FeedRank

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.rssmicro.com/rss.web?q=India

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2012, Shawn Ray | Bodybuilding, Supplements, Diets, Workouts ...



Shawn was the Co-Master of Ceremonies for the 2006 and 2007 Mr. Olympia Competitions held in Las Vegas, Nevada. Shawn is the creator of the only charity fundraiser for professional bodybuilding, Vyo Tech Nutritionals presents: Shawn Ray?s CHOC Hospital Golf Invitational. Over the last two year?s with the help of other pro fitness, figure and bodybuilding champions, as well as supplement companies and magazines, Shawn has helped raise and donate over $55,000.00 to the Children?s Hospital of Orange County by hosting this event annually at Black Gold Golf Club in Yorba Linda, Ca.
Shawn was the first professional bodybuilder to fail the drug testing at the Arnold Classic, which was when he first won the title in 1990. He went on to win the title again in 1991.
Ray retired from competitive bodybuilding in 2001 and is now working with a shaker manufacturer company from Sweden called SmartShake.com. He placed in the top five at the Mr. Olympia competition for twelve consecutive years from 1990 to 2001, two of those being first runner-up finishes.

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Saturday, March 24, 2012

Today's news -- March 23, 2012 | FEA - Florida Education Association

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Regular ol? parents ? with ties to Jeb Bush, John Thrasher

I am constantly amazed at the lengths?to which?Florida officials will go to avoid hearing from the?rank-and-file people they supposedly represent. Take the state?s newly compiled task force on school grading, for example. The topic is controversial. But to make sure they had a wide variety of opinions, state leaders decided to set aside three of the 18 seats on the task force for?regular ol? ?parents.? Only, it turns out, the parents they chose?weren?t so regular after all. One parent was Patricia Levesque, the executive director of Jeb Bush?s education foundation. The other was Julie Thrasher Weinberg ? daughter of powerful State Sen. John Thrasher. Now, I know Julie. I like Julie. I think she?s smart woman and dedicated mom. But for heaven?s sake,?I think it?s also safe to say that Julie already has ways to make her voice heard with powerful people.?There are a lot of other smart women and dedicated moms who have no such opportunity. Commissioner?Gerard Robinson claimed that, when he appointed Thrasher?s daughter, he didn?t realize who she was ? which makes for a fascinating coincidence in a state with 17 million people. For Levesque?s part, she apparently acknowledged her?connections?but said that, in this case:??I really do want to participate in this as?Mom.? How nice for her. Except, I imagine there are about 100,000 other moms in this state who would like to participate -- but who?will never get the chance, because they aren?t working for Jeb Bush or related to a powerful senator. Now, after the state released the original names -- and questions were raised -- Robinson beefed up the task force?s size, adding?more members, including a?migrant worker whose children are still learning English. You can read Leslie Postal?s full post at the Sentinel ?School Zone? blog here.

http://blogs.orlandosentinel.com/news_local_namesblog/2012/03/those-with-ties-to-jeb-bush-john-thrasher-just-regular-ol-parents.html

http://www.tallahassee.com/article/20120322/CAPITOLNEWS/120322004/Task-force-spurred-by-superintendents-complaints-meets-today

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Putnam school union proposes bonuses (Sharon Hughes quoted)
http://www.palatkadailynews.com/articles/2012/03/23/news/news01.txt

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Will merit pay keep Lee teachers from leaving? (Donna?Mutzenard quoted)
http://www.fox4now.com/news/local/143896436.html

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Sarasota cuts aimed at schools for second chance students

http://www.mysuncoast.com/content/news/7SouthNews/story/District-cuts-aimed-at-schools-for-second-chance/RcnHvNf5aEGfRcqP5yPA7g.cspx

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Schools bracing for worse FCAT scores, plenty of Algebra 1 failures
http://blogs.orlandosentinel.com/news_education_edblog/2012/03/schools-bracing-for-worse-fcat-scores-plenty-of-algebra-1-failures.html

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Resisting the script

In teaching I saw a powerful profession, one in which I could develop meaningful relationships with people. To me, teaching was work that would allow me to resist the rampant injustice I saw in the world and to avoid becoming just another cog in the machine. I still see teaching this way, and this vision continues to guide me as a teacher of teachers at the university level today. I worry about the teachers, future and present, in my education courses. Most of them are young, in their mid-20s to early 30s. Although most are working on their credentials, I also have many who are already classroom teachers returning to get their master?s degrees. No Child Left Behind and its draconian test regime started more than 10 years ago, and in many states the testing juggernaut was already well under way. My university students took high-stakes tests through elementary, middle, and high school. Most took high-stakes tests to get into college. They take tests to become credentialed teachers. Almost always good test takers by the time I see them, my students are members of the tested generation. I worry about the toll that these high-stakes, standardized tests have taken on the educational consciousness of my students. The cumulative effect on their commonsense understanding of education and teaching is profound: Even if my students do question the tests and see the detrimental effects of high-stakes testing on teaching and learning, they often have a hard time envisioning classrooms that could be or should be any different. Their horizons are limited because they have mainly known and experienced high-stakes testing in their educational lives. The conspiracy theorist in me thinks that maybe this was the intention of the test pushers. Get one generation as the ?tested generation,? and we?ll have a bunch of educators who cannot effectively imagine an alternative. Unfortunately, due to a combination of their own constrained vision and current educational policy, in most cases my students have this testing-is-the-only-option pedagogy reinforced when they get into classrooms. Whether they are student teachers or classroom veterans, the refrain they hear from district, state, and federal officials has been maddeningly consistent these last years: more standards, more tests, more pacing guides, more scripted instruction, more administrative threats, and more students in the classes they teach -- all with fewer resources, fewer rights, and fewer protections. The current state of teaching under high-stakes testing is obvious. In my own research, as well as the research of countless others, the findings support what many classroom teachers know from their day-to-day experiences: Regimes of high-stakes testing are pressuring teachers to change both their curriculum and teaching to match whatever is on the tests. The control of teaching by test-based accountability schemes is perhaps best illustrated through the rise of scripted reading curricula. Under such programs, administrators mandate teachers use prepackaged curricular materials that require no creative input or decision-making on the part of the teachers. Teachers in many low-performing schools and districts have been required by school leaders to use commercially packaged reading instruction programs, such as Open Court, which tell teachers exactly which page to be on each day as well as every word and line they are allowed to say while teaching reading, all in preparation for the high-stakes testing.

http://rethinkingschools.org/archive/26_03/26_03_au.shtml

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Testing our limits

I walked away from the rest of my class and over to the three computers in the corner of my classroom. Two of my 1st graders, Jasmine and Jayden, sat at their computers with their headphones off, waiting for me to reset their computers to Measure of Academic Progress (MAP) test number 2. ?I got 162,? said Jasmine. ?You got 142.? ?You did better than me,? replied Jayden with a frown. Shelly sat at the third computer. ?I don?t wanna do the computer test,? she pleaded. ?Do I have to?? In the past three years I have experienced unimaginable computer frustration. Don?t get me wrong: I treat my MacBook Pro like a third child, and I definitely use technology in the classroom to enhance teaching and learning. I?ve been accused of being in love with my iPhone, which serves as a timekeeper, meteorologist and DJ in my classroom. And the opaque projector is an excellent, plastic transparency-free alternative to the overhead projector. Computers and technology have come such a long way in the past 20 years, and they hold a big place in the lives of this generation of students. Unfortunately, one use of technology is failing in my classroom: the rapidly increasing use of computers for testing. Computerized testing, including the widely used MAP test, has infiltrated the public schools across the nation like an uncontrollable outbreak of lice, bringing with it a frightening future for public education. High-stakes standardized tests can be scored almost immediately via the internet, and testing companies can now easily link districts to their online data warehouses, which allows districts to quickly access test scores (which would be good if the tests were generating usable data). This system provides momentum to those who believe more tests should be given to ?track progress? throughout the year. In my district this means that every classroom teacher tests students at the beginning, middle, and end of the year, administering four tests in math and reading each time.

Limited funding and fewer staff in our district, as in most urban public schools, creates even more of a problem because there are not enough adults to serve as proctors. Setting up these tests is a tedious, time-consuming job involving a web of long, nonsensical passwords and codes. Teachers are being mandated to use many hours of valuable instructional time and limited teacher planning time to complete these tasks. In schools like mine that don?t have a computer lab, teachers have only a few computers in their classrooms. We are asked to simultaneously teach while setting up and administering a few tests at a time, seriously compromising the quality of instruction we are able to deliver.

http://rethinkingschools.org/archive/26_03/26_03_tempel.shtml

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Duncan: Newspapers shouldn't publish teacher ratings

http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/teacherbeat/2012/03/arne_duncan_newspapers_shouldn.html

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Online learning: the ruin of education

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alexander-m-spring/online-learning-the-ruin-_b_1358761.html

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New College's next president aims for national profile

http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20120322/ARTICLE/120329848/2416/NEWS?Title=New-College-s-next-president-aims-for-national-profile

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UF withdraws proposal for new undergraduate fee

http://www.gainesville.com/article/20120322/ARTICLES/120329836/1002/news01?Title=UF-withdraws-proposal-for-new-undergraduate-fee

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Senate approves redrawn maps after making changes

Using a court ruling as its road map, the Florida Senate voted 31-6 Thursday for a second and final redistricting plan that leaders said would create an unprecedented number of minority senators and a more politically competitive chamber. It is now up to the Florida House, which will meet for three days next week, to sign off on the plan. If this second attempt fails to follow the state's new anti-gerrymandering standards, the Florida Supreme Court will step in to draw the lines that will determine the Senate boundaries for the next decade. "This plan is sensible to our constituents, understandable to all the members of the Senate and faithful to the Constitution,'' said Redistricting Chairman Don Gaetz, R-Niceville, before the Senate vote. Democrats warned that despite three grueling days of debate this week, the map designed by Gaetz continues to violate the new constitutional requirements. They predict the courts will reject the proposal again. "We may have had an excuse last time but, for this go around, there is none,'' said Senate Democratic Leader Nan Rich of Weston, "Incumbent protection is written all over the map." A Times/Herald analysis of the new plan shows Republicans will retain a majority in the Senate, though it gives Democrats one more seat than their original plan. Based on voting data from the 2008 and 2010 general elections, the map would allow for the election of 23 solid Republican Senate seats, two competitive seats and 15 solid Democratic seats ? compared with the current composition of 28 Republicans to 12 Democrats. It also creates five districts designed to favor black candidates and seven districts that favor Hispanics. One Orlando-based Hispanic seat would be dominated by Democrats. The court rejected the first Senate map on March 9, invalidating eight districts saying it "was rife with objective indicators of improper intent" that violated the new Fair Districts standards approved by voters. The governor called lawmakers into extra session to redo the Senate map. The House Redistricting Committee will meet Monday to review the Senate map. If the House adopts the plan, the attorney general will have 15 days to ask the Supreme Court to conduct a second review. The court would have 30 days to complete that review.

http://www.tampabay.com/news/politics/national/florida-senate-approves-second-redistricting-plan/1221407

http://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/state/florida-senate-sends-new-redistricting-plan-to-house-2255327.html

http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/2012-03-22/news/os-senate-debates-redistricting-20120322_1_new-district-maps-gop-senate-candidates-black-majority-districts?pagewanted=all

http://htpolitics.com/2012/03/22/senate-approves-revised-redistricting-map/

http://www.news-press.com/article/20120322/NEWS0107/120322025/1120/NEWS0121/Florida-Senate-approves-redistricting-map-challenges-ahead

http://www.thefloridacurrent.com/article.cfm?id=27073720

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Analysis: House GOP budget gives $187,000 tax cut to every millionaire

http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2012/03/22/450392/ryan-budget-millionaires/

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Big Government isn't the problem, Big Money is

http://www.thenation.com/article/166969/big-government-isnt-problem-big-money

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The GOP assault on the Voting Rights Act

http://www.thenation.com/blog/166933/gop-assault-voting-rights-act

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The Enemies of campaign ad transparency

https://www.commondreams.org/view/2012/03/21-13

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How the press erodes our belief in government

http://www.thenation.com/article/166968/how-press-erodes-our-belief-government

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Health-care changes may not all disappear even if justices overturn the law

http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/2012/03/22/gIQAuOLSUS_story.html

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U.S. inches toward goal of energy independence

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/23/business/energy-environment/inching-toward-energy-independence-in-america.html

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Source: http://feaweb.org/todays-news-march-23-2012

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